60,860 research outputs found
Disc formation in turbulent cloud cores: Circumventing the magnetic braking catastrophe
We present collapse simulations of strongly magnetised, 100 M_sun, turbulent
cloud cores. Around the protostars formed during the collapse Keplerian discs
with typical sizes of up to 100 AU build up in contrast to previous simulations
neglecting turbulence. Analysing the condensations in which the discs form, we
show that the magnetic flux loss is not sufficient to explain the build-up of
Keplerian discs. The average magnetic field is strongly inclined to the disc
which might reduce the magnetic braking efficiency. However, the main reason
for the reduced magnetic braking efficiency is the highly disordered magnetic
field in the surroundings of the discs. Furthermore, due to the lack of a
coherently rotating structure in the turbulent environment of the disc no
toroidal magnetic field necessary for angular momentum extraction can build up.
Simultaneously the angular momentum inflow remains high due to local shear
flows created by the turbulent motions. We suggest that the "magnetic braking
catastrophe" is an artefact of the idealised non-turbulent initial conditions
and that turbulence provides a natural mechanism to circumvent this problem.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. To appear in the proceedings of 'The Labyrinth of
Star Formation' (18-22 June 2012, Chania, Greece), published by Springe
Steady-state entanglement between distant quantum dots in photonic crystal dimers
We show that two spatially separated semiconductor quantum dots under
resonant and continuous-wave excitation can be strongly entangled in the
steady-state, thanks to their radiative coupling by mutual interaction through
the normal modes of a photonic crystal dimer. We employ a quantum master
equation formalism to quantify the steady-state entanglement by calculating the
system {\it negativity}. Calculations are specified to consider realistic
semiconductor nanostructure parameters for the photonic crystal dimer-quantum
dots coupled system, determined by a guided mode expansion solution of Maxwell
equations. Negativity values of the order of 0.1 ( of the maximum value)
are shown for interdot distances that are larger than the resonant wavelength
of the system. It is shown that the amount of entanglement is almost
independent of the interdot distance, as long as the normal mode splitting of
the photonic dimer is larger than their linewidths, which becomes the only
requirement to achieve a local and individual qubit addressing. Considering
inhomogeneously broadened quantum dots, we find that the steady-state
entanglement is preserved as long as the detuning between the two quantum dot
resonances is small when compared to their decay rates. The steady-state
entanglement is shown to be robust against the effects of pure dephasing of the
quantum dot transitions. We finally study the entanglement dynamics for a
configuration in which one of the two quantum dots is initially excited and
find that the transient negativity can be enhanced by more than a factor of two
with respect to the steady-state value. These results are promising for
practical applications of entangled states at short time scales.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
The CORALIE survey for southern extrasolar planets. XVI. Discovery of a planetary system around HD 147018 and of two long period and massive planets orbiting HD 171238 and HD 204313
We report the detection of a double planetary system around HD 140718 as well
as the discovery of two long period and massive planets orbiting HD 171238 and
HD 204313. Those discoveries were made with the CORALIE Echelle spectrograph
mounted on the 1.2-m Euler Swiss telescope located at La Silla Observatory,
Chile. The planetary system orbiting the nearby G9 dwarf HD 147018 is composed
of an eccentric inner planet (e=0.47) with twice the mass of Jupiter (2.1 MJup
) and with an orbital period of 44.24 days. The outer planet is even more
massive (6.6 MJup) with a slightly eccentric orbit (e=0.13) and a period of
1008 days. The planet orbiting HD 171238 has a minimum mass of 2.6 MJup, a
period of 1523 days and an eccentricity of 0.40. It orbits a G8 dwarfs at 2.5
AU. The last planet, HD 204313 b, is a 4.0 MJup -planet with a period of 5.3
years and has a low eccentricity (e = 0.13). It orbits a G5 dwarfs at 3.1 AU.
The three parent stars are metal rich, which further strengthened the case that
massive planets tend to form around metal rich stars.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Avaliação do efeito do manejo adequado da planta forrageira e da fertilidade do solo sobre a produtividade e perenidade de pastagens de capim Panicum maximum cv. Tanzânia.
Mott-insulator phase of coupled 1D atomic gases in a 2D optical lattice
We discuss the 2D Mott insulator (MI) state of a 2D array of coupled finite
size 1D Bose gases. It is shown that the momentum distribution in the lattice
plane is very sensitive to the interaction regime in the 1D tubes. In
particular, we find that the disappearance of the interference pattern in time
of flight experiments will not be a signature of the MI phase, but a clear
consequence of the strongly interacting Tonks-Girardeau regime along the tubes.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Universal optimal broadband photon cloning and entanglement creation in one dimensional atoms
We study an initially inverted three-level atom in the lambda configuration
embedded in a waveguide, interacting with a propagating single-photon pulse.
Depending on the temporal shape of the pulse, the system behaves either as an
optimal universal cloning machine, or as a highly efficient deterministic
source of maximally entangled photon pairs. This quantum transistor operates
over a wide range of frequencies, and can be implemented with today's
solid-state technologies.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
How directional mobility affects biodiversity in rock-paper-scissors models
This work deals with a system of three distinct species that changes in time
under the presence of mobility, selection, and reproduction, as in the popular
rock-paper-scissors game. The novelty of the current study is the modification
of the mobility rule to the case of directional mobility, in which the species
move following the direction associated to a larger (averaged) number density
of selection targets in the surrounding neighborhood. Directional mobility can
be used to simulate eyes that see or a nose that smells, and we show how it may
contribute to reduce the probability of coexistence.Comment: 6 pages, 10 figure
Detection and resolution of normative conflicts in multi-agent systems : a literature survey
Peer reviewedPostprin
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