6,411 research outputs found
Chemical Equilibrium Abundances in Brown Dwarf and Extrasolar Giant Planet Atmospheres
We calculate detailed chemical abundance profiles for a variety of brown
dwarf and extrasolar giant planet atmosphere models, focusing in particular on
Gliese 229B, and derive the systematics of the changes in the dominant
reservoirs of the major elements with altitude and temperature. We assume an
Anders and Grevesse (1989) solar composition of 27 chemical elements and track
330 gas--phase species, including the monatomic forms of the elements, as well
as about 120 condensates. We address the issue of the formation and composition
of clouds in the cool atmospheres of substellar objects and explore the rain
out and depletion of refractories. We conclude that the opacity of clouds of
low--temperature (900 K), small--radius condensibles (specific chlorides
and sulfides), may be responsible for the steep spectrum of Gliese 229B
observed in the near infrared below 1 \mic. Furthermore, we assemble a
temperature sequence of chemical transitions in substellar atmospheres that may
be used to anchor and define a sequence of spectral types for substellar
objects with Ts from 2200 K to 100 K.Comment: 57 pages total, LaTeX, 14 figures, 5 tables, also available in
uuencoded, gzipped, and tarred form via anonymous ftp at
www.astrophysics.arizona.edu (cd to pub/burrows/chem), submitted to Ap.
Detectability of dirty dust grains in brown dwarf atmospheres
Dust clouds influence the atmospheric structure of brown dwarfs, and they
affect the heat transfer and change the gas-phase chemistry. However, the
physics of their formation and evolution is not well understood. In this
letter, we predict dust signatures and propose a potential observational test
of the physics of dust formation in brown dwarf atmosphere based on the
spectral features of the different solid components predicted by dust formation
theory. A momentum method for the formation of dirty dust grains (nucleation,
growth, evaporation, drift) is used in application to a static brown dwarf
atmosphere structure to compute the dust grain properties, in particular the
heterogeneous grain composition and the grain size. Effective medium and Mie
theory are used to compute the extinction of these spherical grains. Dust
formation results in grains whose composition differs from that of grains
formed at equilibrium. Our kinetic model predicts that solid amorphous SiO2[s]
(silica) is one of the most abundant solid component followed by amorphous
MgSiO4[s] and MgSiO3[s], while SiO2[s] is absent in equilibrium models
because it is a metastable solid. Solid amorphous SiO2[s] possesses a strong
broad absorption feature centered at 8.7mum, while amorphous
Mg2SiO4[s]/MgSiO3[s] absorb at 9.7mum beside other absorption features at
longer wavelength. Those features at lambda < 15mum are detectable in
absorption if grains are small (radius < 0.2mum) in the upper atmosphere as
suggested by our model. We suggest that the detection of a feature at 8.7mum in
deep infrared spectra could provide evidence for non-equilibrium dust formation
that yields grains composed of metastable solids in brown dwarf atmospheres.
This feature will shift towards 10mum and broaden if silicates (e.g. fosterite)
are much more abundant.Comment: A&A Letter, accepte
Resolved Spectroscopy of M Dwarf/L Dwarf Binaries. II. 2MASS J 17072343-0558249AB
We present IRTF SpeX observations of the M/L binary system 2MASS
J17072343-0558249. SpeX imaging resolves the system into a 1"01+/-0.17 visual
binary in which both components have red near infrared colors. Resolved
low-resolution (R~150) 0.8-2.5 micron spectroscopy reveals strong H2O, CO and
FeH bands and alkali lines in the spectra of both components, characteristic of
late-type M and L dwarfs. A comparison to a sample of late-type field dwarf
spectra indicates spectral types M9 and L3. Despite the small proper motion of
the system (0"100+/-0"009 yr^{-1}), imaging observations over 2.5 yr provide
strong evidence that the two components share common proper motion. Physical
association is also likely due to the small spatial volume occupied by the two
components (based on spectrophotometric distances estimates of 15+/-1 pc) as
compared to the relatively low spatial density of low mass field stars. The
projected separation of the system is 15+/-3 AU, similar to other late-type M
and L binaries. Assuming a system age of 0.5-5 Gyr, we estimate the masses of
the binary components to be 0.072-0.083 and 0.064-0.077 M_sun, with an orbital
period of roughly 150-300 yr. While this is nominally too long a baseline for
astrometric mass measurements, the proximity and relatively wide angular
separation of the 2MASS J1707-0558AB pair makes it an ideal system for studying
the M dwarf/L dwarf transition at a fixed age and metallicity
2MASS J03105986+1648155AB - A new binary at the L/T transition
The transition from the L to the T spectral type of brown dwarfs is marked by
a very rapid transition phase, remarkable brightening in the J-band and a
higher binary frequency. Despite being an active area of inquiry, this
transition regime still remains one of the most poorly understood phases of
brown dwarf evolution. We resolved the L dwarf 2MASS J03105986+1648155 for the
first time into two almost equally bright components straddling the L/T
transition. Since such a co-eval system with common age and composition
provides crucial information of this special transition phase, we monitored the
system over 3 years to derive first orbital parameters and dynamical mass
estimates, as well as a spectral type determination. We obtained resolved high
angular resolution, near-IR images with HST and the adaptive optics instrument
NACO at the VLT including the laser guide star system PARSEC. Based on two
epochs of astrometric data we derive a minimum semi-major axis of 5.2 +- 0.8
AU. The assumption of a face-on circular orbit yields an orbital period of 72
