9,178 research outputs found
Hydraulic Actuator System for Rotor Control
In the last ten years, several different types of actuators were developed and fabricated for active control of rotors. A special hydraulic actuator system capable of generating high forces to rotating shafts via conventional bearings is addressed. The actively controlled hydraulic force actuator features an electrohydraulic servo valve which can produce amplitudes and forces at high frequencies necessary for influencing rotor vibrations. The mathematical description will be given in detail. The experimental results verify the theoretical model. Simulations already indicate the usefulness of this compact device for application to a real rotor system
Grids of white dwarf evolutionary models with masses from M= 0.1 to 1.2 Ms
We present detailed evolutionary calculations for carbon
- oxygen - and helium - core white dwarf (WD) models with masses ranging from
M= 0.1 to M= 1.2 solar masses and for metallicities Z= 0.001 and Z= 0. The
sequences cover a wide range of hydrogen envelopes as well. We employed a
detailed WD evolutionary code. In particular, the energy transport by
convectcion is treated within the formalism of the full spectrum turbulence
theory. The set of models presented here is very detailed and should be
valuable for the interpretation of the observational data on low - mass WDs
recently discovered in numerous binary configurations and also for the general
problem of determining the theoretical luminosity function for WDs. In this
context, we compare our cooling sequences with the observed WD luminosity
function recently improved by Leggett, Ruiz and Bergeron (1998) and we obtain
an age for the Galactic disc of approximately 8 Gyr. Finally, we applied the
results of this paper to derive stellar masses of a sample of low - mass white
dwarfs.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures; accepted for publication in MNRAS; replaced with
minor corrections to tex
Revisiting the Impact of Axions in the Cooling of White Dwarfs
It has been shown that the shape of the luminosity function of white dwarfs
can be a powerful tool to check for the possible existence of DFSZ-axions. In
particular, Isern et al. (2008) showed that, if the axion mass is of the order
of a few meV, then the white dwarf luminosity function is sensitive enough to
detect their existence. For axion masses of about meV the axion
emission can be a primary cooling mechanism for the white dwarf and the
feedback of the axion emission into the thermal structure of the white dwarf
needs to be considered. Here we present computations of white dwarf cooling
sequences that take into account the effect of axion emission in a self
consistent way by means of full stellar evolution computations. Then, we study
and discuss the impact of the axion emission in the white dwarf luminosity
function.Comment: To be published in the proceedings of the 18th European White Dwarf
Workshop. 4 pages, 2 figure
Outer boundary conditions for evolving cool white dwarfs
White dwarf evolution is essentially a gravothermal cooling process,
which,for cool white dwarfs, sensitively depends on the treatment of the outer
boundary conditions. We provide detailed outer boundary conditions appropriate
for computing the evolution of cool white dwarfs employing detailed non-gray
model atmospheres for pure H composition. We also explore the impact on the
white dwarf cooling times of different assumptions for energy transfer in the
atmosphere of cool white dwarfs. Detailed non-gray model atmospheres are
computed taken into account non-ideal effects in the gas equation of state and
chemical equilibrium, collision-induced absorption from molecules, and the
Lyman alpha quasi-molecular opacity. Our results show that the use of detailed
outer boundary conditions becomes relevant for effective temperatures lower
than 5800 and 6100K for sequences with 0.60 and 0.90 M_sun, respectively.
