227 research outputs found
The Casimir force at high temperature
The standard expression of the high-temperature Casimir force between perfect
conductors is obtained by imposing macroscopic boundary conditions on the
electromagnetic field at metallic interfaces. This force is twice larger than
that computed in microscopic classical models allowing for charge fluctuations
inside the conductors. We present a direct computation of the force between two
quantum plasma slabs in the framework of non relativistic quantum
electrodynamics including quantum and thermal fluctuations of both matter and
field. In the semi-classical regime, the asymptotic force at large slab
separation is identical to that found in the above purely classical models,
which is therefore the right result. We conclude that when calculating the
Casimir force at non-zero temperature, fluctuations inside the conductors can
not be ignored.Comment: 7 pages, 0 figure
Testing the existence of optical linear polarization in young brown dwarfs
Linear polarization can be used as a probe of the existence of atmospheric
condensates in ultracool dwarfs. Models predict that the observed linear
polarization increases withthe degree of oblateness, which is inversely
proportional to the surface gravity. We aimed to test the existence of optical
linear polarization in a sample of bright young brown dwarfs, with spectral
types between M6 and L2, observable from the Calar Alto Observatory, and
cataloged previously as low gravity objects using spectroscopy. Linear
polarimetric images were collected in I and R-band using CAFOS at the 2.2 m
telescope in Calar Alto Observatory (Spain). The flux ratio method was employed
to determine the linear polarization degrees. With a confidence of 3,
our data indicate that all targets have a linear polarimetry degree in average
below 0.69% in the I-band, and below 1.0% in the R-band, at the time they were
observed. We detected significant (i.e. P/ 3) linear polarization
for the young M6 dwarf 2MASS J04221413+1530525 in the R-band, with a degree of
= 0.81 0.17 %.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Hubble Space Telescope astrometry of the closest brown dwarf binary system -- I. Overview and improved orbit
Located at ~2pc, the L7.5+T0.5 dwarfs system WISE J104915.57-531906.1
(Luhman16AB) is the third closest system known to Earth, making it a key
benchmark for detailed investigation of brown dwarf atmospheric properties,
thermal evolution, multiplicity, and planet-hosting frequency. In the first
study of this series -- based on a multi-cycle Hubble Space Telescope (HST)
program -- we provide an overview of the project and present improved estimates
of positions, proper motions, annual parallax, mass ratio, and the current best
assessment of the orbital parameters of the A-B pair. Our HST observations
encompass the apparent periastron of the binary at 220.5+/-0.2 mas at epoch
2016.402. Although our data seem to be inconsistent with recent ground-based
astrometric measurements, we also exclude the presence of third bodies down to
Neptune masses and periods longer than a year.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, 9 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRAS on
2017 May
Direct imaging constraints on planet populations detected by microlensing
Results from gravitational microlensing suggested the existence of a large
population of free-floating planetary mass objects. The main conclusion from
this work was partly based on constraints from a direct imaging survey. This
survey determined upper limits for the frequency of stars that harbor giant
exoplanets at large orbital separations. Aims. We want to verify to what extent
upper limits from direct imaging do indeed constrain the microlensing results.
We examine the current derivation of the upper limits used in the microlensing
study and re-analyze the data from the corresponding imaging survey. We focus
on the mass and semi-major axis ranges that are most relevant in context of the
microlensing results. We also consider new results from a recent M-dwarf
imaging survey as these objects are typically the host stars for planets
detected by microlensing. We find that the upper limits currently applied in
context of the microlensing results are probably underestimated. This means
that a larger fraction of stars than assumed may harbor gas giant planets at
larger orbital separations. Also, the way the upper limit is currently used to
estimate the fraction of free-floating objects is not strictly correct. If the
planetary surface density of giant planets around M-dwarfs is described as
df_Planet ~ a^beta da, we find that beta ~ 0.5 - 0.6 is consistent with results
from different observational studies probing semi-major axes between ~0.03 - 30
AU. Having a higher upper limit on the fraction of stars that may have gas
giant planets at orbital separations probed by the microlensing data implies
that more of the planets detected in the microlensing study are potentially
bound to stars rather than free-floating. The current observational data are
consistent with a rising planetary surface density for giant exoplanets around
M-dwarfs out to ~30 AU.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A as Research Note, 3 page
Microscopic theory of the Casimir force at thermal equilibrium: large-separation asymptotics
We present an entirely microscopic calculation of the Casimir force
between two metallic plates in the limit of large separation . The models of
metals consist of mobile quantum charges in thermal equilibrium with the photon
field at positive temperature . Fluctuations of all degrees of freedom,
matter and field, are treated according to the principles of quantum
electrodynamics and statistical physics without recourse to approximations or
intermediate assumptions. Our main result is the correctness of the asymptotic
universal formula f(d) \sim -\frac{\zeta(3) \kB T}{8\pi d^3}, .
