12,429 research outputs found
Transient Response of Shells of Revolution by Direct Integration and Modal Superposition Methods
The results of an analytical effort to obtain and evaluate transient response data for a cylindrical and a conical shell by use of two different approaches: direct integration and modal superposition are described. The inclusion of nonlinear terms is more important than the inclusion of secondary linear effects (transverse shear deformation and rotary inertia) although there are thin-shell structures where these secondary effects are important. The advantages of the direct integration approach are that geometric nonlinear and secondary effects are easy to include and high-frequency response may be calculated. In comparison to the modal superposition technique the computer storage requirements are smaller. The advantages of the modal superposition approach are that the solution is independent of the previous time history and that once the modal data are obtained, the response for repeated cases may be efficiently computed. Also, any admissible set of initial conditions can be applied
Granulocyte-derived extracellular vesicles activate monocytes and are associated with mortality in intensive care unit patients
Flux calculations in an inhomogeneous Universe: weighting a flux-limited galaxy sample
Many astrophysical problems arising within the context of ultra-high energy
cosmic rays, very-high energy gamma rays or neutrinos, require calculation of
the flux produced by sources tracing the distribution of galaxies in the
Universe. We discuss a simple weighting scheme, an application of the method
introduced by Lynden-Bell in 1971, that allows the calculation of the flux sky
map directly from a flux-limited galaxy catalog without cutting a
volume-limited subsample. Using this scheme, the galaxy distribution can be
modeled up to large scales while representing the distribution in the nearby
Universe with maximum accuracy. We consider fluctuations in the flux map
arising from the finiteness of the galaxy sample. We show how these
fluctuations are reduced by the weighting scheme and discuss how the remaining
fluctuations limit the applicability of the method.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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
Vibration characteristics of ring-stiffened orthotropic shells of revolution
Computer program solves vibration modes and frequencies of thin shells of revolution having general meridional curvature and orthotropic elastic properties in order to evaluate the dynamic behavior of structures with thin shelled components
Precise absolute astrometry from the VLBA imaging and polarimetry survey at 5 GHz
We present in this paper accurate positions of 857 sources derived from the
astrometric analysis of 16 eleven-hour experiments from the Very Long Baseline
Array imaging and polarimetry survey at 5 GHz (VIPS). Among observed sources,
positions of 430 objects were not determined before at a milliarcsecond level
of accuracy. For 95% of the sources the uncertainty of their positions range
from 0.3 to 0.9 mas, with the median value of 0.5 mas. This estimate of
accuracy is substantiated by the comparison of positions of 386 sources that
were previously observed in astrometric programs simultaneously at 2.3/8.6 GHz.
Surprisingly, the ionosphere contribution to group delay was adequately modeled
with the use of the total electron contents maps derived from GPS observations
and only marginally affected estimates of source coordinates.Comment: Accepted for publication by the Astronomical Journal. 7 pages, 2
tables, 4 figures. Submission contains an ascii file with the catalogue. You
can get the catalogue by downloading the source of this paper and extracting
file table2.tx
Weather in stellar atmosphere: the dynamics of mercury clouds in alpha Andromedae
The formation of long-lasting structures at the surfaces of stars is commonly
ascribed to the action of strong magnetic fields. This paradigm is supported by
observations of evolving cool spots in the Sun and active late-type stars, and
stationary chemical spots in the early-type magnetic stars. However, results of
our seven-year monitoring of mercury spots in non-magnetic early-type star
alpha Andromedae show that the picture of magnetically-driven structure
formation is fundamentally incomplete. Using an indirect stellar surface
mapping technique, we construct a series of 2-D images of starspots and
discover a secular evolution of the mercury cloud cover in this star. This
remarkable structure formation process, observed for the first time in any
star, is plausibly attributed to a non-equilibrium, dynamical evolution of the
heavy-element clouds created by atomic diffusion and may have the same
underlying physics as the weather patterns on terrestrial and giant planets.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures; to be published in Nature Physic
UGC 7388: a galaxy with two tidal loops
We present the results of spectroscopic and morphological studies of the
galaxy UGC7388 with the 8.1-m Gemini North telescope. Judging by its observed
characteristics, UGC7388 is a giant late-type spiral galaxy seen almost
edge-on. The main body of the galaxy is surrounded by two faint (\mu(B) ~ 24
and \mu(B) ~ 25.5) extended (~20-30 kpc) loop-like structures. A large-scale
rotation of the brighter loop about the main galaxy has been detected. We
discuss the assumption that the tidal disruption of a relatively massive
companion is observed in the case of UGC7388. A detailed study and modeling of
the observed structure of this unique galaxy can give important information
about the influence of the absorption of massive companions on the galactic
disks and about the structure of the dark halo around UGC7388.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
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