32,557 research outputs found
Surface structure in simple liquid metals. An orbital free first principles study
Molecular dynamics simulations of the liquid-vapour interfaces in simple
sp-bonded liquid metals have been performed using first principles methods.
Results are presented for liquid Li, Na, K, Rb, Cs, Mg, Ba, Al, Tl, and Si at
thermodynamic conditions near their respective triple points, for samples of
2000 particles in a slab geometry. The longitudinal ionic density profiles
exhibit a pronounced stratification extending several atomic diameters into the
bulk, which is a feature already experimentally observed in liquid K, Ga, In,
Sn and Hg. The wavelength of the ionic oscillations shows a good scaling with
the radii of the associated Wigner-Seitz spheres. The structural rearrangements
at the interface are analyzed in terms of the transverse pair correlation
function, the coordination number and the bond-angle distribution between
nearest neighbors. The valence electronic density profile also shows (weaker)
oscillations whose phase, with respect to those of the ionic profile, changes
from opposite phase in the alkalis to almost in-phase for Si.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures, 5 tables. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Cool dwarfs in wide multiple systems. Paper 6: A curious quintuple system of a compact Sun-like triple and a close pair of an M dwarf and a very cool white dwarf at a wide separation
The system WDS 16329+0315 is an old, nearby quintuple physical system in the
thick Galactic disc formed by a close-resolved, triple primary of solar
metallicity, namely HD 149162, and a very wide, common proper motion, secondary
pair, formed by the mid-M dwarf G-17-23 and the white dwarf LSPM J1633+0311S.
We present an exhaustive astrometric and photometric data compilation of the
system, including Gaia DR2 parallaxes and proper motions, and the first
analysis of the nature of the faintest component. LSPM J1633+0311S (HD 149162
C) is a very cool white dwarf with an effective temperature of only about 5500
K, near the coolest end of the grid of theoretical models.Comment: The Observatory, in press, to appear in December 201
On the regularity of the covariance matrix of a discretized scalar field on the sphere
We present a comprehensive study of the regularity of the covariance matrix
of a discretized field on the sphere. In a particular situation, the rank of
the matrix depends on the number of pixels, the number of spherical harmonics,
the symmetries of the pixelization scheme and the presence of a mask. Taking
into account the above mentioned components, we provide analytical expressions
that constrain the rank of the matrix. They are obtained by expanding the
determinant of the covariance matrix as a sum of determinants of matrices made
up of spherical harmonics. We investigate these constraints for five different
pixelizations that have been used in the context of Cosmic Microwave Background
(CMB) data analysis: Cube, Icosahedron, Igloo, GLESP and HEALPix, finding that,
at least in the considered cases, the HEALPix pixelization tends to provide a
covariance matrix with a rank closer to the maximum expected theoretical value
than the other pixelizations. The effect of the propagation of numerical errors
in the regularity of the covariance matrix is also studied for different
computational precisions, as well as the effect of adding a certain level of
noise in order to regularize the matrix. In addition, we investigate the
application of the previous results to a particular example that requires the
inversion of the covariance matrix: the estimation of the CMB temperature power
spectrum through the Quadratic Maximum Likelihood algorithm. Finally, some
general considerations in order to achieve a regular covariance matrix are also
presented.Comment: 36 pages, 12 figures; minor changes in the text, matches published
versio
Exploring Vortex Dynamics in the Presence of Dissipation: Analytical and Numerical Results
In this paper, we systematically examine the stability and dynamics of
vortices under the effect of a phenomenological dissipation used as a
simplified model for the inclusion of the effect of finite temperatures in
atomic Bose-Einstein condensates. An advantage of this simplified model is that
it enables an analytical prediction that can be compared directly (and
favorably) to numerical results. We then extend considerations to a case of
considerable recent experimental interest, namely that of a vortex dipole and
observe good agreement between theory and numerical computations in both the
stability properties (eigenvalues of the vortex dipole stationary states) and
the dynamical evolution of such configurations.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, accepted by PR
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