49,147 research outputs found
The motion, stability and breakup of a stretching liquid bridge with a receding contact line
The complex behavior of drop deposition on a hydrophobic surface is
considered by looking at a model problem in which the evolution of a
constant-volume liquid bridge is studied as the bridge is stretched. The bridge
is pinned with a fixed diameter at the upper contact point, but the contact
line at the lower attachment point is free to move on a smooth substrate.
Experiments indicate that initially, as the bridge is stretched, the lower
contact line slowly retreats inwards. However at a critical radius, the bridge
becomes unstable, and the contact line accelerates dramatically, moving inwards
very quickly. The bridge subsequently pinches off, and a small droplet is left
on the substrate. A quasi-static analysis, using the Young-Laplace equation, is
used to accurately predict the shape of the bridge during the initial bridge
evolution, including the initial onset of the slow contact line retraction. A
stability analysis is used to predict the onset of pinch-off, and a
one-dimensional dynamical equation, coupled with a Tanner-law for the dynamic
contact angle, is used to model the rapid pinch-off behavior. Excellent
agreement between numerical predictions and experiments is found throughout the
bridge evolution, and the importance of the dynamic contact line model is
demonstrated.Comment: 37 pages, 12 figure
Bose-Einstein Condensation with Entangled Order Parameter
We propose a practically accessible non-mean-field ground state of
Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC), which occurs in an interspecies two-particle
entangled state, and is thus described by an entangled order parameter. A
suitably defined entanglement entropy is used as the characterization of the
non-mean-field nature, and is found to persist in a wide parameter regime. The
interspecies entanglement leads to novel interference terms in the dynamical
equations governing the single particle orbital wavefunctions. Experimental
feasibility and several methods of probe are discussed. We urge the study of
multi-channel scattering between different species of atoms.Comment: V1: 5 pages, 4 figures. Accepted by Phys. Rev. Lett.; V2: A couple of
very minor typos corrected, publishe
High Fill-Out, Extreme Mass Ratio Overcontact Binary Systems. X. The new discovered binary XY Leonis Minoris
The new discovered short-period close binary star, XY LMi, was monitored
photometrically since 2006. It is shown that the light curves are typical
EW-type and show complete eclipses with an eclipse duration of about 80
minutes. By analyzing the complete B, V, R, and I light curves with the 2003
version of the W-D code, photometric solutions were determined. It is
discovered that XY LMi is a high fill-out, extreme mass ratio overcontact
binary system with a mass ratio of q=0.148 and a fill-out factor of f=74.1%,
suggesting that it is on the late evolutionary stage of late-type tidal-locked
binary stars. As observed in other overcontact binary stars, evidence for the
presence of two dark spots on both components are given. Based on our 19
epoches of eclipse times, it is found that the orbital period of the
overcontact binary is decreasing continuously at a rate of
dP/dt=-1.67\times10^{-7}\,days/year, which may be caused by the mass transfer
from the primary to the secondary or/and angular momentum loss via magnetic
stellar wind. The decrease of the orbital period may result in the increase of
the fill-out, and finally, it will evolve into a single rapid-rotation star
when the fluid surface reaching the outer critical Roche Lobe.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, 9 table
The most plausible explanation of the cyclical period changes in close binaries: the case of the RS CVn-type binary WW Dra
We searched the orbital period changes in 182 EA-type (including the 101
Algol systems used by \cite{hal89}), 43 EB-type and 53 EW-type binaries with
known both the mass ratio and the spectral type of their secondary components.
We reproduced and improved the same diagram as Hall's (1989) according to the
new collected data. Our plots do not support the conclusion derived by
\cite{hal89} that all cases of cyclical period changes are restricted to
binaries having the secondary component with spectral types later than F5. The
presence of period changes also among stars with secondary component of early
type indicates that the magnetic activity is one cause, but not the only one,
for the period variation. It is discovered that cyclic period changes, likely
due to the presence of a third body are more frequent in EW-type binaries among
close binaries. Therefore, the most plausible explanation of the cyclical
period changes is the LTTE via the presence of a third body. By using the
century-long historical record of the times of light minimum, we analyzed the
cyclical period change in the Algol binary WW Dra. It is found that the orbital
period of the binary shows a cyclic variation
with an amplitude of . The cyclic oscillation
can be attributed to the LTTE via a third body with a mass no less than . However, no spectral lines of the third body were discovered
indicating that it may be a candidate black hole. The third body is orbiting
the binary at a distance shorter than 14.4 AU and it may play an important role
in the evolution of this system.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, published by MNRA
A Circumbinary Planet in Orbit Around the Short-Period White-Dwarf Eclipsing Binary RR Cae
By using six new determined mid-eclipse times together with those collected
from the literature, we found that the Observed-Calculated (O-C) curve of RR
Cae shows a cyclic change with a period of 11.9 years and an amplitude of
14.3s, while it undergoes an upward parabolic variation (revealing a long-term
period increase at a rate of dP/dt =+4.18(+-0.20)x10^(-12). The cyclic change
was analyzed for the light-travel time effect that arises from the
gravitational influence of a third companion. The mass of the third body was
determined to be M_3*sin i' = 4.2(+-0.4) M_{Jup} suggesting that it is a
circumbinary giant planet when its orbital inclination is larger than 17.6
degree. The orbital separation of the circumbinary planet from the central
eclipsing binary is about 5.3(+-0.6)AU. The period increase is opposite to the
changes caused by angular momentum loss via magnetic braking or/and
gravitational radiation, nor can it be explained by the mass transfer between
both components because of its detached configuration. These indicate that the
observed upward parabolic change is only a part of a long-period (longer than
26.3 years) cyclic variation, which may reveal the presence of another giant
circumbinary planet in a wide orbit.Comment: It will be published in the MNRA
Abundances in the Uranium-Rich Star CS 31082-001
The recent discovery by Cayrel et al. of U in CS 31082-001 along with Os and
Ir at greatly enhanced abundances but with [Fe/H]=-2.9 strongly reinforces the
argument that there are at least two kinds of SNII sources for r-nuclei. One
source is the high-frequency H events responsible for heavy r-nuclei (A>135)
but not Fe. The H-yields calculated from data on other ultra-metal-poor stars
and the sun provide a template for quantitatively predicting the abundances of
all other r-elements. In CS 31082-001 these should show a significant
deficiency at A<135 relative to the solar r-pattern. It is proposed that CS
31082-001 should have had a companion that exploded as an SNII H event. If the
binary survived the explosion, this star should now have a compact companion,
most likely a stellar-mass black hole. Comparison of abundance data with
predicted values and a search for a compact companion should provide a
stringent test of the proposed r-process model. The U-Th age determined by
Cayrel et al. for CS 31082-001 is, to within substantial uncertainties, in
accord with the r-process age determined from solar system data. The time gap
between Big Bang and onset of normal star formation only allows r-process
chronometers to provide a lower limit on the age of the universe.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
r-Process Nucleosynthesis in Shocked Surface Layers of O-Ne-Mg Cores
We demonstrate that rapid expansion of the shocked surface layers of an
O-Ne-Mg core following its collapse can result in r-process nucleosynthesis. As
the supernova shock accelerates through these layers, it makes them expand so
rapidly that free nucleons remain in disequilibrium with alpha-particles
throughout most of the expansion. This allows heavy r-process isotopes
including the actinides to form in spite of the very low initial neutron excess
of the matter. We estimate that yields of heavy r-process nuclei from this site
may be sufficient to explain the Galactic inventory of these isotopes.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the Astrophysical Journal Letter
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