165,559 research outputs found
On the Tidal Dissipation of Obliquity
We investigate tidal dissipation of obliquity in hot Jupiters. Assuming an
initial random orientation of obliquity and parameters relevant to the observed
population, the obliquity of hot Jupiters does not evolve to purely aligned
systems. In fact, the obliquity evolves to either prograde, retrograde or
90^{o} orbits where the torque due to tidal perturbations vanishes. This
distribution is incompatible with observations which show that hot jupiters
around cool stars are generally aligned. This calls into question the viability
of tidal dissipation as the mechanism for obliquity alignment of hot Jupiters
around cool stars.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted at ApJ
Thermalization and temperature distribution in a driven ion chain
We study thermalization and non-equilibrium dynamics in a dissipative quantum
many-body system -- a chain of ions with two points of the chain driven by
thermal bath under different temperature. Instead of a simple linear
temperature gradient as one expects from the classical heat diffusion process,
the temperature distribution in the ion chain shows surprisingly rich patterns,
which depend on the ion coupling rate to the bath, the location of the driven
ions, and the dissipation rates of the other ions in the chain. Through
simulation of the temperature evolution, we show that these unusual temperature
distribution patterns in the ion chain can be quantitatively tested in
experiments within a realistic time scale.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Toward a Deterministic Model of Planetary Formation VII: Eccentricity Distribution of Gas Giants
The ubiquity of planets and diversity of planetary systems reveal planet
formation encompass many complex and competing processes. In this series of
papers, we develop and upgrade a population synthesis model as a tool to
identify the dominant physical effects and to calibrate the range of physical
conditions. Recent planet searches leads to the discovery of many
multiple-planet systems. Any theoretical models of their origins must take into
account dynamical interaction between emerging protoplanets. Here, we introduce
a prescription to approximate the close encounters between multiple planets. We
apply this method to simulate the growth, migration, and dynamical interaction
of planetary systems. Our models show that in relatively massive disks, several
gas giants and rocky/icy planets emerge, migrate, and undergo dynamical
instability. Secular perturbation between planets leads to orbital crossings,
eccentricity excitation, and planetary ejection. In disks with modest masses,
two or less gas giants form with multiple super-Earths. Orbital stability in
these systems is generally maintained and they retain the kinematic structure
after gas in their natal disks is depleted. These results reproduce the
observed planetary mass-eccentricity and semimajor axis-eccentricity
correlations. They also suggest that emerging gas giants can scatter residual
cores to the outer disk regions. Subsequent in situ gas accretion onto these
cores can lead to the formation of distant (> 30AU) gas giants with nearly
circular orbits.Comment: 54 pages, 14 Figures; accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journa
Statistical Modelling of Information Sharing: Community, Membership and Content
File-sharing systems, like many online and traditional information sharing
communities (e.g. newsgroups, BBS, forums, interest clubs), are dynamical
systems in nature. As peers get in and out of the system, the information
content made available by the prevailing membership varies continually in
amount as well as composition, which in turn affects all peers' join/leave
decisions. As a result, the dynamics of membership and information content are
strongly coupled, suggesting interesting issues about growth, sustenance and
stability.
In this paper, we propose to study such communities with a simple statistical
model of an information sharing club. Carrying their private payloads of
information goods as potential supply to the club, peers join or leave on the
basis of whether the information they demand is currently available.
Information goods are chunked and typed, as in a file sharing system where
peers contribute different files, or a forum where messages are grouped by
topics or threads. Peers' demand and supply are then characterized by
statistical distributions over the type domain.
This model reveals interesting critical behaviour with multiple equilibria. A
sharp growth threshold is derived: the club may grow towards a sustainable
equilibrium only if the value of an order parameter is above the threshold, or
shrink to emptiness otherwise. The order parameter is composite and comprises
the peer population size, the level of their contributed supply, the club's
efficiency in information search, the spread of supply and demand over the type
domain, as well as the goodness of match between them.Comment: accepted in International Symposium on Computer Performance,
Modeling, Measurements and Evaluation, Juan-les-Pins, France, October-200
Eccentricity Evolution of Extrasolar Multiple Planetary Systems due to the Depletion of Nascent Protostellar Disks
Most extrasolar planets are observed to have eccentricities much larger than
those in the solar system. Some of these planets have sibling planets, with
comparable masses, orbiting around the same host stars. In these multiple
planetary systems, eccentricity is modulated by the planets' mutual secular
interaction as a consequence of angular momentum exchange between them. For
mature planets, the eigenfrequencies of this modulation are determined by their
mass and semi-major axis ratios. But, prior to the disk depletion, self gravity
of the planets' nascent disks dominates the precession eigenfrequencies. We
examine here the initial evolution of young planets' eccentricity due to the
apsidal libration or circulation induced by both the secular interaction
between them and the self gravity of their nascent disks. We show that as the
latter effect declines adiabatically with disk depletion, the modulation
amplitude of the planets' relative phase of periapse is approximately invariant
despite the time-asymmetrical exchange of angular momentum between planets.
However, as the young planets' orbits pass through a state of secular
resonance, their mean eccentricities undergo systematic quantitative changes.
For applications, we analyze the eccentricity evolution of planets around
Upsilon Andromedae and HD168443 during the epoch of protostellar disk
depletion. We find that the disk depletion can change the planets' eccentricity
ratio. However, the relatively large amplitude of the planets' eccentricity
cannot be excited if all the planets had small initial eccentricities.Comment: 50 pages including 11 figures, submitted to Ap
Remark on approximation in the calculation of the primordial spectrum generated during inflation
We re-examine approximations in the analytical calculation of the primordial
spectrum of cosmological perturbation produced during inflation. Taking two
inflation models (chaotic inflation and natural inflation) as examples, we
numerically verify the accuracy of these approximations.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, to appear in PR
Internal Gravity Waves Modulate the Apparent Misalignment of Exoplanets around Hot Stars
We propose that the observed misalignment between extra-solar planets and
their hot host stars can be explained by angular momentum transport within the
host star. Observations have shown that this misalignment is preferentially
around hot stars, which have convective cores and extended radiative envelopes.
This situation is amenable to substantial angular momentum transport by
internal gravity waves (IGW) generated at the convective-radiative interface.
Here we present numerical simulations of this process and show that IGW can
modulate the surface rotation of the star. With these two- dimensional
simulations we show that IGW could explain the retrograde orbits observed in
systems such as HAT-P-6 and HAT-P-7, however, extension to high obliquity
objects will await future three- dimensional simulations. We note that these
results also imply that individual massive stars should show temporal
variations in their v sini measurements.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, Accepted for publication in ApJ
An Investigation, Using Standard Experimental Techniques, to Determine FLCs at Elevated Temperature for Aluminium Alloys
An experimental procedure has been developed for the determination of FLCs at elevated temperatures. The GOM ARGUS system was employed for measuring surface strain based on pre-applied grids (pattern), and limit strains were determined according to the ISO 12004-2:2008 standard. Forming limit curves (FLCs) have been determined for AA5754 under warm forming conditions in an isothermal environment. The tests were carried out at various temperatures up to 300oC and forming speeds ranging from 5 – 300 mm s-1 . Results reveal the significant effect of both temperature and forming speed on FLCs of AA5754. Formability increases with increasing temperature above 200oC. Formability also increases with decreasing speed. The presented FLC results show that the best formability exists at low forming speed and the high temperature end of the warm forming range
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