Detailed model atmospheres predict ages that are up to approx 10% shorter at
log L/L_sun=-4 when compared with the ages derived using Eddington-like
approximations at tau_Ross=2/3. We also analyze the effects of various
assumptions and physical processes of relevance in the calculation of outer
boundary conditions. In particular, we find that the Ly_alpha red wing
absorption does not affect substantially the evolution of white dwarfs. White
dwarf cooling timescales are sensitive to the surface boundary conditions for
T_eff < 6000K. Interestingly enough, non-gray effects have little consequences
on these cooling times at observable luminosities. In fact, collision-induced
absorption processes, which significantly affect the spectra and colors of old
white dwarfs with hydrogen-rich atmospheres, have not noticeable effects in
their cooling rates, except throughout the Rosseland mean opacity.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures, to be published in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Estimating the reproduction number of Ebola virus (EBOV) during the 2014 outbreak in West Africa
The 2014 Ebola virus (EBOV) outbreak in West Africa is the largest outbreak
of the genus Ebolavirus to date. To better understand the spread of infection
in the affected countries, it is crucial to know the number of secondary cases
generated by an infected index case in the absence and presence of control
measures, i.e., the basic and effective reproduction number. In this study, I
describe the EBOV epidemic using an SEIR
(susceptible-exposed-infectious-recovered) model and fit the model to the most
recent reported data of infected cases and deaths in Guinea, Sierra Leone and
Liberia. The maximum likelihood estimates of the basic reproduction number are
1.51 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.50-1.52) for Guinea, 2.53 (95% CI:
2.41-2.67) for Sierra Leone and 1.59 (95% CI: 1.57-1.60) for Liberia. The model
indicates that in Guinea and Sierra Leone the effective reproduction number
might have dropped to around unity by the end of May and July 2014,
respectively. In Liberia, however, the model estimates no decline in the
effective reproduction number by end-August 2014. This suggests that control
efforts in Liberia need to be improved substantially in order to stop the
current outbreak.Comment: Published version, PLOS Currents Outbreaks. 2014 Sep
A nonadiabatic oscillation study of DB white dwarfs
A self-consistent abundance diffusion treatment in the evolution of cooling white dwarfs permitted a study of the effect of elemental segregation in nonadiabatic, nonradial stability computations. In particular, mode trapping manifesting itself in cyclically varying period separations behaved differently from its appearance in the damping/excitation rates. Another aspect of the investigation concerned the effect of heavy-element traces in homogeneous DB white-dwarf envelopes on their pulsational instability domain. The stellar models are computed with the CGM convection approach; the study can therefore be considered as a test of its performance in nonradial stability analyses.Fil: Gautschy, Alfred. Ferrachstrasse. 1; SuizaFil: Althaus, Leandro Gabriel. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - La Plata. Instituto de Astrofísica La Plata. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Astronómicas y Geofísicas. Instituto de Astrofísica la Plata; Argentin
Pulsations of massive ZZ Ceti stars with carbon/oxygen and oxygen/neon cores
We explore the adiabatic pulsational properties of massive white dwarf stars
with hydrogen-rich envelopes and oxygen/neon and carbon/oxygen cores. To this
end, we compute the cooling of massive white dwarf models for both core
compositions taking into account the evolutionary history of the progenitor
stars and the chemical evolution caused by time-dependent element diffusion. In
particular, for the oxygen/neon models, we adopt the chemical profile resulting
from repeated carbon-burning shell flashes expected in very massive white dwarf
progenitors. For carbon/oxygen white dwarfs we consider the chemical profiles
resulting from phase separation upon crystallization. For both compositions we
also take into account the effects of crystallization on the oscillation
eigenmodes. We find that the pulsational properties of oxygen/neon white dwarfs
are notably different from those made of carbon/oxygen, thus making
asteroseismological techniques a promising way to distinguish between both
types of stars and, hence, to obtain valuable information about their
progenitors.Comment: 11 pages, including 11 postscript figures. Accepted for publication
in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Oscillatory secular modes: The thermal micropulses
Stars in the narrow mass range of about 2.5 and 3.5 solar masses can develop
a thermally unstable He-burning shell during its ignition phase. We study, from
the point of view secular stability theory, these so called thermal micropulses
and we investigate their properties; the thermal pulses constitute a convenient
conceptual laboratory to look thoroughly into the physical properties of a
helium-burning shell during the whole thermally pulsing episode. Linear
stability analyses were performed on a large number of 3 solar-mass star models
at around the end of their core helium-burning and the beginning of the
double-shell burning phase. The stellar models were not assumed to be in
thermal equilibrium. The thermal mircopulses, and we conjecture all other
thermal pulse episodes encountered by shell-burning stars, can be understood as
the nonlinear finite-amplitude realization of an oscillatory secular
instability that prevails during the whole thermal pulsing episode. Hence, the
cyclic nature of the thermal pulses can be traced back to a linear instability
concept.Comment: To be published - essentially footnote-free - in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
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