1,846 research outputs found
Coulomb breakup of 22C in a four-body model
Breakup cross sections are determined for the Borromean nucleus 22C by using
a four-body eikonal model, including Coulomb corrections. Bound and continuum
states are constructed within a 20C + n + n three-body model in hyperspherical
coordinates. We compute continuum states with the correct asymptotic behavior
through the R-matrix method. For the n+ n potential, we use the Minnesota
interaction. As there is no precise experimental information on 21C, we define
different parameter sets for the 20C + n potentials. These parameter sets
provide different scattering lengths, and resonance energies of an expected
3/2+ excited state. Then we analyze the 22C ground-state energy and rms radius,
as well as E1 strength distributions and breakup cross sections. The E1
strength distribution presents an enhancement at low energies. Its amplitude is
associated with the low binding energy, rather than with a three-body
resonance. We show that the shape of the cross section at low energies is
sensitive to the ground-state properties. In addition, we suggest the existence
of a low-energy 2+ resonance, which should be observable in breakup
experiments
Microscopic description of Li in the and elastic scattering at high energies
We employ a microscopic continuum-discretized coupled-channels reaction
framework (MCDCC) to study the elastic angular distribution of the
Li nucleus colliding with C and Si targets at
=350 MeV. In this framework, the Li projectile is described
in a microscopic cluster model and impinges on non-composite targets. The
diagonal and coupling potentials are constructed from nucleon-target
interactions and Li microscopic wave functions. We obtain a fair
description of the experimental data, in the whole angular range studied, when
continuum channels are included. The inelastic and breakup angular
distributions on the lightest target are also investigated. In addition, we
compute LiC MCDCC elastic cross sections at energies much higher
than the Coulomb barrier and we use them as reference calculations to test the
validity of multichannel eikonal cross sections.Comment: 9 Pages, 6 Figure
Lopsided dust rings in transition disks
Context. Particle trapping in local or global pressure maxima in
protoplanetary disks is one of the new paradigms in the theory of the first
stages of planet formation. However, finding observational evidence for this
effect is not easy. Recent work suggests that the large ring-shaped outer disks
observed in transition disk sources may in fact be lopsided and constitute
large banana-shaped vortices.
Aims. We wish to investigate how effective dust can accumulate along the
azimuthal direction. We also want to find out if the size- sorting resulting
from this can produce a detectable signatures at millimeter wavelengths.
Methods. To keep the numerical cost under control we develop a 1+1D method in
which the azimuthal variations are treated sepa- rately from the radial ones.
The azimuthal structure is calculated analytically for a steady-state between
mixing and azimuthal drift. We derive equilibration time scales and compare the
analytical solutions to time-dependent numerical simulations.
Results. We find that weak, but long-lived azimuthal density gradients in the
gas can induce very strong azimuthal accumulations of dust. The strength of the
accumulations depends on the P\'eclet number, which is the relative importance
of advection and diffusion. We apply our model to transition disks and our
simulated observations show that this effect would be easily observable with
ALMA and in principle allows to put constraints on the strength of turbulence
and the local gas density.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in A&A Letter
Spirals in protoplanetary disks from photon travel time
Spiral structures are a common feature in scattered-light images of
protoplanetary disks, and of great interest as possible tracers of the presence
of planets. However, other mechanisms have been put foward to explain them,
including self-gravity, disk-envelope interactions, and dead zone boundaries.
These mechanisms explain many spirals very well, but are unable to easily
account for very loosely wound spirals and single spiral arms. We study the
effect of light travel time on the shape of a shadow cast by a clump orbiting
close (within au) of the central star, where there can be
significant orbital motion during the light travel time from the clump to the
outer disk and then to the sky plane. This delay in light rays reaching the sky
plane gives rise to a variety of spiral- and arc-shaped shadows, which we
describe with a general fitting formula for a flared, inclined disk.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A Letters. Videos available at
dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/3526708/spiralmovies.zi
Fingerprints of giant planets in the photospheres of Herbig stars
Around 2% of all A stars have photospheres depleted in refractory elements.
