7,625 research outputs found
Complex magnetic topology and strong differential rotation on the low-mass T Tauri star V2247 Oph
From observations collected with the ESPaDOnS spectropolarimeter at the
Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, we report the detection of Zeeman signatures on
the low-mass classical TTauri star (cTTS) V2247Oph. Profile distortions and
circular polarisation signatures detected in photospheric lines can be
interpreted as caused by cool spots and magnetic regions at the surface of the
star. The large-scale field is of moderate strength and highly complex;
moreover, both the spot distribution and the magnetic field show significant
variability on a timescale of only one week, as a likely result of strong
differential rotation. Both properties make V2247Oph very different from the
(more massive) prototypical cTTS BPTau; we speculate that this difference
reflects the lower mass of V2247Oph.
During our observations, V2247Oph was in a low-accretion state, with emission
lines showing only weak levels of circular polarisation; we nevertheless find
that excess emission apparently concentrates in a mid-latitude region of strong
radial field, suggesting that it is the footpoint of an accretion funnel.
The weaker and more complex field that we report on V2247Oph may share
similarities with those of very-low-mass late-M dwarfs and potentially explain
why low-mass cTTSs rotate on average faster than intermediate mass ones. These
surprising results need confirmation from new independent data sets on V2247Oph
and other similar low-mass cTTSs.Comment: MNRAS (in press) - 12 pages, 9 figure
Surfaces containing a family of plane curves not forming a fibration
We complete the classification of smooth surfaces swept out by a
1-dimensional family of plane curves that do not form a fibration. As a
consequence, we characterize manifolds swept out by a 1-dimensional family of
hypersurfaces that do not form a fibration.Comment: Author's post-print, final version published online in Collect. Mat
A universal optical all-fiber omnipolarizer
Wherever the polarization properties of a light beam are of concern, polarizers and polarizing beamsplitters (PBS) are indispensable devices in linear-, nonlinear-and quantum-optical schemes. By the very nature of their operation principle, transformation of incoming unpolarized or partially polarized beams through these devices introduces large intensity variations in the fully polarized outcoming beam(s). Such intensity fluctuations are often detrimental, particularly when light is post-processed by nonlinear crystals or other polarization-sensitive optic elements. Here we demonstrate the unexpected capability of light to self-organize its own state-of-polarization, upon propagation in optical fibers, into universal and environmentally robust states, namely right and left circular polarizations. We experimentally validate a novel polarizing device-the Omnipolarizer, which is understood as a nonlinear dual-mode polarizing optical element capable of operating in two modes-as a digital PBS and as an ideal polarizer. Switching between the two modes of operation requires changing beam's intensity
Positive selection and inactivation in the vision and hearing genes of cetaceans.
The transition to an aquatic lifestyle in cetaceans (whales and dolphins) resulted in a radical transformation in their sensory systems. Toothed whales acquired specialized high-frequency hearing tied to the evolution of echolocation, while baleen whales evolved low-frequency hearing. More generally, all cetaceans show adaptations for hearing and seeing underwater. To determine the extent to which these phenotypic changes have been driven by molecular adaptation, we performed large-scale targeted sequence capture of 179 sensory genes across the Cetacea, incorporating up to 54 cetacean species from all major clades as well as their closest relatives, the hippopotamuses. We screened for positive selection in 167 loci related to vision and hearing, and found that the diversification of cetaceans has been accompanied by pervasive molecular adaptations in both sets of genes, including several loci implicated in non-syndromic hearing loss (NSHL). Despite these findings, however, we found no direct evidence of positive selection at the base of odontocetes coinciding with the origin of echolocation, as found in studies examining fewer taxa. By using contingency tables incorporating taxon- and gene-based controls, we show that, while numbers of positively selected hearing and NSHL genes are disproportionately high in cetaceans, counts of vision genes do not differ significantly from expected values. Alongside these adaptive changes, we find increased evidence of pseudogenization of genes involved in cone-mediated vision in mysticetes and deep diving odontocetes
Refined conformal spectra in the dimer model
Working with Lieb's transfer matrix for the dimer model, we point out that
the full set of dimer configurations may be partitioned into disjoint subsets
(sectors) closed under the action of the transfer matrix. These sectors are
labelled by an integer or half-integer quantum number we call the variation
index. In the continuum scaling limit, each sector gives rise to a
representation of the Virasoro algebra. We determine the corresponding
conformal partition functions and their finitizations, and observe an
intriguing link to the Ramond and Neveu-Schwarz sectors of the critical dense
polymer model as described by a conformal field theory with central charge
c=-2.Comment: 44 page
Magnetic topologies of cool stars
Stellar magnetic fields can be investigated using several, very complementary
approaches. While conventional spectroscopy is capable of estimating the
