3,311 research outputs found
How realistic are solar model atmospheres?
Recently, new solar model atmospheres have been developed to replace
classical 1D LTE hydrostatic models and used to for example derive the solar
chemical composition. We aim to test various models against key observational
constraints. In particular, a 3D model used to derive the solar abundances, a
3D MHD model (with an imposed 10 mT vertical magnetic field), 1D models from
the PHOENIX project, the 1D MARCS model, and the 1D semi-empirical model of
Holweger & M\"uller. We confront the models with observational diagnostics of
the temperature profile: continuum centre-to-limb variations (CLV), absolute
continuum fluxes, and the wings of hydrogen lines. We also test the 3D models
for the intensity distribution of the granulation and spectral line shapes. The
predictions from the 3D model are in excellent agreement with the continuum CLV
observations, performing even better than the Holweger & M\"uller model
(constructed largely to fulfil such observations). The predictions of the 1D
theoretical models are worse, given their steeper temperature gradients. For
the continuum fluxes, predictions for most models agree well with the
observations. No model fits all hydrogen lines perfectly, but again the 3D
model comes ahead. The 3D model also reproduces the observed continuum
intensity fluctuations and spectral line shapes very well. The excellent
agreement of the 3D model with the observables reinforces the view that its
temperature structure is realistic. It outperforms the MHD simulation in all
diagnostics, implying that recent claims for revised abundances based on MHD
modelling are premature. Several weaknesses in the 1D models are exposed. The
differences between the PHOENIX LTE and NLTE models are small. We conclude that
the 3D hydrodynamical model is superior to any of the tested 1D models, which
gives further confidence in the solar abundance analyses based on it.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Spectral degeneracy and escape dynamics for intermittent maps with a hole
We study intermittent maps from the point of view of metastability. Small
neighbourhoods of an intermittent fixed point and their complements form pairs
of almost-invariant sets. Treating the small neighbourhood as a hole, we first
show that the absolutely continuous conditional invariant measures (ACCIMs)
converge to the ACIM as the length of the small neighbourhood shrinks to zero.
We then quantify how the escape dynamics from these almost-invariant sets are
connected with the second eigenfunctions of Perron-Frobenius (transfer)
operators when a small perturbation is applied near the intermittent fixed
point. In particular, we describe precisely the scaling of the second
eigenvalue with the perturbation size, provide upper and lower bounds, and
demonstrate convergence of the positive part of the second eigenfunction
to the ACIM as the perturbation goes to zero. This perturbation and associated
eigenvalue scalings and convergence results are all compatible with Ulam's
method and provide a formal explanation for the numerical behaviour of Ulam's
method in this nonuniformly hyperbolic setting. The main results of the paper
are illustrated with numerical computations.Comment: 34 page
A numerical study of infinitely renormalizable area-preserving maps
It has been shown in (Gaidashev et al, 2010) and (Gaidashev et al, 2011) that
infinitely renormalizable area-preserving maps admit invariant Cantor sets with
a maximal Lyapunov exponent equal to zero. Furthermore, the dynamics on these
Cantor sets for any two infinitely renormalizable maps is conjugated by a
transformation that extends to a differentiable function whose derivative is
Holder continuous of exponent alpha>0.
In this paper we investigate numerically the specific value of alpha. We also
present numerical evidence that the normalized derivative cocycle with the base
dynamics in the Cantor set is ergodic. Finally, we compute renormalization
eigenvalues to a high accuracy to support a conjecture that the renormalization
spectrum is real
Eigenfunctions for smooth expanding circle maps
We construct a real-analytic circle map for which the corresponding
Perron-Frobenius operator has a real-analytic eigenfunction with an eigenvalue
outside the essential spectral radius when acting upon -functions.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Can we trust elemental abundances derived in late-type giants with the classical 1D stellar atmosphere models?
