1,864 research outputs found
Variational bounds for the shear viscosity of gelling melts
We study shear stress relaxation for a gelling melt of randomly crosslinked,
interacting monomers. We derive a lower bound for the static shear viscosity
, which implies that it diverges algebraically with a critical exponent
. Here, and are the critical exponents of
percolation theory for the correlation length and the gel fraction. In
particular, the divergence is stronger than in the Rouse model, proving the
relevance of excluded-volume interactions for the dynamic critical behaviour at
the gel transition. Precisely at the critical point, our exact results imply a
Mark-Houwink relation for the shear viscosity of isolated clusters of fixed
size.Comment: 5 pages; CHANGES: typos corrected, some references added; version as
publishe
The Isaacson expansion in quantum cosmology
This paper is an application of the ideas of the Born-Oppenheimer (or
slow/fast) approximation in molecular physics and of the Isaacson (or
short-wave) approximation in classical gravity to the canonical quantization of
a perturbed minisuperspace model of the kind examined by Halliwell and Hawking.
Its aim is the clarification of the role of the semiclassical approximation and
the backreaction in such a model. Approximate solutions of the quantum model
are constructed which are not semiclassical, and semiclassical solutions in
which the quantum perturbations are highly excited.Comment: Revtex, 11 journal or 24 preprint pages. REPLACEMENT: A comment on
previous work by Dowker and Laflamme is corrected. Utah preprint
UU-REL-93/3/1
HAT-P-26b: A Low-Density Neptune-Mass Planet Transiting a K Star
We report the discovery of HAT-P-26b, a transiting extrasolar planet orbiting
the moderately bright V=11.744 K1 dwarf star GSC 0320-01027, with a period P =
4.234516 +- 0.000015 d, transit epoch Tc = 2455304.65122 +- 0.00035 (BJD), and
transit duration 0.1023 +- 0.0010 d. The host star has a mass of 0.82 +- 0.03
Msun, radius of 0.79 + 0.10 - 0.04 Rsun, effective temperature 5079 +- 88 K,
and metallicity [Fe/H] = -0.04 +- 0.08. The planetary companion has a mass of
0.059 +- 0.007 MJ, and radius of 0.565 + 0.072 - 0.032 RJ yielding a mean
density of 0.40 +- 0.10 g cm-3. HAT-P-26b is the fourth Neptune-mass transiting
planet discovered to date. It has a mass that is comparable to those of Neptune
and Uranus, and slightly smaller than those of the other transiting
Super-Neptunes, but a radius that is ~65% larger than those of Neptune and
Uranus, and also larger than those of the other transiting Super-Neptunes.
HAT-P-26b is consistent with theoretical models of an irradiated Neptune-mass
planet with a 10 Mearth heavy element core that comprises >~ 50% of its mass
with the remainder contained in a significant hydrogen-helium envelope, though
the exact composition is uncertain as there are significant differences between
various theoretical models at the Neptune-mass regime. The equatorial
declination of the star makes it easily accessible to both Northern and
Southern ground-based facilities for follow-up observations.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, 5 tables, submitted to Ap
The Quantum Gravitationally Induced Stress Tensor
We derive non-perturbative relations between the expectation value of the
invariant element in a homogeneous and isotropic state and the quantum
gravitationally induced pressure and energy density. By exploiting previously
obtained bounds for the maximum possible growth of perturbative corrections to
a locally de Sitter background we show that the two loop result dominates all
higher orders. We also show that the quantum gravitational slowing of inflation
becomes non-perturbatively strong earlier than previously expected.Comment: 13 pages, LaTeX 2 epsilo
The Jupiter Twin HD 154345b
We announce the discovery of a twin of Jupiter orbiting the slightly
metal-poor ([Fe/H] = -0.1) nearby (d = 18 pc) G8 dwarf HD 154345. This planet
has a minimum mass of 0.95 Jupiter masses and a 9.2 year, circular orbit with
radius 4.2 AU. There is currently little or no evidence for other planets in
the system, but smaller or exterior planets cannot yet be ruled out. We also
detect a ~ 9-year activity cycle in this star photometrically and in
chromospheric emission. We rule out activity cycles as the source of the radial
velocity variations by comparison with other cycling late-G dwarfs.Comment: 15pp. ApJL. v2: Substantial additions, including 3 new authors, new
photometry, activity measurements, and a discussion of activity cycle
HAT-P-57b: A Short-Period Giant Planet Transiting A Bright Rapidly Rotating A8V Star Confirmed Via Doppler Tomography
We present the discovery of HAT-P-57b, a P = 2.4653 day transiting planet
around a V = 10.465 +- 0.029 mag, Teff = 7500 +- 250 K main sequence A8V star
with a projected rotation velocity of v sin i = 102.1 +- 1.3 km s^-1. We
measure the radius of the planet to be R = 1.413 +- 0.054 R_J and, based on RV
observations, place a 95% confidence upper limit on its mass of M < 1.85 M_J .
Based on theoretical stellar evolution models, the host star has a mass and
radius of 1.47 +- 0.12 M_sun, and 1.500 +- 0.050 R_sun, respectively.
Spectroscopic observations made with Keck-I/HIRES during a partial transit
event show the Doppler shadow of HAT-P-57b moving across the average spectral
line profile of HAT-P- 57, confirming the object as a planetary system. We use
these observations, together with analytic formulae that we derive for the line
profile distortions, to determine the projected angle between the spin axis of
HAT-P-57 and the orbital axis of HAT-P-57b. The data permit two possible
solutions, with -16.7 deg < lambda < 3.3 deg or 27.6 deg < lambda < 57.4 deg at
95% confidence, and with relative probabilities for the two modes of 26% and
74%, respectively. Adaptive optics imaging with MMT/Clio2 reveals an object
located 2.7" from HAT-P-57 consisting of two point sources separated in turn
from each other by 0.22". The H and L -band magnitudes of the companion stars
are consistent with their being physically associated with HAT-P-57, in which
case they are stars of mass 0.61 +- 0.10 M_sun and 0.53 +- 0.08 M_sun. HAT-P-57
is the most rapidly rotating star, and only the fourth main sequence A star,
known to host a transiting planet.Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in A
HATS-15 b and HATS-16 b: Two massive planets transiting old G dwarf stars
We report the discovery of HATS-15 b and HATS-16 b, two massive transiting
extrasolar planets orbiting evolved ( Gyr) main-sequence stars. The
planet HATS-15 b, which is hosted by a G9V star ( mag), is a hot
Jupiter with mass of and radius of
, and completes its orbit in nearly 1.7 days.
HATS-16 b is a very massive hot Jupiter with mass of and radius of ; it orbits around
its G3 V parent star ( mag) in days. HATS-16 is slightly
active and shows a periodic photometric modulation, implying a rotational
period of 12 days which is unexpectedly short given its isochronal age. This
fast rotation might be the result of the tidal interaction between the star and
its planet.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, submitted to PAS
Gravitational Optics: Self-phase modulation and harmonic cascades
Nonlinear wave interaction of low amplitude gravitational waves in flat
space-time is considered. Analogy with optics is established. It is shown that
the flat metric space-time is equivalent to a centro-symmetric optical medium,
with no second order susceptibility. The lowest order nonlinear effects are
those due to the third order nonlinearity and include self-phase modulation and
high harmonic generation. These processes lead to an efficient energy dilution
of the gravitational wave energy over an increasingly large spectral range.Comment: 12 pages, REVTEX
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