332 research outputs found
Analysis of in-situ observations in the Strait of Gibraltar
During the EU-project CANIGO intensive ship-board observations were carried out in April 1996 and October 1997 in order to observe the spatial and temporal variability of the flow, of the internal bore and of the water mass
structure in the Strait of Gibraltar. An inverse model for the current and interfacefluctuations was developed to remove tidal currents from the measurement and to calculate the volume transport for the in and outflow seperately. In addition traveltime measurements across the strait have been analysed to test the suitability of acoustical instruments for a longterm monitoring of the exchange through the strait
Beyond the iron group: heavy metals in hot subdwarfs
We report the discovery of strong photospheric resonance lines of Ga III, Ge
IV, Sn IV and Pb IV in the UV spectra of more than two dozen sdB and sdOB stars
at temperatures ranging from 22000 K to 40000 K. Lines of other heavy elements
are also detected, however in these cases more atomic data are needed. Based on
these discoveries, we present a hypothesis to explain the apparent lack of
silicon in sdB stars hotter than ~32000 K. The existence of triply ionised Ge,
Sn, and Pb suggests that rather than silicon sinking deep into the photosphere,
it is removed from the star in a fractionated stellar wind. This hypothesis
provides a challenge to diffusion models of sdB stars.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, to appear in A&A Letter
Intensive ship-board observations of the flow through the Strait of Gibraltar
During the European project Canary Island Azores Gibraltar Experiment (CANIGO), intensive shipboard observations were carried out in April 1996 and October 1997 in order to observe the spatial and temporal variability of the flow and of the water mass structure in the Strait of Gibraltar. At the sill and the eastern and western entrances to the strait, repeated cross-strait sections and station time series of the flow and of T–S profiles were measured using vessel-mounted and lowered acoustic Doppler current profilers (ADCP) and conductivity-temperature-depth probes (CTD)/expendable bathythermographs (XBT), yielding new views of the rapid changes over tidal cycles and of approximate tidal means. It is argued that transport observations might be easier to carry out away from the sill, in the eastern part of the strait, even though maximum resolved shears were comparable in both places, 0.03–0.04 s−1 in the vertical and 0.001–0.016 s−1 in the horizontal. In the east, coordinated changes in the stratification and the flow field are documented via four time series over M 2 tidal cycles, showing a sharpening/diffusing of the vertical gradients in the water masses and the flow. Maximum shear and maximum water mass gradients do not always coincide there, and both are much shallower (50–80 m) than the delimiter between inflow and outflow (120–150 m). The mean salinity of the outflow core decreases from 38.43 in the east to 38.17 west of the sills as a result of the mixing processes. The internal bore was followed and directly observed with rapid CTD-yoyo stations and with XBT/vessel-mounted ADCP measurements. It generates extreme changes in currents and shears on timescales of minutes, with directly measured vertical velocities reaching ±50 cm s−1. Patches of density inversions were observed as the bore passed by, consistent with active turbulent mixing along the interface. The time series of flow and CTD measurements allow the direct calculation of Froude numbers at various locations and over tidal cycles. These and along-strait sections suggest that the exchange through the strait is maximal in April 1996 and submaximal in October 1997, supporting the expectations of Garrett et al. [1990]
Abundance studies of sdB stars using UV echelle HST/STIS spectroscopy
Aims: We test the hypothesis that the pulsations in sdB stars are correlated
with the surface abundances of iron-group elements. Any correlation might
explain why, when given two spectroscopically similar stars, one will pulsate
while the other will not. Methods: We have obtained high-resolution ultraviolet
spectra two pulsating and three non-pulsating sdB stars using the Space
Telescope Imaging Spectrograph onboard the Hubble Space Telescope. We
determined abundances for 25 elements including the iron group and even heavier
elements such as tin and lead using LTE curve-of-growth and spectrum synthesis
