6,015 research outputs found

    Search For Oxygen in Cool DQ White Dwarf Atmospheres

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    We report new infrared spectroscopic observations of cool DQ white dwarfs by using Coolspec on the 2.7m Harlan-Smith Telescope. DQs have helium-rich atmospheres with traces of molecular carbon thought to be the result of convective dredge-up from their C/O interiors. Recent model calculations predict that oxygen should also be present in DQ atmospheres in detectable amounts. Our synthetic spectra calculations for He-rich white dwarfs with traces of C and O indicate that CO should be easily detected in the cool DQ atmospheres if present in the expected amounts. Determination of the oxygen abundance in the atmosphere will reveal the C/O ratio at the core/envelope boundary, constraining the important and uncertain ^{12}C(alpha,gamma)^{16}O reaction rate.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures, to appear in proceedings of the 13th European Workshop on White Dwarf

    Renormalization of the periodic Anderson model: an alternative analytical approach to heavy Fermion behavior

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    In this paper a recently developed projector-based renormalization method (PRM) for many-particle Hamiltonians is applied to the periodic Anderson model (PAM) with the aim to describe heavy Fermion behavior. In this method high-energetic excitation operators instead of high energetic states are eliminated. We arrive at an effective Hamiltonian for a quasi-free system which consists of two non-interacting heavy-quasiparticle bands. The resulting renormalization equations for the parameters of the Hamiltonian are valid for large as well as small degeneracy νf\nu_f of the angular momentum. An expansion in 1/νf1/\nu_f is avoided. Within an additional approximation which adapts the idea of a fixed renormalized \textit{f} level ϵ~f\tilde{\epsilon}_{f}, we obtain coupled equations for ϵ~f\tilde{\epsilon}_{f} and the averaged \textit{f} occupation . These equations resemble to a certain extent those of the usual slave boson mean-field (SB) treatment. In particular, for large νf\nu_f the results for the PRM and the SB approach agree perfectly whereas considerable differences are found for small νf\nu_f.Comment: 26 pages, 5 figures included, discussion of the DOS added in v2, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Wegner bounds for a two-particle tight binding model

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    We consider a quantum two-particle system on a d-dimensional lattice with interaction and in presence of an IID external potential. We establish Wegner-typer estimates for such a model. The main tool used is Stollmann's lemma

    Temperature in One-Dimensional Bosonic Mott insulators

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    The Mott insulating phase of a one-dimensional bosonic gas trapped in optical lattices is described by a Bose-Hubbard model. A continuous unitary transformation is used to map this model onto an effective model conserving the number of elementary excitations. We obtain quantitative results for the kinetics and for the spectral weights of the low-energy excitations for a broad range of parameters in the insulating phase. By these results, recent Bragg spectroscopy experiments are explained. Evidence for a significant temperature of the order of the microscopic energy scales is found.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure

    Specific heat of the simple-cubic Ising model

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    We provide an expression quantitatively describing the specific heat of the Ising model on the simple-cubic lattice in the critical region. This expression is based on finite-size scaling of numerical results obtained by means of a Monte Carlo method. It agrees satisfactorily with series expansions and with a set of experimental results. Our results include a determination of the universal amplitude ratio of the specific-heat divergences at both sides of the critical point.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figure

    The supermassive black hole and double nucleus of the core elliptical NGC5419

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    We obtained adaptive-optics assisted SINFONI observations of the central regions of the giant elliptical galaxy NGC5419 with a spatial resolution of 0.2 arcsec (55\approx 55 pc). NGC5419 has a large depleted stellar core with a radius of 1.58 arcsec (430 pc). HST and SINFONI images show a point source located at the galaxy's photocentre, which is likely associated with the low-luminosity AGN previously detected in NGC5419. Both the HST and SINFONI images also show a second nucleus, off-centred by 0.25 arcsec (70\approx 70 pc). Outside of the central double nucleus, we measure an almost constant velocity dispersion of σ350\sigma \sim 350 km/s. In the region where the double nucleus is located, the dispersion rises steeply to a peak value of 420\sim 420 km/s. In addition to the SINFONI data, we also obtained stellar kinematics at larger radii from the South African Large Telescope. While NGC5419 shows low rotation (v<50v < 50 km/s), the central regions (inside 4rb\sim 4 \, r_b) clearly rotate in the opposite direction to the galaxy's outer parts. We use orbit-based dynamical models to measure the black hole mass of NGC5419 from the kinematical data outside of the double nuclear structure. The models imply MBH=7.21.9+2.7×109_{\rm BH}=7.2^{+2.7}_{-1.9} \times 10^9 M_{\odot}. The enhanced velocity dispersion in the region of the double nucleus suggests that NGC5419 possibly hosts two supermassive black holes at its centre, separated by only 70\approx 70 pc. Yet our measured MBH_{\rm BH} is consistent with the black hole mass expected from the size of the galaxy's depleted stellar core. This suggests, that systematic uncertainties in MBH_{\rm BH} related to the secondary nucleus are small.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
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