267 research outputs found
Numerically determined transport laws for fingering ("thermohaline") convection in astrophysics
We present the first three-dimensional simulations of fingering convection
performed in a parameter regime close to the one relevant for astrophysics, and
reveal the existence of simple asymptotic scaling laws for turbulent heat and
compositional transport. These laws can straightforwardly be extrapolated to
the true astrophysical regime. Our investigation also indicates that
thermocompositional "staircases," a key consequence of fingering convection in
the ocean, cannot form spontaneously in the fingering regime in stellar
interiors. Our proposed empirically-determined transport laws thus provide
simple prescriptions for mixing by fingering convection in a variety of
astrophysical situations, and should, from here on, be used preferentially over
older and less accurate parameterizations. They also establish that fingering
convection does not provide sufficient extra mixing to explain observed
chemical abundances in RGB stars.Comment: Submitted to ApJ Letters on October 29th. 15 pages, 4 figures. See
Garaud 2010 for companion pape
Buried Black Hole Growth in IR-selected Mergers: New Results from Chandra
Observations and theoretical simulations suggest that a significant fraction
of merger-triggered accretion onto supermassive black holes is highly obscured,
particularly in late-stage galaxy mergers, when the black hole is expected to
grow most rapidly. Starting with the Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer
all-sky survey, we identified a population of galaxies whose morphologies
suggest ongoing interaction and which exhibit red mid-infrared colors often
associated with powerful active galactic nuclei (AGNs). In a follow-up to our
pilot study, we now present Chandra/ACIS and XMM-Newton X-ray observations for
the full sample of the brightest 15 IR-preselected mergers. All mergers reveal
at least one nuclear X-ray source, with 8 out of 15 systems exhibiting dual
nuclear X-ray sources, highly suggestive of single and dual AGNs. Combining
these X-ray results with optical line ratios and with near-IR coronal emission
line diagnostics, obtained with the near-IR spectrographs on the Large
Binocular Telescope, we confirm that 13 out of the 15 mergers host AGNs, two of
which host dual AGNs. Several of these AGNs are not detected in the optical.
All X-ray sources appear X-ray weak relative to their mid-infrared continuum,
and of the nine X-ray sources with sufficient counts for spectral analysis,
eight reveal strong evidence of high absorption with column densities of
~cm. These observations demonstrate that a
significant population of single and dual AGNs are missed by optical studies,
due to high absorption, adding to the growing body of evidence that the epoch
of peak black hole growth in mergers occurs in a highly obscured phase.Comment: 29 pages, 22 figures; (Main text: 17 pages, 4 figures
Prodsimplicial-Neighborly Polytopes
Simultaneously generalizing both neighborly and neighborly cubical polytopes,
we introduce PSN polytopes: their k-skeleton is combinatorially equivalent to
that of a product of r simplices. We construct PSN polytopes by three different
methods, the most versatile of which is an extension of Sanyal and Ziegler's
"projecting deformed products" construction to products of arbitrary simple
polytopes. For general r and k, the lowest dimension we achieve is 2k+r+1.
Using topological obstructions similar to those introduced by Sanyal to bound
the number of vertices of Minkowski sums, we show that this dimension is
minimal if we additionally require that the PSN polytope is obtained as a
projection of a polytope that is combinatorially equivalent to the product of r
simplices, when the dimensions of these simplices are all large compared to k.Comment: 28 pages, 9 figures; minor correction
Silicon-organic hybrid electro-optical devices
Organic materials combined with strongly guiding silicon waveguides open the route to highly efficient electro-optical devices. Modulators based on the so-called silicon-organic hybrid (SOH) platform have only recently shown frequency responses up to 100 GHz, high-speed operation beyond 112 Gbit/s with fJ/bit power consumption. In this paper, we review the SOH platform and discuss important devices such as Mach-Zehnder and IQ-modulators based on the linear electro-optic effect. We further show liquid-crystal phase-shifters with a voltage-length product as low as V pi L = 0.06 V.mm and sub-mu W power consumption as required for slow optical switching or tuning optical filters and devices
Silicon-Organic Hybrid (SOH) and Plasmonic-Organic Hybrid (POH) integration
Silicon-organic hybrid (SOH) and plasmonic-organic hybrid (POH) integration combines organic clectro-optic materials with silicon photonic and plasmonic waveguides, The concept enables fast and power-efficient modulators that support advanced modulation formats such as QPSK and 16QAM
Microresonator solitons for massively parallel coherent optical communications
Optical solitons are waveforms that preserve their shape while propagating,
relying on a balance of dispersion and nonlinearity. Soliton-based data
transmission schemes were investigated in the 1980s, promising to overcome the
limitations imposed by dispersion of optical fibers. These approaches, however,
were eventually abandoned in favor of wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM)
schemes that are easier to implement and offer improved scalability to higher
data rates. Here, we show that solitons may experience a comeback in optical
communications, this time not as a competitor, but as a key element of
massively parallel WDM. Instead of encoding data on the soliton itself, we
exploit continuously circulating dissipative Kerr solitons (DKS) in a
microresonator. DKS are generated in an integrated silicon nitride
microresonator by four-photon interactions mediated by Kerr nonlinearity,
leading to low-noise, spectrally smooth and broadband optical frequency combs.
In our experiments, we use two interleaved soliton Kerr combs to transmit a
data stream of more than 50Tbit/s on a total of 179 individual optical carriers
that span the entire telecommunication C and L bands. Equally important, we
demonstrate coherent detection of a WDM data stream by using a pair of
microresonator Kerr soliton combs - one as a multi-wavelength light source at
the transmitter, and another one as a corresponding local oscillator (LO) at
the receiver. This approach exploits the scalability advantages of
microresonator soliton comb sources for massively parallel optical
communications both at the transmitter and receiver side. Taken together, the
results prove the significant potential of these sources to replace arrays of
continuous-wave lasers in high-speed communications.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Confirmation of the Planetary Microlensing Signal and Star and Planet Mass Determinations for Event OGLE-2005-BLG-169
We present Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3)
observations of the source and lens stars for planetary microlensing event
OGLE-2005-BLG-169, which confirm the relative proper motion prediction due to
the planetary light curve signal observed for this event. This (and the
companion Keck result) provide the first confirmation of a planetary
microlensing signal, for which the deviation was only 2%. The follow-up
observations determine the flux of the planetary host star in multiple
passbands and remove light curve model ambiguity caused by sparse sampling of
part of the light curve. This leads to a precise determination of the
properties of the OGLE-2005-BLG-169Lb planetary system. Combining the
constraints from the microlensing light curve with the photometry and
astrometry of the HST/WFC3 data, we find star and planet masses of M_* = 0.69+-
0.02 M_solar and m_p = 14.1 +- 0.9 M_earth. The planetary microlens system is
located toward the Galactic bulge at a distance of D_L = 4.1 +- 0.4 kpc, and
the projected star-planet separation is a_perp = 3.5 +- 0.3 AU, corresponding
to a semi-major axis of a = 4.0 (+2.2 -0.6) AU.Comment: 21 pages, including 5 figures, published in Ap
50 Tbit/s Massively ParallelWDMTransmission in C and L Band Using Interleaved Cavity-Soliton Kerr Combs
Interleaving two soliton Kerr combs we generate 179 carriers for WDM transmission and demonstrate transmission of a data stream of 50 Tbit/s over 75 km. This is the highest data rate achieved with a chip-scale comb source
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