1,691 research outputs found
Mechanical properties and the electronic structure of transition of metal alloys
This interdiscipline research program was undertaken in an effort to investigate the relationship between the mechanical strength of Mo based alloys with their electronic structure. Electronic properties of these alloys were examined through optical studies, and the classical solid solution strengthening mechanisms were considered, based on size and molecular differences to determine if these mechanisms could explain the hardness data
Kinetostatic Analysis and Solution Classification of a Planar Tensegrity Mechanism
Tensegrity mechanisms have several interesting properties that make them
suitable for a number of applications. Their analysis is generally challenging
because the static equilibrium conditions often result in complex equations. A
class of planar one-degree-of-freedom (dof) tensegrity mechanisms with three
linear springs is analyzed in detail in this paper. The kinetostatic equations
are derived and solved under several loading and geometric conditions. It is
shown that these mechanisms exhibit up to six equilibrium configurations, of
which one or two are stable. Discriminant varieties and cylindrical algebraic
decomposition combined with Groebner base elimination are used to classify
solutions as function of the input parameters.Comment: 7th IFToMM International Workshop on Computational Kinematics, May
2017, Poitiers, France. 201
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Vibronic mixing enables ultrafast energy flow in light-harvesting complex II.
Since the discovery of quantum beats in the two-dimensional electronic spectra of photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes over a decade ago, the origin and mechanistic function of these beats in photosynthetic light-harvesting has been extensively debated. The current consensus is that these long-lived oscillatory features likely result from electronic-vibrational mixing, however, it remains uncertain if such mixing significantly influences energy transport. Here, we examine the interplay between the electronic and nuclear degrees of freedom (DoF) during the excitation energy transfer (EET) dynamics of light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) with two-dimensional electronic-vibrational spectroscopy. Particularly, we show the involvement of the nuclear DoF during EET through the participation of higher-lying vibronic chlorophyll states and assign observed oscillatory features to specific EET pathways, demonstrating a significant step in mapping evolution from energy to physical space. These frequencies correspond to known vibrational modes of chlorophyll, suggesting that electronic-vibrational mixing facilitates rapid EET over moderately size energy gaps
Multiscale assimilation of Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer-EOS snow water equivalent and Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer snow cover fraction observations in northern Colorado
Eight years (2002–2010) of Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer–EOS (AMSR-E) snow water equivalent (SWE) retrievals and Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) snow cover fraction (SCF) observations are assimilated separately or jointly into the Noah land surface model over a domain in Northern Colorado. A multiscale ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF) is used, supplemented with a rule-based update. The satellite data are either left unscaled or are scaled for anomaly assimilation. The results are validated against in situ observations at 14 high-elevation Snowpack Telemetry (SNOTEL) sites with typically deep snow and at 4 lower-elevation Cooperative Observer Program (COOP) sites. Assimilation of coarse-scale AMSR-E SWE and fine-scale MODIS SCF observations both result in realistic spatial SWE patterns. At COOP sites with shallow snowpacks, AMSR-E SWE and MODIS SCF data assimilation are beneficial separately, and joint SWE and SCF assimilation yields significantly improved root-mean-square error and correlation values for scaled and unscaled data assimilation. In areas of deep snow where the SNOTEL sites are located, however, AMSR-E retrievals are typically biased low and assimilation without prior scaling leads to degraded SWE estimates. Anomaly SWE assimilation could not improve the interannual SWE variations in the assimilation results because the AMSR-E retrievals lack realistic interannual variability in deep snowpacks. SCF assimilation has only a marginal impact at the SNOTEL locations because these sites experience extended periods of near-complete snow cover. Across all sites, SCF assimilation improves the timing of the onset of the snow season but without a net improvement of SWE amounts
Feedback in the Antennae Galaxies (NGC 4038/9): I. High-Resolution Infrared Spectroscopy of Winds from Super Star Clusters
We present high-resolution (R ~ 24,600) near-IR spectroscopy of the youngest
super star clusters (SSCs) in the prototypical starburst merger, the Antennae
Galaxies. These SSCs are young (3-7 Myr old) and massive (10^5 - 10^7 M_sun for
a Kroupa IMF) and their spectra are characterized by broad, extended Br-gamma
emission, so we refer to them as emission-line clusters (ELCs) to distinguish
them from older SSCs. The Brgamma lines of most ELCs have supersonic widths
(60-110 km/s FWHM) and non-Gaussian wings whose velocities exceed the clusters'
escape velocities. This high-velocity unbound gas is flowing out in winds that
are powered by the clusters' massive O and W-R stars over the course of at
least several crossing times. The large sizes of some ELCs relative to those of
older SSCs may be due to expansion caused by these outflows; many of the ELCs
may not survive as bound stellar systems, but rather dissipate rapidly into the
field population. The observed tendency of older ELCs to be more compact than
young ones is consistent with the preferential survival of the most
concentrated clusters at a given age.Comment: Accepted to Ap
Release of NO(x) from sunlight-irradiated midlatitude snow
Photochemical production and release of gas-phase NO(x) (NO + NO2) from the natural snowpack at a remote site in northern Michigan were investigated during the Snow Nitrogen and Oxidants in Winter study in January 1999. Snow was collected in an open 34 L chamber, which was then sealed with a transparent Teflon cover and used as an outdoor flow and reaction chamber. Significant increases in NO(x) mixing ratio were observed in synthetic and ambient air pulled through the sunlit chamber. [NO(x)] enhancements were correlated to ultraviolet sunlight intensity, reaching ~300 pptv under partially overcast midday, mid-winter conditions. These findings are consistent with NO(x) production from photolysis of snowpack NO3 -; the observed NO(x) release implies production of significant amounts of OH within the snow. Snowpack NO3 - photolysis may therefore significantly alter boundary layer levels of both NO(x) and oxidized compounds over wide regions of the atmosphere
VLTI/VINCI observations of the nucleus of NGC 1068 using the adaptive optics system MACAO
We present the first near-infrared K-band long-baseline interferometric
measurement of the prototype Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC 1068 with resolution lambda/B
\~ 10 mas obtained with the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) and the
two 8.2m Unit Telescopes UT2 and UT3. The adaptive optics system MACAO was
employed to deliver wavefront-corrected beams to the K-band commissioning
instrument VINCI. A squared visibility amplitude of 16.3 +/- 4.3 % was measured
for NGC 1068 at a sky-projected baseline length of 45.8 m and azimuth angle
44.9 deg. This value corresponds to a FWHM of the K-band intensity distribution
of 5.0 +/- 0.5 mas (0.4 +/- 0.04 pc) at the distance of NGC 1068) if it
consists of a single Gaussian component. Taking into account K-band speckle
interferometry observations (Wittkowski et al. 1998; Weinberger et al. 1999;
Weigelt et al. 2004), we favor a multi-component model for the intensity
distribution where a part of the flux originates from scales clearly smaller
than about 5 mas (<0.4 pc), and another part of the flux from larger scales.
The K-band emission from the small (< 5 mas) scales might arise from
substructure of the dusty nuclear torus, or directly from the central accretion
flow viewed through only moderate extinction.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics Letter
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