409,786 research outputs found
Acoustic bubble removal method
A method is described for removing bubbles from a liquid bath such as a bath of molten glass to be used for optical elements. Larger bubbles are first removed by applying acoustic energy resonant to a bath dimension to drive the larger bubbles toward a pressure well where the bubbles can coalesce and then be more easily removed. Thereafter, submillimeter bubbles are removed by applying acoustic energy of frequencies resonant to the small bubbles to oscillate them and thereby stir liquid immediately about the bubbles to facilitate their breakup and absorption into the liquid
Giant Gamma-ray Bubbles from Fermi-LAT: AGN Activity or Bipolar Galactic Wind?
Data from the Fermi-LAT reveal two large gamma-ray bubbles, extending 50
degrees above and below the Galactic center, with a width of about 40 degrees
in longitude. The gamma-ray emission associated with these bubbles has a
significantly harder spectrum (dN/dE ~ E^-2) than the IC emission from
electrons in the Galactic disk, or the gamma-rays produced by decay of pions
from proton-ISM collisions. There is no significant spatial variation in the
spectrum or gamma-ray intensity within the bubbles, or between the north and
south bubbles. The bubbles are spatially correlated with the hard-spectrum
microwave excess known as the WMAP haze; the edges of the bubbles also line up
with features in the ROSAT X-ray maps at 1.5-2 keV. We argue that these
Galactic gamma-ray bubbles were most likely created by some large episode of
energy injection in the Galactic center, such as past accretion events onto the
central massive black hole, or a nuclear starburst in the last ~10 Myr. Dark
matter annihilation/decay seems unlikely to generate all the features of the
bubbles and the associated signals in WMAP and ROSAT; the bubbles must be
understood in order to use measurements of the diffuse gamma-ray emission in
the inner Galaxy as a probe of dark matter physics. Study of the origin and
evolution of the bubbles also has the potential to improve our understanding of
recent energetic events in the inner Galaxy and the high-latitude cosmic ray
population.Comment: 46 pages, 28 figures, accepted by Ap
Molecular Lines of 13 Galactic Infrared Bubble Regions
We investigated the physical properties of molecular clouds and star
formation processes around infrared bubbles which are essentially expanding HII
regions. We performed observations of 13 galactic infrared bubble fields
containing 18 bubbles. Five molecular lines, 12CO (J=1-0), 13CO (J=1-0),
C18O(J=1-0), HCN (J=1-0), and HCO+ (J=1-0), were observed, and several publicly
available surveys, GLIMPSE, MIPSGAL, ATLASGAL, BGPS, VGPS, MAGPIS, and NVSS,
were used for comparison. We find that these bubbles are generally connected
with molecular clouds, most of which are giant. Several bubble regions display
velocity gradients and broad shifted profiles, which could be due to the
expansion of bubbles. The masses of molecular clouds within bubbles range from
100 to 19,000 solar mass, and their dynamic ages are about 0.3-3.7 Myr, which
takes into account the internal turbulence pressure of surrounding molecular
clouds. Clumps are found in the vicinity of all 18 bubbles, and molecular
clouds near four of these bubbles with larger angular sizes show shell-like
morphologies, indicating that either collect-and-collapse or radiation-driven
implosion processes may have occurred. Due to the contamination of adjacent
molecular clouds, only six bubble regions are appropriate to search for
outflows, and we find that four of them have outflow activities. Three bubbles
display ultra-compact HII regions at their borders, and one of them is probably
responsible for its outflow. In total, only six bubbles show star formation
activities in the vicinity, and we suggest that star formation processes might
have been triggered.Comment: 55 Pages, 32 figures. Accepted for publication in A
Stability of multi-electron bubbles in liquid helium
The stability of multi-electron bubbles in liquid helium is investigated
theoretically. We find that multi-electron bubbles are unstable against fission
whenever the pressure is positive. It is shown that for moving bubbles the
Bernoulli effect can result in a range of pressures over which the bubbles are
stable.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
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