50,810 research outputs found
Magnetohydrodynamic Simulations of the Atmosphere of HD 209458b
We present the first three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations
of the atmosphere of HD 209458b which self-consistently include reduction of
winds due to the Lorentz force and Ohmic heating. We find overall wind
structures similar to that seen in previous models of hot Jupiter atmospheres,
with strong equatorial jets and meridional flows poleward near the day side and
equatorward near the night side. Inclusion of magnetic fields slows those winds
and leads to Ohmic dissipation. We find wind slowing ranging from 10%-40% for
reasonable field strengths. We find Ohmic dissipation rates ~10^17 W at 100
bar, orders of magnitude too small to explain the inflated radius of this
planet. Faster wind speeds, not achievable in these anelastic calculations, may
be able to increase this value somewhat, but likely will not be able to close
the gap necessary to explain the inflated radius. We demonstrate that the
discrepancy between the simulations presented here and previous models is due
to inadequate treatment of magnetic field geometry and evolution. Induced
poloidal fields become much larger than those imposed, highlighting the need
for a self-consistent MHD treatment of these hot atmospheres.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted at ApJ
Transit Light Curves with Finite Integration Time: Fisher Information Analysis
Kepler has revolutionized the study of transiting planets with its
unprecedented photometric precision on more than 150,000 target stars. Most of
the transiting planet candidates detected by Kepler have been observed as
long-cadence targets with 30 minute integration times, and the upcoming
Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) will record full frame images with
a similar integration time. Integrations of 30 minutes affect the transit
shape, particularly for small planets and in cases of low signal-to-noise.
Using the Fisher information matrix technique, we derive analytic
approximations for the variances and covariances on the transit parameters
obtained from fitting light curve photometry collected with a finite
integration time. We find that binning the light curve can significantly
increase the uncertainties and covariances on the inferred parameters when
comparing scenarios with constant total signal-to-noise (constant total
integration time in the absence of read noise). Uncertainties on the transit
ingress/egress time increase by a factor of 34 for Earth-size planets and 3.4
for Jupiter-size planets around Sun-like stars for integration times of 30
minutes compared to instantaneously-sampled light curves. Similarly,
uncertainties on the mid-transit time for Earth and Jupiter-size planets
increase by factors of 3.9 and 1.4. Uncertainties on the transit depth are
largely unaffected by finite integration times. While correlations among the
transit depth, ingress duration, and transit duration all increase in magnitude
with longer integration times, the mid-transit time remains uncorrelated with
the other parameters. We provide code in Python and Mathematica for predicting
the variances and covariances at www.its.caltech.edu/~eprice
Gauge fixing and equivariant cohomology
The supersymmetric model developed by Witten to study the equivariant
cohomology of a manifold with an isometric circle action is derived from the
BRST quantization of a simple classical model. The gauge-fixing process is
carefully analysed, and demonstrates that different choices of gauge-fixing
fermion can lead to different quantum theories.Comment: 18 pages LaTe
BRST Extension of Geometric Quantization
Consider a physical system for which a mathematically rigorous geometric
quantization procedure exists. Now subject the system to a finite set of
irreducible first class (bosonic) constraints. It is shown that there is a
mathematically rigorous BRST quantization of the constrained system whose
cohomology at ghost number zero recovers the constrained quantum states.
Moreover this space of constrained states has a well-defined Hilbert space
structure inherited from that of the original system. Treatments of these ideas
in the Physics literature are more general but suffer from having states with
infinite or zero "norms" and thus are not admissible as states. Also the BRST
operator for many systems require regularization to be well-defined. In our
more restricted context we show that our treatment does not suffer from any of
these difficulties. This work was submitted for publication March 21,2006
Innovative concepts for aerodynamic control of wind turbine rotors
New systems for the aerodynamic control of wind turbine rotors are being studied in various projects funded by the UK Department of Energy. Results from a current project, ongoing at the National Wind Turbine Test Centre (NWTC) in Scotland are presented. These systems show the promise of much cheaper and more affective active control of horizontal axis wind turbines than has been achieved with full span and partial span pitching systems
Does environment affect the star formation histories of early-type galaxies?
Differences in the stellar populations of galaxies can be used to quantify
the effect of environment on the star formation history. We target a sample of
early-type galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey in two different
environmental regimes: close pairs and a general sample where environment is
measured by the mass of their host dark matter halo. We apply a blind source
separation technique based on principal component analysis, from which we
define two parameters that correlate, respectively, with the average stellar
age (eta) and with the presence of recent star formation (zeta) from the
spectral energy distribution of the galaxy. We find that environment leaves a
second order imprint on the spectra, whereas local properties - such as
internal velocity dispersion - obey a much stronger correlation with the
stellar age distribution.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Proceedings of JENAM 2010, Symposium 2:
"Environment and the formation of galaxies: 30 years later
Old and New Fields on Super Riemann Surfaces
The ``new fields" or ``superconformal functions" on super Riemann
surfaces introduced recently by Rogers and Langer are shown to coincide with
the Abelian differentials (plus constants), viewed as a subset of the functions
on the associated super Riemann surface. We confirm that, as originally
defined, they do not form a super vector space.Comment: 9 pages, LaTex. Published version: minor changes for clarity, two new
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