292 research outputs found
Spin injection in Silicon at zero magnetic field
In this letter, we show efficient electrical spin injection into a SiGe based
\textit{p-i-n} light emitting diode from the remanent state of a
perpendicularly magnetized ferromagnetic contact. Electron spin injection is
carried out through an alumina tunnel barrier from a Co/Pt thin film exhibiting
a strong out-of-plane anisotropy. The electrons spin polarization is then
analysed through the circular polarization of emitted light. All the light
polarization measurements are performed without an external applied magnetic
field \textit{i.e.} in remanent magnetic states. The light polarization as a
function of the magnetic field closely traces the out-of-plane magnetization of
the Co/Pt injector. We could achieve a circular polarization degree of the
emitted light of 3 % at 5 K. Moreover this light polarization remains almost
constant at least up to 200 K.Comment: accepted in AP
CO and C_2 Absorption Toward W40 IRS 1a
The H II region W40 harbors a small group of young, hot stars behind roughly
9 magnitudes of visual extinction. We have detected gaseous carbon monoxide
(CO) and diatomic carbon (C_2) in absorption toward the star W40 IRS 1a. The
2-0 R0, R1, and R2 lines of 12CO at 2.3 micron were measured using the CSHELL
on the NASA IR Telescope Facility (with upper limits placed on R3, R4, and R5)
yielding an N_CO of (1.1 +/- 0.2) x 10^18 cm^-2. Excitation analysis indicates
T_kin > 7 K. The Phillips system of C_2 transitions near 8775 Ang. was measured
using the Kitt Peak 4-m telescope and echelle spectrometer. Radiative pumping
models indicate a total C_2 column density of (7.0 +/- 0.4) x 10^14 cm^-2, two
excitation temperatures (39 and 126 K), and a total gas density of n ~ 250
cm^-3. The CO ice band at 4.7 micron was not detected, placing an upper limit
on the CO depletion of delta < 1 %. We postulate that the sightline has
multiple translucent components and is associated with the W40 molecular cloud.
Our data for W40 IRS 1a, coupled with other sightlines, shows that the ratio of
CO/C_2 increases from diffuse through translucent environs. Finally, we show
that the hydrogen to dust ratio seems to remain constant from diffuse to dense
environments, while the CO to dust ratio apparently does not.Comment: To appear in The Astrophysical Journal 17 pages total, 5 figures Also
available at http://casa.colorado.edu/~shuping/research/w40/w40.htm
Spitzer Observations of NGC 1333: A Study of Structure and Evolution in a Nearby Embedded Cluster
We present a comprehensive analysis of structure in the young, embedded
cluster, NGC 1333 using members identified with Spitzer and 2MASS photometry
based on their IR-excess emission. In total, 137 members are identified in this
way, composed of 39 protostars and 98 more evolved pre-main sequence stars with
disks. Of the latter class, four are transition/debris disk candidates. The
fraction of exposed pre-main sequence stars with disks is 83% +/- 11%, showing
that there is a measurable diskless pre-main sequence population. The sources
in each of the Class I and Class II evolutionary states are shown to have very
different spatial distributions relative to the distribution of the dense gas
in their natal cloud. However, the distribution of nearest neighbor spacings
among these two groups of sources are found to be quite similar, with a strong
peak at spacings of 0.045 pc. Radial and azimuthal density profiles and surface
density maps computed from the identified YSOs show that NGC 1333 is elongated
and not strongly centrally concentrated, confirming previous claims in the
literature. We interpret these new results as signs of a low velocity
dispersion, extremely young cluster that is not in virial equilibrium.Comment: 59 pages, 20 figures, accepted to ApJ, verion with full resolution
figures available at
http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~rgutermuth/preprints/gutermuth_ngc1333.pdf .
Updated to fix astro-ph figure garblin
Hubble Space Telescope Survey of Interstellar ^12CO/^13CO in the Solar Neighborhood
We examine 20 diffuse and translucent Galactic sight lines and extract the
column densities of the ^12CO and ^13CO isotopologues from their ultraviolet
A--X absorption bands detected in archival Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph
data with lambda/Deltalambda geq 46,000. Five more targets with Goddard
High-Resolution Spectrograph data are added to the sample that more than
doubles the number of sight lines with published Hubble Space Telescope
observations of ^13CO. Most sight lines have 12-to-13 isotopic ratios that are
not significantly different from the local value of 70 for ^12C/^13C, which is
based on mm-wave observations of rotational lines in emission from CO and H_2CO
inside dense molecular clouds, as well as on results from optical measurements
of CH^+. Five of the 25 sight lines are found to be fractionated toward lower
12-to-13 values, while three sight lines in the sample are fractionated toward
higher ratios, signaling the predominance of either isotopic charge exchange or
selective photodissociation, respectively. There are no obvious trends of the
^12CO-to-^13CO ratio with physical conditions such as gas temperature or
density, yet ^12CO/^13CO does vary in a complicated manner with the column
density of either CO isotopologue, owing to varying levels of competition
between isotopic charge exchange and selective photodissociation in the
fractionation of CO. Finally, rotational temperatures of H_2 show that all
sight lines with detected amounts of ^13CO pass through gas that is on average
colder by 20 K than the gas without ^13CO. This colder gas is also sampled by
CN and C_2 molecules, the latter indicating gas kinetic temperatures of only 28
K, enough to facilitate an efficient charge exchange reaction that lowers the
value of ^12CO/^13CO.Comment: 1-column emulateapj, 23 pages, 9 figure
Can Protostellar Jets Drive Supersonic Turbulence in Molecular Clouds?
