2,001 research outputs found
Vortex lattice stability and phase coherence in three-dimensional rapidly rotating Bose condensates
We establish the general equations of motion for the modes of a vortex
lattice in a rapidly rotating Bose-Einstein condensate in three dimensions,
taking into account the elastic energy of the lattice and the vortex line
bending energy. As in two dimensions, the vortex lattice supports Tkachenko and
gapped sound modes. In contrast, in three dimensions the Tkachenko mode
frequency at long wavelengths becomes linear in the wavevector for any
propagation direction out of the transverse plane. We compute the correlation
functions of the vortex displacements and the superfluid order parameter for a
homogeneous Bose gas of bounded extent in the axial direction. At zero
temperature the vortex displacement correlations are convergent at large
separation, but at finite temperatures, they grow with separation. The growth
of the vortex displacements should lead to observable melting of vortex
lattices at higher temperatures and somewhat lower particle number and faster
rotation than in current experiments. At zero temperature a system of large
extent in the axial direction maintains long range order-parameter correlations
for large separation, but at finite temperatures the correlations decay with
separation.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, Changes include the addition of the particle
density - vortex density coupling and the correct value of the shear modulu
Spectrum Analysis of Bright Kepler late B- to early F- Stars
The Kepler satellite mission delivers single band-pass light curves of a huge
number of stars observed in the Cygnus-Lyra region opening a new window for
asteroseismology. In order to accomplish one of the preconditions for the
asteroseismic modelling of the stars, we aim to derive fundamental parameters
and individual abundances for a sample of 18 Gamma Dor (GD)/Delta Sct (DSct)
and 8 SPB/beta Cep candidate stars in the Kepler satellite field of view. We
use the spectral synthesis method to model newly obtained, high-resolution
spectra of 26 stars in order to derive their fundamental parameters and
individual abundances. The stars are then placed into the log(Teff)-log(g)
diagram and the obtained spectroscopic classification is compared to the
existing photometric one. For hot stars, the KIC temperatures appear to be
systematically underestimated, in agreement with previous findings. We also
find that the temperatures derived from our spectra agree reasonably well with
those derived from the SED fitting. According to their position in the
log(Teff)-log(g) diagram, two stars are expected GD stars, four stars are
expected DSct stars, and four stars are possibly DSct stars at the blue edge of
the instability strip. Two stars are confirmed SPB variables, and one star
falls into the SPB instability region but its parameters might be biased by
binarity. Two of the four stars that fall into the DSct instability region show
GD-type oscillation in their light curves implying that GD-like oscillations
are much more common among the DSct stars than is theoretically expected.
Moreover, one of the stars located at the hot border of the DSct instability
strip is classified as DSct-GD hybrid pulsator from its light curve analysis.
Given that these findings are fully consistent with recent investigations, we
conclude that a revision of the GD and DSct instability strips is essential.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, 6 tables; accepted for publication in MNRA
Two-component Bose-Einstein Condensates with Large Number of Vortices
We consider the condensate wavefunction of a rapidly rotating two-component
Bose gas with an equal number of particles in each component. If the
interactions between like and unlike species are very similar (as occurs for
two hyperfine states of Rb or Na) we find that the two components
contain identical rectangular vortex lattices, where the unit cell has an
aspect ratio of , and one lattice is displaced to the center of the
unit cell of the other. Our results are based on an exact evaluation of the
vortex lattice energy in the large angular momentum (or quantum Hall) regime.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, RevTe
Pinning and collective modes of a vortex lattice in a Bose-Einstein condensate
We consider the ground state of vortices in a rotating Bose-Einstein
condensate that is loaded in a corotating two-dimensional optical lattice. Due
to the competition between vortex interactions and their potential energy, the
vortices arrange themselves in various patterns, depending on the strength of
the optical potential and the vortex density. We outline a method to determine
the phase diagram for arbitrary vortex filling factor. Using this method, we
discuss several filling factors explicitly. For increasing strength of the
optical lattice, the system exhibits a transition from the unpinned hexagonal
lattice to a lattice structure where all the vortices are pinned by the optical
lattice. The geometry of this fully pinned vortex lattice depends on the
filling factor and is either square or triangular. For some filling factors
there is an intermediate half-pinned phase where only half of the vortices is
pinned. We also consider the case of a two-component Bose-Einstein condensate,
where the possible coexistence of the above-mentioned phases further enriches
the phase diagram. In addition, we calculate the dispersion of the low-lying
collective modes of the vortex lattice and find that, depending on the
structure of the ground state, they can be gapped or gapless. Moreover, in the
half-pinned and fully pinned phases, the collective mode dispersion is
anisotropic. Possible experiments to probe the collective mode spectrum, and in
particular the gap, are suggested.Comment: 29 pages, 4 figures, changes in section
Influence of equation of state on interpretation of electrical conductivity measurements in strongly coupled tungsten plasma
We study the influence of equation-of-state (EOS) model on the interpretation
of electrical conductivity measurements in strongly coupled plasma of tungsten
by Korobenko et al. (2002 Plasma Physics Reports 28(12) 1008--1016). Three
different semiempirical EOS models for tungsten are used. Discrepancies in
obtained thermodynamic parameters and specific resistivity values as compared
with calculation results of Korobenko et al. are analysed.Comment: 11 pages, 5 Postscript figures, accepted for publication in J. Phys.