This is hypothesized to arise from a preferential accretion of gas rather than
dust, but the specific processes and the origin of the material -- circum- or
interstellar -- are not known. The same depletion is seen in 30% of young,
disk-hosting Herbig Ae/Be stars. We investigate whether the chemical
peculiarity originates in a circumstellar disk. Using a sample of systems for
which both the stellar abundances and the protoplanetary disk structure are
known, we find that stars hosting warm, flaring group I disks typically have
Fe, Mg and Si depletions of 0.5 dex compared to the solar-like abundances of
stars hosting cold, flat group II disks. The volatile, C and O, abundances in
both sets are identical. Group I disks are generally transitional, having
radial cavities depleted in millimetre-sized dust grains, while those of group
II are usually not. Thus we propose that the depletion of heavy elements
emerges as Jupiter-like planets block the accretion of part of the dust, while
gas continues to flow towards the central star. We calculate gas to dust ratios
for the accreted material and find values consistent with models of disk
clearing by planets. Our results suggest that giant planets of ~0.1 to 10 M_Jup
are hiding in at least 30% of Herbig Ae/Be disks.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&A Letter
A tunnel and a traffic jam: How transition disks maintain a detectable warm dust component despite the presence of a large planet-carved gap
We combined hydrodynamical simulations of planet-disk interactions with dust
evolution models that include coagulation and fragmentation of dust grains over
a large range of radii and derived observational properties using radiative
transfer calculations. We studied the role of the snow line in the survival of
the inner disk of transition disks. Inside the snow line, the lack of ice
mantles in dust particles decreases the sticking efficiency between grains. As
a consequence, particles fragment at lower collision velocities than in regions
beyond the snow line. This effect allows small particles to be maintained for
up to a few Myrs within the first astronomical unit. These particles are
closely coupled to the gas and do not drift significantly with respect to the
gas. For lower mass planets (1), the pre-transition appearance
can be maintained even longer because dust still trickles through the gap
created by the planet, moves invisibly and quickly in the form of relatively
large grains through the gap, and becomes visible again as it fragments and
gets slowed down inside of the snow line. The global study of dust evolution of
a disk with an embedded planet, including the changes of the dust aerodynamics
near the snow line, can explain the concentration of millimetre-sized particles
in the outer disk and the survival of the dust in the inner disk if a large
dust trap is present in the outer disk. This behaviour solves the conundrum of
the combination of both near-infrared excess and ring-like millimetre emission
observed in several transition disks.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A (including acknowledgments
Trapping dust particles in the outer regions of protoplanetary disks
Aims. We attempt to explain grain growth to mm sized particles and their retention in the outer regions of protoplanetary disks, as observed at sub-mm and mm wavelengths, by investigating whether strong inhomogeneities in the gas density profiles can decelerate excessive radial drift and help the dust particles to grow.
Methods. We use coagulation/fragmentation and disk-structure models, to simulate the evolution of dust in a bumpy surface density profile, which we mimic with a sinusoidal disturbance. For different values of the amplitude and length scale of the bumps, we investigate the ability of this model to produce and retain large particles on million-year timescales. In addition, we compare the pressure inhomogeneities considered in this work with the pressure profiles that come from magnetorotational instability. Using the Common Astronomy Software Applications ALMA simulator, we study whether there are observational signatures of these pressure inhomogeneities that can be seen with ALMA.
Results. We present the conditions required to trap dust particles and the corresponding calculations predicting the spectral slope in the mm-wavelength range, to compare with current observations. Finally, we present simulated images using different antenna configurations of ALMA at different frequencies, to show that the ring structures will be detectable at the distances of either the Taurus Auriga or Ophiucus star-forming regions
The Spectrum of Pluto, 0.40 - 0.93 m I. Secular and longitudinal distribution of ices and complex organics
Context. During the last 30 years the surface of Pluto has been
characterized, and its variability has been monitored, through continuous
near-infrared spectroscopic observations. But in the visible range only few
data are available. Aims. The aim of this work is to define the Pluto's
relative reflectance in the visible range to characterize the different
components of its surface, and to provide ground based observations in support
of the New Horizons mission. Methods. We observed Pluto on six nights between
May and July 2014, with the imager/spectrograph ACAM at the William Herschel
Telescope (La Palma, Spain). The six spectra obtained cover a whole rotation of
Pluto (Prot = 6.4 days). For all the spectra we computed the spectral slope and
the depth of the absorption bands of methane ice between 0.62 and 0.90 m.
