1,897 research outputs found
Nano dust impacts on spacecraft and boom antenna charging
High rate sampling detectors measuring the potential difference between the
main body and boom antennas of interplanetary spacecraft have been shown to be
efficient means to measure the voltage pulses induced by nano dust impacts on
the spacecraft body itself (see Meyer-Vernet et al, Solar Phys. 256, 463
(2009)). However, rough estimates of the free charge liberated in post impact
expanding plasma cloud indicate that the cloud's own internal electrostatic
field is too weak to account for measured pulses as the ones from the TDS
instrument on the STEREO spacecraft frequently exceeding 0.1 V/m. In this paper
we argue that the detected pulses are not a direct measure of the potential
structure of the plasma cloud, but are rather the consequence of a transitional
interruption of the photoelectron return current towards the portion of the
antenna located within the expanding cloud
Large parallel and perpendicular electric fields on electron spatial scales in the terrestrial bow shock
Large parallel ( 100 mV/m) and perpendicular ( 600 mV/m) electric
fields were measured in the Earth's bow shock by the vector electric field
experiment on the Polar satellite. These are the first reported direct
measurements of parallel electric fields in a collisionless shock. These fields
exist on spatial scales comparable to or less than the electron skin depth (a
few kilometers) and correspond to magnetic field-aligned potentials of tens of
volts and perpendicular potentials up to a kilovolt. The perpendicular fields
are amongst the largest ever measured in space, with energy densities of
of order 10%. The measured parallel electric field
implies that the electrons can be demagnetized, which may result in stochastic
(rather than coherent) electron heating
From ‘greenest government ever’ to ‘get rid of all the green crap’: David Cameron, the Conservatives and the environment
The environment was David Cameron’s signature issue underpinning his modernization agenda. In opposition the ‘Vote Blue, Go Green’ strategy had a positive impact on the party’s image: the environment operated as a valence issue in a period of raised public concern, particularly about climate change, and Cameron’s high-profile support contributed to the cross-party consensus that delivered radical change in climate policy. Although the Coalition government has implemented important environmental measures, the Conservatives have not enhanced their green credentials in government and Cameron has failed to provide strong leadership on the issue. Since 2010, climate change has to some extent been transformed into a positional issue. Conservative MPs, urged on by the right-wing press, have adopted an increasingly partisan approach to climate change, and opinion polls reveal clear partisan divisions on climate change amongst public opinion. As a positional issue climate change has become challenging for the Conservatives, showing them to be internally divided, rebellious and inclined to support producer interests. This article makes a contribution to our understanding of Conservative modernization, while also challenging the dominant assumption in the scholarly literature that the environment, particularly climate change, is a valence issue
Use of ERTS-1 data to assess and monitor change in the Southern California environment
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
More and More Restrictive-But Not Always Populist: Explaining Variation in the British Conservative Party's Stance on Immigration and Asylum
This is the Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in the Journal of Contemporary European Studies Vol. 21, Iss. 1, copyright Taylor & Francis 2013, available online at: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/14782804.2013.766474Centre-right parties are commonly inclined towards appeals and policies on immigration that are both restrictive in nature and populist in tone-in part because this is what they believe in, in part because it affords them an electoral advantage over their rivals on the centre-left. One would expect, however, that the extent to which they focus on immigration and asylum will vary according to public opinion, according to who leads them, and according to whether they are in government or in opposition. This would appear to be the case for the British Conservative Party, but the relationship is not an entirely consistent one. Moreover, while the Party has, for half a century, pursued ever more restrictive policies, the extent to which it has couched its approach in populist rhetoric varies considerably over time-and not always in line with the severity of its stance on immigration. The reason for this lies partly in the social and economic liberalism of some of its leaders (and in their related concern to act 'responsibly' on race and immigration) but also in their anxiety not to alienate key sections of the middle classes who must be persuaded to support the Party if it is to win elections. These considerations are likely to weigh heavily with other centre-right parties, too. © 2013 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC
Dust detection by the wave instrument on STEREO: nanoparticles picked up by the solar wind?
