5,177 research outputs found

    Fixed-N Superconductivity: The Crossover from the Bulk to the Few-Electron Limit

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    We present a truly canonical theory of superconductivity in ultrasmall metallic grains by variationally optimizing fixed-N projected BCS wave-functions, which yields the first full description of the entire crossover from the bulk BCS regime (mean level spacing dd \ll bulk gap Δ~\tilde\Delta) to the ``fluctuation-dominated'' few-electron regime (dΔ~d\gg\tilde\Delta). A wave-function analysis shows in detail how the BCS limit is recovered for dΔ~d\ll \tilde \Delta, and how for dΔ~d \gg \tilde \Delta pairing correlations become delocalized in energy space. An earlier grand-canonical prediction for an observable parity effect in the spectral gaps is found to survive the fixed-N projection.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, RevTeX, V2: minor charges to mach final printed versio

    The LAEX and NASA portals for CoRoT public data

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    * Aims. We describe here the main functionalities of the LAEX (Laboratorio de Astrofisica Estelar y Exoplanetas/Laboratory for Stellar Astrophysics and Exoplanets) and NASA portals for CoRoT Public Data. The CoRoT archive at LAEX was opened to the community in January 2009 and is managed in the framework of the Spanish Virtual Observatory. NStED (NASA Star and Exoplanet Database) serves as the CoRoT portal for the US astronomical community. NStED is a general purpose stellar and exoplanet archive with the aim of providing support for NASA planet finding and characterisation goals, and the planning and support of NASA and other space missions. CoRoT data at LAEX and NStED can be accessed at http://sdc.laeff.inta.es/corotfa/ and http://nsted.ipac.caltech.edu,respectively. * Methods. Based on considerable experience with astronomical archives, the aforementioned archives are designed with the aim of delivering science-quality data in a simple and efficient way. * Results. LAEX and NStED not only provide access to CoRoT Public Data but furthermore serve a variety of observed and calculated astrophysical data. In particular, NStED provides scientifically validated information on stellar and planetary data related to the search for and characterization of extrasolar planets, and LAEX makes any information from Virtual Observatory services available to the astronomical community.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic

    Photometry Results for the Globular Clusters M10 and M12: Extinction Maps, Color-Magnitude Diagrams, and Variable Star Candidates

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    We report on photometry results of the equatorial globular clusters (GCs) M10 and M12. These two clusters are part of our sample of GCs which we are probing for the existence of photometrically varying eclipsing binary stars. During the search for binaries in M10 and M12, we discovered the signature of differential reddening across the fields of the clusters. The effect is stronger for M10 than for M12. Using our previously described dereddening technique, we create differential extinction maps for the clusters which dramatically improve the appearance of the color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs). Comparison of our maps with the dust emissivity maps of Schlegel, Finkbeiner, & Davis (SFD) shows good agreement in terms of spatial extinction features. Several methods of adding an E_{V-I} zero point to our differential maps are presented of which isochrone fitting proved to be the most successful. Our E_{V-I} values fall within the range of widely varying literature values. More specifically, our reddening zero point estimate for M12 agrees well with the SFD estimate, whereas the one for M10 falls below the SFD value. Our search for variable stars in the clusters produced a total of five variables: three in M10 and two in M12. The M10 variables include a binary system of the W Ursa Majoris (W UMa) type, a background RR Lyrae star, and an SX Phoenicis pulsator, none of which is physically associated with M10. M12's variables are two W UMa binaries, one of which is most likely a member of the cluster. We present the phased photometry lightcurves for the variable stars, estimate their distances, and show their locations in the fields and the CMDs of the GCs.Comment: 22 pages, 21 figures, to be published in AJ October 2002. For a higher-resolution version of this paper, please visit http://www.astro.lsa.umich.edu/~kaspar/M10_M12_photometry.ps.gz (gzipped postscript) or http://www.astro.lsa.umich.edu/~kaspar/M10_M12_photometry.pdf (pdf file

    Paramagnetic Breakdown of Superconductivity in Ultrasmall Metallic Grains

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    We study the magnetic-field-induced breakdown of superconductivity in nm-scale metal grains having a mean electron level spacing dΔ~d \simeq \tilde\Delta (bulk gap). Using a generalized variational BCS approach that yields good qualitative agreement with measured spectra, we argue that Pauli paramagnetism dominates orbital diamagnetism, as in the case of thin films in a parallel magnetic field. However, the first-order transition observed for the latter can be made continuous by finite size effects. The mean-field procedure of describing the system by a single pairing parameter Δ\Delta breaks down for dΔ~d \simeq \tilde\Delta.Comment: 4 pages of revtex, 3 postscript figures, uses psfrag.sty, epsfig.sty. Slightly revised and improved version, matching published versio

    Distribution of level curvatures for the Anderson model at the localization-delocalization transition

