64,265 research outputs found
On the asymptotic acoustic-mode phase in red-giant stars and its dependence on evolutionary state
Asteroseismic investigations based on the wealth of data now available,in
particular from the CoRoT and Kepler missions, require a good understanding of
the relation between the observed quantities and the properties of the
underlying stellar structure. Kallinger et al. 2012 found a relation between
their determination of the asymptotic phase of radial oscillations in evolved
stars and the evolutionary state, separating ascending-branch red giants from
helium-burning stars in the `red clump'. Here we provide a detailed analysis of
this relation, which is found to derive from differences between these two
classes of stars in the thermodynamic state of the convective envelope. There
is potential for distinguishing red giants and clump stars based on the phase
determined from observations that are too short to allow distinction based on
determination of the period spacing for mixed modes. The analysis of the phase
may also point to a better understanding of the potential for using the
helium-ionization-induced acoustic glitch to determine the helium abundance in
the envelopes of these stars.Comment: MNRAS, in the pres
Reparametrization invariance of B decay amplitudes and implications for new physics searches in B decays
When studying B decays within the Standard Model, it is customary to use the
unitarity of the CKM matrix in order to write the decay amplitudes in terms of
only two of the three weak phases which appear in the various diagrams.
Occasionally, it is mentioned that those two weak phases can be used in order
to describe any decay amplitude, even beyond the Standard Model. Here we point
out that, when describing a generic decay amplitude, the two weak phases can be
chosen completely at will, and we study the behavior of the decay amplitudes
under changes in the two weak phases chosen as a basis. Of course, physical
observables cannot depend on such reparametrizations. This has an impact in
discussions of the SM and in attempts to parametrize new physics effects in the
decay amplitudes. We illustrate these issues by looking at B --> psi K_S and
the isospin analysis in B --> pi pi.Comment: 16 pages, RevTe
Oxygen adsorption effect on magnetic properties of graphite
Both experimental and theoretical studies of the magnetic properties of
micrographite and nanographite indicate a crucial role of the partial oxidation
of graphitic zigzag edges in ferromagnetism. In contrast to total and partial
hydrogenation, the oxidation of half of the carbon atoms on the graphite edges
transforms the antiferromagnetic exchange interaction between graphite planes
and over graphite ribbons to the ferromagnetic interaction. The stability of
the ferromagnetism is discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Identifying Web Tables - Supporting a Neglected Type of Content on the Web
The abundance of the data in the Internet facilitates the improvement of
extraction and processing tools. The trend in the open data publishing
encourages the adoption of structured formats like CSV and RDF. However, there
is still a plethora of unstructured data on the Web which we assume contain
semantics. For this reason, we propose an approach to derive semantics from web
tables which are still the most popular publishing tool on the Web. The paper
also discusses methods and services of unstructured data extraction and
processing as well as machine learning techniques to enhance such a workflow.
The eventual result is a framework to process, publish and visualize linked
open data. The software enables tables extraction from various open data
sources in the HTML format and an automatic export to the RDF format making the
data linked. The paper also gives the evaluation of machine learning techniques
in conjunction with string similarity functions to be applied in a tables
recognition task.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Communicating via ignorance: Increasing communication capacity via superposition of order
Classically, no information can be transmitted through a depolarising, that
is a completely noisy, channel. We show that by combining a depolarising
channel with another channel in an indefinite causal order---that is, when
there is superposition of the order that these two channels were applied---it
becomes possible to transmit significant information. We consider two limiting
cases. When both channels are fully-depolarising, the ideal limit is
communication of 0.049 bits; experimentally we achieve
bits. When one channel is fully-depolarising,
and the other is a known unitary, the ideal limit is communication of 1 bit. We
experimentally achieve 0.640.02 bits. Our results offer intriguing
possibilities for future communication strategies beyond conventional quantum
Shannon theory
Tests of the asymptotic large frequency separation of acoustic oscillations in solar-type and red giant stars
Asteroseismology, i.e. the study of the internal structures of stars via
their global oscillations, is a valuable tool to obtain stellar parameters such
as mass, radius, surface gravity and mean density. These parameters can be
obtained using certain scaling relations which are based on an asymptotic
approximation. Usually the observed oscillation parameters are assumed to
follow these scaling relations. Recently, it has been questioned whether this
is a valid approach, i.e., whether the order of the observed oscillation modes
are high enough to be approximated with an asymptotic theory. In this work we
use stellar models to investigate whether the differences between observable
oscillation parameters and their asymptotic estimates are indeed significant.
We compute the asymptotic values directly from the stellar models and derive
the observable values from adiabatic pulsation calculations of the same models.
We find that the extent to which the atmosphere is included in the models is a
key parameter. Considering a larger extension of the atmosphere beyond the
photosphere reduces the difference between the asymptotic and observable values
of the large frequency separation. Therefore, we conclude that the currently
suggested discrepancies in the scaling relations might have been overestimated.
Hence, based on the results presented here we believe that the suggestions of
Mosser et al. (2013) should not be followed without careful consideration.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication by MNRAS as a
Letter to the Edito
Universal Magnetic-Field-Driven Metal-Insulator-Metal Transformations in Graphite and Bismuth
Applied magnetic field induces metal - insulator and re-entrant
insulator-metal transitions in both graphite and rhombohedral bismuth. The
corresponding transition boundaries plotted on the magnetic field - temperature
(B - T) plane nearly coincide for these semimetals and can be best described by
power laws T ~ (B - B_c)^k, where B_c is a critical field at T = 0 and k = 0.45
+/- 0.05. We show that insulator-metal-insulator (I-M-I) transformations take
place in the Landau level quantization regime and illustrate how the IMT in
quasi-3D graphite transforms into a cascade of I-M-I transitions, related to
the quantum Hall effect in quasi-2D graphite samples. We discuss the possible
coupling of superconducting and excitonic correlations with the observed
phenomena, as well as the signatures of quantum phase transitions associated
with the M-I and I-M transformations.Comment: 23 pages including 14 figure
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