Jets and outflows from young stellar objects are proposed candidates to drive
supersonic turbulence in molecular clouds. Here, we present the results from
multi-dimensional jet simulations where we investigate in detail the energy and
momentum deposition from jets into their surrounding environment and quantify
the character of the excited turbulence with velocity probability density
functions. Our study include jet--clump interaction, transient jets, and
magnetised jets. We find that collimated supersonic jets do not excite
supersonic motions far from the vicinity of the jet. Supersonic fluctuations
are damped quickly and do not spread into the parent cloud. Instead subsonic,
non-compressional modes occupy most of the excited volume. This is a generic
feature which can not be fully circumvented by overdense jets or magnetic
fields. Nevertheless, jets are able to leave strong imprints in their cloud
structure and can disrupt dense clumps. Our results question the ability of
collimated jets to sustain supersonic turbulence in molecular clouds.Comment: 33 pages, 18 figures, accepted by ApJ, version with high resolution
figures at:
http://www.ita.uni-heidelberg.de/~banerjee/publications/jet_paper.pd
‘Blindness to the obvious’?: Treatment experiences and feminist approaches to eating disorders
Eating disorders (EDs) are now often approached as biopsychosocial problems, but the social or cultural aspects of the equation are often marginalised in treatment - relegated to mere contributory or facilitating factors. In contrast, feminist and socio-cultural approaches are primarily concerned with the relationship between EDs and the social/ cultural construction of gender. Yet although such approaches emerged directly from the work of feminist therapists, the feminist scholarship has increasingly observed, critiqued and challenged the biomedical model from a scholarly distance. As such, this article draws upon data from 15 semi-structured interviews with women in the UK context who have experience of anorexia and/or bulimia in order to explore a series of interlocking themes concerning the relationship between gender identity and treatment. In engaging the women in debate about the feminist approaches (something which has been absent from previous feminist work), the article explores how gender featured in their own understandings of their problem, and the ways in which it was - or rather wasn’t - addressed in treatment. The article also explores the women’s evaluations of the feminist discourse, and their discussions of how it might be implemented within therapeutic and clinical contexts
Risk management challenges of shared public services: a comparative analysis of Scotland and Finland
Star Formation in the Extreme Outer Galaxy: Digel Cloud 2 Clusters
As a first step for studying star formation in the extreme outer Galaxy
(EOG), we obtained deep near-infrared images of two embedded clusters at the
northern and southern CO peaks of Cloud 2, which is one of the most distant
star forming regions in the outer Galaxy (galactic radius R_g ~ 19 kpc). With
high spatial resolution (FWHM ~ 0".35) and deep imaging (K ~ 21 mag) with the
IRCS imager at the Subaru telescope, we detected cluster members with a mass
detection limit of < 0.1 M_{sun}, which is well into the substellar regime.
These high quality data enables a comparison of EOG to those in the solar
neighborhood on the same basis for the first time. Before interpreting the
photometric result, we have first constructed the NIR color-color diagram
(dwarf star track, classical T Tauri star (CTTS) locus, reddening law) in the
Mauna Kea Observatory filter system and also for the low metallicity
environment since the metallicity in EOG is much lower than those in the solar
neighborhood. The estimated stellar density suggests that an ``isolated type''
star formation is ongoing in Cloud 2-N, while a ``cluster type'' star formation
is ongoing in Cloud 2-S. Despite the difference of the star formation mode,
other characteristics of the two clusters are found to be almost identical: (1)
K-band luminosity function (KLF) of the two clusters are quite similar, as is
the estimated IMF and ages (~ 0.5--1 Myr) from the KLF fitting, (2) the
estimated star formation efficiencies (SFEs) for both clusters are typical
compared to those of embedded clusters in the solar neighborhood (~ 10 %). The
similarity of two independent clusters with a large separation (~ 25 pc)
strongly suggest that their star formation activities were triggered by the
same mechanism, probably the supernova remnant (GSH 138-01-94).Comment: 14pages, 11 figures; Accepted for publication in Ap
Infrared and optical polarimetry around the low-mass star-forming region NGC 1333 IRAS 4A
We performed J- and R-band linear polarimetry with the 4.2 m William Herschel
Telescope at the Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos and with the 1.6 m
telescope at the Observat\'orio do Pico dos Dias, respectively, to derive the
magnetic field geometry of the diffuse molecular cloud surrounding the embedded
protostellar system NGC 1333 IRAS 4A. We obtained interstellar polarization
data for about two dozen stars. The distribution of polarization position
angles has low dispersion and suggests the existence of an ordered magnetic
field component at physical scales larger than the protostar. Some of the
observed stars present intrinsic polarization and evidence of being young
stellar objects. The estimated mean orientation of the interstellar magnetic
field as derived from these data is almost perpendicular to the main direction
of the magnetic field associated with the dense molecular envelope around IRAS
4A. Since the distribution of the CO emission in NGC 1333 indicates that the
diffuse molecular gas has a multi-layered structure, we suggest that the
observed polarization position angles are caused by the superposed projection
along the line of sight of different magnetic field components.Comment: 37 pages, 9 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in A
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