This supports the fact that, in the framework of Lifshitz' theory of
electromagnetic fluctuations, transverse electric modes do not contribute in
this regime. Moreover the microscopic origin of universality is seen to rely on
perfect screening sum rules that hold in great generality for conducting media.Comment: 34 pages, 0 figures. New version includes restructured intro and
minor typos correcte
"Screening" of universal van der Waals - Casimir terms by Coulomb gases in a fully-finite two-dimensional geometry
This paper is a continuation of a previous one [Jancovici and Samaj, 2004 J.
Stat. Mech. P08006] dealing with classical Casimir phenomena in semi-infinite
wall geometries. In that paper, using microscopic Coulomb systems, the
long-ranged Casimir force due to thermal fluctuations in conducting walls was
shown to be screened by the presence of an electrolyte between the walls into
some residual short-ranged force. Here, we aim to extend the study of the
screening (cancellation) phenomena to universal Casimir terms appearing in the
large-size expansions of the grand potentials for microscopic Coulomb systems
confined in fully-finite 2D geometries, in particular the disc geometry. Two
cases are solved exactly: the high-temperature (Debye-H\"uckel) limit and the
Thirring free-fermion point. Similarities and fundamental differences between
fully-finite and semi-infinite geometries are pointed out.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figur
Weather on the Nearest Brown Dwarfs: Resolved Simultaneous Multi-Wavelength Variability Monitoring of WISE J104915.57-531906.1AB
We present two epochs of MPG/ESO 2.2m GROND simultaneous 6-band ()
photometric monitoring of the closest known L/T transition brown dwarf binary
WISE J104915.57-531906.1AB. We report here the first resolved variability
monitoring of both the T0.5 and L7.5 components. We obtained 4 hours of focused
observations on the night of UT 2013-04-22, as well as 4 hours of defocused
(unresolved) observations on the night of UT 2013-04-16. We note a number of
robust trends in our light curves. The and light curves appear to be
anticorrelated with and for the T0.5 component and in the unresolved
lightcurve. In the defocused dataset, appears correlated with and
and anticorrelated with and , while in the focused dataset we measure
no variability for at the level of our photometric precision, likely due to
evolving weather phenomena. In our focused T0.5 component lightcurve, the
band lightcurve displays a significant phase offset relative to both and
. We argue that the measured phase offsets are correlated with atmospheric
pressure probed at each band, as estimated from 1D atmospheric models. We also
report low-amplitude variability in and intrinsic to the L7.5
component.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, accepted to ApJ Letter
A grid of polarization models for Rayleigh scattering planetary atmospheres
We investigate the intensity and polarization of reflected light from
planetary atmospheres. We present a large grid of Monte Carlo simulations for
planets with Rayleigh scattering atmospheres. We discuss the disk-integrated
polarization for phase angles typical of extrasolar planet observations and for
the limb polarization effect observable for solar system objects near
opposition. The main parameters investigated are single scattering albedo,
optical depth of the scattering layer, and albedo of an underlying Lambert
surface for a homogeneous Rayleigh scattering atmosphere. We also investigate
atmospheres with isotropic scattering and forward scattering aerosol particles,
as well as models with two scattering layers.
The model grid provides a tool for extracting quantitative results from
polarimetric measurements of planetary atmospheres from solar system planets
and extrasolar planets, in particular on the scattering properties and
stratification of particles in the highest atmosphere layers.
Spectropolarimetry of solar system planets offers complementary information to
spectroscopy and polarization flux colors can be used for a first
characterization of exoplanet atmospheres. From limb polarization measurements,
one can set constraints on the polarization at large phase angles.Comment: 19 pages, 21 figures. Minor changes. Published in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
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