2,453 research outputs found
Measurements of pernitric acid at the South Pole during ISCAT 2000
The first measurements of pernitric acid at the South Pole were performed during the second Investigation of Sulfur Chemistry in the Antarctic Troposphere (ISCAT 2000). Observed HO2NO2 concentrations averaged 25 pptv. Simple steady-state calculations constrained by measurements show that the lifetime of pernitric acid was largely controlled by dry deposition, with thermal decomposition becoming increasingly important at warmer temperatures. We determined that the pernitric acid equilibrium constant is less uncertain than indicated in the literature. One consequence of pernitric acid deposition to the snow surface is that it is an important sink for both NOx and HOx. Another is that the photochemistry of HO2NO2 in the Antarctic snowpack may be a NOx source in addition to nitrate photolysis. This might be one of the important differences in snow photochemistry between the South Pole and warmer polar sites
The near-infrared excitation of the HH211 protostellar outflow
The protostellar outflow HH211 is of considerable interest since it is
extremely young and highly collimated. Here, we explore the outflow through
imaging and spectroscopy in the near-infrared to determine if there are further
diagnostic signatures of youth. We confirm the detection of a near-infrared
continuum of unknown origin. We propose that it is emitted by the driving
millimeter source, escapes the core through tunnels, and illuminates features
aligning the outflow. Narrow-band flux measurements of these features contain
an unusually large amount of continuum emission. [Fe II] emission has been
detected and is restricted to isolated condensations. However, the
characteristics of vibrational excitation of molecular hydrogen resemble those
of older molecular outflows. We attempt to model the ordered structure of the
western outflow as a series of shocks, finding that bow shocks with J-type
dissociative apices and C-type flanks are consistent. Moreover, essentially the
same conditions are predicted for all three bows except for a systematic
reduction in speed and density with distance from the driving source. We find
increased K-band extinctions in the bright regions as high as 2.9 magnitudes
and suggest that the bow shocks become visible where the outflow impacts on
dense clumps of cloud material. We propose that the outflow is carved out by
episodes of pulsating jets. The jets, driven by central explosive events, are
responsible for excavating a central tunnel through which radiation temporarily
penetrates.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Siting prisons, sighting communities: geographies of objection in a planning process
This paper reviews the planning process for a Scottish prison located near a former mining village. Analysing the letters of objection submitted by residents offers an opportunity to explore local views about prison and community and to relate these to the unique social and spatial history of the area. The planning process itself structured how residents were able to express themselves and defined what counted as a relevant objection. After deconstructing this process, the paper then restores and uses as a framework for analysis three geographies of objection stripped from local responses to the development proposal: the emotional, temporal, and spatial. Emotional expressions of objection added intensity and gave meaning to claims about the historical decline of the region and also conveyed a deep sense of the proposed building site as a lived space. Particular grounds of opposition—over fear of strangers, the fragility of a local orchid, and the pollution from mining—provide an opportunity to explore the complex nature of place meaning and community identity, ultimately leading to a conclusion that the meaning of place is always in flux. The paper argues that Simmel’s classic concept of the stranger, as the outsider who comes to stay, offers a useful analytic in understanding how the quality of proximal remoteness that prisons and other unwanted developments constitute participates in a constantly evolving sense of the local
Using deuterated trichloroethylene (TCE) in a tracer test to estimate the transport characteristics of a TCE plume
A trichloroethene (TCE) plume has been identified in an unconfined sand aquifer in Perth, Western Australia. This is the first known major occurrence of groundwater contamination by chlorinated aliphatic compounds in Perth. A small-scale (ca. 13m), natural-gradient tracer test, utilizing deuterated TCE (TCEdl) and potassium bromide, was undertaken within the TCE plume to determine hydrodynamic and sorptive properties of TCE in the aquifer. No sorption of TCEdl was observed, which is in contrast to a retardation coefficient estimate of 1.8, calculated from equations based on the organic carbon fraction of the aquifer sand. A low dispersivity of the aquifer material was calculated, indicating that dispersion was negligible with respect to the advective flow. Variable advective flow at distinct levels in the aquifer profile is shown to produce tailing of the depth-averaged breakthrough curves. The C-D bond of the deuterated TCE was stable, indicating the usefulness of deuterated TCE as a tracer within the contaminated zone
The Ursinus Weekly, May 16, 1938