techniques. Results: We find no clear correlation between pulsations and metal
abundances, and we comment on the resulting implications, including whether it
is possible to determine the difference between a pulsating and a non-pulsating
sdB spectroscopically. In addition to the main goal of our observations, we
have also investigated the effect of supersolar metallicity on fundamental
parameter determination, possible trends with iron abundance, and the
hypothesis that weak winds may be selectively removing elements from the
stellar envelopes. These effects provide challenges to stellar atmosphere
modelling and diffusion models for sdB stars.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Inch, Foot & Yard – bilinguales Lernen in der Primarstufe
Fortgeschrittene sprachliche Kompetenzen von bilingual unterrichteten Schüler*innen wurden beispielsweise von Bechler (2014) hervorgehoben und mit dem höherfrequentierten Sprachenkontakt begründet. In bilingualen Settings wird zusätzlich zu den im traditionellen Fremdsprachenunterricht bedeutsamen Basic Interpersonal Communication Skills (Cummins, 1979) auch die Cognitive/Academic Language Proficiency (Cummins, 1979) angesprochen. Mit dem hier vorgestellten Forschungsprojekt soll der Beitrag des Unterrichtsansatzes PrimarWebQuest zum mathematischen und sprachlichen Lernen der bilingual unterrichteten Schüler*innen untersucht werden. Das Forschungsinteresse lässt sich auf den Ebenen fachlich, sprachlich und digital verorten, wobei besonders deren Beziehungen von Interesse sind:
Welche fachbezogenen und fachsprachlichen Kompetenzen zeigen die Schüler*innen im Verlauf der Bearbeitung von PrimarWebQuests im bilingualen Mathematikunterricht der Primarstufe?
Im Vortrag soll das fachbezogene Lernen im Vordergrund stehen
Striking Photospheric Abundance Anomalies in Blue Horizontal-Branch Stars in Globular Cluster M13
High-resolution optical spectra of thirteen blue horizontal-branch (BHB)
stars in the globular cluster M13 show enormous deviations in element
abundances from the expected cluster metallicity. In the hotter stars (T_eff >
12000 K), helium is depleted by factors of 10 to 100 below solar, while iron is
enhanced to three times the solar abundance, two orders of magnitude above the
canonical metallicity [Fe/H] ~= -1.5 dex for this globular cluster. Nitrogen,
phosphorus, and chromium exhibit even more pronounced enhancements, and other
metals are also mildly overabundant, with the exception of magnesium, which
stays very near the expected cluster metallicity. These photospheric anomalies
are most likely due to diffusion --- gravitational settling of helium, and
radiative levitation of the other elements --- in the stable radiative
atmospheres of these hot stars. The effects of these mechanisms may have some
impact on the photometric morphology of the cluster's horizontal branch and on
estimates of its age and distance.Comment: 11 pages, 1 Postscript figure, uses aaspp4.sty, accepted for
publication in ApJ Letter
Rotations and Abundances of Blue Horizontal-Branch Stars in Globular Cluster M15
High-resolution optical spectra of eighteen blue horizontal-branch (BHB)
stars in the globular cluster M15 indicate that their stellar rotation rates
and photospheric compositions vary strongly as a function of effective
temperature. Among the cooler stars in the sample, at Teff ~ 8500 K, metal
abundances are in rough agreement with the canonical cluster metallicity, and
the v sin i rotations appear to have a bimodal distribution, with eight stars
at v sin i < 15 km/s and two stars at v sin i ~ 35 km/s. Most of the stars at
Teff > 10000 K, however, are slowly rotating, v sin i < 7 km/s, and their iron
and titanium are enhanced by a factor of 300 to solar abundance levels.
Magnesium maintains a nearly constant abundance over the entire range of Teff,
and helium is depleted by factors of 10 to 30 in three of the hotter stars.
Diffusion effects in the stellar atmospheres are the most likely explanation
for these large differences in composition. Our results are qualitatively very
similar to those previously reported for M13 and NGC 6752, but with even larger
enhancement amplitudes, presumably due to the increased efficiency of radiative
levitation at lower intrinsic [Fe/H]. We also see evidence for faster stellar
rotation explicitly preventing the onset of the diffusion mechanisms among a
subset of the hotter stars.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, 1 table, accepted to ApJ
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