17,391 research outputs found
Rotating Superconductors and the London Moment: Thermodynamics versus Microscopics
Comparing various microscopic theories of rotating superconductors to the
conclusions of thermodynamic considerations, we traced their marked difference
to the question of how some thermodynamic quantities (the electrostatic and
chemical potentials) are related to more microscopic ones: The electron's the
work function, mean-field potential and Fermi energy -- certainly a question of
general import.
After the correct identification is established, the relativistic correction
for the London Moment is shown to vanish, with the obvious contribution from
the Fermi velocity being compensated by other contributions such as
electrostatics and interactions.Comment: 23 pages 4 fi
A WIMP Detector with Two-Phase Liquid Xenon
We describe the liquid-xenon dark-matter detector program of the UCLA-Torino
team. A two-phase detector, ZEPLIN II, for the Boulby Mine is a good match for
the current search for WIMP dark matter.Comment: 3 pages with 4 figures; for Proceedings, Sixth Int'l Wksp. On Topics
in Astroparticle and Underground Physics, TAUP99 (College de France, Paris,
Sept. 6-10, 1999), to be published in Nucl. Phys. B(PS
The power of low-resolution spectroscopy: On the spectral classification of planet candidates in the ground-based CoRoT follow-up
Planetary transits detected by the CoRoT mission can be mimicked by a
low-mass star in orbit around a giant star. Spectral classification helps to
identify the giant stars and also early-type stars which are often excluded
from further follow-up.
We study the potential and the limitations of low-resolution spectroscopy to
improve the photometric spectral types of CoRoT candidates. In particular, we
want to study the influence of the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the target
spectrum in a quantitative way. We built an own template library and
investigate whether a template library from the literature is able to reproduce
the classifications. Including previous photometric estimates, we show how the
additional spectroscopic information improves the constraints on spectral type.
Low-resolution spectroscopy (1000) of 42 CoRoT targets covering a
wide range in SNR (1-437) and of 149 templates was obtained in 2012-2013 with
the Nasmyth spectrograph at the Tautenburg 2m telescope. Spectral types have
been derived automatically by comparing with the observed template spectra. The
classification has been repeated with the external CFLIB library.
The spectral class obtained with the external library agrees within a few
sub-classes when the target spectrum has a SNR of about 100 at least. While the
photometric spectral type can deviate by an entire spectral class, the
photometric luminosity classification is as close as a spectroscopic
classification with the external library. A low SNR of the target spectrum
limits the attainable accuracy of classification more strongly than the use of
external templates or photometry. Furthermore we found that low-resolution
reconnaissance spectroscopy ensures that good planet candidates are kept that
would otherwise be discarded based on photometric spectral type alone.Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomische Nachrichten; 12 pages, 4
figures, 7 table
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