1,819 research outputs found
First global analysis of SEASAT scatterometer winds and potential for meteorological research
The first global wind fields from SEASAT-A scatterometer (SASS) data were produced. Fifteen days of record are available on tape, with unique wind directions indicated for each observation. The methodology of the production of this data set is described, as well as the testing of its validity. A number of displays of the data, on large and small scales, analyzed and gridded, are provided
A Note on Frame Dragging
The measurement of spin effects in general relativity has recently taken
centre stage with the successfully launched Gravity Probe B experiment coming
toward an end, coupled with recently reported measurements using laser ranging.
Many accounts of these experiments have been in terms of frame-dragging. We
point out that this terminology has given rise to much confusion and that a
better description is in terms of spin-orbit and spin-spin effects. In
particular, we point out that the de Sitter precession (which has been mesured
to a high accuracy) is also a frame-dragging effect and provides an accurate
benchmark measurement of spin-orbit effects which GPB needs to emulate
Anatomy of the binary black hole recoil: A multipolar analysis
We present a multipolar analysis of the gravitational recoil computed in
recent numerical simulations of binary black hole (BH) coalescence, for both
unequal masses and non-zero, non-precessing spins. We show that multipole
moments up to and including l=4 are sufficient to accurately reproduce the
final recoil velocity (within ~2%) and that only a few dominant modes
contribute significantly to it (within ~5%). We describe how the relative
amplitudes, and more importantly, the relative phases, of these few modes
control the way in which the recoil builds up throughout the inspiral, merger,
and ringdown phases. We also find that the numerical results can be reproduced
by an ``effective Newtonian'' formula for the multipole moments obtained by
replacing the radial separation in the Newtonian formulae with an effective
radius computed from the numerical data. Beyond the merger, the numerical
results are reproduced by a superposition of three Kerr quasi-normal modes
(QNMs). Analytic formulae, obtained by expressing the multipole moments in
terms of the fundamental QNMs of a Kerr BH, are able to explain the onset and
amount of ``anti-kick'' for each of the simulations. Lastly, we apply this
multipolar analysis to help explain the remarkable difference between the
amplitudes of planar and non-planar kicks for equal-mass spinning black holes.Comment: 28 pages, 20 figures, submitted to PRD; v2: minor revisions from
referee repor
Impact of Technology on Meat Safety
Innovations and new technologies tend to create apprehension among consumers who are not familiar with the technologies and their mode of action. This case currently exists regarding the use of hormones, antibiotics and other feed additives in livestock production. The purpose of this fact sheet is to familiarize consumers with some of the products of technology that are currently utilized in the production of meat animals and to provide an evaluation of how these products impact the safety of meat and meat products
Modeling kicks from the merger of generic black-hole binaries
Recent numerical relativistic results demonstrate that the merger of
comparable-mass spinning black holes has a maximum ``recoil kick'' of up to
\sim 4000 \kms. However the scaling of these recoil velocities with mass
ratio is poorly understood. We present new runs showing that the maximum
possible kick perpendicular to the orbital plane does not scale as
(where is the symmetric mass ratio), as previously proposed, but is more
consistent with , at least for systems with low orbital precession.
We discuss the effect of this dependence on galactic ejection scenarios and
retention of intermediate-mass black holes in globular clusters.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, 3 tables. Version published in Astrophys. J. Let
The Giant Flare of December 27, 2004 from SGR 1806-20
The giant flare of December 27, 2004 from SGR 1806-20 represents one of the
most extraordinary events captured in over three decades of monitoring the
gamma-ray sky. One measure of the intensity of the main peak is its effect on
X- and gamma-ray instruments. RHESSI, an instrument designed to study the
brightest solar flares, was completely saturated for ~0.5 s following the start
of the main peak. A fortuitous alignment of SGR 1806-20 near the Sun at the
time of the giant flare, however, allowed RHESSI a unique view of the giant
flare event, including the precursor, the main peak decay, and the pulsed tail.
Since RHESSI was saturated during the main peak, we augment these observations
with Wind and RHESSI particle detector data in order to reconstruct the main
peak as well. Here we present detailed spectral analysis and evolution of the
giant flare. We report the novel detection of a relatively soft fast peak just
milliseconds before the main peak, whose timescale and sizescale indicate a
magnetospheric origin. We present the novel detection of emission extending up
to 17 MeV immediately following the main peak, perhaps revealing a
highly-extended corona driven by the hyper-Eddington luminosities. The spectral
evolution and pulse evolution during the tail are presented, demonstrating
significant magnetospheric twist and evolution during this phase. Blackbody
radii are derived for every stage of the flare, which show remarkable agreement
despite the range of luminosities and temperatures covered. Finally, we place
significant upper limits on afterglow emission in the hundreds of seconds
following the giant flare.Comment: 32 pages, 14 figures, submitted to Ap
A General Formula for Black Hole Gravitational Wave Kicks
Although the gravitational wave kick velocity in the orbital plane of
coalescing black holes has been understood for some time, apparently
conflicting formulae have been proposed for the dominant out-of-plane kick,
each a good fit to different data sets. This is important to resolve because it
is only the out-of-plane kicks that can reach more than 500 km/s and can thus
eject merged remnants from galaxies. Using a different ansatz for the
out-of-plane kick, we show that we can fit almost all existing data to better
than 5 %. This is good enough for any astrophysical calculation, and shows that
the previous apparent conflict was only because the two data sets explored
different aspects of the kick parameter space.Comment: 14 pages
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