To search for shifts of the center of the methane bands, associated with
dilution of CH4 in N2, we compared the bands with reflectances of pure methane
ice. Results. All the new spectra show the methane ice absorption bands between
0.62 and 0.90 m. The computation of the depth of the band at 0.62 m
in the new spectra of Pluto, and in the spectra of Makemake and Eris from the
literature, allowed us to estimate the Lambert coefficient at this wavelength,
at a temperature of 30 K and 40 K, never measured before. All the detected
bands are blue shifted, with minimum shifts in correspondence with the regions
where the abundance of methane is higher. This could be indicative of a
dilution of CH4:N2 more saturated in CH4. The longitudinal and secular
variations of the parameters measured in the spectra are in accordance with
results previously reported in the literature and with the distribution of the
dark and bright material that show the Pluto's albedo maps from New Horizons.Comment: This manuscript may change and improve during the reviewing process.
The data reduction and calibration is reliable and has been checked
independently using different reduction approaches. The data will be made
publicily available when the paper is accepted. If you need them before,
please, contact the autho
Rotationally resolved spectroscopy of (20000) Varuna in the near-infrared
Models of the escape and retention of volatiles by minor icy objects exclude
any presence of volatile ices on the surface of TNOs smaller than ~1000km in
diameter at the typical temperature in this region of the solar system, whereas
the same models show that water ice is stable on the surface of objects over a
wide range of diameters. Collisions and cometary activity have been used to
explain the process of surface refreshing of TNOs and Centaurs. These processes
can produce surface heterogeneity that can be studied by collecting information
at different rotational phases. The aims of this work are to study the surface
composition of (20000)Varuna, a TNO with a diameter ~650km and to search for
indications of rotational variability. We observed Varuna during two
consecutive nights in January 2011 with NICS@TNG obtaining a set of spectra
covering the whole rotation period of Varuna. After studying the spectra
corresponding to different rotational phases, we did not find any indication of
surface variability. In all the spectra, we detect an absorption at 2{\mu}m,
suggesting the presence of water ice on the surface. We do not detect any other
volatiles on the surface, although the S/N is not high enough to discard their
presence. Based on scattering models, we present two possible compositions
compatible with our set of data and discuss their implications in the frame of
the collisional history of the Kuiper Belt. We find that the most probable
composition for the surface of Varuna is a mixture of amorphous silicates,
complex organics, and water ice. This composition is compatible with all the
materials being primordial. However, our data can also be fitted by models
containing up to a 10% of methane ice. For an object with the characteristics
of Varuna, this volatile could not be primordial, so an event, such as an
energetic impact, would be needed to explain its presence on the surface.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, to be published in A&
Scattered light images of spiral arms in marginally gravitationally unstable discs with an embedded planet
Scattered light images of transition discs in the near-infrared often show
non-axisymmetric structures in the form of wide-open spiral arms in addition to
their characteristic low-opacity inner gap region. We study self-gravitating
discs and investigate the influence of gravitational instability on the shape
and contrast of spiral arms induced by planet-disc interactions.
Two-dimensional non-isothermal hydrodynamical simulations including viscous
heating and a cooling prescription are combined with three-dimensional dust
continuum radiative transfer models for direct comparison to observations. We
find that the resulting contrast between the spirals and the surrounding disc
in scattered light is by far higher for pressure scale height variations, i.e.
thermal perturbations, than for pure surface density variations. Self-gravity
effects suppress any vortex modes and tend to reduce the opening angle of
planet-induced spirals, making them more tightly wound. If the disc is only
marginally gravitationally stable with a Toomre parameter around unity, an
embedded massive planet (planet-to-star mass ratio of ) can trigger
gravitational instability in the outer disc. The spirals created by this
instability and the density waves launched by the planet can overlap resulting
in large-scale, more open spiral arms in the outer disc. The contrast of these
spirals is well above the detection limit of current telescopes.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 13 pages, 8 figure
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