A: Math. Ge
Theory of vortex-lattice melting in a one-dimensional optical lattice
We investigate quantum and temperature fluctuations of a vortex lattice in a
one-dimensional optical lattice. We discuss in particular the Bloch bands of
the Tkachenko modes and calculate the correlation function of the vortex
positions along the direction of the optical lattice. Because of the small
number of particles in the pancake Bose-Einstein condensates at every site of
the optical lattice, finite-size effects become very important. Moreover, the
fluctuations in the vortex positions are inhomogeneous due to the inhomogeneous
density. As a result, the melting of the lattice occurs from the outside
inwards. However, tunneling between neighboring pancakes substantially reduces
the inhomogeneity as well as the size of the fluctuations. On the other hand,
nonzero temperatures increase the size of the fluctuations dramatically. We
calculate the crossover temperature from quantum melting to classical melting.
We also investigate melting in the presence of a quartic radial potential,
where a liquid can form in the center instead of at the outer edge of the
pancake Bose-Einstein condensates.Comment: 17 pages, 17 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. A, references update
Kinetic pinning and biological antifreezes
Biological antifreezes protect cold-water organisms from freezing. An example
are the antifreeze proteins (AFPs) that attach to the surface of ice crystals
and arrest growth. The mechanism for growth arrest has not been heretofore
understood in a quantitative way. We present a complete theory based on a
kinetic model. We use the `stones on a pillow' picture. Our theory of the
suppression of the freezing point as a function of the concentration of the AFP
is quantitatively accurate. It gives a correct description of the dependence of
the freezing point suppression on the geometry of the protein, and might lead
to advances in design of synthetic AFPs.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
The HERMES Solar Atlas and the spectroscopic analysis of the seismic solar analogue KIC3241581
Solar-analog stars provide an excellent opportunity to study the Sun's
evolution, i.e. the changes with time in stellar structure, activity, or
rotation for solar-like stars. The unparalleled photometric data from the NASA
space telescope Kepler allows us to study and characterise solar-like stars
through asteroseismology. We aim to spectroscopically investigate the
fundamental parameter and chromospheric activity of solar analogues and twins,
based on observations obtained with the HERMES spectrograph and combine them
with asteroseismology. Therefore, we need to build a solar atlas for the
spectrograph, to provide accurate calibrations of the spectroscopically
determined abundances of solar and late type stars observed with this
instrument and thus perform differential spectral comparisons. We acquire
high-resolution and high signal-to-noise spectroscopy to construct three solar
reference spectra by observing the reflected light of Vesta and Victoria
asteroids and Europa (100<S/N<450) with the \Hermes spectrograph. We then
observe the Kepler solar analog KIC3241581 (S/N~170). We constructed three
solar spectrum atlases from 385 to 900 nm obtained with the Hermes spectrograph
from observations of two bright asteroids and Europa. A comparison between our
solar spectra atlas to the Kurucz and HARPS solar spectrum shows an excellent
agreement. KIC3241581 was found to be a long-periodic binary system. The
fundamental parameter for the stellar primary component are Teff=5689+/-11K,
logg=4.385+/-0.005, [Fe/H]=+0.22+/-0.01, being in agreement with the published
global seismic values confirming its status of solar analogue. KIC 3241581 is a
metal rich solar analogue with a solar-like activity level in a binary system
of unknown period. The chromospheric activity level is compatible to the solar
magnetic activity.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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