669 research outputs found
Wide binaries as a critical test for Gravity theories
Assuming Newton's gravity and GR to be valid at all scales leads to the dark
matter hypothesis as a requirement demanded by the observed dynamics and
measured baryonic content at galactic and extragalactic scales. Alternatively,
modified gravity scenarios where a change of regime appears at acceleration
scales have been proposed. This modified regime at will
generically be characterised by equilibrium velocities which become independent
of distance. Here we identify a critical test in this debate and we propose its
application to samples of wide binary stars. Since for systems
the acceleration drops below at scales of around 7000 AU, a statistical
survey of wide binaries with relative velocities and separations reaching
AU and beyond should prove useful to the above debate. We apply the
proposed test to the best currently available data. Results show a constant
upper limit to the relative velocities in wide binaries which is independent of
separation for over three orders of magnitude, in analogy with galactic flat
rotation curves in the same acceleration regime. Our results are
suggestive of a breakdown of Kepler's third law beyond
scales, in accordance with generic predictions of modified gravity theories
designed not to require any dark matter at galactic scales and beyond.Comment: 4 pages 1 figure, Proceedings of the COSGRAV12 meeting, Kolkata,
India, 7th - 11th February, 201
Periodic Accretion From A Circumbinary Disk In The Young Binary UZ Tau E
Close pre-main-sequence binary stars are expected to clear central holes in their protoplanetary disks, but the extent to which material can flow from the circumbinary disk across the gap onto the individual circumstellar disks has been unclear. In binaries with eccentric orbits, periodic perturbation of the outer disk is predicted to induce mass flow across the gap, resulting in accretion that varies with the binary period. This accretion may manifest itself observationally as periodic changes in luminosity. Here we present a search for such periodic accretion in the pre-main-sequence spectroscopic binary UZ Tau E. We present BVRI photometry spanning 3 years; we find that the brightness of UZ Tau E is clearly periodic, with a best-fit period of 19.16 +/- 0.04 days. This is consistent with the spectroscopic binary period of 19.13 days, refined here from analysis of new and existing radial velocity data. The brightness of UZ Tau E shows significant random variability, but the overall periodic pattern is a broad peak in enhanced brightness, spanning more than half the binary orbital period. The variability of the H alpha line is not as clearly periodic, but given the sparseness of the data, some periodic component is not ruled out. The photometric variations are in good agreement with predictions from simulations of binaries with orbital parameters similar to those of UZ Tau E, suggesting that periodic accretion does occur from circumbinary disks, replenishing the inner circumstellar disks and possibly extending the timescale over which they might form planets
Advances of Peripheral Nerve Repair Techniques to Improve Hand Function: A Systematic Review of Literature
Concepts of neuronal damage and repair date back to ancient times. The research in this topic has been growing ever since and numerous nerve repair techniques have evolved throughout the years. Due to our greater understanding of nerve injuries and repair we now distinguish between central and peripheral nervous system. In this review, we have chosen to concentrate on peripheral nerve injuries and in particular those involving the hand. There are no reviews bringing together and summarizing the latest research evidence concerning the most up-to-date techniques used to improve hand function. Therefore, by identifying and evaluating all the published literature in this field, we have summarized all the available information about the advances in peripheral nerve techniques used to improve hand function. The most important ones are the use of resorbable poly[(R)-3-hydroxybutyrate] (PHB), epineural end-to-end suturing, graft repair, nerve transfer, side to side neurorrhaphy and end to side neurorrhaphy between median, radial and ulnar nerves, nerve transplant, nerve repair, external neurolysis and epineural sutures, adjacent neurotization without nerve suturing, Agee endoscopic operation, tourniquet induced anesthesia, toe transfer and meticulous intrinsic repair, free auto nerve grafting, use of distal based neurocutaneous flaps and tubulization. At the same time we found that the patient’s age, tension of repair, time of repair, level of injury and scar formation following surgery affect the prognosis. Despite the thorough findings of this systematic review we suggest that further research in this field is needed
The High-Order-Multiplicity of Unusually Wide M-dwarf Binaries: Eleven New Triple and Quadruple Systems
M-dwarfs in extremely wide binary systems are very rare, and may thus have
different formation processes from those found as single stars or close
binaries in the field. In this paper we search for close companions to a new
sample of 36 extremely wide M-dwarf binaries, covering a spectral type range of
M1 to M5 and a separation range of 600 - 6500 AU. We discover 10 new triple
systems and one new quadruple system. We carefully account for selection
effects including proper motion, magnitude limits, the detection of close
binaries in the SDSS, and other sample biases. The bias-corrected total
high-order-multiple fraction is 45% (+18%/-16%) and the bias-corrected
incidence of quadruple systems is < 5%, both statistically compatible with that
found for the more common close M-dwarf multiple systems. Almost all the
detected companions have similar masses to their primaries, although two very
low mass companions, including a candidate brown dwarf, are found at relatively
large separations. We find that the close-binary separation distribution is
strongly peaked towards < 30AU separations. There is marginally significant
evidence for a change in high-order M-dwarf multiplicity with binding energy
and total mass. We also find 2-sigma evidence of an unexpected increased
high-order-multiple fraction for the widest targets in our survey, with a
high-order-multiple fraction of 21% (+17%/-7%) for systems with separations up
to 2000AU, compared to 77% (+9%/-22%) for systems with separations > 4000AU.
