25,944 research outputs found

    Numerical constraints on the model of stochastic excitation of solar-type oscillations

    Full text link
    Analyses of a 3D simulation of the upper layers of a solar convective envelope provide constraints on the physical quantities which enter the theoretical formulation of a stochastic excitation model of solar p modes, for instance the convective velocities and the turbulent kinetic energy spectrum. These constraints are then used to compute the acoustic excitation rate for solar p modes, P. The resulting values are found ~5 times larger than the values resulting from a computation in which convective velocities and entropy fluctuations are obtained with a 1D solar envelope model built with the time-dependent, nonlocal Gough (1977) extension of the mixing length formulation for convection (GMLT). This difference is mainly due to the assumed mean anisotropy properties of the velocity field in the excitation region. The 3D simulation suggests much larger horizontal velocities compared to vertical ones than in the 1D GMLT solar model. The values of P obtained with the 3D simulation constraints however are still too small compared with the values inferred from solar observations. Improvements in the description of the turbulent kinetic energy spectrum and its depth dependence yield further increased theoretical values of P which bring them closer to the observations. It is also found that the source of excitation arising from the advection of the turbulent fluctuations of entropy by the turbulent movements contributes ~ 65-75 % to the excitation and therefore remains dominant over the Reynolds stress contribution. The derived theoretical values of P obtained with the 3D simulation constraints remain smaller by a factor ~3 compared with the solar observations. This shows that the stochastic excitation model still needs to be improved.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&

    Empirical evidence for the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjectures for modular jacobians of genus 2 curves

    Get PDF
    This paper provides empirical evidence for the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjectures for modular Jacobians of genus 2 curves. The second of these conjectures relates six quantities associated to a Jacobian over the rational numbers. One of these six quantities is the size of the Shafarevich-Tate group. Unable to compute that, we computed the five other quantities and solved for the last one. In all 32 cases, the result is very close to an integer that is a power of 2. In addition, this power of 2 agrees with the size of the 2-torsion of the Shafarevich-Tate group, which we could compute

    Relationships Between the Performance of Time/Frequency Standards and Navigation/Communication Systems

    Get PDF
    The relationship between system performance and clock or oscillator performance is discussed. Tradeoffs discussed include: short term stability versus bandwidth requirements; frequency accuracy versus signal acquisition time; flicker of frequency and drift versus resynchronization time; frequency precision versus communications traffic volume; spectral purity versus bit error rate, and frequency standard stability versus frequency selection and adjustability. The benefits and tradeoffs of using precise frequency and time signals are various levels of precision and accuracy are emphasized

    INTERGRANULAR BRITTLENESS STUDIES IN W USING AUGER SPECTROSCOPY.

    Full text link

    The response of a turbulent accretion disc to an imposed epicyclic shearing motion

    Get PDF
    We excite an epicyclic motion, whose amplitude depends on the vertical position, zz, in a simulation of a turbulent accretion disc. An epicyclic motion of this kind may be caused by a warping of the disc. By studying how the epicyclic motion decays we can obtain information about the interaction between the warp and the disc turbulence. A high amplitude epicyclic motion decays first by exciting inertial waves through a parametric instability, but its subsequent exponential damping may be reproduced by a turbulent viscosity. We estimate the effective viscosity parameter, αv\alpha_{\rm v}, pertaining to such a vertical shear. We also gain new information on the properties of the disc turbulence in general, and measure the usual viscosity parameter, αh\alpha_{\rm h}, pertaining to a horizontal (Keplerian) shear. We find that, as is often assumed in theoretical studies, αv\alpha_{\rm v} is approximately equal to αh\alpha_{\rm h} and both are much less than unity, for the field strengths achieved in our local box calculations of turbulence. In view of the smallness (∼0.01\sim 0.01) of αv\alpha_{\rm v} and αh\alpha_{\rm h} we conclude that for β=pgas/pmag∼10\beta = p_{\rm gas}/p_{\rm mag} \sim 10 the timescale for diffusion or damping of a warp is much shorter than the usual viscous timescale. Finally, we review the astrophysical implications.Comment: 12 pages, 18 figures, MNRAS accepte

    Solar Oscillations and Convection: II. Excitation of Radial Oscillations

    Full text link
    Solar p-mode oscillations are excited by the work of stochastic, non-adiabatic, pressure fluctuations on the compressive modes. We evaluate the expression for the radial mode excitation rate derived by Nordlund and Stein (Paper I) using numerical simulations of near surface solar convection. We first apply this expression to the three radial modes of the simulation and obtain good agreement between the predicted excitation rate and the actual mode damping rates as determined from their energies and the widths of their resolved spectral profiles. We then apply this expression for the mode excitation rate to the solar modes and obtain excellent agreement with the low l damping rates determined from GOLF data. Excitation occurs close to the surface, mainly in the intergranular lanes and near the boundaries of granules (where turbulence and radiative cooling are large). The non-adiabatic pressure fluctuations near the surface are produced by small instantaneous local imbalances between the divergence of the radiative and convective fluxes near the solar surface. Below the surface, the non-adiabatic pressure fluctuations are produced primarily by turbulent pressure fluctuations (Reynolds stresses). The frequency dependence of the mode excitation is due to effects of the mode structure and the pressure fluctuation spectrum. Excitation is small at low frequencies due to mode properties -- the mode compression decreases and the mode mass increases at low frequency. Excitation is small at high frequencies due to the pressure fluctuation spectrum -- pressure fluctuations become small at high frequencies because they are due to convection which is a long time scale phenomena compared to the dominant p-mode periods.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ (scheduled for Dec 10, 2000 issue). 17 pages, 27 figures, some with reduced resolution -- high resolution versions available at http://www.astro.ku.dk/~aake/astro-ph/0008048

    Decision-based fusion of pansharpened VHR satellite images using two-level rolling self-guidance filtering and edge information

    Get PDF
    Pan-sharpening (PS) fuses low-resolution multispectral (LR MS) images with high-resolution panchromatic (HR PAN) bands to produce HR MS data. Current PS methods either better maintain the spectral information of MS images, or better transfer the PAN spatial details to the MS bands. In this study, we propose a decision-based fusion method that integrates two basic pan-sharpened very-high-resolution (VHR) satellite imageries taking advantage of both images simultaneously. It uses two-level rolling self-guidance filtering (RSGF) and Canny edge detection. The method is tested on Worldview (WV)-2 and WV-4 VHR satellite images on the San Fransisco and New York areas, using four PS algorithms. Results indicate that the proposed method increased the overall spectral-spatial quality of the base pan-sharpened images by 7.2% and 9.8% for the San Fransisco and New York areas, respectively. Our method therefore effectively addresses decision-level fusion of different base pan-sharpened images
    • …
    corecore