5 research outputs found
Prometheus induced vorticity in Saturn’s F ring
Saturn’s rings are known to show remarkable real time variability in their structure. Many of which can be associated to interactions with nearby moons and moonlets. Possibly the most interesting and dynamic place in the rings, probably in the whole Solar System, is the F ring. A highly disrupted ring with large asymmetries both radially and azimuthally. Numerically non-zero components to the curl of the velocity vector field (vorticity) in the perturbed area of the F ring post encounter are witnessed, significantly above the background vorticity. Within the perturbed area rich distributions of local rotations is seen located in and around the channel edges. The gravitational scattering of ring particles during the encounter causes a significant elevated curl of the vector field above the background F ring vorticity for the first 1–3 orbital periods post encounter. After 3 orbital periods vorticity reverts quite quickly to near background levels. This new found dynamical vortex life of the ring will be of great interest to planet and planetesimals in proto-planetary disks where vortices and turbulence are suspected of having a significant role in their formation and migrations. Additionally, it is found that the immediate channel edges created by the close passage of Prometheus actually show high radial dispersions in the order ~20–50 cm/s, up to a maximum of 1 m/s. This is much greater than the value required by Toomre for a disk to be unstable to the growth of axisymmetric oscillations. However, an area a few hundred km away from the edge shows a more promising location for the growth of coherent objects
A selective control of volatile and non-volatile superconductivity in an insulating copper oxide via ionic liquid gating
Manipulating the superconducting states of high transition temperature (high-Tc) cuprate superconductors in an efficient and reliable way is of great importance for their applications in next generation electronics. Here, employing ionic liquid gating, a selective control of volatile and nonvolatile superconductivity is achieved in pristine insulating Pr2CuO4±δ (PCO) films, based on two distinct mechanisms. Firstly, with positive electric fields, the film can be reversibly switched between superconducting and non-superconducting states, attributed to the carrier doping effect. Secondly, the film becomes more resistive by applying negative bias voltage up to −4 V, but strikingly, a non-volatile superconductivity is achieved once the gate voltage is removed. Such phenomenon represents a distinctive route of manipulating superconductivity in PCO, resulting from the doping healing of oxygen vacancies in copper-oxygen planes as unravelled by high-resolution scanning transmission electron microscope and in situ x-ray diffraction experiments. The effective manipulation of volatile/non-volatile superconductivity in the same parent cuprate brings more functionalities to superconducting electronics, as well as supplies flexible samples for investigating the nature of quantum phase transitions in high-Tc superconductors