1,385 research outputs found
A possible mechanism for superconductivity in doped SrTiO3
The soft ferro-electric phonon in SrTiO3 observed with optical spectroscopy
has an extraordinary strong spectral weight which is much stronger than
expected in the limit of a perfectly ionic compound. The "charged phonon" in
SrTiO3 is caused by the close-to-covalent character of the Ti-O ionic bond and
implies a strong coupling between the soft ferro-electric phonon and the inter
band transitions across the 3 eV gap of SrTiO3. We demonstrate that this
coupling leads, in addition to the charged phonon effect, to a pairing
interaction involving the exchange of two transverse optical phonons. This
process owes its relevance to the strong electron-phonon coupling and to the
fact that the interaction mediated by a single transverse optical phonon
vanishes at low electron density. We use the experimental soft phonon spectral
weight to calculate the strength of the bi-phonon mediated pairing interaction
in the electron doped material and show that it is of the correct magnitude
when compared to the experimental value of the superconducting critical
temperature.Comment: Missing factors corrected in Eqs. 6 and
The fate of quasiparticles in the superconducting state
Quasiparticle properties in the superconducting state are masked by the
superfluid and are not directly accessible to infrared spectroscopy. We show
how one can use a Kramers--Kronig transformation to separate the quasiparticle
from superfluid response and extract intrinsic quasiparticle properties in the
superconducting state. We also address the issue of a narrow quasiparticle peak
observed in microwave measurements, and demonstrate how it can be combined with
infrared measurements to obtain unified picture of electrodynamic properties of
cuprate superconductors
Induction methods used in low temperature physics
A study has been made of induction bridges used in low temperature physics.\ud
\ud
In Part 1 the design of a mutual inductance bridge of the Hartshorn type is discussed. This design is based on a critical analysis of impurity effects of the different parts of the Hartshorn bridge. With this equipment frequencies up to 0.5 MHz can be used. Two methods have been developed to examine the secondary signal. In one of these use has been made of AD conversion techniques. In the other one, the secondary signal, produced by a superconducting sample, which is generally distorted, is analysed by using a Fourier expansion.\ud
\ud
In Part 2 equipment is described which enables us to measure the phase and amplitude of the harmonics of the output signal of the bridge. For synchronous detection a reference signal of the same frequency of the harmonic of interest is required. This reference signal is generated from the input signal of the bridge by means of a digital frequency multiplier with programmable multiplication factor N.\ud
\ud
In Part 3 some experimental results, showing the possibilities of the equipment, on some superconductors are presented
The black hole in IC 1459 from HST observations of the ionized gas disk
The peculiar elliptical galaxy IC 1459 (M_V = -21.19, D = 16.5 Mpc) has a
fast counterrotating stellar core, stellar shells and ripples, a blue nuclear
point source and strong radio core emission. We present results of a detailed
HST study of IC 1459, and in particular its central gas disk, aimed a
constraining the central mass distribution. We obtained WFPC2 narrow-band
imaging centered on the Halpha+[NII] emission lines to determine the flux
distribution of the gas emission at small radii, and we obtained FOS spectra at
six aperture positions along the major axis to sample the gas kinematics. We
construct different dynamical models for the Halpha+[NII] and Hbeta kinematics
that include a supermassive black hole, and in which the stellar mass
distribution is constrained by the observed surface brightness distribution and
ground-based stellar kinematics. All models are consistent with a black hole
mass in the range Mbh=1-4 x 10^8 Msun, and models without a black hole are
always ruled out at high confidence.Comment: 40 pages including 14 figures, Latex; submitted to A
Black Hole Masses and Host Galaxy Evolution of Radio-loud Active Galactic Nuclei
We report stellar velocity dispersion measurements for a sample of 28 AGN
host galaxies including our previous work. Using the mass-dispersion
() and the fundamental plane relations, we estimate the
black hole mass for a sample of 66 BL Lac objects and investigate the role of
black hole mass in the energetics of BL Lac objects. The black hole mass range
for different BL Lac spectral types is similar, . Neither X-ray nor radio luminosity correlates with black hole
mass. Low-frequency-peaked BL Lac objects have higher Eddington ratios on
average, because of either more beaming or higher intrinsic power. For the
black hole mass range , the radio
luminosity of BL Lac objects and flat-spectrum radio quasars spans over 4
orders of magnitude, with BL Lac objects being low-power AGNs. We also
investigate the evolution of host galaxies for 39 AGNs out to
with measuredstellar velocity dispersions. Comparing the mass-to-light ratio
evolution in the observed frame with population synthesis models, we find that
single burst star formation models with are
consistent with the observations. From our model, we estimated
the intrinsic mass-to-light ratio evolution in the Cousins band, , consistent with that of normal early
type galaxies.Comment: ApJ accepted, 22 pages, 11 figure
Dynamics of the nuclear gas & dust disc in the E4 radio galaxy NGC 7052
We present high spatial resolution ground-based broad-band imaging, H-alpha
+[NII] narrow-band imaging and long-slit spectroscopy for the E4 radio galaxy
NGC 7052, which has a nuclear dust disc. We detect ionized gas with a LINER
spectrum, residing also in a nuclear disc. The gas rotates rapidly and the
emission line widths increase towards the nucleus.
