30,777 research outputs found
Conformal mapping of ultrasonic crystals: confining ultrasound and cochlear-like wave guiding
Conformal mapping of a slab of a two-dimensional ultrasonic crystal generate
a closed geometrical arrangement of ultrasonic scatterers with appealing
acoustic properties. This acoustic shell is able to confine ultrasonic modes.
Some of these internal resonances can be induced from an external wave source.
The mapping of a linear defect produces a wave-guide that exhibits a
spatial-frequency selection analogous to that characteristic of a synthetic
"cochlea". Both, experimental and theoretical results are reported here.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Extended Weyl Calculus and Application to the Phase-Space Schr\"{o}dinger Equation
We show that the Schr\"{o}dinger equation in phase space proposed by
Torres-Vega and Frederick is canonical in the sense that it is a natural
consequence of the extended Weyl calculus obtained by letting the Heisenberg
group act on functions (or half-densities) defined on phase space. This allows
us, in passing, to solve rigorously the TF equation for all quadratic
Hamiltonians.Comment: To appear in J. Phys. A: Math. and genera
Search for Associations Containing Young stars (SACY): Chemical tagging IC 2391 & the Argus association
We explore the possible connection between the open cluster IC 2391 and the
unbound Argus association identified by the SACY survey. In addition to common
kinematics and ages between these two systems, here we explore their chemical
abundance patterns to confirm if the two substructures shared a common origin.
We carry out a homogenous high-resolution elemental abundance study of eight
confirmed members of IC 2391 as well as six members of the Argus association
using UVES spectra. We derive spectroscopic stellar parameters and abundances
for Fe, Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Ti, Cr, Ni and Ba.
All stars in the open cluster and Argus association were found to share
similar abundances with the scatter well within the uncertainties, where [Fe/H]
= -0.04 +/-0.03 for cluster stars and [Fe/H] = -0.06 +/-0.05 for Argus stars.
Effects of over-ionisation/excitation were seen for stars cooler than roughly
5200K as previously noted in the literature. Also, enhanced Ba abundances of
around 0.6 dex were observed in both systems. The common ages, kinematics and
chemical abundances strongly support that the Argus association stars
originated from the open cluster IC 2391. Simple modeling of this system find
this dissolution to be consistent with two-body interactions.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figs, accepted for publication in MNRA
Star formation in low density HI gas around the Elliptical Galaxy NGC2865
Interacting galaxies surrounded by HI tidal debris are ideal sites for the
study of young clusters and tidal galaxy formation. The process that triggers
star formation in the low-density environments outside galaxies is still an
open question. New clusters and galaxies of tidal origin are expected to have
high metallicities for their luminosities. Spectroscopy of such objects is,
however, at the limit of what can be done with existing 8-10m class telescopes,
which has prevented statistical studies of these objects. NGC2865 is an
UV-bright merging elliptical galaxy with shells and extended HI tails. The
regions observed in this work were previously detected using multi-slit imaging
spectroscopy. We obtain new multislit spectroscopy of six young star-forming
regions around NGC2865, to determine their redshifts and metallicities. The six
emission-line regions are located 16-40 kpc from NGC2865 and they have similar
redshifts. They have ages of ~10Myears and an average metallicity of
12+log(O/H) ~ 8.6, suggesting a tidal origin for the regions. It is noted that
they coincide with an extended HI tail, which has projected density of N
< 10 cm, and displays a low surface brightness counterpart. These
regions may represent the youngest of the three populations of star clusters
already identified in NGC2865. The high, nearly-solar, oxygen abundances found
for the six regions in the vicinity of NGC2865 suggest that they were formed by
pre-enriched material from the parent galaxy, from gas removed during the last
major merger. Given the mass and the location of the HII regions, we can
speculate that these young star-forming regions are potential precursors of
globular clusters that will be part of the halo of NGC2865 in the future. Our
result supports the use of the multi-slit imaging spectroscopy as a useful tool
for finding nearly-formed stellar systems around galaxies.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures accepted in A&
Coherent delocalization: Views of entanglement in different scenarios
The concept of entanglement was originally introduced to explain correlations
existing between two spatially separated systems, that cannot be described
using classical ideas. Interestingly, in recent years, it has been shown that
similar correlations can be observed when considering different degrees of
freedom of a single system, even a classical one. Surprisingly, it has also
been suggested that entanglement might be playing a relevant role in certain
biological processes, such as the functioning of pigment-proteins that
constitute light-harvesting complexes of photosynthetic bacteria. The aim of
this work is to show that the presence of entanglement in all of these
different scenarios should not be unexpected, once it is realized that the very
same mathematical structure can describe all of them. We show this by
considering three different, realistic cases in which the only condition for
entanglement to exist is that a single excitation is coherently delocalized
between the different subsystems that compose the system of interest
Observations of three young gamma-ray pulsars with the Gran Telescopio Canarias
We report the analysis of the first deep optical observations of three
isolated -ray pulsars detected by the {\em Fermi Gamma-ray Space
Telescope}: the radio-loud PSR\, J0248+6021 and PSR\, J0631+1036, and the
radio-quiet PSR\, J0633+0632. The latter has also been detected in the X rays.
The pulsars are very similar in their spin-down age (40--60 kyrs),
spin-down energy ( erg s), and dipolar surface
magnetic field (-- G). These pulsars are promising
targets for multi-wavelength observations, since they have been already
detected in rays and in radio or X-rays. None of them has been
detected yet in the optical band. We observed the three pulsar fields in 2014
with the Spanish 10.4m Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC). We could not find any
candidate optical counterpart to the three pulsars close to their most recent
radio or {\em Chandra} positions down to limits of ,
, for PSR\, J0248+6021, J0631+1036, and J0633+0632,
respectively. From the inferred optical upper limits and estimated distance and
interstellar extinction, we derived limits on the pulsar optical luminosity. We
also searched for the X-ray counterpart to PSR\, J0248+6021 with \chan\ but we
did not detect the pulsar down to a 3 flux limit of
erg cm s (0.3--10 keV). For all these pulsars, we compared the
optical flux upper limits with the extrapolations in the optical domain of the
-ray spectra and compared their multi-wavelength properties with those
of other -ray pulsars of comparable age.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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