The STEREO/WAVES instrument has detected a very large number of intense
voltage pulses. We suggest that these events are produced by impact ionisation
of nanoparticles striking the spacecraft at a velocity of the order of
magnitude of the solar wind speed. Nanoparticles, which are half-way between
micron-sized dust and atomic ions, have such a large charge-to-mass ratio that
the electric field induced by the solar wind magnetic field accelerates them
very efficiently. Since the voltage produced by dust impacts increases very
fast with speed, such nanoparticles produce signals as high as do much larger
grains of smaller speeds. The flux of 10-nm radius grains inferred in this way
is compatible with the interplanetary dust flux model. The present results may
represent the first detection of fast nanoparticles in interplanetary space
near Earth orbit.Comment: In press in Solar Physics, 13 pages, 5 figure
Development of a structured, turbulent solar wind as a result of interchange reconnection
The role of interchange reconnection as a drive mechanism for the solar wind
is explored by solving the global magnetic-field-aligned equations describing
wind acceleration. Boundary conditions in the low corona, including a
reconnection-driven Alfv\'enic outflow and associated heating differ from
previous models. Additional heating of the corona associated with Alfv\'en
waves or other MHD turbulence, which has been the foundation of many earlier
models, is neglected. For this simplified model a sufficient condition for
interchange reconnection to overcome gravity to drive the wind is derived. The
combination of Alfv\'enic ejection and reconnection-driven heating yields a
minimum value of the Alfv\'en speed of the order of 350-400 that is
required to drive the wind. Recent evidence based on Parker Solar Probe (PSP)
observations suggests that this threshold is typically exceeded in the coronal
holes that are the source regions of the fast wind. On the other hand, since
reconnection in the coronal environment is predicted to have a bursty
character, the magnitude of reconnection outflows can be highly variable. The
consequence is a highly non-uniform wind in which in some regions the velocity
increases sharply to super-Alfv\'enic values while in adjacent regions the
formation of an asymptotic wind fails. A simple model is constructed to
describe the turbulent mixing of these highly-sheared super-Alfv\'enic flows
that suggests these flows are the free-energy source of the Alfv\'enic
turbulence and associated switchbacks that have been documented in the PSP data
in the near coronal environment. The global wind profiles are presented and
benchmarked with Parker Solar Probe (PSP) observations at 12 solar radii
Different seasonality of pelagic and benthic Thaumarchaeota in the North Sea
We have examined the spatial and seasonal distribution of Thaumarchaeota in the water column and sediment of the southern North Sea using the specific intact polar lipid (IPL) hexose-phosphohexose (HPH) crenarchaeol, as well as thaumarchaeotal 16S rRNA gene abundances and expression. In the water column, a higher abundance of Thaumarchaeota was observed in the winter season than in the summer, which is in agreement with previous studies, but this was not the case in the sediment where Thaumarchaeota were most abundant in spring and summer. This observation corresponds well with the idea that ammonia availability is a key factor in thaumarchaeotal niche determination. In the surface waters of the southern North Sea, we observed a spatial variability in HPH crenarchaeol, thaumarchaeotal 16S rRNA gene abundance and transcriptional activity that corresponded well with the different water masses present. In bottom waters, a clear differentiation based on water masses was not observed; instead, we suggest that observed differences in thaumarchaeotal abundance with depth may be related to resuspension from the sediment. This could be due to suspension of benthic Thaumarchaeota to the water column or due to delivery of e.g. resuspended sediment or ammonium to the water column, which could be utilized by pelagic Thaumarchaeota. This study has shown that the seasonality of Thaumarchaeota in water and sediment is different and highlights the importance of water masses, currents and sedimentary processes in determining the spatial abundance of Thaumarchaeota in the southern North Sea
Uniportal fully robotic-assisted bronchovascular sleeve bilobectomy
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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