+- 4 years and a total system mass of 30-60 Mjup. This places the masses of the
individual components of the system at the lower end of the mass regime of
brown dwarfs. The achieved photometry allowed a first spectral type
determination of L9 +- 1 for each component. In addition, this seems to be only
the fifth resolved L/T transition binary with a flux reversal. While ultimate
explanations for this effect are still owing, the 2MASS J03105986+1648155
system adds an important benchmark object for improving our understanding of
this remarkable evolutionary phase of brown dwarfs. Additionally, the
observational results of 2MASS J03105986+1648155 AB derived with the new PARSEC
AO system at the VLT show the importance of this technical capability. The
updated AO system allows us to significantly extend the sample of brown dwarfs
observable with high-resolution from the ground and hence to reveal more of
their physical properties.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication by A&
The Green’s function for the Hückel (tight binding) model
Applications of the Huckel (tight binding) model are ubiquitous in quantum chemistry and solid state physics. The matrix representation of this model is isomorphic to an unoriented vertex adjacency matrix of a bipartite graph, which is also the Laplacian matrix plus twice the identity. In this paper, we analytically calculate the determinant and, when it exists, the inverse of this matrix in connection with the Green's function, G, of the N × N Huckel matrix. A corollary is a closed form expression for a Harmonic sum (Eq. (12)).We then extend the results to d-dimensional lattices, whose linear size is N. The existence of the inverse becomes a question of number theory. We prove a new theorem in number theory pertaining to vanishing sums of cosines and use it to prove that the inverse exists if and only if N + 1 and d are odd and d is smaller than the smallest divisor of N + 1. We corroborate our results by demonstrating the entry patterns of the Green's function and discuss applications related to transport and conductivity
Superior Protection against Malaria and Melanoma Metastases by a C-glycoside Analogue of the Natural Killer T Cell Ligand α-Galactosylceramide
α-Galactosylceramide (α-GalCer) is a glycolipid that stimulates natural killer T cells to produce both T helper (Th) 1 and Th2 cytokines. This property enables α-GalCer to ameliorate a wide variety of infectious, neoplastic, and autoimmune diseases; however, its effectiveness against any one disease is limited by the opposing activities of the induced Th1 and Th2 cytokines. Here, we report that a synthetic C-glycoside analogue of α-GalCer, α-C-galactosylceramide (α-C-GalCer), acts as natural killer T cell ligand in vivo, and stimulates an enhanced Th1-type response in mice. In two disease models requiring Th1-type responses for control, namely malaria and melanoma metastases, α-C-GalCer exhibited a 1,000-fold more potent antimalaria activity and a 100-fold more potent antimetastatic activity than α-GalCer. Moreover, α-C-GalCer consistently stimulated prolonged production of the Th1 cytokines interferon-γ and interleukin (IL)-12, and decreased production of the Th2 cytokine IL-4 compared with α-GalCer. Finally, α-C-GalCer's enhanced therapeutic activity required the presence of IL-12, which was needed to stimulate natural killer cells for optimal interferon-γ production, but did not affect IL-4. Overall, our results suggest that α-C-GalCer may one day be an excellent therapeutic option for diseases resolved by Th1-type responses
A Multifactorial Mechanism in the Superior Antimalarial Activity of α-C-GalCer
We have previously shown that the C-glycoside analog of α-galactosylceramide (α-GalCer), α-C-GalCer, displays a superior inhibitory activity against the liver stages of the rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium yoelii than its parental glycolipid, α-GalCer. In this study, we demonstrate that NK cells, as well as IL-12, are a key contributor for the superior activity displayed by α-C-GalCer. Surprisingly, the diminished production of Th2 cytokines, including IL-4, by α-C-GalCer has no affect on its superior therapeutic activity relative to α-GalCer. Finally, we show that the in vivo administration of α-C-GalCer induces prolonged maturation of dendritic cells (DCs), as well as an enhanced proliferative response of mouse invariant Vα14 (Vα14i) NKT cells, both of which may also contribute to some degree to the superior activity of α-C-GalCer in vivo
Quantitative estimates of discrete harmonic measures
A theorem of Bourgain states that the harmonic measure for a domain in
is supported on a set of Hausdorff dimension strictly less than
\cite{Bourgain}. We apply Bourgain's method to the discrete case, i.e., to the
distribution of the first entrance point of a random walk into a subset of , . By refining the argument, we prove that for all \b>0 there
exists \rho (d,\b)N(d,\b), any , and any | \{y\in\Z^d\colon \nu_{A,x}(y)
\geq n^{-\b} \}| \leq n^{\rho(d,\b)}, where denotes the
probability that is the first entrance point of the simple random walk
starting at into . Furthermore, must converge to as \b \to
\infty.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures. Part (B) of the theorem is ne
5-micron photometry of late-type dwarfs
We present narrowband-M photometry of nine low-mass dwarfs with spectral
types ranging from M2.5 to L0.5. Combining the (L'-M') colours derived from our
observations with data from the literature, we find colours consistent with a
Rayleigh-Jeans flux distribution for spectral types earlier than M5, but
enhanced F_3.8/F_4.7 flux ratios (negative (L'-M') colours) at later spectral
types. This probably reflects increased absorption at M' due to the CO
fundamental band. We compare our results against recent model predictions and
briefly discuss the implications.Comment: accepted for the Astronomical Journa
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