5,192 research outputs found
Shocks and a Giant Planet in the Disk Orbiting BP Piscium?
Spitzer IRS spectroscopy supports the interpretation that BP Piscium, a gas
and dust enshrouded star residing at high Galactic latitude, is a first-ascent
giant rather than a classical T Tauri star. Our analysis suggests that BP
Piscium's spectral energy distribution can be modeled as a disk with a gap that
is opened by a giant planet. Modeling the rich mid-infrared emission line
spectrum indicates that the solid-state emitting grains orbiting BP Piscium are
primarily composed of ~75 K crystalline, magnesium-rich olivine; ~75 K
crystalline, magnesium-rich pyroxene; ~200 K amorphous, magnesium-rich
pyroxene; and ~200 K annealed silica ('cristobalite'). These dust grains are
all sub-micron sized. The giant planet and gap model also naturally explains
the location and mineralogy of the small dust grains in the disk. Disk shocks
that result from disk-planet interaction generate the highly crystalline dust
which is subsequently blown out of the disk mid-plane and into the disk
atmosphere.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Accepted to Ap
Warm dust in the terrestrial planet zone of a sun-like Pleiad: collisions between planetary embryos?
Only a few solar-type main sequence stars are known to be orbited by warm
dust particles; the most extreme is the G0 field star BD+20 307 that emits ~4%
of its energy at mid-infrared wavelengths. We report the identification of a
similarly dusty star HD 23514, an F6-type member of the Pleiades cluster. A
strong mid-IR silicate emission feature indicates the presence of small warm
dust particles, but with the primary flux density peak at the non-standard
wavelength of ~9 micron. The existence of so much dust within an AU or so of
these stars is not easily accounted for given the very brief lifetime in orbit
of small particles. The apparent absence of very hot (>~1000 K) dust at both
stars suggests the possible presence of a planet closer to the stars than the
dust. The observed frequency of the BD+20 307/HD 23514 phenomenon indicates
that the mass equivalent of Earth's Moon must be converted, via collisions of
massive bodies, to tiny dust particles that find their way to the terrestrial
planet zone during the first few hundred million years of the life of many
(most?) sun-like stars. Identification of these two dusty systems among
youthful nearby solar-type stars suggests that terrestrial planet formation is
common.Comment: ApJ in press, 19 pages including 3 figures and 2 tables, minor
changes to the tables and figure
NaAlSi: a self-doped semimetallic superconductor with free electrons and covalent holes
The layered ternary sp conductor NaAlSi, possessing the iron-pnictide "111"
crystal structure, superconducts at 7 K. Using density functional methods, we
show that this compound is an intrinsic (self-doped) low-carrier-density
semimetal with a number of unusual features. Covalent Al-Si valence bands
provide the holes, and free-electron-like Al 3s bands, which propagate in the
channel between the neighboring Si layers, dip just below the Fermi level to
create the electron carriers. The Fermi level (and therefore the
superconducting carriers) lies in a narrow and sharp peak within a pseudogap in
the density of states. The small peak arises from valence bands which are
nearly of pure Si, quasi-two-dimensional, flat, and coupled to Al conduction
bands. Isostructural NaAlGe, which is not superconducting above 1.6 K, has
almost exactly the same band structure except for one missing piece of small
Fermi surface. Certain deformation potentials induced by Si and Na
displacements along the c-axis are calculated and discussed. It seems likely
that the mechanism of pairing is related to that of several other lightly doped
two-dimensional nonmagnetic semiconductors (TiNCl, ZrNCl, HfNCl), which is not
well understood but apparently not of phonon origin.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
Characterization of Dusty Debris Disks: the IRAS and Hipparcos Catalogs
Dusty debris disks around main-sequence stars are signposts for the existence
of planetesimals and exoplanets. From cross-correlating \hip stars with the
\iras catalogs, we identify 146 stars within 120 pc of Earth that show excess
emission at 60 \micron. This search took special precautions to avoid false
positives. Our sample is reasonably well distributed from late B to early
K-type stars, but it contains very few later type stars. Even though \iras flew
more than 20 years ago and many astronomers have cross-correlated its catalogs
with stellar catalogs, we were still able to newly identify debris disks at as
many as 33 main-sequence stars; of these, 32 are within 100 pc of Earth. The
power of an all-sky survey satellite like \iras is evident when comparing our
33 new debris disks with the total of only 22 dusty debris disk stars detected
first with the more sensitive, but pointed, satellite \iso. Our investigation
focuses on the mass, dimensions, and evolution of dusty debris disks.Comment: Changes made to table, figures and conclusion (v4); correction made
to Equation 9 (v3); added a paragraph and a reference to Section 3 (v2); ApJ
in pres
Superconducting gap structure of the 115's revisited
Density functional theory calculations of the electronic structure of Ce- and
Pu-based heavy fermion superconductors in the so-called 115 family are
performed. The gap equation is used to consider which superconducting order
parameters are most favorable assuming a pairing interaction that is peaked at
(\pi,\pi,q_z) - the wavevector for the antiferromagnetic ordering found in
close proximity. In addition to the commonly accepted order
parameter, there is evidence that an extended s-wave order parameter with nodes
is also plausible. We discuss whether these results are consistent with current
observations and possible measurements that could help distinguish between
these scenarios.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures; Accepted for publication in JPC
Suppression of mitochondrial respiration through recruitment of p160 myb binding protein to PGC-1α : modulation by p38 MAPK
The transcriptional coactivator PPAR gamma coactivator 1 α (PGC-1α) is a key regulator of metabolic processes such as mitochondrial biogenesis and respiration in muscle and gluconeogenesis in liver. Reduced levels of PGC-1α in humans have been associated with type II diabetes. PGC-1α contains a negative regulatory domain that attenuates its transcriptional activity. This negative regulation is removed by phosphorylation of PGC-1α by p38 MAPK, an important kinase downstream of cytokine signaling in muscle and β-adrenergic signaling in brown fat. We describe here the identification of p160 myb binding protein (p160MBP) as a repressor of PGC-1α. The binding and repression of PGC-1α by p160MBP is disrupted by p38 MAPK phosphorylation of PGC-1α. Adenoviral expression of p160MBP in myoblasts strongly reduces PGC-1α's ability to stimulate mitochondrial respiration and the expression of the genes of the electron transport system. This repression does not require removal of PGC-1α from chromatin, suggesting that p160MBP is or recruits a direct transcriptional suppressor. Overall, these data indicate that p160MBP is a powerful negative regulator of PGC-1α function and provide a molecular mechanism for the activation of PGC-1α by p38 MAPK. The discovery of p160MBP as a PGC-1α regulator has important implications for the understanding of energy balance and diabetes
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