56,200 research outputs found
A Far-Infrared Survey of Molecular Cloud Cores
We present a catalogue of molecular cloud cores drawn from high latitude,
medium opacity clouds, using the all-sky IRAS Sky Survey Atlas (ISSA) images at
60 and 100~m. The typical column densities of the cores are cm and the typical volume densities are cm. They are therefore significantly less dense than
many other samples obtained in other ways. Those cloud cores with IRAS point
sources are seen to be already forming stars, but this is found to be only a
small fraction of the total number of cores. The fraction of the cores in the
protostellar stage is used to estimate the prestellar timescale - the time
until the formation of a hydrostatically supported protostellar object. We
argue, on the basis of a comparison with other samples, that a trend exists for
the prestellar lifetime of a cloud core to decrease with the mean column
density and number density of the core. We compare this with model predictions
and show that the data are consistent with star formation regulated by the
ionisation fraction.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figure
Search for Contact Interactions in the Dimuon Final State at ATLAS
The Standard Model has been successful in describing many fundamental aspects
of particle physics. However, there are some remaining puzzles that are not
explained within the context of its present framework. We discuss the
possibility to discover new physics in the ATLAS Detector via a four-fermion
contact interaction, much in the same way Fermi first described Weak
interactions. Using a simple ratio method on dimuon events, we can set a 95%
C.L. lower limit on the effective scale Lambda = 7.5 TeV (8.7 TeV) for the
constructive Left-left Isoscalar Model of quark compositeness with 100 pb^-1
(200 pb^-1) of data at sqrt{s} = 10 TeV.Comment: To be published in the proceedings of DPF-2009, Detroit, MI, July
2009, eConf C09072
Technological change and productivity growth in the air transport industry
The progress of the civil air transport industry in the United States was examined in the light of a proposal of Enos who, after examining the growth of the petroleum industry, divided that phenomenon into two phases, the alpha and the beta; that is, the invention, first development and production, and the improvement phase. The civil air transport industry developed along similar lines with the technological progress coming in waves; each wave encompassing several new technological advances while retaining the best of the old ones. At the same time the productivity of the transport aircraft as expressed by the product of the aircraft velocity and the passenger capacity increased sufficiently to allow the direct operating cost in cents per passenger mile to continually decrease with each successive aircraft development
Haze in the Mars atmosphere as revealed by the Mariner 4 television data
Photometric investigation of haze in Mars atmosphere revealed by Mariner 4 television dat
Development and evaluation of the elastic recovery concept for expandable space structures
Elastic recovery of expandable space structure
Relativistic Jets and Long-Duration Gamma-ray Bursts from the Birth of Magnetars
We present time-dependent axisymmetric magnetohydrodynamic simulations of the
interaction of a relativistic magnetized wind produced by a proto-magnetar with
a surrounding stellar envelope, in the first seconds after core
collapse. We inject a super-magnetosonic wind with ergs
s into a cavity created by an outgoing supernova shock. A strong
toroidal magnetic field builds up in the bubble of plasma and magnetic field
that is at first inertially confined by the progenitor star. This drives a jet
out along the polar axis of the star, even though the star and the magnetar
wind are each spherically symmetric. The jet has the properties needed to
produce a long-duration gamma-ray burst (GRB). At s after core bounce,
the jet has escaped the host star and the Lorentz factor of the material in the
jet at large radii cm is similar to that in the magnetar wind
near the source. Most of the spindown power of the central magnetar escapes via
the relativistic jet. There are fluctuations in the Lorentz factor and energy
flux in the jet on second timescale. These may contribute to
variability in GRB emission (e.g., via internal shocks).Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted in MNRAS letter, presented at the
conference "Astrophysics of Compact Objects", 1-7 July, Huangshan, Chin
Confocal Laser Induced Fluorescence with Comparable Spatial Localization to the Conventional Method
We present measurements of ion velocity distributions obtained by laser induced fluorescence (LIF) using a single viewport in an argon plasma. A patent pending design, which we refer to as the confocal fluorescence telescope, combines large objective lenses with a large central obscuration and a spatial filter to achieve high spatial localization along the laser injection direction. Models of the injection and collection optics of the two assemblies are used to provide a theoretical estimate of the spatial localization of the confocal arrangement, which is taken to be the full width at half maximum of the spatial optical response. The new design achieves approximately 1.4 mm localization at a focal length of 148.7 mm, improving on previously published designs by an order of magnitude and approaching the localization achieved by the conventional method. The confocal method, however, does so without requiring a pair of separated, perpendicular optical paths. The confocal technique therefore eases the two window access requirement of the conventional method, extending the application of LIF to experiments where conventional LIF measurements have been impossible or difficult, or where multiple viewports are scarce
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