5,613 research outputs found
Kepler-447b: a hot-Jupiter with an extremely grazing transit
We present the radial velocity confirmation of the extrasolar planet
Kepler-447b, initially detected as a candidate by the Kepler mission. In this
work, we analyze its transit signal and the radial velocity data obtained with
the Calar Alto Fiber-fed Echelle spectrograph (CAFE). By simultaneously
modeling both datasets, we obtain the orbital and physical properties of the
system. According to our results, Kepler-447b is a Jupiter-mass planet
(), with an estimated radius of
(uncertainties provided in this work are
unless specified). This translates into a sub-Jupiter density. The
planet revolves every days in a slightly eccentric orbit
() around a G8V star with detected activity in the
Kepler light curve. Kepler-447b transits its host with a large impact parameter
(), being one of the few planetary grazing transits
confirmed so far and the first in the Kepler large crop of exoplanets. We
estimate that only around 20% of the projected planet disk occults the stellar
disk. The relatively large uncertainties in the planet radius are due to the
large impact parameter and short duration of the transit. Planets with such an
extremely large impact parameter can be used to detect and analyze interesting
configurations such as additional perturbing bodies, stellar pulsations,
rotation of a non-spherical planet, or polar spot-crossing events. All these
scenarios would periodically modify the transit properties (depth, duration,
and time of mid-transit), what could be detectable with sufficient accurate
photometry. Short-cadence photometric data (at the 1 minute level) would help
in the search for these exotic configurations in grazing planetary transits
like that of Kepler-447b.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 13 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables. This
version replaces an earlier version of the pape
Dipolar gases in quasi one-dimensional geometries
We analyze the physics of cold dipolar gases in quasi one-dimensional
geometries, showing that the confinement-induced scattering resonances produced
by the transversal trapping are crucially affected by the dipole-dipole
interaction. As a consequence, the dipolar interaction may drastically change
the properties of quasi-1D dipolar condensates, even for situations in which
the dipolar interaction would be completely overwhelmed by the short-range
interactions in a 3D environment.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figure
Radion stabilization from the vacuum on flat extra dimensions
Volume stabilization in models with flat extra dimension could follow from
vacuum energy residing in the bulk when translational invariance is
spontaneously broken. We study a simple toy model that exemplifies this
mechanism which considers a massive scalar field with non trivial boundary
conditions at the end points of the compact space, and includes contributions
from brane and bulk cosmological constants. We perform our analysis in the
conformal frame where the radion field, associated with volume variations, is
defined, and present a general strategy for building stabilization potentials
out of those ingredients. We also provide working examples for the interval and
the orbifold configuration.Comment: Comments and clarifications added throughout the text. Typos
corrected and references added. Final version, 27 pages, five figures
include
Eclipsing binaries and fast rotators in the Kepler sample. Characterization via radial velocity analysis from Calar Alto
The Kepler mission has provided high-accurate photometric data in a long time
span for more than two hundred thousands stars, looking for planetary transits.
Among the detected candidates, the planetary nature of around 15% has been
established or validated by different techniques. But additional data is needed
to characterize the rest of the candidates and reject other possible
configurations. We started a follow-up program to validate, confirm, and
characterize some of the planet candidates. In this paper we present the radial
velocity analysis (RV) of those presenting large variations, compatible with
being eclipsing binaries. We also study those showing large rotational
velocities, which prevents us from obtaining the necessary precision to detect
planetary-like objects. We present new RV results for 13 Kepler objects of
interest (KOIs) obtained with the CAFE spectrograph at the Calar Alto
Observatory, and analyze their high-spatial resolution images and the Kepler
light curves of some interesting cases. We have found five spectroscopic and
eclipsing binaries. Among them, the case of KOI-3853 is of particular interest.
This system is a new example of the so-called heartbeat stars, showing dynamic
tidal distortions in the Kepler light curve. We have also detected duration and
depth variations of the eclipse. We suggest possible scenarios to explain such
effect, including the presence of a third substellar body possibly detected in
our RV analysis. We also provide upper mass limits to the transiting companions
of other six KOIs with large rotational velocities. This property prevents the
RV method to obtain the necessary precision to detect planetary-like masses.
