9,055 research outputs found
Phase Transitions and superuniversality in the dynamics of a self-driven particle
We study an active random walker model in which a particle's motion is
determined by a self-generated field. The field encodes information about the
particle's path history. This leads to either self-attractive or self-repelling
behavior. For self-repelling behavior, we find a phase transition in the
dynamics: when the coupling between the field and the walker exceeds a critical
value, the particle's behavior changes from renormalized diffusion to one
characterized by a diverging diffusion coefficient. The dynamical behavior for
all cases is surprisingly independent of dimension and of the noise amplitude.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Migration of extrasolar planets to large orbital radii
Observations of structure in circumstellar debris discs provide
circumstantial evidence for the presence of massive planets at large (several
tens of au) orbital radii, where the timescale for planet formation via core
accretion is prohibitively long. Here, we investigate whether a population of
distant planets can be produced via outward migration subsequent to formation
in the inner disc. Two possibilities for significant outward migration are
identified. First, cores that form early at radii of around 10 au can be
carried to larger radii via gravitational interaction with the gaseous disc.
This process is efficient if there is strong mass loss from the disc - either
within a cluster or due to photoevaporation from a star more massive than the
Sun - but does not require the extremely destructive environment found, for
example, in the core of the Orion Nebula. We find that, depending upon the disc
model, gas disc migration can yield massive planets (several Jupiter masses) at
radii of around 20-50 au. Second, interactions within multiple planet systems
can drive the outer planet into a large, normally highly eccentric orbit. A
series of scattering experiments suggests that this process is most efficient
for lower mass planets within systems of unequal mass ratio. This mechanism is
a good candidate for explaining the origin of relatively low mass giant planets
in eccentric orbits at large radii.Comment: MNRAS, in pres
Tilted accretion discs in cataclysmic variables: tidal instabilities and superhumps
We investigate the growth of tidal instabilities in accretion discs in a
binary star potential, using three dimensional numerical simulations. As
expected from analytic work, the disc is prone to an eccentric instability
provided that it is large enough to extend to the 3:1 resonance. The eccentric
disc leads to positive superhumps in the light curve. It has been proposed that
negative superhumps might arise from a tilted disc, but we find no evidence
that the companion gravitational tilt instability can grow fast enough in a
fluid disc to create a measurable inclination. The origin of negative
superhumps in the light curves of cataclysmic variables remains a puzzle.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
A broadband microwave Corbino spectrometer at He temperatures and high magnetic fields
We present the technical details of a broadband microwave spectrometer for
measuring the complex conductance of thin films covering the range from 50 MHz
up to 16 GHz in the temperature range 300 mK to 6 K and at applied magnetic
fields up to 8 Tesla. We measure the complex reflection from a sample
terminating a coaxial transmission line and calibrate the signals with three
standards with known reflection coefficients. Thermal isolation of the heat
load from the inner conductor is accomplished by including a section of NbTi
superconducting cable (transition temperature around 8 9 K) and hermetic
seal glass bead adapters. This enables us to stabilize the base temperature of
the sample stage at 300 mK. However, the inclusion of this superconducting
cable complicates the calibration procedure. We document the effects of the
superconducting cable on our calibration procedure and the effects of applied
magnetic fields and how we control the temperature with great repeatability for
each measurement. We have successfully extracted reliable data in this
frequency, temperature and field range for thin superconducting films and
highly resistive graphene samples
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