The images are well fit by an axisymmetric model with the gas and dust in a
disc of 1.5" radius (340 pc) in the equatorial plane of the stellar body,
viewed at an inclination of 70 degrees. We assume the gas to be on circular
orbits in the equatorial plane, with in addition a local turbulent velocity
dispersion. The circular velocity is calculated from the combined gravitational
potential of the stars and a possible nuclear black hole. The observed gas
rotation curve is well fit, either with or without a black hole. Turbulent
velocities >300 km/s must be present at radii <0.5" to fit the observed nuclear
line widths. Models with a black hole and no turbulence can also fit the line
widths, but these models cannot fit the observed nuclear line shapes. Models
with both a black hole and gas turbulence can fit the data well, but the black
hole is not required by the data, and if present, its mass must be < 5 x 10^8
solar masses. This upper limit is 5 times smaller than the black hole mass
inferred for M87 from HST data.
Our modelling and analysis techniques will be useful also for the study of
the kinematics of nuclear gas discs in other galaxies. Such data will yield
important information on the presence of massive black holes.Comment: 15 pages, uuencoded compressed PostScript, without the figures.
Figures at ftp://eku.ias.edu/pub/marel/ngc7052fig.u
The counterrotating core and the black hole mass of IC1459
The E3 giant elliptical galaxy IC1459 is the prototypical galaxy with a fast
counterrotating stellar core. We obtained one HST/STIS long-slit spectrum along
the major axis of this galaxy and CTIO spectra along five position angles. We
present self-consistent three-integral axisymmetric models of the stellar
kinematics, obtained with Schwarzschild's numerical orbit superposition method.
We study the dynamics of the kinematically decoupled core (KDC) in IC1459 and
we find it consists of stars that are well-separated from the rest of the
galaxy in phase space. The stars in the KDC counterrotate in a disk on orbits
that are close to circular. We estimate that the KDC mass is ~0.5% of the total
galaxy mass or ~3*10^9 Msun. We estimate the central black hole mass M_BH of
IC1459 independently from both its stellar and its gaseous kinematics. Some
complications probably explain why we find rather discrepant BH masses with the
different methods. The stellar kinematics suggest that M_BH = (2.6 +/-
1.1)*10^9 Msun (3 sigma error). The gas kinematics suggests that M_BH ~
3.5*10^8 Msun if the gas is assumed to rotate at the circular velocity in a
thin disk. If the observed velocity dispersion of the gas is assumed to be
gravitational, then M_BH could be as high as ~1.0*10^9 Msun. These different
estimates bracket the value M_BH = (1.1 +/- 0.3)*10^9 Msun predicted by the
M_BH-sigma relation. It will be an important goal for future studies to assess
the reliability of black hole mass determinations with either technique. This
is essential if one wants to interpret the correlation between the BH mass and
other global galaxy parameters (e.g. velocity dispersion) and in particular the
scatter in these correlations (believed to be only ~0.3 dex). [Abridged]Comment: 51 pages, LaTeX with 19 PostScript figures. Revised version, with
three new figures and data tables. To appear in The Astrophysical Journal,
578, 2002 October 2
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