58,714 research outputs found

    A note on linearized "New Massive Gravity" in arbitrary dimensions

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    By means of a triple master action we deduce here a linearized version of the "New Massive Gravity" (NMG) in arbitrary dimensions. The theory contains a 4th-order and a 2nd-order term in derivatives. The 4th-order term is invariant under a generalized Weyl symmetry. The action is formulated in terms of a traceless ημνΩμνρ=0\eta^{\mu\nu}\Omega_{\mu\nu\rho}=0 mixed symmetry tensor Ωμνρ=Ωμρν\Omega_{\mu\nu\rho}=-\Omega_{\mu\rho\nu} and corresponds to the massive Fierz-Pauli action with the replacement e_{\mu\nu}=\p^{\rho}\Omega_{\mu\nu\rho}. The linearized 3D and 4D NMG theories are recovered via the invertible maps Ωμνρ=ϵνρβhβμ\Omega_{\mu\nu\rho} = \epsilon_{\nu\rho}^{\quad\beta}h_{\beta\mu} and Ωμνρ=ϵνργδT[γδ]μ\Omega_{\mu\nu\rho} = \epsilon_{\nu\rho}^{\quad \gamma\delta}T_{[\gamma\delta]\mu} respectively. The properties hμν=hνμh_{\mu\nu}=h_{\nu\mu} and T[[γδ]μ]=0T_{[[\gamma\delta]\mu]}=0 follow from the traceless restriction. The equations of motion of the linearized NMG theory can be written as zero "curvature" conditions \p_{\nu}T_{\rho\mu} - \p_{\rho}T_{\nu\mu}=0 in arbitrary dimensions.Comment: 15 pages, no figures, few typos fixed, one more referenc

    Elodie metallicity-biased search for transiting Hot Jupiters I. Two Hot Jupiters orbiting the slightly evolved stars HD118203 and HD149143

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    We report the discovery of a new planet candidate orbiting the subgiant star HD118203 with a period of P=6.1335 days. The best Keplerian solution yields an eccentricity e=0.31 and a minimum mass m2sin(i)=2.1MJup for the planet. This star has been observed with the ELODIE fiber-fed spectrograph as one of the targets in our planet-search programme biased toward high-metallicity stars, on-going since March 2004 at the Haute-Provence Observatory. An analysis of the spectroscopic line profiles using line bisectors revealed no correlation between the radial velocities and the line-bisector orientations, indicating that the periodic radial-velocity signal is best explained by the presence of a planet-mass companion. A linear trend is observed in the residuals around the orbital solution that could be explained by the presence of a second companion in a longer-period orbit. We also present here our orbital solution for another slightly evolved star in our metal-rich sample, HD149143, recently proposed to host a 4-d period Hot Jupiter by the N2K consortium. Our solution yields a period P=4.09 days, a marginally significant eccentricity e=0.08 and a planetary minimum mass of 1.36MJup. We checked that the shape of the spectral lines does not vary for this star as well.Comment: Accepted in A&A (6 pages, 6 figures

    Tracking Vector Magnetograms with the Magnetic Induction Equation

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    The differential affine velocity estimator (DAVE) developed in Schuck (2006) for estimating velocities from line-of-sight magnetograms is modified to directly incorporate horizontal magnetic fields to produce a differential affine velocity estimator for vector magnetograms (DAVE4VM). The DAVE4VM's performance is demonstrated on the synthetic data from the anelastic pseudospectral ANMHD simulations that were used in the recent comparison of velocity inversion techniques by Welsch (2007). The DAVE4VM predicts roughly 95% of the helicity rate and 75% of the power transmitted through the simulation slice. Inter-comparison between DAVE4VM and DAVE and further analysis of the DAVE method demonstrates that line-of-sight tracking methods capture the shearing motion of magnetic footpoints but are insensitive to flux emergence -- the velocities determined from line-of-sight methods are more consistent with horizontal plasma velocities than with flux transport velocities. These results suggest that previous studies that rely on velocities determined from line-of-sight methods such as the DAVE or local correlation tracking may substantially misrepresent the total helicity rates and power through the photosphere.Comment: 30 pages, 13 figure

    Impact of stellar companions on precise radial velocities

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    Context: With the announced arrival of instruments such as ESPRESSO one can expect that several systematic noise sources on the measurement of precise radial velocity will become the limiting factor instead of photon noise. A stellar companion within the fiber is such a possible noise source. Aims: With this work we aim at characterizing the impact of a stellar companion within the fiber to radial velocity measurements made by fiber-fed spectrographs. We consider the contaminant star either to be part of a binary system whose primary star is the target star, or as a background/foreground star. Methods: To carry out our study, we used HARPS spectra, co-added the target with contaminant spectra, and then compared the resulting radial velocity with that obtained from the original target spectrum. We repeated this procedure and used different tunable knobs to reproduce the previously mentioned scenarios. Results: We find that the impact on the radial velocity calculation is a function of the difference between individual radial velocities, of the difference between target and contaminant magnitude, and also of their spectral types. For the worst-case scenario in which both target and contaminant star are well centered on the fiber, the maximum contamination for a G or K star may be higher than 10 cm/s, on average, if the difference between target and contaminant magnitude is Δm\Delta m < 10, and higher than 1 m/s if Δm\Delta m < 8. If the target star is of spectral type M, Δm\Delta m < 8 produces the same contamination of 10 cm/s, and a contamination may be higher than 1 m/sComment: Accepted for publication in A&A on 29/12/2019 - 14 page

    Deformation method for generalized Abelian Higgs-Chern-Simons models

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    We present an extension of the deformation method applied to self-dual solutions of generalized Abelian Higgs-Chern-Simons models. Starting from a model defined by a potential V(ϕ)V(| \phi |) and a non-canonical kinetic term ω(ϕ)Dμϕ2\omega(| \phi |) | D_{\mu}\phi |^2 whose analytical domain wall solutions are known, we show that this method allows to obtain an uncountable number of new analytical solutions of new models defined by other functions V~\widetilde{V} and ω~\widetilde{\omega}. We present some examples of deformation functions leading to new families of models and their associated analytic solutions.Comment: 6 pages, 10 figure
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