22,260 research outputs found
Planets Transiting Non-Eclipsing Binaries
The majority of binary stars do not eclipse. Current searches for transiting
circumbinary planets concentrate on eclipsing binaries, and are therefore
restricted to a small fraction of potential hosts. We investigate the concept
of finding planets transiting non-eclipsing binaries, whose geometry would
require mutually inclined planes. Using an N-body code we explore how the
number and sequence of transits vary as functions of observing time and orbital
parameters. The concept is then generalised thanks to a suite of simulated
circumbinary systems. Binaries are constructed from RV surveys of the solar
neighbourhood. They are then populated with orbiting gas giants, drawn from a
range of distributions. The binary population is shown to be compatible with
the Kepler eclipsing binary catalogue, indicating that the properties of
binaries may be as universal as the initial mass function. These synthetic
systems produce transiting circumbinary planets occurring on both eclipsing and
non-eclipsing binaries. Simulated planets transiting eclipsing binaries are
compared with published Kepler detections. We obtain 1) that planets transiting
non-eclipsing binaries probably exist in the Kepler data, 2) that observational
biases alone cannot account for the observed over-density of circumbinary
planets near the stability limit, implying a physical pile-up, and 3) that the
distributions of gas giants orbiting single and binary stars are likely
different. Estimating the frequency of circumbinary planets is degenerate with
the spread in mutual inclination. Only a minimum occurrence rate can be
produced, which we find to be compatible with 9%. Searching for inclined
circumbinary planets may significantly increase the population of known objects
and will test our conclusions. Their existence, or absence, will reveal the
true occurrence rate and help develop circumbinary planet formation theories.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, accepted August 2014 to A&A, minor changes to
previous arXiv versio
Detecting Circumbinary Exoplanets: Understanding Transit Timing
We have derived and tested a simple analytical model for placing limits on the transit timing variations of circumbinary exoplanets. These are generally of days in magnitude, dwarfing those found in multi-planet systems. The derived method is fast, efficient and is accurate to approximately 1% in predicting limits on the possible times of transits over a 3-year campaig
Dark Matter Constraints from the Sagittarius Dwarf and Tail System
2MASS has provided a three-dimensional map of the >360 degree, wrapped tidal
tails of the Sagittarius (Sgr) dwarf spheroidal galaxy, as traced by M giant
stars. With the inclusion of radial velocity data for stars along these tails,
strong constraints exist for dynamical models of the Milky Way-Sgr interaction.
N-body simulations of Sgr disruption with model parameters spanning a range of
initial conditions (e.g., Sgr mass and orbit, Galactic rotation curve, halo
flattening) are used to find parameterizations that match almost every extant
observational constraint of the Sgr system. We discuss the implications of the
Sgr data and models for the orbit, mass and M/L of the Sgr bound core as well
as the strength, flattening, and lumpiness of the Milky Way potential.Comment: 6 pages, 0 figures. Contribution to proceedings of ``IAU Symposium
220: Dark Matter in Galaxies'', eds. S. Ryder, D.J. Pisano, M. Walker, and K.
Freema
Collisionless magnetic reconnection in a plasmoid chain
The kinetic features of plasmoid chain formation and evolution are
investigated by two dimensional Particle-in-Cell simulations. Magnetic
reconnection is initiated in multiple X points by the tearing instability.
Plasmoids form and grow in size by continuously coalescing. Each chain plasmoid
exhibits a strong out-of plane core magnetic field and an out-of-plane electron
current that drives the coalescing process. The disappearance of the X points
in the coalescence process are due to anti-reconnection, a magnetic
reconnection where the plasma inflow and outflow are reversed with respect to
the original reconnection flow pattern. Anti-reconnection is characterized by
the Hall magnetic field quadrupole signature. Two new kinetic features, not
reported by previous studies of plasmoid chain evolution, are here revealed.
First, intense electric fields develop in-plane normally to the separatrices
and drive the ion dynamics in the plasmoids. Second, several bipolar electric
field structures are localized in proximity of the plasmoid chain. The analysis
of the electron distribution function and phase space reveals the presence of
counter-streaming electron beams, unstable to the two stream instability, and
phase space electron holes along the reconnection separatrices.Comment: accepted for publication in special issue "Magnetic reconnection and
turbulence in space, laboratory and astrophysical systems" of Nonlinear
Processes in Geophysic
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