2,903 research outputs found
Mean-Motion Resonances of High Order in Extrasolar Planetary Systems
Many multi-planet systems have been discovered in recent years. Some of them
are in mean-motion resonances (MMR). Planet formation theory was successful in
explaining the formation of 2:1, 3:1 and other low resonances as a result of
convergent migration. However, higher order resonances require high initial
orbital eccentricities in order to be formed by this process and these are in
general unexpected in a dissipative disk. We present a way of generating large
initial eccentricities using additional planets. This procedure allows us to
form high order MMRs and predict new planets using a genetic N-body code.Comment: To appear in Proceedings: Extrasolar Planets in Multi-body Systems:
Theory and Observations; Editors K. Gozdziewski, A. Niedzielski and J.
Schneider; 5 pages, 2 figures
Existence of axially symmetric static solutions of the Einstein-Vlasov system
We prove the existence of static, asymptotically flat non-vacuum spacetimes
with axial symmetry where the matter is modeled as a collisionless gas. The
axially symmetric solutions of the resulting Einstein-Vlasov system are
obtained via the implicit function theorem by perturbing off a suitable
spherically symmetric steady state of the Vlasov-Poisson system.Comment: 32 page
Stochastic orbital migration of small bodies in Saturn's rings
Many small moonlets, creating propeller structures, have been found in
Saturn's rings by the Cassini spacecraft. We study the dynamical evolution of
such 20-50m sized bodies which are embedded in Saturn's rings. We estimate the
importance of various interaction processes with the ring particles on the
moonlet's eccentricity and semi-major axis analytically. For low ring surface
densities, the main effects on the evolution of the eccentricity and the
semi-major axis are found to be due to collisions and the gravitational
interaction with particles in the vicinity of the moonlet. For large surface
densities, the gravitational interaction with self-gravitating wakes becomes
important.
We also perform realistic three dimensional, collisional N-body simulations
with up to a quarter of a million particles. A new set of pseudo shear periodic
boundary conditions is used which reduces the computational costs by an order
of magnitude compared to previous studies. Our analytic estimates are confirmed
to within a factor of two.
On short timescales the evolution is always dominated by stochastic effects
caused by collisions and gravitational interaction with self-gravitating ring
particles. These result in a random walk of the moonlet's semi-major axis. The
eccentricity of the moonlet quickly reaches an equilibrium value due to
collisional damping. The average change in semi-major axis of the moonlet after
100 orbital periods is 10-100m. This translates to an offset in the azimuthal
direction of several hundred kilometres. We expect that such a shift is easily
observable.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, submitted to A&A, comments welcom
The thermodynamics of computational copying in biochemical systems
Living cells use readout molecules to record the state of receptor proteins,
similar to measurements or copies in typical computational devices. But is this
analogy rigorous? Can cells be optimally efficient, and if not, why? We show
that, as in computation, a canonical biochemical readout network generates
correlations; extracting no work from these correlations sets a lower bound on
dissipation. For general input, the biochemical network cannot reach this
bound, even with arbitrarily slow reactions or weak thermodynamic driving. It
faces an accuracy-dissipation trade-off that is qualitatively distinct from and
worse than implied by the bound, and more complex steady-state copy processes
cannot perform better. Nonetheless, the cost remains close to the thermodynamic
bound unless accuracy is extremely high. Additionally, we show that
biomolecular reactions could be used in thermodynamically optimal devices under
exogenous manipulation of chemical fuels, suggesting an experimental system for
testing computational thermodynamics.Comment: Accepted versio
A numerical investigation of the stability of steady states and critical phenomena for the spherically symmetric Einstein-Vlasov system
The stability features of steady states of the spherically symmetric
Einstein-Vlasov system are investigated numerically. We find support for the
conjecture by Zeldovich and Novikov that the binding energy maximum along a
steady state sequence signals the onset of instability, a conjecture which we
extend to and confirm for non-isotropic states. The sign of the binding energy
of a solution turns out to be relevant for its time evolution in general. We
relate the stability properties to the question of universality in critical
collapse and find that for Vlasov matter universality does not seem to hold.Comment: 29 pages, 10 figure
The Einstein-Vlasov sytem/Kinetic theory
The main purpose of this article is to guide the reader to theorems on global
properties of solutions to the Einstein-Vlasov system. This system couples
Einstein's equations to a kinetic matter model. Kinetic theory has been an
important field of research during several decades where the main focus has
been on nonrelativistic- and special relativistic physics, e.g. to model the
dynamics of neutral gases, plasmas and Newtonian self-gravitating systems. In
1990 Rendall and Rein initiated a mathematical study of the Einstein-Vlasov
system. Since then many theorems on global properties of solutions to this
system have been established. The Vlasov equation describes matter
phenomenologically and it should be stressed that most of the theorems
presented in this article are not presently known for other such matter models
(e.g. fluid models). The first part of this paper gives an introduction to
kinetic theory in non-curved spacetimes and then the Einstein-Vlasov system is
introduced. We believe that a good understanding of kinetic theory in
non-curved spacetimes is fundamental in order to get a good comprehension of
kinetic theory in general relativity.Comment: 31 pages. This article has been submitted to Living Rev. Relativity
(http://www.livingreviews.org
Critical collapse of collisionless matter - a numerical investigation
In recent years the threshold of black hole formation in spherically
symmetric gravitational collapse has been studied for a variety of matter
models. In this paper the corresponding issue is investigated for a matter
model significantly different from those considered so far in this context. We
study the transition from dispersion to black hole formation in the collapse of
collisionless matter when the initial data is scaled. This is done by means of
a numerical code similar to those commonly used in plasma physics. The result
is that for the initial data for which the solutions were computed, most of the
matter falls into the black hole whenever a black hole is formed. This results
in a discontinuity in the mass of the black hole at the onset of black hole
formation.Comment: 22 pages, LaTeX, 7 figures (ps-files, automatically included using
psfig
On the behavior of physical parameters of aqueous solutions affected by the inerton field of Teslar technology
We present studies of the behavior of the permittivity of such liquid systems
as pure distilled water, alcohol and 50%-aqueous solutions of alcohol as
affected by the inerton field generated by a special signal generator contained
within a wrist-watch or bracelet made by so-called Teslar technology. It has
been found that the changes in fact are significant. The method employed has
allowed us to fix the value of frequency of the field generated by the Teslar
chip. The frequency has been determined to be approximately 8 Hz. The
phenomenological consideration and submicroscopic foundations of a significant
increase of the permittivity are studied taking into account an additional
interaction, namely the mass interaction between polar water molecules, which
is caused by the inerton field of the Teslar chip. This is one more proof of
Krasnoholovets' concept regarding the existence of a substructure of the matter
waves of moving/vibrating entities, i.e. the inerton field, which has been
predicted in a series of his previous works.Comment: 15 p., 9 fig
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