1,730 research outputs found
Survival of molecular gas in cavities of transition disks (I. CO)
(Abridged) Planet formation is closely related to the structure and dispersal
of protoplanetary disks. A certain class of disks, called transition disks,
exhibit cavities in dust images at scales of up to a few 10s of AU. The
formation mechanism of the cavities is still unclear. The gas content of such
cavities can be spatially resolved for the first time using the Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA).
We have developed a new series of models to simulate the physical conditions
and chemical abundances of the gas in cavities to address the question whether
the gas is primarily atomic or molecular inside the dust free cavities exposed
to intense UV radiation. Molecular/atomic line emission by carbon monoxide
(CO), its isotopologues (13CO, C18O, C17O, and 13C18O) and related species
([CI], [CII], and [OI]) is predicted for comparison with ALMA and the Herschel
Space Observatory.
The gas can remain in molecular form down to very low amounts of gas in the
cavity. Shielding of the stellar radiation by a dusty inner disk
(pre-transition disk) allows CO to survive down to lower gas masses in the
cavity. The main parameter for the CO emission from cavity is the gas mass.
Other parameters such as the outer disk mass, bolometric luminosity, shape of
the stellar spectrum or PAH abundance are less important. Since the CO pure
rotational lines readily become optically thick, the CO isotopologues need to
be observed in order to quantitatively determine the amount of gas in the
cavity.
A wide range of gas masses in the cavity of transition disks (~4 orders of
magnitude) can be probed using combined observations of CO isotopologue lines
with ALMA. Measuring the gas mass in the cavity will ultimately help to
distinguish between different cavity formation theories.Comment: Accepted by A&A, 21 pages, 20 figure
Probing BEC phase fluctuations with atomic quantum dots
We consider the dephasing of two internal states |0> and |1> of a trapped
impurity atom, a so-called atomic quantum dot (AQD), where only state |1>
couples to a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC). A direct relation between the
dephasing of the internal states of the AQD and the temporal phase fluctuations
of the BEC is established. Based on this relation we suggest a scheme to probe
BEC phase fluctuations nondestructively via dephasing measurements of the AQD.
In particular, the scheme allows to trace the dependence of the phase
fluctuations on the trapping geometry of the BEC.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Methods of quantitative and qualitative analysis of bird migration with a tracking radar
Methods of analyzing bird migration by using tracking radar are discussed. The procedure for assessing the rate of bird passage is described. Three topics are presented concerning the grouping of nocturnal migrants, the velocity of migratory flight, and identification of species by radar echoes. The height and volume of migration under different weather conditions are examined. The methods for studying the directions of migration and the correlation between winds and the height and direction of migrating birds are presented
Herschel/HIFI detections of hydrides towards AFGL 2591: Envelope emission versus tenuous cloud absorption
The Heterodyne Instrument for the Far Infrared (HIFI) onboard the Herschel Space Observatory allows the first observations of light diatomic
molecules at high spectral resolution and in multiple transitions. Here, we report deep integrations using HIFI in different lines of hydrides
towards the high-mass star forming region AFGL 2591. Detected are CH, CH^+, NH, OH^+, H_2O^+, while NH^+ and SH^+ have not been detected. All
molecules except for CH and CH^+ are seen in absorption with low excitation temperatures and at velocities different from the systemic velocity
of the protostellar envelope. Surprisingly, the CH(J_(F,P) = 3/2_(2,â) â 1/2_(1,+)) and CH^+(J = 1â0, J = 2â1) lines are detected in emission at the
systemic velocity. We can assign the absorption features to a foreground cloud and an outflow lobe, while the CH and CH^+ emission stems from
the envelope. The observed abundance and excitation of CH and CH^+ can be explained in the scenario of FUV irradiated outflow walls, where
a cavity etched out by the outflow allows protostellar FUV photons to irradiate and heat the envelope at larger distances driving the chemical
reactions that produce these molecules
Volatile snowlines in embedded disks around low-mass protostars
(Abridged*) Models of the young solar nebula assume a hot initial disk with
most volatiles are in the gas phase. The question remains whether an actively
accreting disk is warm enough to have gas-phase water up to 50 AU radius. No
detailed studies have yet been performed on the extent of snowlines in an
embedded accreting disk (Stage 0). Quantify the location of gas-phase volatiles
in embedded actively accreting disk system. Two-dimensional physical and
radiative transfer models have been used to calculate the temperature structure
of embedded protostellar systems. Gas and ice abundances of HO, CO, and
CO are calculated using the density-dependent thermal desorption formulation.
