12,756 research outputs found
Eccentricity Excitation and Apsidal Resonance Capture in the Planetary System Upsilon Andromedae
The orbits of the outer two known planets orbiting Upsilon Andromedae are
remarkably eccentric. Planet C possesses an orbital eccentricity of e1 = 0.253.
For the more distant planet D, e2 = 0.308. Previous dynamical analyses strongly
suggest that the two orbits are nearly co-planar and are trapped in an apsidal
resonance in which the difference between their longitudes of periastron
undergoes a bounded oscillation about 0 degrees. Here we elucidate the origin
of these large eccentricities and of the apsidal alignment. Resonant
interactions between a remnant circumstellar disk of gas lying exterior to the
orbits of both planets can smoothly grow e2. Secular interactions between
planets D and C can siphon off the eccentricity of the former to grow that of
the latter. Externally amplifying e2 during the phase of the apsidal
oscillation when e2/e1 is smallest drives the oscillation amplitude towards
zero. Thus, the substantial eccentricity of planet C and the locking of orbital
apsides are both consequences of externally pumping the eccentricity of planet
D over timescales exceeding apsidal precession periods of order 1e4 yr. We
explain why the recently detected stellar companion to Upsilon Andromedae is
largely dynamically decoupled from the planetary system.Comment: accepted to Ap
Phase-sensitive quantum effects in Andreev conductance of the SNS system of metals with macroscopic phase breaking length
The dissipative component of electron transport through the doubly connected
SNS Andreev interferometer indium (S)-aluminium (N)-indium (S) has been
studied. Within helium temperature range, the conductance of the individual
sections of the interferometer exhibits phase-sensitive oscillations of
quantum-interference nature. In the non-domain (normal) state of indium
narrowing adjacent to NS interface, the nonresonance oscillations have been
observed, with the period inversely proportional to the area of the
interferometer orifice. In the domain intermediate state of the narrowing, the
magneto-temperature resistive oscillations appeared, with the period determined
by the coherence length in the magnetic field equal to the critical one. The
oscillating component of resonance form has been observed in the conductance of
the macroscopic N-aluminium part of the system. The phase of the oscillations
appears to be shifted by compared to that of nonresonance oscillations.
We offer an explanation in terms of the contribution into Josephson current
from the coherent quasiparticles with energies of order of the Thouless energy.
The behavior of dissipative transport with temperature has been studied in a
clean normal metal in the vicinity of a single point NS contact.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, to be published in Low Temp. Phys., v. 29, No.
12, 200
Development and performance of IR detectors in the 1.5 to 2.4 micrometer region that operate at 240 K
High performance 1.5 to 2.4 micrometers (Hg,Cd)Te photodetectors for operating at 240 K or above are discussed. The detailed characterization of the detector with respect to detector temperature and background flux led to a development of an empirical model for minority carrier trapping. The concept of detective time constant is presented and successfully demonstrated by the four detectors delivered on this contract. An alternative approach is presented with the use of photovoltaic (Hg,Cd)Te detectors
Spin-dependent conductivity of iron-based superconductors in a magnetic field
We report the results of a study of magnetic field features of electron
transport in heterojunctions with NS boundary inside iron-based
superconductors, represented by a binary phase of - FeSe and
oxyarsenide pnictide LaO(F)FeAs. We used the ability of self magnetic field of
the transport current to partially destroy superconductivity, no matter how low
the field may be, in the NS interface area, where, due to the proximity effect,
the superconducting order parameter, , disperses from 1 to 0 within the
scale of the Ginzburg-Landau coherence length. The following features of
transport were found:(i) at , magnetoresistance in systems with
different superconductors has different sign;(ii) sign and magnitude of the
magnetoresistance depend on the magnitude of current and temperature, and (iii)
in all operating modes where the contribution from Andreev reflection is
suppressed (),the hysteresis of the magnetoresistance
is present. Based on the results of the experiment and analysis it has been
concluded that there is along-range magnetic order in th eground normal state
of the iron-based superconductors studied, in the presence of itinerant
magnetism of conduction electrons which determines the possibility of
anisotropic spin-dependent exchange interaction with the local magnetic moments
of the ions.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
The Family SU(2)_l x SU(2)_h x U(1) Model
We consider extension of the standard model where the first two families of quarks and leptons transform according to
the group and the third family according to the group. In
this approach, the largeness of top-quark mass is associated with the large
vacuum expectation value of the corresponding Higgs field. The model predicts
almost degenerate heavy and bosons with non-universal couplings, and
extra Higgs bosons. We present in detail the symmetry breaking mechanism, and
carry out the subsequent phenomenology of the gauge sector. We compare the
model with electroweak precision data, and conclude that the extra gauge bosons
and the Higgs bosons whose masses lie in the TeV range, can be discovered at
the LHC.Comment: Latex 18 pages. No figure. Some references added. Version appeared in
PR
Reverberation Mapping and the Disk Wind Model of the Broad Line Region
Using the disk wind model of Murray et al. (1995), we calculate line profiles
and frequency-resolved response functions for broad line emission from the
surface of an accretion disk in an AGN in the presence of a radiatively driven
wind. We find that the combined effects of the shears in the wind and in the
disk itself produce anisotropic line emission which solves several well-known
problems connected with disk models of the broad line region. In particular,
the broadening of resonance lines such as \Civ, \Lya, and \Nv\/ can be
attributed to orbital motion of the disk gas at radii as close as ~cm in Seyferts without requiring unrealistically large emission
regions in order to produce single-peaked profiles. Furthermore, the anisotropy
of the line emission results in frequency-dependent response functions which
are no longer red-blue symmetric so that the time delays inferred for the
various red and blue components of the line agree qualitatively with recent
reverberation mapping observations of NGC~5548.Comment: 17 pages text, 8 postscript figure
An Overview of China's Environmental Governance Problems
The Wind Turbine industry continues to drive towards high market penetrationand profitability. In order to keep Wind Turbines in field for as long as possiblecomputational analysis tools are required. The open source tool QBlade[38] softwarewas extended to now contain routines to analyse the structural properties of WindTurbine blades. This was achieved using 2D integration methods and a Tapered Euler-Bernoulli beam element in order to find the mode shapes and 2D sectional properties.This was a key step towards integrating the National Renewable Energy LaboratoriesFAST package[32] which has the ability to analyse Aeroelastic Responses. The QFEMmodule performed well for the test cases including: hollow isotropic blade, rotatingbeam and tapered beam. Some improvements can be made to the torsion estimationof the 2D sections but this has no effect on the mode shapes required for the FASTsimulations
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