These results suggest that the very widest M-dwarf binary systems need higher
masses to form or to survive.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
The evolution of antiferromagnetic susceptibility to uniaxial pressure in Ba(Fe{1-x}Co{x})2As2
Neutron diffraction measurements are presented measuring the responses of
both magnetic and structural order parameters of parent and lightly Co-doped
Ba(Fe{1-x}Co{x})2As2 under the application of uniaxial pressure. We find that
the uniaxial pressure induces a thermal shift in the onset of antiferromagnetic
order that grows as a percentage of T_N as Co-doping is increased and the
superconducting phase is approached. Additionally, as uniaxial pressure is
increased within parent and lightly-doped Ba(Fe{1-x}Co{x})2As2 on the first
order side of the tricritical point, we observe a decoupling between the onsets
of the orthorhombic structural distortion and antiferromagnetism. Our findings
place needed constraints on models exploring the nematic susceptibility of the
bilayer pnictides in the tetragonal, paramagnetic regime.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Neutron scattering study of magnetic phase separation in nanocrystalline LaCaMnO
We demonstrate that magnetic phase separation and competing spin order in the
colossal magnetoresistive (CMR) manganites can be directly explored via tuning
strain in bulk samples of nanocrystalline LaCaMnO. Our results
show that strain can be reversibly frozen into the lattice in order to
stabilize coexisting antiferromagnetic domains within the nominally
ferromagnetic metallic state of LaCaMnO. The measurement of
tunable phase separation via magnetic neutron powder diffraction presents a
direct route of exploring the correlated spin properties of phase separated
charge/magnetic order in highly strained CMR materials and opens a potential
avenue for realizing intergrain spin tunnel junction networks with enhanced CMR
behavior in a chemically homogeneous material.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. New figure and text added to manuscrip
Magnetic order and the electronic ground state in the pyrochlore iridate Nd2Ir2O7
We report a combined muon spin relaxation/rotation, bulk magnetization,
neutron scattering, and transport study of the electronic properties of the
pyrochlore iridate Nd2Ir2O7. We observe the onset of strongly hysteretic
behavior in the temperature dependent magnetization below 120 K, and an abrupt
increase in the temperature dependent resistivity below 8 K. Zero field muon
spin relaxation measurements show that the hysteretic magnetization is driven
by a transition to a magnetically disordered state, and that below 8 K a
complex magnetically ordered ground state sets in, as evidenced by the onset of
heavily damped spontaneous muon precession. Our measurements point toward the
absence of a true metal-to-insulator phase transition in this material and
suggest that Nd2Ir2O7 lies either within or on the metallic side of the
boundary of the Dirac semimetal regime within its topological phase diagram.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figure
Few-Body Dynamics Underlying Postcollision Effects in the Ionization of Hâ‚‚ by 75-KeV Proton Impact
We have measured fully differential cross sections (FDCS) for ionization in 75-keVp+H2 collisions for ejected electron speeds close to the projectile speed. The data were analyzed in dependence on both the electron emission angle and the projectile scattering angle. Pronounced postcollisional effects between the projectile and the ejected electrons were observed. Significant differences between experiment and theory and between two conceptually very similar theoretical models were found. This shows that in the region of electron-projectile velocity-matching the FDCS is very sensitive to the details of the underlying few-body dynamics
Spin ordering and electronic texture in the bilayer iridate SrIrO
Through a neutron scattering, charge transport, and magnetization study, the
correlated ground state in the bilayer iridium oxide SrIrO is
explored. Our combined results resolve scattering consistent with a high
temperature magnetic phase that persists above 600 K, reorients at the
previously defined K, and coexists with an electronic ground state
whose phase behavior suggests the formation of a fluctuating charge or orbital
phase that freezes below K. Our study provides a window into
the emergence of multiple electronic order parameters near the boundary of the
metal to insulator phase transition of the 5d Mott phase.Comment: Revised text and figures. 4 pages, 4 figure
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