39,982 research outputs found
A Detailed Model Grid for Solid Planets from 0.1 through 100 Earth Masses
This paper describes a new grid for the mass-radius relation of 3-layer
exoplanets within the mass range of 0.1 through 100 Earth Masses. The 3 layers
are: Fe (epsilon iron), MgSiO3 (including both the perovskite phase,
post-perovskite phase, and its dissociation at ultra-high pressures), and H2O
(including Ices Ih, III, V, VI, VII, X, and the superionic phase along the
melting curve). We discuss the current state of knowledge about the equations
of state (EOS) that influence these calculations and the improvements used in
the new grid. For the 2-layer model, we demonstrate the utility of contours on
the mass-radius diagrams. Given the mass and radius input, these contours can
be used to quickly determine the important physical properties of a planet
including its p0 (central pressure), p1/p0 (core-mantle boundary pressure over
central pressure), CMF (core mass fraction) or CRF (core radius fraction). For
the 3-layer model, a curve segment on the ternary diagram represents all
possible relative mass proportions of the 3 layers for a given mass-radius
input. These ternary diagrams are tabulated into Table3 with the intent to make
comparison to observations easier. How the presence of Fe in the mantle affects
the mass-radius relations is also discussed in a separate section. A dynamic
and interactive tool to characterize and illustrate the interior structure of
exoplanets built upon models in this paper is available on the website:
http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~lzengComment: submitted to PASP, including 29 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables. For
associated files and interactive tool, see http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~lzeng
Prethermal time crystals in a one-dimensional periodically driven Floquet system
Motivated by experimental observations of time-symmetry breaking behavior in
a periodically driven (Floquet) system, we study a one-dimensional spin model
to explore the stability of such Floquet discrete time crystals (DTCs) under
the interplay between interaction and the microwave driving. For intermediate
interactions and high drivings, from the time evolution of both stroboscopic
spin polarization and mutual information between two ends, we show that Floquet
DTCs can exist in a prethermal time regime without the tuning of strong
disorder. For much weak interactions the system is a symmetry-unbroken phase,
while for strong interactions it gives its way to a thermal phase. Through
analyzing the entanglement dynamics, we show that large driving fields protect
the prethermal DTCs from many-body localization and thermalization. Our results
suggest that by increasing the spin interaction, one can drive the experimental
system into optimal regime for observing a robust prethermal DTC phase.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures; published versio
SU(N) fractional quantum Hall effects in topological flat bands
We study -component interacting particles (hardcore bosons and fermions)
loaded in topological lattice models with SU-invariant interactions based
on density matrix renormalization group method. By tuning the interplay of
interspecies and intraspecies interactions, we demonstrate that a class of
SU fractional quantum Hall states can emerge at fractional filling factors
for bosons ( for fermions) in the lowest Chern
band, characterized by the nontrivial fractional Hall responses and the
fractional charge pumping. Moreover, we establish a topological
characterization based on the matrix, and discuss the close
relationship to the fractional quantum Hall physics in topological flat bands
with Chern number .Comment: 9 pages, 12 figure
Orbital Magnetism Induced by Heat Currents in Mott insulators
We derive the effective heat current density operator for the strong-coupling
regime of Mott insulators. Similarly to the case of the electric current
density, the leading contribution to this effective operator is proportional to
the local scalar spin chirality . This common
form of the effective heat and electric current density operators leads to a
novel cross response in Mott insulators. A heat current induces a distribution
of orbital magnetic moments in systems containing loops of an odd number of
hopping terms. The relative orientation of the orbital moments depends on the
particular lattice of magnetic ions. This subtle effect arises from the
symmetries that the heat and electric currents have in common.Comment: 4.3 pages and 3 figure
Face centered cubic and hexagonal close packed skyrmion crystals in centro-symmetric magnets
Skyrmions are disk-like objects that typically form triangular crystals in
two dimensional systems. This situation is analogous to the so-called "pancake
vortices" of quasi-two dimensional superconductors. The way in which skyrmion