average magnetic strength of potentially complex field configurations thanks to
its low sensitivity to the vector properties of the field, spectropolarimetry
can be used to map the medium- and large-scale structure of magnetic
topologies. In particular, the latter approach allows one to retrieve
information about the poloidal and toroidal components of the large-scale
dynamo fields in low-mass stars, and thus to investigate the physical processes
that produce them. Similarly, this technique can be used to explore how
magnetic fields couple young stars to their massive accretion disc and thus to
estimate how much mass and angular momentum are transfered to the newly-born
low-mass star. We present here the latest results in this field obtained with
spectropolarimetry, with special emphasis on the surprising discoveries
obtained on very-low mass fully-convective stars and classical T Tauri stars
thanks to the ESPaDOnS spectropolarimeter recently installed on the 3.6m
Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope.Comment: 10p invited review paper, 3 figures, to be published in the
proceedings of the 14th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems,
and the Sun, November 6-10, 2006, ed. G. van Belle (ASP Conf Ser
UVMag: stellar formation, evolution, structure and environment with space UV and visible spectropolarimetry
Important insights into the formation, structure, evolution and environment
of all types of stars can be obtained through the measurement of their winds
and possible magnetospheres. However, this has hardly been done up to now
mainly because of the lack of UV instrumentation available for long periods of
time. To reach this aim, we have designed UVMag, an M-size space mission
equipped with a high-resolution spectropolarimeter working in the UV and
visible spectral range. The UV domain is crucial in stellar physics as it is
very rich in atomic and molecular lines and contains most of the flux of hot
stars. Moreover, covering the UV and visible spectral domains at the same time
will allow us to study the star and its environment simultaneously. Adding
polarimetric power to the spectrograph will multiply tenfold the capabilities
of extracting information on stellar magnetospheres, winds, disks, and magnetic
fields. Examples of science objectives that can be reached with UVMag are
presented for pre-main sequence, main sequence and evolved stars. They will
cast new light onto stellar physics by addressing many exciting and important
questions. UVMag is currently undergoing a Research and Technology study and
will be proposed at the forthcoming ESA call for M-size missions. This
spectropolarimeter could also be installed on a large UV and visible
observatory (e.g. NASA's LUVOIR project) within a suite of instruments.Comment: Accepted in ApSS's special volume on UV astronom
Activity and Magnetic Field Structure of the Sun-Like Planet Hosting Star HD 1237
We analyse the magnetic activity characteristics of the planet hosting
Sun-like star, HD 1237, using HARPS spectro-polarimetric time-series data. We
find evidence of rotational modulation of the magnetic longitudinal field
measurements consistent with our ZDI analysis, with a period of 7 days. We
investigate the effect of customising the LSD mask to the line depths of the
observed spectrum and find that it has a minimal effect on shape of the
extracted Stokes V profile but does result in a small increase in the S/N
( 7%). We find that using a Milne-Eddington solution to describe the
local line profile provides a better fit to the LSD profiles in this slowly
rotating star, which also impacts the recovered ZDI field distribution. We also
introduce a fit-stopping criterion based on the information content (entropy)
of the ZDI maps solution set. The recovered magnetic field maps show a strong
(+90 G) ring-like azimuthal field distribution and a complex radial field
dominating at mid latitudes (45 degrees). Similar magnetic field maps are
recovered from data acquired five months apart. Future work will investigate
how this surface magnetic field distribution impacts the coronal magnetic field
and extended environment around this planet-hosting star.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
DeepWalk: Online Learning of Social Representations
We present DeepWalk, a novel approach for learning latent representations of
vertices in a network. These latent representations encode social relations in
a continuous vector space, which is easily exploited by statistical models.
DeepWalk generalizes recent advancements in language modeling and unsupervised
feature learning (or deep learning) from sequences of words to graphs. DeepWalk
uses local information obtained from truncated random walks to learn latent
representations by treating walks as the equivalent of sentences. We
demonstrate DeepWalk's latent representations on several multi-label network
classification tasks for social networks such as BlogCatalog, Flickr, and
YouTube. Our results show that DeepWalk outperforms challenging baselines which
are allowed a global view of the network, especially in the presence of missing
information. DeepWalk's representations can provide scores up to 10%
higher than competing methods when labeled data is sparse. In some experiments,
DeepWalk's representations are able to outperform all baseline methods while
using 60% less training data. DeepWalk is also scalable. It is an online
learning algorithm which builds useful incremental results, and is trivially
parallelizable. These qualities make it suitable for a broad class of real
world applications such as network classification, and anomaly detection.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 4 table
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