24,535 research outputs found
Causality detection and turbulence in fusion plasmas
This work explores the potential of an information-theoretical causality
detection method for unraveling the relation between fluctuating variables in
complex nonlinear systems. The method is tested on some simple though nonlinear
models, and guidelines for the choice of analysis parameters are established.
Then, measurements from magnetically confined fusion plasmas are analyzed. The
selected data bear relevance to the all-important spontaneous confinement
transitions often observed in fusion plasmas, fundamental for the design of an
economically attractive fusion reactor. It is shown how the present method is
capable of clarifying the interaction between fluctuating quantities such as
the turbulence amplitude, turbulent flux, and Zonal Flow amplitude, and
uncovers several interactions that were missed by traditional methods.Comment: 26 pages, 14 figure
Tachinidae (Diptera) del Parque Nacional de La Caldera de Taburiente en La Palma (Islas Canarias)
Data on distribution, abundance and phenology of Tachinidae (Diptera) from the Caldera de Taburiente National Park on La Palma are given, based on systematic Malaise trap and yellow pan trap samples between August 1999 and July 2001. The occurrence of 22 species is proved; all of them were already known from the Canary Islands, but two species (Gonia quadrisetosa and Phytomyptera vaccinii) are recorded from La Palma for the first time. The present paper is a result of the project “Inventory and study of the invertebrate fauna of the Caldera de Taburiente National Park”.Se presentan datos de distribución, abundancia y fenología de Tachinidae (Diptera), obtenidos en el Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente en La Palma con trampa Malaise y trampa amarilla entre agosto de 1999 y julio de 2001. Han sido recolectadas 22 especies, todas ya conocidas en las Islas Canarias, pero dos especies (Gonia quadrisetosa y Phytomyptera vaccinii) son citas nuevas para La Palma. El presente artículo es un resultado del proyecto “Inventario y estudio de la fauna invertebrada del Parque Nacional de la Caldera de Taburiente”
Optical detection of the radio supernova SN 2000ft in the circumnuclear region of the luminous infrared galaxy NGC 7469
SN 2000ft is detected in two independent Planetary Camera images (F547W and
F814W) taken May 13, 2000, about two months before the predicted date of the
explosion (July 19, 2000), based on the analysis of its radio light evolution
by Alberdi and collaborators. The apparent optical magnitudes and red color of
SN 2000ft indicate that it is observed through an extinction of at least A=
3.0 magnitudes. The extinction corrected lower limit to the absolute visual
magnitude (M 18.0), identifies SN 2000ft as a luminous supernova
in the optical, as other luminous radio supernovae before. SN 2000ft exploded
in a region located at only 0.1 arcsec (i.e. 34 +/- 3 pc) west of a faint
cluster (C24). No parent cluster is identified within the detection limits of
the HST short exposures. The unambiguous detection of SN 2000ft in the visual
shows that multi-epoch sub-arcsecond (FWHM less than 0.1 arcsec) optical
imaging is also a valid tool that should be explored further to detect
supernovae in the dusty (circum)nuclear regions of (U)LIRGs
A trap-based pulsed positron beam optimised for positronium laser spectroscopy
We describe a pulsed positron beam that is optimised for positronium (Ps) laser-spectroscopy experiments. The system is based on a two-stage Surko-type buffer gas trap that produces 4 ns wide pulses containing up to 5 × 105 positrons at a rate of 0.5-10 Hz. By implanting positrons from the trap into a suitable target material, a dilute positronium gas with an initial density of the order of 107 cm−3 is created in vacuum. This is then probed with pulsed (ns) laser systems, where various Ps-laser interactions have been observed via changes in Ps annihilation rates using a fast gamma ray detector. We demonstrate the capabilities of the apparatus and detection methodology via the observation of Rydberg positronium atoms with principal quantum numbers ranging from 11 to 22 and the Stark broadening of the n = 2 → 11 transition in electric fields
Understanding the tsunami with a simple model
In this paper, we use the approximation of shallow water waves (Margaritondo
G 2005 Eur. J. Phys. 26 401) to understand the behaviour of a tsunami in a
variable depth. We deduce the shallow water wave equation and the continuity
equation that must be satisfied when a wave encounters a discontinuity in the
sea depth. A short explanation about how the tsunami hit the west coast of
India is given based on the refraction phenomenon. Our procedure also includes
a simple numerical calculation suitable for undergraduate students in physics
and engineering
Post-Editorial of "The Multiverse" Special Volume
A succesful series of papers devoted to various aspects of an idea of the Multiverse have been gathered together and presented to the readers. In this post-editorial we briefly challenge the content referring to the main issues dealt with by the Authors. We hope that this will inspire other investigators for designing future tests which could make this very notion of the Multiverse falsifiable
Black Hole Entropy: a spacetime foam approach
The spacetime foam structure is reviewed briefly (topogical fluctuations and
virtual black hole possibility; equation of state of the foam). A model of
space foam at the surface of the event horizon is introduced. The model is
applied to the calculus of the number of states of a black hole, of its entropy
and of other thermodynamical properties. A formula for the number of microholes
on the surface of the event horizon is derived. Thermodynamical properties of
the event horizon are extended to thermodynamical properties of the space. On
the basis of the previous results, the possibility of micro black holes
creation by the Unruh Effect is investigated.Comment: 23 pages, no figures, postscript file gzipped,to be published in
Classical and Quantum Gravity, July 199
Spectroscopic characterization and detection of Ethyl Mercaptan in Orion
New laboratory data of ethyl mercaptan, CHCHSH, in the millimeter
and submillimeter-wave domains (up to 880 GHz) provided very precise values of
the spectroscopic constants that allowed the detection of
-CHCHSH towards Orion KL. 77 unblended or slightly blended
lines plus no missing transitions in the range 80-280 GHz support this
identification. A detection of methyl mercaptan, CHSH, in the spectral
survey of Orion KL is reported as well. Our column density results indicate
that methyl mercaptan is 5 times more abundant than ethyl mercaptan in
the hot core of Orion KL.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL (30 January 2014)/ submitted (8
January 2014
A cool starspot or a second transiting planet in the TrES-1 system?
We investigate the origin of a flux increase found during a transit of
TrES-1, observed with the HST. This feature in the HST light curve cannot be
attributed to noise and is supposedly a dark area on the stellar surface of the
host star eclipsed by TrES-1 during its transit. We investigate the likeliness
of two possible hypothesis for its origin: A starspot or a second transiting
planet. We made use of several transit observations of TrES-1 from space with
the HST and from ground with the IAC-80 telescope. On the basis of these
observations we did a statistical study of flux variations in each of the
observed events, to investigate if similar flux increases are present in other
parts of the data set. The HST observation presents a single clear flux rise
during a transit whereas the ground observations led to the detection of two
such events but with low significance. In the case of having observed a
starspot in the HST data, assuming a central impact between the spot and
TrES-1, we would obtain a lower limit for the spot radius of 42000 km. For this
radius the spot temperature would be 4690 K, 560 K lower then the stellar
surface of 5250 K. For a putative second transiting planet we can set a lower
limit for its radius at 0.37 R and for periods of less than 10.5 days, we
can set an upper limit at 0.72 R. Assuming a conventional interpretation,
then this HST observation constitutes the detection of a starspot.
Alternatively, this flux rise might also be caused by an additional transiting
planet. The true nature of the origin can be revealed if a wavelength
dependency of the flux rise can be shown or discarded with a higher certainty.
Additionally, the presence of a second planet can also be detected by radial
velocity measurements.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A&
- …