10,139 research outputs found
Stellar model atmospheres with magnetic line blanketing. III. The role of magnetic field inclination
Context. See abstract in the paper.
Aims. In the last paper of this series we study the effects of the magnetic
field, varying its strength and orientation, on the model atmosphere structure,
the energy distribution, photometric colors and the hydrogen Balmer line
profiles. We compare with the previous results for an isotropic case in order
to understand whether there is a clear relation between the value of the
magnetic field angle and model changes, and to study how important the
additional orientational information is. Also, we examine the probable
explanation of the visual flux depressions of the magnetic chemically peculiar
stars in the context of this work.
Methods. We calculated one more grid of the model atmospheres of magnetic A
and B stars for different effective temperatures (Teff=8000K, 11000K, 15000K),
magnetic field strengths (B=0, 5, 10, 40 kG) and various angles of the magnetic
field (Omega=0-90 degr) with respect to the atmosphere plane. We used the
LLmodels code which implements a direct method for line opacity calculation,
anomalous Zeeman splitting of spectral lines, and polarized radiation transfer.
Results. We have not found significant changes in model atmosphere structure,
photometric and spectroscopic observables or profiles of hydrogen Balmer lines
as we vary the magnetic field inclination angle Omega. The strength of the
magnetic field plays the main role in magnetic line blanketing. We show that
the magnetic field has a clear relation to the visual flux depressions of the
magnetic CP stars.
Conclusions. See abstract in the paper.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Phonographic neighbors, not orthographic neighbors, determine word naming latencies
The orthographic neighborhood size (N) of a word—the number of words that can be formed from that word by replacing one letter with another in its place—has been found to have facilitatory effects in word naming. The orthographic neighborhood hypothesis attributes this facilitation to interactive effects. A phonographic neighborhood hypothesis, in contrast, attributes the effect to lexical print-sound conversion. According to the phonographic neighborhood hypothesis, phonographic neighbors (words differing in one letter and one phoneme, e.g., stove and stone) should facilitate naming, and other orthographic neighbors (e.g., stove and shove) should not. The predictions of these two hypotheses are tested. Unique facilitatory phonographic N effects were found in four sets of word naming mega-study data, along with an absence of facilitatory orthographic N effects. These results implicate print-sound conversion—based on consistent phonology—in neighborhood effects rather than word-letter feedback
Xenon in Mercury-Manganese Stars
Previous studies of elemental abundances in Mercury-Manganese (HgMn) stars
have occasionally reported the presence of lines of the ionized rare noble gas
Xe II, especially in a few of the hottest stars with Teff ~ 13000--15000 K. A
new study of this element has been undertaken using observations from Lick
Observatory's Hamilton Echelle Spectrograph. In this work, the spectrum
synthesis program UCLSYN has been used to undertake abundance analysis assuming
LTE. We find that in the Smith & Dworetsky sample of HgMn stars, Xe is vastly
over-abundant in 21 of 22 HgMn stars studied, by factors of 3.1--4.8 dex. There
does not appear to be a significant correlation of Xe abundance with Teff. A
comparison sample of normal late B stars shows no sign of Xe II lines that
could be detected, consistent with the expected weakness of lines at normal
abundance. The main reason for the previous lack of widespread detection in
HgMn stars is probably due to the strongest lines being at longer wavelengths
than the photographic blue. The lines used in this work were 4603.03A, 4844.33A
and 5292.22A.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. Accepted by Monthly Notices of the Royal
Astronomical Society, 8 January 200
Methods of testing and diagnosing model error : dual and single route cascaded models of reading aloud
Models of visual word recognition have been assessed by both factorial and regression approaches. Factorial approaches tend to provide a relatively weak test of models, and regression approaches give little indication of the sources of models’ mispredictions, especially when parameters are not optimal. A new alternative method, involving regression on model error, combines these two approaches with parameter optimization. The method is illustrated with respect to the dual route cascaded model of reading aloud. In contrast to previous investigations, this method provides clear evidence that there are parameter-independent problems with the model, and identifies two specific sources of misprediction made by model
Instantaneous Pair Theory for High-Frequency Vibrational Energy Relaxation in Fluids
Notwithstanding the long and distinguished history of studies of vibrational
energy relaxation, exactly how it is that high frequency vibrations manage to
relax in a liquid remains somewhat of a mystery. Both experimental and
theoretical approaches seem to say that there is a natural frequency range
associated with intermolecular motions in liquids, typically spanning no more
than a few hundred cm^{-1}. Landau-Teller-like theories explain how a solvent
can absorb any vibrational energy within this "band", but how is it that
molecules can rid themselves of superfluous vibrational energies significantly
in excess of these values? We develop a theory for such processes based on the
idea that the crucial liquid motions are those that most rapidly modulate the
force on the vibrating coordinate -- and that by far the most important of
these motions are those involving what we have called the mutual nearest
neighbors of the vibrating solute. Specifically, we suggest that whenever there
is a single solvent molecule sufficiently close to the solute that the solvent
and solute are each other's nearest neighbors, then the instantaneous
scattering dynamics of the solute-solvent pair alone suffices to explain the
high frequency relaxation. The many-body features of the liquid only appear in
the guise of a purely equilibrium problem, that of finding the likelihood of
particularly effective solvent arrangements around the solute. These results
are tested numerically on model diatomic solutes dissolved in atomic fluids
(including the experimentally and theoretically interesting case of I_2 in Xe).