The midplane water snowline increases from 3 to 55 AU for accretion rates
through the disk onto the star between -. CO can remain in the solid phase within the disk for down to AU. Most of the CO
is in the gas phase within an actively accreting disk independent of disk
properties and accretion rate. The predicted optically thin water isotopolog
emission is consistent with the detected HO emission toward the Stage
0 embedded young stellar objects, originating from both the disk and the warm
inner envelope (hot core). An accreting embedded disk can only account for
water emission arising from AU, however, and the extent rapidly
decreases for low accretion rates. Thus, the radial extent of the emission can
be measured with ALMA observations and compared to this limit. Volatiles
sublimate out to 50 AU in young disks and can reset the chemical content
inherited from the envelope in periods of high accretion rates. A hot young
solar nebula out to 30 AU can only have occurred during the deeply embedded
Stage 0, not during the T-Tauri phase of our early solar system.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The Atomic and Molecular Content of Disks Around Very Low-mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs
There is growing observational evidence that disk evolution is stellar-mass
dependent. Here, we show that these dependencies extend to the atomic and
molecular content of disk atmospheres. We analyze a unique dataset of
high-resolution Spitzer/IRS spectra from 8 very low-mass star and brown dwarf
disks. We report the first detections of Ne+, H2, CO2, and tentative detections
of H2O toward these faint and low-mass disks. Two of our [NeII] 12.81 micron
emission lines likely trace the hot (>5,000 K) disk surface irradiated by X-ray
photons from the central stellar/sub-stellar object. The H2 S(2) and S(1)
fluxes are consistent with arising below the fully or partially ionized surface
traced by the [NeII] emission, in gas at about 600 K. We confirm the higher
C2H2/HCN flux and column density ratio in brown dwarf disks previously noted
from low-resolution IRS spectra. Our high-resolution spectra also show that the
HCN/H2O fluxes of brown dwarf disks are on average higher than those of T Tauri
disks. Our LTE modeling hints that this difference extends to column density
ratios if H2O lines trace warm > 600 K disk gas. These trends suggest that the
inner regions of brown dwarf disks have a lower O/C ratio than those of T Tauri
disks which may result from a more efficient formation of non-migrating icy
planetesimals. A O/C=1, as inferred from our analysis, would have profound
implications on the bulk composition of rocky planets that can form around very
low-mass stars and brown dwarfs.Comment: Accepted to Ap
Entanglement generation in a system of two atomic quantum dots coupled to a pool of interacting bosons
We discuss entanglement generation in a closed system of one or two atomic
quantum dots (qubits) coupled via Raman transitions to a pool of cold
interacting bosons. The system exhibits rich entanglement dynamics, which we
analyze in detail in an exact quantum mechanical treatment of the problem. The
bipartite setup of only one atomic quantum dot coupled to a pool of bosons
turns out to be equivalent to two qubits which easily get entangled being
initially in a product state. We show that both the number of bosons in the
pool and the boson-boson interaction crucially affect the entanglement
characteristics of the system. The tripartite system of two atomic quantum dots
and a pool of bosons reduces to a qubit-qutrit-qubit realization. We consider
entanglement possibilities of the pure system as well as of reduced ones by
tracing out one of the constituents, and show how the entanglement can be
controlled by varying system parameters. We demonstrate that the qutrit, as
expected, plays a leading role in entangling of the two qubits and the maximum
entanglement depends in a nontrivial way on the pool characteristics.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
Konrad Zuse und die ETH ZĂŒrich: Zum 100. Geburtstag des Informatikpioniers Konrad Zuse (22. Juni 2010)
Zusammenfassung: Der deutsche Bauingenieur Konrad Zuse (1910-1995) hat 1941 die Z3 vorgefĂŒhrt, den ersten frei programmierbaren und in binĂ€rer Gleitpunktrechnung arbeitenden Rechner der Welt. Zudem entwickelte er mit seinem PlankalkĂŒl erste Ideen fĂŒr eine allgemeine Programmiersprache. Vor 100 Jahren wurde der Informatikpionier in Berlin geboren. Als einzige UniversitĂ€t auf dem europĂ€ischen Festland hatte die ETH ZĂŒrich 1950 eine betriebsfĂ€hige programmgesteuerte Rechenmaschine, die gemietete Z4. Die Z4 ist eine Weiterentwicklung der im Krieg zerstörten Z3. Dank der mit diesem GerĂ€t durchgefĂŒhrten Forschungsarbeiten wurde das damalige von Eduard Stiefel geleitete Institut fĂŒr angewandte Mathematik in kurzer Zeit weltberĂŒhmt. Der Verfasser dankt den Professoren Walter Gander, Martin Gutknecht und Carl August Zehnder fĂŒr ihre tatkrĂ€ftige UnterstĂŒtzung, die um so wertvoller war, als die drei Pioniere der GrĂŒnderzeit, die Professoren Eduard Stiefel, Heinz Rutishauser und Ambros Speiser, gestorben sind und es nur noch wenige Zeitzeugen gib
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