We compare the abundances of various chemical species as derived with 3D
hydrodynamical and classical 1D stellar atmosphere codes in a late-type giant
characterized by T_eff=3640K, log g = 1.0, [M/H] = 0.0. For this particular set
of atmospheric parameters the 3D-1D abundance differences are generally small
for neutral atoms and molecules but they may reach up to 0.3-0.4 dex in case of
ions. The 3D-1D differences generally become increasingly more negative at
higher excitation potentials and are typically largest in the optical
wavelength range. Their sign can be both positive and negative, and depends on
the excitation potential and wavelength of a given spectral line. While our
results obtained with this particular late-type giant model suggest that 1D
stellar atmosphere models may be safe to use with neutral atoms and molecules,
care should be taken if they are exploited with ions.Comment: Poster presented at the IAU Symposium 265 "Chemical Abundances in the
Universe: Connecting First Stars to Planets", Rio de Janeiro, 10-14 August
2009; 2 pages, 1 figur
A Two-Parameter Recursion Formula For Scalar Field Theory
We present a two-parameter family of recursion formulas for scalar field
theory. The first parameter is the dimension . The second parameter
() allows one to continuously extrapolate between Wilson's approximate
recursion formula and the recursion formula of Dyson's hierarchical model. We
show numerically that at fixed , the critical exponent depends
continuously on . We suggest the use of the independence as a
guide to construct improved recursion formulas.Comment: 7 pages, uses Revtex, one Postcript figur
Evidence for Complex Subleading Exponents from the High-Temperature Expansion of the Hierarchical Ising Model
Using a renormalization group method, we calculate 800 high-temperature
coefficients of the magnetic susceptibility of the hierarchical Ising model.
The conventional quantities obtained from differences of ratios of coefficients
show unexpected smooth oscillations with a period growing logarithmically and
can be fitted assuming corrections to the scaling laws with complex exponents.Comment: 10 pages, Latex , uses revtex. 2 figures not included (hard copies
available on request
On the spectrum of Farey and Gauss maps
In this paper we introduce Hilbert spaces of holomorphic functions given by
generalized Borel and Laplace transforms which are left invariant by the
transfer operators of the Farey map and its induced version, the Gauss map,
respectively. By means of a suitable operator-valued power series we are able
to study simultaneously the spectrum of both these operators along with the
analytic properties of the associated dynamical zeta functions.Comment: 23 page
High-precision abundances of elements in Kepler LEGACY stars. Verification of trends with stellar age
HARPS-N spectra with S/N > 250 and MARCS model atmospheres were used to
derive abundances of C, O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Ti, Cr, Fe, Ni, Zn, and Y in ten
stars from the Kepler LEGACY sample (including the binary pair 16 Cyg A and B)
selected to have metallicities in the range -0.15 < [Fe/H] < +0.15 and ages
between 1 and 7 Gyr. Stellar gravities were obtained from seismic data and
effective temperatures were determined by comparing non-LTE iron abundances
derived from FeI and FeII lines. Available non-LTE corrections were also
applied when deriving abundances of the other elements. The results support the
[X/Fe]-age relations previously found for solar twins. [Mg/Fe], [Al/Fe], and
[Zn/Fe] decrease by ~0.1 dex over the lifetime of the Galactic thin disk due to
delayed contribution of iron from Type Ia supernovae relative to prompt
production of Mg, Al, and Zn in Type II supernovae. [Y/Mg] and [Y/Al], on the
other hand, increase by ~0.3 dex, which can be explained by an increasing
contribution of s-process elements from low-mass AGB stars as time goes on. The
trends of [C/Fe] and [O/Fe] are more complicated due to variations of the ratio
between refractory and volatile elements among stars of similar age. Two stars
with about the same age as the Sun show very different trends of [X/H] as a
function of elemental condensation temperature Tc and for 16 Cyg, the two
components have an abundance difference, which increases with Tc. These
anomalies may be connected to planet-star interactions.Comment: 13 pages with 7 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
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