5,868 research outputs found
Cool White Dwarfs Found in the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey
We present the results of a search for cool white dwarfs in the United
Kingdom InfraRed Telescope (UKIRT) Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) Large Area
Survey (LAS). The UKIDSS LAS photometry was paired with the Sloan Digital Sky
Survey (SDSS) to identify cool hydrogen-rich white dwarf candidates by their
neutral optical colors and blue near-infrared colors, as well as faint Reduced
Proper Motion magnitudes. Optical spectroscopy was obtained at Gemini
Observatory, and showed the majority of the candidates to be newly identified
cool degenerates, with a small number of G- to K-type (sub)dwarf contaminants.
Our initial search of 280 deg2 of sky resulted in seven new white dwarfs with
effective temperature T_eff ~ 6000 K. The current followup of 1400 deg2 of sky
has produced thirteen new white dwarfs. Model fits to the photometry show that
seven of the newly identified white dwarfs have 4120 K <= T_eff <= 4480 K, and
cooling ages between 7.3 Gyr and 8.7 Gyr; they have 40 km/s <= v_tan <= 85 km/s
and are likely to be thick disk 10-11 Gyr-old objects. The other half of the
sample has 4610 K <= T_eff <= 5260 K, cooling ages between 4.3 Gyr and 6.9 Gyr,
and 60 km/s <= v_tan <= 100 km/s. These are either thin disk remnants with
unusually high velocities, or lower-mass remnants of thick disk or halo late-F
or G stars.Comment: To appear in ApJ, accepted April 18 2011. 34 pages include 11 Figures
and 5 Table
Characteristics of oxygen isotope substitutions in the quasiparticle spectrum of BiSrCaCuO
There is an ongoing debate about the nature of the bosonic excitations
responsible for the quasiparticle self energy in high temperature
superconductors -- are they phonons or spin fluctuations? We present a careful
analysis of the bosonic excitations as revealed by the `kink' feature at 70 meV
in angle resolved photoemission data using Eliashberg theory for a d-wave
superconductor. Starting from the assumption that nodal quasiparticles are not
coupled to the magnetic resonance, the sharp structure at meV
can be assigned to phonons. We find that not only can we account for the shifts
of the kink energy seen on oxygen isotope substitution but also get a
quantitative estimate of the fraction of the area under the electron-boson
spectral density which is due to phonons. We conclude that for optimally doped
BiSrCaCuO phonons contribute % and
non-phononic excitations %.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Mott physics and first-order transition between two metals in the normal state phase diagram of the two-dimensional Hubbard model
For doped two-dimensional Mott insulators in their normal state, the
challenge is to understand the evolution from a conventional metal at high
doping to a strongly correlated metal near the Mott insulator at zero doping.
To this end, we solve the cellular dynamical mean-field equations for the
two-dimensional Hubbard model using a plaquette as the reference quantum
impurity model and continuous-time quantum Monte Carlo method as impurity
solver. The normal-state phase diagram as a function of interaction strength
, temperature , and filling shows that, upon increasing towards
the Mott insulator, there is a surface of first-order transition between two
metals at nonzero doping. That surface ends at a finite temperature critical
line originating at the half-filled Mott critical point. Associated with this
transition, there is a maximum in scattering rate as well as thermodynamic
signatures. These findings suggest a new scenario for the normal-state phase
diagram of the high temperature superconductors. The criticality surmised in
these systems can originate not from a T=0 quantum critical point, nor from the
proximity of a long-range ordered phase, but from a low temperature transition
between two types of metals at finite doping. The influence of Mott physics
therefore extends well beyond half-filling.Comment: 27 pages, 16 figures, LaTeX, published versio
Magnetic and pair correlations of the Hubbard model with next-nearest-neighbor hopping
A combination of analytical approaches and quantum Monte Carlo simulations is
used to study both magnetic and pairing correlations for a version of the
Hubbard model that includes second-neighbor hopping as a
model for high-temperature superconductors. Magnetic properties are analyzed
using the Two-Particle Self-Consistent approach. The maximum in magnetic
susceptibility as a function of doping appears both at finite
and at but for two totally different physical reasons. When
, it is induced by antiferromagnetic correlations while at
it is a band structure effect amplified by interactions.
Finally, pairing fluctuations are compared with -matrix results to
disentangle the effects of van Hove singularity and of nesting on
superconducting correlations. The addition of antiferromagnetic fluctuations
increases slightly the -wave superconducting correlations despite the
presence of a van Hove singularity which tends to decrease them in the
repulsive model. Some aspects of the phase diagram and some subtleties of
finite-size scaling in Monte Carlo simulations, such as inverted finite-size
dependence, are also discussed.Comment: Revtex, 8 pages + 15 uuencoded postcript figure
Complete genome sequence of a Staphylococcus epidermidis bacteriophage isolated from the anterior nares of humans
We report here the complete genome sequence of a virulent Staphylococcus epidermidis siphophage, phage 6ec, isolated from the
anterior nares of a human. This viral genome is 93,794 bp in length, with a 3' overhang cos site of 10 nucleotides, and it codes for
142 putative open reading frames
A Quantitative Analysis of the Available Multicolor Photometry for Rapidly Pulsating Hot B Subdwarfs
We present a quantitative and homogeneous analysis of the broadband
multicolor photometric data sets gathered so far on rapidly pulsating hot B
subdwarf stars. This concerns seven distinct data sets related to six different
stars. Our analysis is carried out within the theoretical framework developed
by Randall et al., which includes full nonadiabatic effects. The goal of this
analysis is partial mode identification, i.e., the determination of the degree
index l of each of the observed pulsation modes. We assume possible values of l
from 0 to 5 in our calculations. For each target star, we compute a specific
model atmosphere and a specific pulsation model using estimates of the
atmospheric parameters coming from time-averaged optical spectroscopy. For
every assumed value of l, we use a formal chi-squared approach to model the
observed amplitude-wavelength distribution of each mode, and we compute a
quality-of-fit Q probability to quantify the derived fit and to discriminate
objectively between the various solutions. We find that no completely
convincing and unambiguous l identification is possible on the basis of the
available data, although partial mode discrimination has been reached for 25
out of the 41 modes studied. A brief statistical study of these results
suggests that a majority of the modes must have l values of 0, 1, and 2, but
also that modes with l = 4 could very well be present while modes with l = 3
appear to be rarer. This is in line with recent results showing that l = 4
modes in rapidly pulsating B subdwarfs have a higher visibility in the optical
domain than modes with l = 3. Although somewhat disappointing in terms of mode
discrimination, our results still suggest that the full potential of multicolor
photometry for l identification in pulsating subdwarfs is within reach.Comment: 59 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal Supplement Serie
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