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    We compute the distribution function of single-level curvatures, P(k)P(k), for a tight binding model with site disorder, on a cubic lattice. In metals P(k)P(k) is very close to the predictions of the random-matrix theory (RMT). In insulators P(k)P(k) has a logarithmically-normal form. At the Anderson localization-delocalization transition P(k)P(k) fits very well the proposed novel distribution P(k)(1+kμ)3/μP(k)\propto (1+k^{\mu})^{3/\mu} with μ1.58\mu \approx 1.58, which approaches the RMT result for large kk and is non-analytical at small kk. We ascribe such a non-analiticity to the spatial multifractality of the critical wave functions.Comment: 4 ReVTeX pages and 4(.epsi)figures included in one uuencoded packag

    Superconductivity in Ultrasmall Metallic Grains

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    We develop a theory of superconductivity in ultrasmall (nm-scale) metallic grains having a discrete electronic eigenspectrum with a mean level spacing of order of the bulk gap. The theory is based on calculating the eigenspectrum using a generalized BCS variational approach, whose applicability has been extensively demonstrated in studies of pairing correlations in nuclear physics. We discuss how conventional mean field theory breaks down with decreasing sample size, how the so-called blocking effect weakens pairing correlations in states with non-zero total spin, and how this affects the discrete eigenspectrum's behavior in a magnetic field, which favors non-zero total spin. In ultrasmall grains, spin magnetism dominates orbital magnetism, just as in thin films in a parallel field; but whereas in the latter the magnetic-field induced transition to a normal state is known to be first-order, we show that in ultrasmall grains it is softened by finite size effects. Our calculations qualitatively reproduce the magnetic-field dependent tunneling spectra for individual aluminum grains measured recently by Ralph, Black and Tinkham. We argue that previously-discussed parity effects for the odd-even ground state energy difference are presently not observable for experimental reasons, and propose an analogous parity effect for the pair-breaking energy that should be observable provided that the grain size can be controlled sufficiently well. Finally, experimental evidence is pointed out that the dominant role played by time-reversed pairs of states, well-established in bulk and in dirty superconductors, persists also in ultrasmall grains.Comment: 21 pages RevTeX, 12 EPS figures included, uses epsf.st

    The NASA-UC-UH Eta-Earth Program: IV. A Low-mass Planet Orbiting an M Dwarf 3.6 PC from Earth

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    We report the discovery of a low-mass planet orbiting Gl 15 A based on radial velocities from the Eta-Earth Survey using HIRES at Keck Observatory. Gl 15 Ab is a planet with minimum mass Msini = 5.35 ±\pm 0.75 M_\oplus, orbital period P = 11.4433 ±\pm 0.0016 days, and an orbit that is consistent with circular. We characterize the host star using a variety of techniques. Photometric observations at Fairborn Observatory show no evidence for rotational modulation of spots at the orbital period to a limit of ~0.1 mmag, thus supporting the existence of the planet. We detect a second RV signal with a period of 44 days that we attribute to rotational modulation of stellar surface features, as confirmed by optical photometry and the Ca II H & K activity indicator. Using infrared spectroscopy from Palomar-TripleSpec, we measure an M2 V spectral type and a sub-solar metallicity ([M/H] = -0.22, [Fe/H] = -0.32). We measure a stellar radius of 0.3863 ±\pm 0.0021 R_\odot based on interferometry from CHARA.Comment: ApJ accepted, 11 pages, 8 figures, 3 table

    Follow-Up Observations of PTFO 8-8695: A 3 MYr Old T-Tauri Star Hosting a Jupiter-mass Planetary Candidate

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    We present Spitzer 4.5\micron\ light curve observations, Keck NIRSPEC radial velocity observations, and LCOGT optical light curve observations of PTFO~8-8695, which may host a Jupiter-sized planet in a very short orbital period (0.45 days). Previous work by \citet{vaneyken12} and \citet{barnes13} predicts that the stellar rotation axis and the planetary orbital plane should precess with a period of 300600300 - 600 days. As a consequence, the observed transits should change shape and depth, disappear, and reappear with the precession. Our observations indicate the long-term presence of the transit events (>3>3 years), and that the transits indeed do change depth, disappear and reappear. The Spitzer observations and the NIRSPEC radial velocity observations (with contemporaneous LCOGT optical light curve data) are consistent with the predicted transit times and depths for the $M_\star = 0.34\ M_\odot$ precession model and demonstrate the disappearance of the transits. An LCOGT optical light curve shows that the transits do reappear approximately 1 year later. The observed transits occur at the times predicted by a straight-forward propagation of the transit ephemeris. The precession model correctly predicts the depth and time of the Spitzer transit and the lack of a transit at the time of the NIRSPEC radial velocity observations. However, the precession model predicts the return of the transits approximately 1 month later than observed by LCOGT. Overall, the data are suggestive that the planetary interpretation of the observed transit events may indeed be correct, but the precession model and data are currently insufficient to confirm firmly the planetary status of PTFO~8-8695b.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
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