5,213 research outputs found
The Be/X-ray Transient V0332+53: Evidence for a tilt between the orbit and the equatorial plane?
We present optical and infrared observations of BQ Cam, the optical
counterpart to the Be/X-ray transient system V0332+53. BQ Cam is shown to be an
O8-9Ve star, which places V0332+53 at a distance of ~7 kpc. H-alpha
spectroscopy and infrared photometry are used to discuss the evolution of the
circumstellar envelope. Due to the low inclination of the system, parameters
are strongly constrained. We find strong evidence for a tilt of the orbital
plane with respect to the circumstellar disc (pressumably on the equatorial
plane). Even though the periastron distance is only ~ 10 R_*, during the
present quiescent state the circumstellar disc does not extend to the distance
of periastron passage. Under these conditions, X-ray emission is effectively
prevented by centrifugal inhibition of accretion. The circumstellar disc is
shown to be optically dense at optical and infrared wavelengths, which together
with its small size, is taken as an indication of tidal truncation.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, uses mn.sty and epsfig Accepted for publication
in MNRA
Induced fission of 240Pu
We study the fission dynamics of 240Pu within an implementation of the
Density Functional Theory (DFT) extended to superfluid systems and real-time
dynamics. We demonstrate the critical role played by the pairing correlations.
The evolution is found to be much slower than previously expected in this fully
non-adiabatic treatment of nuclear dynamics, where there are no symmetry
restrictions and all collective degrees of freedom (CDOF) are allowed to
participate in the dynamics.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, talk given at The 6th International Conference on
Fission and Properties of Neutron-Rich Nuclei, Sanibel Island, Florida,
November 6-2 (2016
The X-ray Transient XTE J2012+381
We present optical and infrared observations of the soft X-ray transient
(SXT) XTE J2012+381 and identify the optical counterpart with a faint red star
heavily blended with a brighter foreground star. The fainter star is coincident
with the radio counterpart and appears to show weak H alpha emission and to
have faded between observations. The RXTE/ASM lightcurve of XTE J2012+381 is
unusual for an SXT in that after an extended linear decay, it settled into a
plateau state for about 40 days before undergoing a weak mini-outburst. We
discuss the nature of the object and suggest similarities to long orbital
period SXTs.Comment: 5 pages, 7 postscript figures included, uses mn.sty. Accepted for
publication in MNRA
Real time description of fission
Using the time-dependent superfluid local density approximation, the dynamics
of fission is investigated in real time from just beyond the saddle to fully
separated fragments. Simulations produced in this fully microscopic framework
can help to assess the validity of the current approaches to fission, and to
obtain estimate of fission observables. In this contribution, we concentrate on
general aspects of fission dynamics.Comment: Proceedings of the "15th Varenna Conference on Nuclear Reaction
Mechanisms," Varenna, Italy, June 201
Magnetoresistance in Disordered Graphene: The Role of Pseudospin and Dimensionality Effects Unraveled
We report a theoretical low-field magnetotransport study unveiling the effect
of pseudospin in realistic models of weakly disordered graphene-based
materials. Using an efficient Kubo computational method, and simulating the
effect of charges trapped in the oxide, different magnetoconductance
fingerprints are numerically obtained in system sizes as large as 0.3
micronmeter squared, containing tens of millions of carbon atoms. In
two-dimensional graphene, a strong valley mixing is found to irreparably yield
a positive magnetoconductance (weak localization), whereas crossovers from
positive to a negative magnetoconductance (weak antilocalization) are obtained
by reducing disorder strength down to the ballistic limit. In sharp contrast,
graphene nanoribbons with lateral size as large as 10nm show no sign of weak
antilocalization, even for very small disorder strength. Our results
rationalize the emergence of a complex phase diagram of magnetoconductance
fingerprints, shedding some new light on the microscopical origin of pseudospin
effects.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
High Redshift Candidates and the Nature of Small Galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field
We present results on two related topics: 1. A discussion of high redshift
candidates (z>4.5), and 2. A study of very small galaxies at intermediate
redshifts, both sets being detected in the region of the northern Hubble Deep
Field covered by deep NICMOS observations at 1.6 and 1.1 microns. The high
redshift candidates are just those with redshift z>4.5 as given in the recent
catalog of Thompson, Weymann and Storrie-Lombardi, while the ``small galaxy''
sample is defined to be those objects with isophotal area <= 0.2 squ. arcsec
and with photometric redshifts 1<z<4.5. Of the 19 possible high redshift
candidates listed in the Thompson et al. catalog, 11 have (nominal) photometric
redshifts less than 5.0. Of these, however, only 4 are ``robust'' in the sense
of yielding high redshifts when the fluxes are randomly perturbed with errors
comparable to the estimated measuring error in each wave band. For the 8 other
objects with nominal photometric redshifts greater than 5.0, one (WFPC2 4--473)
has a published spectroscopic redshift. Of the remaining 7, 4 are robust in the
sense indicated above. Two of these form a close pair (NIC 586 and NIC 107).
The redshift of the object having formally the highest redshift, at 6.56
(NIC118 = WFPC2 4--601), is problematic, since F606W and F814W flux are clearly
present, and the nature of this object poses a dilemma. (abridged)Comment: 44 pages, 12 figures, to appear in ApJ v591, July 10, 200
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