3,872 research outputs found
Spin diffusion and the anisotropic spin-1/2 Heisenberg chain
Measurements of the spin-lattice relaxation rate 1/T_1 by nuclear magnetic
resonance for the one-dimensional Heisenberg antiferromagnet Sr_2CuO_3 have
provided evidence for a diffusion-like contribution at finite temperature and
small wave-vector. By analyzing real-time data for the auto- and
nearest-neighbor spin-spin correlation functions obtained by the density-matrix
renormalization group I show that such a contribution indeed exists for
temperatures T>J, where J is the coupling constant, but that it becomes
exponentially suppressed for T << J. I present evidence that the
frequency-dependence of 1/T_1 in the Heisenberg case is smoothly connected to
that in the free fermion case where the exponential suppression of the
diffusion-like contribution is easily understood.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Open XXZ spin chain: Nonequilibrium steady state and strict bound on ballistic transport
Explicit matrix product ansatz is presented, in first two orders in the
(weak) coupling parameter, for the non-equilibrium steady state of the
homogeneous, nearest neighbor Heisenberg XXZ spin-1/2 chain driven by Lindblad
operators which act only at the edges of the chain. The first order of the
density operator becomes in thermodynamic limit an exact pseudo-local
conservation law and yields -- via Mazur inequality -- a rigorous lower bound
on the high temperature spin Drude weight. Such Mazur bound is a non-vanishing
fractal function of the anisotropy parameter Delta for |Delta|<1.Comment: Slightly longer but essentially equivalent to a published versio
Spin conductivity in almost integrable spin chains
The spin conductivity in the integrable spin-1/2 XXZ-chain is known to be
infinite at finite temperatures T for anisotropies -1 < Delta < 1.
Perturbations which break integrability, e.g. a next-nearest neighbor coupling
J', render the conductivity finite. We construct numerically a non-local
conserved operator J_parallel which is responsible for the finite spin Drude
weight of the integrable model and calculate its decay rate for small J'. This
allows us to obtain a lower bound for the spin conductivity sigma_s >= c(T) /
J'^2, where c(T) is finite for J' to 0. We discuss the implication of our
result for the general question how non-local conservation laws affect
transport properties.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Application of recent results on the orbital migration of low mass planets: convergence zones
Previous models of the combined growth and migration of protoplanets needed
large ad hoc reduction factors for the type I migration rate as found in the
isothermal approximation. In order to eliminate these factors, a simple
semi-analytical model is presented that incorporates recent results on the
migration of low mass planets in non-isothermal disks. It allows for outward
migration. The model is used to conduct planetary populations synthesis
calculations. Two points with zero torque are found in the disks. Planets
migrate both in- and outward towards these convergence zones. They could be
important for accelerating planetary growth by concentrating matter in one
point. We also find that the updated type I migration models allow the
formation of both close-in low mass planets, but also of giant planets at large
semimajor axes. The problem of too rapid migration is significantly mitigated.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Proceedings of the IAU Symposium 276, 2010: The
Astrophysics of Planetary Systems: Formation, Structure, and Dynamical
Evolution, ed. A. Sozzetti, M. G. Lattanzi, and A. P. Bos
Reconnection in Marginally Collisionless Accretion Disk Coronae
We point out that a conventional construction placed upon observations of
accreting black holes, in which their nonthermal X-ray spectra are produced by
inverse comptonization in a coronal plasma, suggests that the plasma is
marginally collisionless. Recent developments in plasma physics indicate that
fast reconnection takes place only in collisionless plasmas. As has recently
been suggested for the Sun's corona, such marginal states may result from a
combination of energy balance and the requirements of fast magnetic
reconnection.Comment: Revised in response to referee. Accepted ApJ. 11 pp., no figures.
Uses aastex 5.0
A model for long-term climatic effects of impacts
We simulated climatic changes following the impacts of asteroids of different sizes on the present surface of Earth. These changes are assumed to be due to the variations of the radiation energy budget as determined by the amount of dust globally distributed in the atmosphere following the impact. A dust evolution model is used to determine the dust particle size spectra as a function of time and atmospheric altitude. We simulate radiation transfer through the dust layer using a multiple scattering calculation scheme and couple the radiative fluxes to an ocean circulation model in order to determine climatic changes and deviations over 2000 years following the impact. Resulting drops in sea surface temperatures are of the order of several degrees at the equator and decrease toward the poles, which is deduced from the increasing importance of infrared insulation of the dust cover at high latitudes. While gravitational settling reduces the atmospheric amount of dust significantly within 6 months, temperature changes remain present for roughly 1 year irrespective of impactor size. Below 1000 m ocean depth, these changes are small, and we do not observe significant modifications in the structure of the ocean circulation pattern. For bodies smaller than 3 km in diameter, climatic effects increase with impactor size. Beyond this threshold, there is enough dust in the atmosphere to block almost completely solar radiation; thus additional dust does not enhance climatic deviations anymore. In fact, owing to interaction in the infrared, we even observe smaller effects by going from a 5 km impactor to larger diameters
Accretion disc formation around the neutron star in Be/X-ray binaries
We study the accretion on to the neutron star in Be/X-ray binaries, using a
3D SPH code and the data imported from a simulation by \citet{oka2} for a
coplanar system with a short period () and a moderate
eccentricity , which targeted the Be/X-ray binary 4U 0115+63. For
simplicity, we adopt the polytropic equation of state. We find that a
time-dependent accretion disc is formed around the neutron star regardless of
the simulation parameters. In the long term, the disc evolves via a two-stage
process, which consists of the initial developing stage and the later developed
stage. The developed disc is nearly Keplerian. In the short term, the disc
structure modulates with the orbital phase. The disc shrinks at the periastron
passage of the Be star and restores its radius afterwards. The accretion rate
on to the neutron star is also phase dependent, but its peak is broader and
much lower than that of the mass-transfer rate from the Be disc, unless the
polytropic exponent is as large as 5/3. Our simulations show that the truncated
Be disk model for Be/X-ray binaries is consistent with the observed X-ray
behaviour of 4U 0115+63.Comment: 13pages, 62figures, accepted to MNRAS. Revised version adds in 4 new
figures, in which we have improved the English, kindly pointed out by Manson
Katherine. For associated movies, see
http://astro3.sci.hokudai.ac.jp/~kimi/movie.htm
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