The instantaneous pair theory leads to results in quantitative agreement with
those obtained from far more laborious exact molecular dynamics simulations.Comment: 55 pages, 6 figures Scheduled to appear in J. Chem. Phys., Jan, 199
Uses of zeta regularization in QFT with boundary conditions: a cosmo-topological Casimir effect
Zeta regularization has proven to be a powerful and reliable tool for the
regularization of the vacuum energy density in ideal situations. With the
Hadamard complement, it has been shown to provide finite (and meaningful)
answers too in more involved cases, as when imposing physical boundary
conditions (BCs) in two-- and higher--dimensional surfaces (being able to
mimic, in a very convenient way, other {\it ad hoc} cut-offs, as non-zero
depths). What we have considered is the {\it additional} contribution to the cc
coming from the non-trivial topology of space or from specific boundary
conditions imposed on braneworld models (kind of cosmological Casimir effects).
Assuming someone will be able to prove (some day) that the ground value of the
cc is zero, as many had suspected until very recently, we will then be left
with this incremental value coming from the topology or BCs. We show that this
value can have the correct order of magnitude in a number of quite reasonable
models involving small and large compactified scales and/or brane BCs, and
supergravitons.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure, Talk given at the Seventh International Workshop
Quantum Field Theory under the Influence of External Conditions, QFEXT'05,
Barcelona, September 5-9, 200
Cool White Dwarfs Identified in the Second Data Release of the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey
We have paired the Second Data Release of the Large Area Survey of the UKIRT
Infrared Deep Sky Survey with the Fifth Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky
Survey to identify ten cool white dwarf candidates, from their photometry and
astrometry. Of these ten, one was previously known to be a very cool white
dwarf. We have obtained optical spectroscopy for seven of the candidates using
the GMOS-N spectrograph on Gemini North, and have confirmed all seven as white
dwarfs. Our photometry and astrometry indicates that the remaining two objects
are also white dwarfs. Model analysis of the photometry and available
spectroscopy shows that the seven confirmed new white dwarfs, and the two new
likely white dwarfs, have effective temperatures in the range Teff = 5400-6600
K. Our analysis of the previously known white dwarf confirms that it is cool,
with Teff = 3800 K. The cooling age for this dwarf is 8.7 Gyr, while that of
the nine ~6000 K white dwarfs is 1.8-3.6 Gyr. We are unable to determine the
masses of the white dwarfs from the existing data, and therefore we cannot
constrain the total ages of the white dwarfs. The large cooling age for the
coolest white dwarf in the sample, combined with its low estimated tangential
velocity, suggests that it is an old member of the thin disk, or a member of
the thick disk of the Galaxy, with an age 10-11 Gyr. The warmer white dwarfs
appear to have velocities typical of the thick disk or even halo; these may be
very old remnants of low-mass stars, or they may be relatively young thin disk
objects with unusually high space motion.Comment: 37 pages (referee format), 4 tables, 7 figures, accepted to Ap
Magnetic field, chemical composition and line profile variability of the peculiar eclipsing binary star AR Aur
AR Aur is the only eclipsing binary known to contain a HgMn star, making it
an ideal case for a detailed study of the HgMn phenomenon. HgMn stars are a
poorly understood class of chemically peculiar stars, which have traditionally
been thought not to possess significant magnetic fields. However, the recent
discovery of line profile variability in some HgMn stars, apparently
attributable to surface abundance patches, has brought this belief into
question. In this paper we investigate the chemical abundances, line profile
variability, and magnetic field of the primary and secondary of the AR Aur
system, using a series of high resolution spectropolarimetric observations. We
find the primary is indeed a HgMn star, and present the most precise abundances
yet determined for this star. We find the secondary is a weak Am star, and is
possibly still on the pre-main sequence. Line profile variability was observed
in a range of lines in the primary, and is attributed to inhomogeneous surface
distributions of some elements. No magnetic field was detected in any
observation of either stars, with an upper limit on the longitudinal magnetic
field in both stars of 100 G. Modeling of the phase-resolve longitudinal field
measurements leads to a 3 sigma upper limit on any dipole surface magnetic
field of about 400 G.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 11 pages, 9 figure
GM crops and gender issues
Correspondence in the December issue by Jonathan Gressel not only states that gender issues in rural settings have not been adequately addressed with respect to weed control biotech but also asserts that such technology can increase the quality of life of rural women in developing countries. Improved weed control is a labor-saving technology that can result in less employment in a labor surplus rural economy. Often in rural areas, wage income is the main source of income and an important determinant of the quality of life, particularly where employment opportunities are generally limited. Apart from soil preparation, planting and weeding, harvesting is also 'femanual' work that can generate more employment if yields are higher. Biotech can enhance the quality of life of women but only if the technology is associated with overall generation of rural employment
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