37,403 research outputs found

    Large-scale Vortices in Protoplanetary Disks: On the observability of possible early stages of planet formation

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    We investigate the possibility of mapping large-scale anti-cyclonic vortices, resulting from a global baroclinic instability, as pre-cursors of planet formation in proto-planetary disks with the planned Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA). On the basis of three-dimensional radiative transfer simulations, images of a hydrodynamically calculated disk are derived which provide the basis for the simulation of ALMA. We find that ALMA will be able to trace the theoretically predicted large-scale anti-cyclonic vortex and will therefore allow testing of existing models of this very early stage of planet formation in circumstellar disks.Comment: Accepted by ApJ (Letters section). A preprint version with high-quality figures can be downloaded from http://spider.ipac.caltech.edu/staff/swolf/homepage/public/preprints/ vortex.ps.g

    Progress on testing Lorentz symmetry with MICROSCOPE

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    The Weak Equivalence Principle (WEP) and the local Lorentz invariance (LLI) are two major assumptions of General Relativity (GR). The MICROSCOPE mission, currently operating, will perform a test of the WEP with a precision of 101510^{-15}. The data will also be analysed at SYRTE for the purposes of a LLI test realised in collaboration with J. Tasson (Carleton College, Minnesota) and Q. Bailey (Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Arizona). This study will be performed in a general framework, called the Standard Model Extension (SME), describing Lorentz violations that could appear at Planck scale (101910^{19} GeV). The SME allows us to derive a Lorentz violating observable designed for the MICROSCOPE experiment and to search for possible deviations from LLI in the differential acceleration of the test masses

    Technologies for 3D Heterogeneous Integration

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    3D-Integration is a promising technology towards higher interconnect densities and shorter wiring lengths between multiple chip stacks, thus achieving a very high performance level combined with low power consumption. This technology also offers the possibility to build up systems with high complexity just by combining devices of different technologies. For ultra thin silicon is the base of this integration technology, the fundamental processing steps will be described, as well as appropriate handling concepts. Three main concepts for 3D integration have been developed at IZM. The approach with the greatest flexibility called Inter Chip Via - Solid Liquid Interdiffusion (ICV-SLID) is introduced. This is a chip-to-wafer stacking technology which combines the advantages of the Inter Chip Via (ICV) process and the solid-liquid-interdiffusion technique (SLID) of copper and tin. The fully modular ICV-SLID concept allows the formation of multiple device stacks. A test chip was designed and the total process sequence of the ICV-SLID technology for the realization of a three-layer chip-to-wafer stack was demonstrated. The proposed wafer-level 3D integration concept has the potential for low cost fabrication of multi-layer high-performance 3D-SoCs and is well suited as a replacement for embedded technologies based on monolithic integration. To address yield issues a wafer-level chip-scale handling is presented as well, to select known-good dies and work on them with wafer-level process sequences before joining them to integrated stacks.Comment: Submitted on behalf of EDA Publishing Association (http://irevues.inist.fr/handle/2042/16838

    Ferrimagnetism of MnV_2O_4 spinel

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    The spinel MnV_2O_4 is a two-sublattice ferrimagnet, with site A occupied by the Mn^{2+} ion and site B by the V^{3+} ion. The magnon of the system, the transversal fluctuation of the total magnetization, is a complicated mixture of the sublattice A and B transversal magnetic fluctuations. As a result, the magnons' fluctuations suppress in a different way the manganese and vanadium magnetic orders and one obtains two phases. At low temperature (0,T^*) the magnetic orders of the Mn and V ions contribute to the magnetization of the system, while at the high temperature (T^*,T_N), the vanadium magnetic order is suppressed by magnon fluctuations, and only the manganese ions have non-zero spontaneous magnetization. A modified spin-wave theory is developed to describe the two phases and to calculate the magnetization as a function of temperature. The anomalous M(T)M(T) curve reproduces the experimentally obtained ZFC magnetization.Comment: 4 pages, one figur

    Electronic structure of single-crystalline Mgx_xAl1x_{1-x}B2_2 probed by x-ray diffraction multipole refinements and polarization-dependent x-ray absorption spectroscopy

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    X-ray diffraction multipole refinements of single-crystalline Mgx_xAl1x_{1-x}B2_2 and polarization-dependent near-edge x-ray absorption fine structure at the B 1ss edge reveal a strongly anisotropic electronic structure. Comparing the data for superconducting compounds (x=0.8x= 0.8, 1.0) with those for the non-superconductor (x=0x=0) gives direct evidence for a rearrangement of the hybridizations of the boron pzp_z bonds and underline the importance of holes in the σ\sigma-bonded covalent sp2sp^2 states for the superconducting properties of the diborides. The data indicate that Mg is approximately divalent in MgB2_2 and suggest predominantly ionic bonds between the Mg ions and the two-dimensional B rings. For AlB2_2 (x=0x=0), on the other hand, about 1.5 electrons per Al atom are transferred to the B sheets while the residual 1.5 electrons remain at the Al site which suggests significant covalent bonding between the Al ions and the B sheets. This finding together with the static electron deformation density points to almost equivalent electron counts on B sheets of MgB2_2 and AlB2_2\@, yet with a completely different electron/hole distribution between the σ\sigma and π\pi bonds

    Role of phi decays for K- yields in relativistic heavy-ion collisions

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    The production of strange mesons in collisions of Ar+KCl at a kinetic beam energy of 1.756 AGeV is studied within a transport model of Boltzmann-\"Uhling-Uhlenbeck (BUU) type. In particular, ϕ,K+\phi, K^+ and KK^- yields and spectra are compared to the data mesured recently by the HADES collaboration and the ϕ\phi yield measured previously by the FOPI collaboration. Our results are in agreement with these data thus presenting an interpretation of the subleading role of ϕ\phi decays into KK^-'s and confirming the importance of the strangeness-exchange channels for KK^- production.Comment: 24 pages, 19 figure
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