Finally, we analyze the large RV variations of other two KOIs, incompatible
with the presence of planetary-mass objects. These objects are likely to be
stellar binaries but a longer timespan is still needed.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 18 pages, 9 figures, 17 tables. This
version fixes an error affecting the values of tables A.1-A.13. The text
remains unaltere
A Note on Segre Types of Second Order Symmetric Tensors in 5-D Brane-world Cosmology
Recent developments in string theory suggest that there might exist extra
spatial dimensions, which are not small nor compact. The framework of most
brane cosmological models is that in which the matter fields are confined on a
brane-world embedded in five dimensions (the bulk). Motivated by this we
reexamine the classification of the second order symmetric tensors in 5--D, and
prove two theorems which collect together some basic results on the algebraic
structure of these tensors in 5-dimensional space-times. We also briefly
indicate how one can obtain, by induction, the classification of symmetric
two-tensors (and the corresponding canonical forms) on n-dimensional spaces
from the classification on 4-dimensional spaces. This is important in the
context of 11--D supergravity and 10--D superstrings.Comment: 12 pages, to appear in Mod. Phys. Lett. A (2003) in the present for
Magnetic Instabilities and Phase Diagram of the Double-Exchange Model in Infinite Dimensions
Dynamical mean-field theory is used to study the magnetic instabilities and
phase diagram of the double-exchange (DE) model with Hund's coupling J_H >0 in
infinite dimensions. In addition to ferromagnetic (FM) and antiferromagnetic
(AF) phases, the DE model supports a broad class of short-range ordered (SRO)
states with extensive entropy and short-range magnetic order. For any site on
the Bethe lattice, the correlation parameter q of a SRO state is given by the
average q=, where theta_i is the angle between any spin and
its neighbors. Unlike the FM (q=0) and AF (q=1) transitions, the transition
temperature of a SRO state (T_{SRO}) with 0<q<1 cannot be obtained from the
magnetic susceptibility. But a solution of the coupled Green's functions in the
weak-coupling limit indicates that a SRO state always has a higher transition
temperature than the AF for all fillings p<1 and even than the FM for 0.26\le p
\le 0.39. For 0.39<p<0.73, where both the FM and AF phases are unstable for
small J_H, a SRO phase has a non-zero T_{SRO} except close to p=0.5. As J_H
increases, T_{SRO} eventually vanishes and the FM dominates. For small J_H, the
T=0 phase diagram is greatly simplified by the presence of the SRO phase. A SRO
phase is found to have lower energy than either the FM or AF phases for 0.26\le
p0 but appears for J_H\neq 0. For
p near 1, PS occurs between an AF with p=1 and either a SRO or a FM phase. The
stability of a SRO state at T=0 can be understood by examining the interacting
DOS,which is gapped for any nonzero J_H in an AF but only when J_H exceeds a
critical value in a SRO state.Comment: 38 pages, 11 figures, submitted to New Journal of Physic
Nonlinear atom optics and bright gap soliton generation in finite optical lattices
We theoretically investigate the transmission dynamics of coherent matter
wave pulses across finite optical lattices in both the linear and the nonlinear
regimes. The shape and the intensity of the transmitted pulse are found to
strongly depend on the parameters of the incident pulse, in particular its
velocity and density: a clear physical picture for the main features observed
in the numerical simulations is given in terms of the atomic band dispersion in
the periodic potential of the optical lattice. Signatures of nonlinear effects
due the atom-atom interaction are discussed in detail, such as atom optical
limiting and atom optical bistability. For positive scattering lengths, matter
waves propagating close to the top of the valence band are shown to be subject
to modulational instability. A new scheme for the experimental generation of
narrow bright gap solitons from a wide Bose-Einstein condensate is proposed:
the modulational instability is seeded in a controlled way starting from the
strongly modulated density profile of a standing matter wave and the solitonic
nature of the generated pulses is checked from their shape and their
collisional properties
JWST observations of stellar occultations by solar system bodies and rings
In this paper we investigate the opportunities provided by the James Webb
Space Telescope (JWST) for significant scientific advances in the study of
solar system bodies and rings using stellar occultations. The strengths and
weaknesses of the stellar occultation technique are evaluated in light of
JWST's unique capabilities. We identify several possible JWST occultation
events by minor bodies and rings, and evaluate their potential scientific
value. These predictions depend critically on accurate a priori knowledge of
the orbit of JWST near the Sun-Earth Lagrange-point 2 (L2). We also explore the
possibility of serendipitous stellar occultations by very small minor bodies as
a by-product of other JWST observing programs. Finally, to optimize the
potential scientific return of stellar occultation observations, we identify
several characteristics of JWST's orbit and instrumentation that should be
taken into account during JWST's development.Comment: This paper is one of a series for a special issue on Solar System
observations with JWST in PASP. Accepted 2-Oct-2015. Preprint 30 pages, 5
tables, 8 figure
Planetary companions around the metal-poor star HIP 11952
Aims. We carried out a radial-velocity survey to search for planets around
metal-poor stars. In this paper we report the discovery of two planets around
HIP 11952, a metal-poor star with [Fe/H]= -1.9 that belongs to our target
sample. Methods. Radial velocity variations of HIP 11952 were monitored
systematically with FEROS at the 2.2 m telescope located at the ESO La Silla
observatory from August 2009 until January 2011. We used a cross-correlation
technique to measure the stellar radial velocities (RV). Results. We detected a
long-period RV variation of 290 d and a short-period one of 6.95 d. The
spectroscopic analysis of the stellar activity reveals a stellar rotation
period of 4.8 d. The Hipparcos photometry data shows intra-day variabilities,
which give evidence for stellar pulsations. Based on our analysis, the observed
RV variations are most likely caused by the presence of unseen planetary
companions. Assuming a primary mass of 0.83 M\odot, we computed minimum
planetary masses of 0.78 MJup for the inner and 2.93 MJup for the outer planet.
The semi-major axes are a1 = 0.07 AU and a2 = 0.81 AU, respectively.
Conclusions. HIP 11952 is one of very few stars with [Fe/H]< -1.0 which have
planetary companions. This discovery is important to understand planet
formation around metal-poor starsComment: Published in A&
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