21,665 research outputs found
Element Abundance Determination in Hot Evolved Stars
The hydrogen-deficiency in extremely hot post-AGB stars of spectral class
PG1159 is probably caused by a (very) late helium-shell flash or a AGB final
thermal pulse that consumes the hydrogen envelope, exposing the usually-hidden
intershell region. Thus, the photospheric element abundances of these stars
allow us to draw conclusions about details of nuclear burning and mixing
processes in the precursor AGB stars. We compare predicted element abundances
to those determined by quantitative spectral analyses performed with advanced
non-LTE model atmospheres. A good qualitative and quantitative agreement is
found for many species (He, C, N, O, Ne, F, Si, Ar) but discrepancies for
others (P, S, Fe) point at shortcomings in stellar evolution models for AGB
stars. Almost all of the chemical trace elements in these hot stars can only be
identified in the UV spectral range. The Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer
and the Hubble Space Telescope played a crucial role for this research.Comment: To appear in: Recent Advances in Spectroscopy: Theoretical,
Astrophysical, and Experimental Perspectives, Proceedings, Jan 28 - 31, 2009,
Kodaikanal, India (Springer
A non-pulsating neutron star in the supernova remnant HESS J1731-347 / G353.6-0.7 with a carbon atmosphere
Context: The CCO candidate in the center of the supernova remnant shell HESS
J1731-347 / G353.6-0.7 shows no pulsations and exhibits a blackbody-like X-ray
spectrum. If the absence of pulsations is interpreted as evidence for the
emitting surface area being the entire neutron star surface, the assumption of
the measured flux being due to a blackbody emission translates into a source
distance that is inconsistent with current estimates of the remnant's distance.
Aims: With the best available observational data, we extended the pulse period
search down to a sub-millisecond time scale and used a carbon atmosphere model
to describe the X-ray spectrum of the CCO and to estimate geometrical
parameters of the neutron star. Methods: To search for pulsations we used data
of an observation of the source with XMM-Newton performed in timing mode. For
the spectral analysis, we used earlier XMM-Newton observations performed in
imaging mode, which permits a more accurate treatment of the background. The
carbon atmosphere models used to fit the CCO spectrum are computed assuming
hydrostatic and radiative equilibria and take into account pressure ionization
and the presence of spectral lines. Results: Our timing analysis did not reveal
any pulsations with a pulsed fraction above ~8% down to 0.2 ms. This finding
further supports the hypothesis that the emitting surface area is the entire
neutron star surface. The carbon atmosphere model provides a good fit to the
CCO spectrum and leads to a normalization consistent with the available
distance estimates of the remnant. The derived constraints on the mass and
radius of the source are consistent with reasonable values of the neutron star
mass and radius. After the CCO in Cas A, the CCO in HESS J1731-347 / G353.6-0.7
is the second object of this class for which a carbon atmosphere model provides
a consistent description of X-ray emission.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in
Astronomy&Astrophysic
Numerical studies of planar closed random walks
Lattice numerical simulations for planar closed random walks and their
winding sectors are presented. The frontiers of the random walks and of their
winding sectors have a Hausdorff dimension . However, when properly
defined by taking into account the inner 0-winding sectors, the frontiers of
the random walks have a Hausdorff dimension .Comment: 15 pages, 15 figure
Weak magnetic fields in white dwarfs and their direct progenitors?
We have carried out a re-analysis of polarimetric data of central stars of
planetary nebulae, hot subdwarfs, and white dwarfs taken with FORS1 (FOcal
Reducer and low dispersion Spectrograph) on the VLT (Very Large Telescope), and
added a large number of new observations in order to increase the sample. A
careful analysis of the observations using only one wavelength calibration for
the polarimetrically analysed spectra and for all positions of the retarder
plate of the spectrograph is crucial in order to avoid spurious signals. We
find that the previous detections of magnetic fields in subdwarfs and central
stars could not be confirmed while about 10% of the observed white dwarfs have
magnetic fields at the kilogauss level.Comment: 6 pages, Proceedings of the 18th European White Dwarf Workshop, ASP
Conference Serie
The NASA Spitzer Space Telescope
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Spitzer Space Telescope (formerly the Space Infrared Telescope Facility) is the fourth and final facility in the Great Observatories Program, joining Hubble Space Telescope (1990), the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory (1991–2000), and the Chandra X-Ray Observatory (1999). Spitzer, with a sensitivity that is almost three orders of magnitude greater than that of any previous ground-based and space-based infrared observatory, is expected to revolutionize our understanding of the creation of the universe, the formation and evolution of primitive galaxies, the origin of stars and planets, and the chemical evolution of the universe. This review presents a brief overview of the scientific objectives and history of infrared astronomy. We discuss Spitzer's expected role in infrared astronomy for the new millennium. We describe pertinent details of the design, construction, launch, in-orbit checkout, and operations of the observatory and summarize some science highlights from the first two and a half years of Spitzer operations. More information about Spitzer can be found at http://spitzer.caltech.edu/
Lowering of surface melting temperature in atomic clusters with a nearly closed shell structure
We investigate the interplay of particle number, N, and structural properties
of selected clusters with N=12 up to N=562 by employing Gupta potentials
parameterized for Aluminum and extensive Monte-Carlo simulations. Our analysis
focuses on closed shell structures with extra atoms. The latter can put the
cluster under a significant stress and we argue that typically such a strained
system exhibits a reduced energy barrier for (surface) diffusion of cluster
atoms. Consequently, also its surface melting temperature, T_S, is reduced, so
that T_S separates from and actually falls well below the bulk value. The
proposed mechanism may be responsible for the suppression of the surface
melting temperature observed in a recent experiments.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, REVTeX 4; submitted to Phys.Rev.
Violation of Bell's inequalities implies distillability for N qubits
We consider quantum systems composed of qubits, and the family of all
Bell's correlation inequalities for two two-valued measurements per site. We
show that if a -qubit state violates any of these inequalities, then
it is at least bipartite distillable. Indeed there exists a link between the
amount of Bell's inequality violation and the degree of distillability. Thus,
we strengthen the interpretation of Bell's inequalities as detectors of useful
entanglement.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, REVTEX. List of authors extended. Partially
rewritten, a rather qualitative explanation of the results. Conclusions
unchange
Creating pseudo Kondo-resonances by field-induced diffusion of atomic hydrogen
In low temperature scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) experiments a cerium
adatom on Ag(100) possesses two discrete states with significantly different
apparent heights. These atomic switches also exhibit a Kondo-like feature in
spectroscopy experiments. By extensive theoretical simulations we find that
this behavior is due to diffusion of hydrogen from the surface onto the Ce
adatom in the presence of the STM tip field. The cerium adatom possesses
vibrational modes of very low energy (3-4meV) and very high efficiency (> 20%),
which are due to the large changes of Ce-states in the presence of hydrogen.
The atomic vibrations lead to a Kondo-like feature at very low bias voltages.
We predict that the same low-frequency/high-efficiency modes can also be
observed at lanthanum adatoms.Comment: five pages and four figure
A measurement-based approach to quantum arrival times
For a quantum-mechanically spread-out particle we investigate a method for
determining its arrival time at a specific location. The procedure is based on
the emission of a first photon from a two-level system moving into a
laser-illuminated region. The resulting temporal distribution is explicitly
calculated for the one-dimensional case and compared with axiomatically
proposed expressions. As a main result we show that by means of a deconvolution
one obtains the well known quantum mechanical probability flux of the particle
at the location as a limiting distribution.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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