648 research outputs found
Interplay of tidal evolution and stellar wind braking in the rotation of stars hosting massive close-in planets
This paper deals with the application of the creep tide theory (Ferraz-Mello,
Cel. Mech. Dyn. Astron. vol. 116, 109, 2013) to the study of the rotation of
stars hosting massive close-in planets. The stars have nearly the same tidal
relaxation factors as gaseous planets and the evolution of their rotation is
similar to that of close-in hot Jupiters: they tidally evolve towards a
stationary solution. However, stellar rotation may also be affected by stellar
wind braking. Thus, while the rotation of a quiet host star evolves towards a
stationary attractor with a frequency () times the orbital mean-motion
of the companion, the continuous loss of angular momentum in an active star
displaces the stationary solution towards slower values: Active host stars with
big close-in companions tend to have rotational periods larger than the orbital
periods of their companions. The study of some hypothetical examples shows that
because of tidal evolution, the rules of gyrochronology cannot be used to
estimate the age of one system with a large close-in companion, no matter if
the star is quiet or active, if the current semi-major axis of the companion is
smaller than 0.03--0.04 AU. Details on the evolution of the systems: CoRoT
LRc06E21637, CoRoT-27, Kepler-75, CoRoT-2, CoRoT-18, CoRoT-14 and on
hypothetical systems with planets of mass 1--4 M_Jup in orbit around a star
similar to the Sun are given.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figures; Publication in Ap
Collision damping in the pi 3He -> d'N reaction near the threshold
We present a simple quantum mechanical model exploiting the optical potential
approach for the description of collision damping in the reaction pi 3He -> d'N
near the threshold, which recently has been measured at TRIUMF. The influence
of the open d'N -> NNN channel is taken into account. It leads to a suppression
factor of about ten in the d' survival probability. Applications of the method
to other reactions are outlined.Comment: RevTeX4, 14 pages, 3 Postscript figures, uses epsfig.sty, to appear
in Phys.Rev.
The Reaction 7Li(pi+,pi-)7B and its Implications for 7B
The reaction 7Li(pi+,pi-)7B has been measured at incident pion energies of
30-90 MeV. 7Li constitutes the lightest target nucleus, where the pionic charge
exchange may proceed as a binary reaction to a discrete final state. Like in
the Delta-resonance region the observed cross sections are much smaller than
expected from the systematics found for heavier nuclei. In analogy to the
neutron halo case of 11Li this cross section suppression is interpreted as
evidence for a proton halo in the particle-unstable nucleus 7B.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Search for Narrow NNpi Resonances in Exclusive p p -> p p pi+ pi- Measurements
Narrow structures in the range of a few MeV have been searched for in p p pi+
and p p pi- invariant mass spectra obtained from exclusive measurements of the
p p -> p p pi+ pi- reaction at Tp = 725, 750 and 775 MeV using the PROMICE/WASA
detector at CELSIUS. The selected reaction is particularily well suited for the
search for NN and / or N Delta decoupled dibaryon resonances. Except for a
possible fluctuation at 2087 MeV/c^2 in Mpppi- no narrow structures could be
identified neither in Mpppi+ nor in Mpppi- on the 3 sigma level of statistical
significance, giving an upper limit (95% C.L.) for dibaryon production in this
reaction of sigma < 20 nb for 2020 MeV/c^2 < m(dibaryon) < 2085 MeV/c^2Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
Search for Exotic Muon Decays
Recently, it has been proposed that the observed anomaly in the time
distribution of neutrino induced reactions, reported by the KARMEN
collaboration, can be interpreted as a signal from an exotic muon decay branch
mu+ to e+ X. It has been shown that this hypothesis gives an acceptable fit to
the KARMEN data if the boson X has a mass of m_X=103.9MeV/c^2, close to the
kinematical limit. We have performed a search for the X particle by studying
for the first time the very low energy part of the Michel spectrum in mu+
decays. Using a HPGe detector setup at the muE4 beamline at PSI we find
branching ratios BR(mu+ to e+ X)<5.7e-4 (90% C.L.) for most of the region
103MeV/c^2<m_X<105MeV/c^2.Comment: 9 page
Nonequilibrium dynamics: preheating in the SU(2) Higgs model
The term `preheating' has been introduced recently to denote the process in
which energy is transferred from a classical inflaton field into fluctuating
field (particle) degrees of freedom without generating yet a real thermal
ensemble. The models considered up to now include, besides the inflaton field,
scalar or fermionic fluctuations. On the other hand the typical ingredient of
an inflationary scenario is a nonabelian spontaneously broken gauge theory. So
the formalism should also be developed to include gauge field fluctuations
excited by the inflaton or Higgs field. We have chosen here, as the simplest
nonabelian example, the SU(2) Higgs model. We consider the model at temperature
zero. From the technical point of view we generalize an analytical and
numerical renormalized formalism developed by us recently to coupled channnel
systems. We use the 't Hooft-Feynman gauge and dimensional regularization. We
present some numerical results but reserve a more exhaustive discussion of
solutions within the paramter space of two couplings and the initial value of
the Higgs field to a future publication.Comment: 30 pages, 10 figures in enhanced postscript, 2 unreadable figures
made accessibl
Nonequilibrium dynamics: a renormalized computation scheme
We present a regularized and renormalized version of the one-loop nonlinear
relaxation equations that determine the non-equilibrium time evolution of a
classical (constant) field coupled to its quantum fluctuations. We obtain a
computational method in which the evaluation of divergent fluctuation integrals
and the evaluation of the exact finite parts are cleanly separated so as to
allow for a wide freedom in the choice of regularization and renormalization
schemes. We use dimensional regularization here. Within the same formalism we
analyze also the regularization and renormalization of the energy-momentum
tensor. The energy density serves to monitor the reliability of our numerical
computation. The method is applied to the simple case of a scalar phi^4 theory;
the results are similar to the ones found previously by other groups.Comment: 15 pages, 9 postscript figures, revtex; version published in Phys.
Rev, with minor corrections; improves the first version of 1996 by including
the discussion of energy momentum tenso
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