4,398 research outputs found
Behavioral study of ultradian activity periods of mice enclosed in experimental cages of different dimensions
Male mice are enclosed in cages of different dimensions (cage A - 23x8x8 cm., cage B - 36x27x17 cm.), in an alternating light/dark regimen, at an ambient temperature of 22 to 23 C. The successions of the behavioral sequences of ultradian activity periods are noticed by direct observation during 11 consecutive hours in light. The experimental situation modifies the mean duration time and the behavioral organization of each activity period. However, the comparison of the overall activity time lengths and the comparison of the overall behavioral frequencies suggest that the energy spent per mouse is constant
The multiple planets transiting Kepler-9 I. Inferring stellar properties and planetary compositions
The discovery of multiple transiting planetary systems offers new
possibilities for characterising exoplanets and understanding their formation.
The Kepler-9 system contains two Saturn-mass planets, Kepler-9b and 9c. Using
evolution models of gas giants that reproduce the sizes of known transiting
planets and accounting for all sources of uncertainties, we show that Kepler-9b
(respectively 9c) contains \,\mearth\ (resp.
\,\mearth) of hydrogen and helium and \,\mearth
(resp. \,\mearth) of heavy elements. More accurate constraints
are obtained when comparing planets 9b and 9c: the ratio of the total mass
fractions of heavy elements are , indicating
that, although the masses of the planets differ, their global composition is
very similar, an unexpected result for formation models. Using evolution models
for super-Earths, we find that Kepler-9d must contain less than 0.1% of its
mass in hydrogen and helium and predict a mostly rocky structure with a total
mass between 4 and 16\,\mearth.Comment: 5 pages + 7 pages of online material ; revised article submitted to
A\&A and accepted on March 3
The Effects of Rotation Rate on Deep Convection in Giant Planets with Small Solid Cores
We study how the pattern of thermal convection and differential rotation in
the interior of a giant gaseous planet is affected by the presence of a small
solid core as a function of the planetary rotation rate. We show, using 2D
anelastic, hydrodynamic simulations, that the presence of a small solid core
results in significantly different flow structure relative to that of a fully
convective interior only if there is little or no planetary rotation.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
Evolution of "51Peg b-like" Planets
About one-quarter of the extrasolar giant planets discovered so far have
orbital distances smaller than 0.1 AU. These ``51Peg b-like'' planets can now
be directly characterized, as shown by the planet transiting in front the star
HD209458. We review the processes that affect their evolution.
We apply our work to the case of HD209458b, whose radius has been recently
measured. We argue that its radius can be reproduced only when the deep
atmosphere is assumed to be unrealistically hot. When using more realistic
atmospheric temperatures, an energy source appears to be missing in order to
explain HD209458b's large size. The most likely source of energy available is
not in the planet's spin or orbit, but in the intense radiation received from
the parent star. We show that the radius of HD209458b can be reproduced if a
small fraction (~1%) of the stellar flux is transformed into kinetic energy in
the planetary atmosphere and subsequently converted to thermal energy by
dynamical processes at pressures of tens of bars.Comment: 11 pages including 9 figures. A&A, in press. Also available at
http://www.obs-nice.fr/guillot/pegasi-planets
Comparative Evolution of Jupiter and Saturn
We present evolutionary sequences for Jupiter and Saturn, based on new
nongray model atmospheres, which take into account the evolution of the solar
luminosity and partitioning of dense components to deeper layers. The results
are used to set limits on the extent to which possible interior phase
separation of hydrogen and helium may have progressed in the two planets. When
combined with static models constrained by the gravity field, our evolutionary
calculations constrain the helium mass fraction in Jupiter to be between 0.20
and 0.27, relative to total hydrogen and helium. This is in agreement with the
Galileo determination. The helium mass fraction in Saturn's atmosphere lies
between 0.11 and 0.25, higher than the Voyager determination. Based on the
discrepancy between the Galileo and Voyager results for Jupiter, and our
models, we predict that Cassini measurements will yield a higher atmospheric
helium mass fraction for Saturn relative to the Voyager value.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX, 4 figures. submitted to ``Planetary and Space
Science.'
Spatiotemporal instability of a confined capillary jet
Recent experimental studies on the instability appearance of capillary jets
have revealed the capabilities of linear spatiotemporal instability analysis to
predict the parametrical map where steady jetting or dripping takes place. In
this work, we present an extensive analytical, numerical and experimental
analysis of confined capillary jets extending previous studies. We propose an
extended, accurate analytic model in the limit of low Reynolds flows, and
introduce a numerical scheme to predict the system response when the liquid
inertia is not negligible. Theoretical predictions show a remarkable accuracy
with results from the extensive experimental exploration provided.Comment: Submitted to the Physical Review E (20-March-2008
Measurement of the Radius of Neutron Stars with High S/N Quiescent Low-mass X-ray Binaries in Globular Clusters
This paper presents the measurement of the neutron star (NS) radius using the
thermal spectra from quiescent low-mass X-ray binaries (qLMXBs) inside globular
clusters (GCs). Recent observations of NSs have presented evidence that cold
ultra dense matter -- present in the core of NSs -- is best described by
"normal matter" equations of state (EoSs). Such EoSs predict that the radii of
NSs, Rns, are quasi-constant (within measurement errors, of ~10%) for
astrophysically relevant masses (Mns > 0.5 Msun). The present work adopts this
theoretical prediction as an assumption, and uses it to constrain a single Rns
value from five qLMXB targets with available high signal-to-noise X-ray
spectroscopic data. Employing a Markov-Chain Monte-Carlo approach, we produce
the marginalized posterior distribution for Rns, constrained to be the same
value for all five NSs in the sample. An effort was made to include all
quantifiable sources of uncertainty into the uncertainty of the quoted radius
measurement. These include the uncertainties in the distances to the GCs, the
uncertainties due to the Galactic absorption in the direction of the GCs, and
the possibility of a hard power-law spectral component for count excesses at
high photon energy, which are observed in some qLMXBs in the Galactic plane.
Using conservative assumptions,we found that the radius, common to the five
qLMXBs and constant for a wide range of masses, lies in the low range of
possible NS radii, Rns=9.1(+1.3)(-1.5) km (90%-confidence). Such a value is
consistent with low-res equations of state. We compare this result with
previous radius measurements of NSs from various analyses of different types of
systems. In addition, we compare the spectral analyses of individual qLMXBs to
previous works.Comment: Accepted to Apj. 31 pages, 17 figures, 8 table
On the Radii of Close-in Giant Planets
The recent discovery that the close-in extrasolar giant planet, HD209458b,
transits its star has provided a first-of-its-kind measurement of the planet's
radius and mass. In addition, there is a provocative detection of the light
reflected off of the giant planet, Boo b. Including the effects of
stellar irradiation, we estimate the general behavior of radius/age
trajectories for such planets and interpret the large measured radii of
HD209458b and Boo b in that context. We find that HD209458b must be a
hydrogen-rich gas giant. Furthermore, the large radius of close-in gas giant is
not due to the thermal expansion of its atmosphere, but to the high residual
entropy that remains throughout its bulk by dint of its early proximity to a
luminous primary. The large stellar flux does not inflate the planet, but
retards its otherwise inexorable contraction from a more extended configuration
at birth. This implies either that such a planet was formed near its current
orbital distance or that it migrated in from larger distances (0.5 A.U.),
no later than a few times years of birth.Comment: aasms4 LaTeX, 1 figure, accepted to Ap.J. Letter
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