disks or pancake skyrmions pile up in layered centro-symmetric materials is
dictated by the inter-layer exchange. Unbiased Monte Carlo simulations and
simple stabilization arguments reveal face centered cubic and hexagonal close
packed skyrmion crystals for different choices of the inter-layer exchange, in
addition to the conventional triangular crystal of skyrmion lines. Moreover, an
inhomogeneous current induces sliding motion of pancake skyrmions, indicating
that they behave as effective mesoscale particles.Comment: 9 pages and 8 figure
Operator representations for a class of quantum entanglement measures and criterions
We find that a class of entanglement measures for bipartite pure state can be
expressed by the average values of quantum operators, which are related to any
complete basis of one partite operator space. Two specific examples are given
based on two different ways to generalize Pauli matrices to dimensional
Hilbert space and the case for identical particle system is also considered. In
addition, applying our measure to mixed state case will give a sufficient
condition for entanglement.Comment: 9 pages, no figure
Irreducible many-body correlations in topologically ordered systems
Topologically ordered systems exhibit large-scale correlation in their ground
states, which may be characterized by quantities such as topological
entanglement entropy. We propose that the concept of irreducible many-body
correlation, the correlation that cannot be implied by all local correlations,
may also be used as a signature of topological order. In a topologically
ordered system, we demonstrate that for a part of the system with holes, the
reduced density matrix exhibits irreducible many-body correlation which becomes
reducible when the holes are removed. The appearance of these irreducible
correlations then represents a key feature of topological phase. We analyze the
many-body correlation structures in the ground state of the toric code model in
an external magnetic field, and show that the topological phase transition is
signaled by the irreducible many-body correlations
Skyrmion fractionalization and merons in chiral magnets with easy-plane anisotropy
We study the equilibrium phase diagram of ultrathin chiral magnets with
easy-plane anisotropy . The vast triangular skyrmion lattice phase that is
stabilized by an external magnetic field evolves continuously as a function of
increasing into a regime in which nearest-neighbor skyrmions start
overlapping with each other. This overlap leads to a continuous reduction of
the skyrmion number from its quantized value and to the emergence of
antivortices at the center of the triangles formed by nearest-neighbor
skyrmions. The antivortices also carry a small "skyrmion number"
that grows as a function of increasing . The system undergoes a first order
phase transition into a square vortex-antivortex lattice at a critical value of
. Finally, a canted ferromagnetic state becomes stable through another first
order transition for a large enough anisotropy . Interestingly enough, this
first order transition is accompanied by {\it metastable} meron solutions.Comment: 7.1 pages, 7 figure
Topological characterization of hierarchical fractional quantum Hall effects in topological flat bands with SU() symmetry
We study the many-body ground states of SU() symmetric hardcore bosons on
the topological flat-band model by using controlled numerical calculations. By
introducing strong intracomponent and intercomponent interactions, we
demonstrate that a hierarchy of bosonic SU() fractional quantum Hall (FQH)
states emerges at fractional filling factors (odd ). In
order to characterize this series of FQH states, we figure the effective
matrix from the inverse of the Chern number matrix. The
topological characterization of the matrix also reveals quantized
drag Hall responses and fractional charge pumping that could be detected in
future experiments. In addition, we address the general one-to-one
correspondence to the spinless FQH states in topological flat bands with Chern
number at fillings .Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures. revised versio
Exoplanet Radius Gap Dependence on Host Star Type
Exoplanets smaller than Neptune are numerous, but the nature of the planet
populations in the 1-4 Earth radii range remains a mystery. The complete Kepler
sample of Q1-Q17 exoplanet candidates shows a radius gap at ~ 2 Earth radii, as
reported by us in January 2017 in LPSC conference abstract #1576 (Zeng et al.
2017). A careful analysis of Kepler host stars spectroscopy by the CKS survey
allowed Fulton et al. (2017) in March 2017 to unambiguously show this radius
gap. The cause of this gap is still under discussion (Ginzburg et al. 2017;
Lehmer & Catling 2017; Owen & Wu 2017). Here we add to our original analysis
the dependence of the radius gap on host star type.Comment: 2pages, 1 figure, RNAAS 201
- …