College to confer two honorary degrees • Y\u27s invite students, profs to spring doggie roast • Loan fund established by Varsity Club • 110 couples dance Friday at May sports hop • Stoudt, Plunkett star in Mother\u27s Day play; pageant, dinner other Saturday activities • Glatfelter chosen to head men\u27s council • Ursinus gains victory over Penn on radio • McClure, Poling speak at two Sunday vespers • June issue of Lantern to feature commencement • Presenting the \u27sinus senior: a preview of the 1938 Ruby questionnaire • Works of contemporary Philadelphia painters displayed in exhibit • Bears trim Albright, Gettysburg in league tilts • Trackmen poor fifth in Lancaster meet • Records broken as school trackmen meet here • Peg Claflin installed as new WAA head • Power leads batsmen • Todt succeeds Bodley as Varsity Club leader • Curtain clubbers dine and dance in Norristown • Power elected president of pre-legal society • Laucks conducts current events quiz of IRC • Germantown boy awarded sixth open scholarshiphttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1900/thumbnail.jp
A revised Cepheid distance to NGC 4258 and a test of the distance scale
In a previous paper (Maoz et al. 1999), we reported a Hubble Space Telescope
(HST) Cepheid distance to the galaxy NGC 4258 obtained using the calibrations
and methods then standard for the Key Project on the Extragalactic Distance
Scale. Here, we reevaluate the Cepheid distance using the revised Key Project
procedures described in Freedman et al. (2001). These revisions alter the zero
points and slopes of the Cepheid Period-Luminosity (P-L) relations derived at
the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), the calibration of the HST WFPC2 camera, and
the treatment of metallicity differences. We also provide herein full
information on the Cepheids described in Maoz et al. 1999. Using the refined
Key Project techniques and calibrations, we determine the distance modulus of
NGC 4258 to be 29.47 +/- 0.09 mag (unique to this determination) +/- 0.15 mag
(systematic uncertainties in Key Project distances), corresponding to a metric
distance of 7.8 +/- 0.3 +/- 0.5 Mpc and 1.2 sigma from the maser distance of
7.2 +/- 0.5 Mpc. We also test the alternative Cepheid P-L relations of Feast
(1999), which yield more discrepant results. Additionally, we place weak limits
upon the distance to the LMC and upon the effect of metallicity in Cepheid
distance determinations.Comment: 26 pages in emulateapj5 format, including 6 figures and 5 tables.
Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
The Wicked Machinery of Government: Malta and the Problems of Continuity under the New Model Administration
This is a study focused on the early years of British rule in Malta (1800-1813). It explores the application to the island of the “new model” of colonial government, one based on direct rule from London mediated by the continuation of existing laws and institutions. Systemic deficiencies are identified. These tended to undermine the effectiveness of direct British rule. This study also reveals, in the context of legal and constitutional continuity, unresolved tensions between modernity and tradition. The political stability of the island was damaged and the possibility of continued British possession was threatened
A Cepheid Distance to NGC 4603 in Centaurus
In an attempt to use Cepheid variables to determine the distance to the
Centaurus cluster, we have obtained images of NGC 4603 with the Hubble Space
Telescope on 9 epochs using WFPC2 and the F555W and F814W filters. This galaxy
has been suggested to lie within the ``Cen30'' portion of the cluster and is
the most distant object for which this method has been attempted. Previous
distance estimates for Cen30 have varied significantly and some have presented
disagreements with the peculiar velocity predicted from redshift surveys,
motivating this investigation. Using our observations, we have found 61
candidate Cepheid variable stars; however, a significant fraction of these
candidates are likely to be nonvariable stars whose magnitude measurement
errors happen to fit a Cepheid light curve of significant amplitude for some
choice of period and phase. Through a maximum likelihood technique, we
determine that we have observed 43 +/- 7 real Cepheids and that NGC 4603 has a
distance modulus of 32.61 +0.11/-0.10 (random, 1 sigma) +0.24/-0.25
(systematic, adding in quadrature), corresponding to a distance of 33.3 Mpc.
This is consistent with a number of recent estimates of the distance to NGC
4603 or Cen30 and implies a small peculiar velocity consistent with predictions
from the IRAS 1.2 Jy redshift survey if the galaxy lies in the foreground of
the cluster.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 17 pages with
17 embedded figures and 3 tables using emulateapj.sty. Additional figures and
images may be obtained from http://astro.berkeley.edu/~marc/n4603
Vortex stability of interacting Bose-Einstein condensates confined in anisotropic harmonic traps
Vortex states of weakly-interacting Bose-Einstein condensates confined in
three-dimensional rotating harmonic traps are investigated numerically at zero
temperature. The ground state in the rotating frame is obtained by propagating
the Gross-Pitaevskii equation for the condensate in imaginary time. The total
energies between states with and without a vortex are compared, yielding
critical rotation frequencies that depend on the anisotropy of the trap and the
number of atoms. Vortices displaced from the center of nonrotating traps are
found to have long lifetimes for sufficiently large numbers of atoms. The
relationship between vortex stability and bound core states is explored.Comment: 5 pages, 2 embedded figures, revtex. To appear in Phys. Rev. Let
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