32,335 research outputs found
Inflows towards active regions and the modulation of the solar cycle: a parameter study
Aims: We aim to investigate how converging flows towards active regions
affect the surface transport of magnetic flux, as well as their impact on the
generation of the Sun's poloidal field. The inflows constitute a potential
non-linear mechanism for the saturation of the global dynamo and may contribute
to the modulation of the solar cycle in the Babcock-Leighton framework.
Methods: We build a surface flux transport code incorporating a parametrized
model of the inflows and run simulations spanning several cycles. We carry out
a parameter study to assess how the strength and extension of the inflows
affect the build-up of the global dipole field. We also perform simulations
with different levels of activity to investigate the potential role of the
inflows in the saturation of the global dynamo.
Results: We find that the interaction of neighbouring active regions can lead
to the occasional formation of single-polarity magnetic flux clumps
inconsistent with observations. We propose the darkening caused by pores in
areas of high magnetic field strength as a plausible mechanism preventing this
flux-clumping. We find that inflows decrease the amplitude of the axial dipole
moment by a , relative to a no-inflows scenario. Stronger (weaker)
inflows lead to larger (smaller) reductions of the axial dipole moment. The
relative amplitude of the generated axial dipole is about larger after
very weak cycles than after very strong cycles. This supports the inflows as a
non-linear mechanism capable of saturating the global dynamo and contributing
to the modulation of the solar cycle within the Babcock-Leighton framework
Surface flux transport simulations: Effect of inflows toward active regions and random velocities on the evolution of the Sun's large-scale magnetic field
Aims: We aim to determine the effect of converging flows on the evolution of
a bipolar magnetic region (BMR), and to investigate the role of these inflows
in the generation of poloidal flux. We also discuss whether the flux dispersal
due to turbulent flows can be described as a diffusion process.
Methods: We developed a simple surface flux transport model based on
point-like magnetic concentrations. We tracked the tilt angle, the magnetic
flux and the axial dipole moment of a BMR in simulations with and without
inflows and compared the results. To test the diffusion approximation,
simulations of random walk dispersal of magnetic features were compared against
the predictions of the diffusion treatment.
Results: We confirm the validity of the diffusion approximation to describe
flux dispersal on large scales. We find that the inflows enhance flux
cancellation, but at the same time affect the latitudinal separation of the
polarities of the bipolar region. In most cases the latitudinal separation is
limited by the inflows, resulting in a reduction of the axial dipole moment of
the BMR. However, when the initial tilt angle of the BMR is small, the inflows
produce an increase in latitudinal separation that leads to an increase in the
axial dipole moment in spite of the enhanced flux destruction. This can give
rise to a tilt of the BMR even when the BMR was originally aligned parallel to
the equator
Planets Transiting Non-Eclipsing Binaries
The majority of binary stars do not eclipse. Current searches for transiting
circumbinary planets concentrate on eclipsing binaries, and are therefore
restricted to a small fraction of potential hosts. We investigate the concept
of finding planets transiting non-eclipsing binaries, whose geometry would
require mutually inclined planes. Using an N-body code we explore how the
number and sequence of transits vary as functions of observing time and orbital
parameters. The concept is then generalised thanks to a suite of simulated
circumbinary systems. Binaries are constructed from RV surveys of the solar
neighbourhood. They are then populated with orbiting gas giants, drawn from a
range of distributions. The binary population is shown to be compatible with
the Kepler eclipsing binary catalogue, indicating that the properties of
binaries may be as universal as the initial mass function. These synthetic
systems produce transiting circumbinary planets occurring on both eclipsing and
non-eclipsing binaries. Simulated planets transiting eclipsing binaries are
compared with published Kepler detections. We obtain 1) that planets transiting
non-eclipsing binaries probably exist in the Kepler data, 2) that observational
biases alone cannot account for the observed over-density of circumbinary
planets near the stability limit, implying a physical pile-up, and 3) that the
distributions of gas giants orbiting single and binary stars are likely
different. Estimating the frequency of circumbinary planets is degenerate with
the spread in mutual inclination. Only a minimum occurrence rate can be
produced, which we find to be compatible with 9%. Searching for inclined
circumbinary planets may significantly increase the population of known objects
and will test our conclusions. Their existence, or absence, will reveal the
true occurrence rate and help develop circumbinary planet formation theories.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, accepted August 2014 to A&A, minor changes to
previous arXiv versio
Quantum phase transition in capacitively coupled double quantum dots
We investigate two equivalent, capacitively coupled semiconducting quantum
dots, each coupled to its own lead, in a regime where there are two electrons
on the double dot. With increasing interdot coupling a rich range of behavior
is uncovered: first a crossover from spin- to charge-Kondo physics, via an
intermediate SU(4) state with entangled spin and charge degrees of freedom;
followed by a quantum phase transition of Kosterlitz-Thouless type to a
non-Fermi liquid `charge-ordered' phase with finite residual entropy and
anomalous transport properties. Physical arguments and numerical
renormalization group methods are employed to obtain a detailed understanding
of the problem.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Nonlinear response of quantum cascade structures
The gain spectrum of a terahertz quantum cascade laser is analysed by a non
equilibrium Green's functions approach. Higher harmonics of the response
function were retrievable, providing a way to approach nonlinear phenomena in
quantum cascade lasers theoretically. Gain is simulated under operation
conditions and results are presented both for linear response and strong laser
fields. An iterative way of reconstructing the field strength inside the laser
cavity at lasing conditions is described using a measured value of the level of
the losses of the studied system. Comparison with recent experimental data from
time-domain-spectroscopy indicates that the experimental situation is beyond
linear response.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures included in text, to appear in Applied Physics
Letter
- …