3,640 research outputs found
Detection system ensures positive alarm activation in digital message loss
Lost Word Detection System /LOWDS/ provides special identification for each error detection message transmitted from receiver to transmitter. The message is identified as an original message or an n-times retransmitted message so the receiver can detect where a retransmission request was not fulfilled and activate an alarm
Line-of-Sight Reddening Predictions: Zero Points, Accuracies, the Interstellar Medium, and the Stellar Populations of Elliptical Galaxies
Revised (B-V)_0-Mg_2 data for 402 elliptical galaxies are given to test
reddening predictions which can also tell us both what the intrinsic errors are
in this relationship among gE galaxy stellar populations, as well as details of
nearby structure in the interstellar medium (ISM) of our Galaxy and of the
intrinsic errors in reddening predictions. Using least-squares fits, the
explicit 1-sigma errors in the Burstein-Heiles (BH) and the Schlegel et al.
(IR) predicted reddenings are calculated, as well as the 1-sigma observational
error in the (B-V)_0-Mg_2 for gE galaxies. It is found that, in directions with
E(B-V)<0.100 mag (where most of these galaxies lie), 1-sigma errors in the IR
reddening predictions are 0.006 to 0.009 in E(B-V) mag, those for BH reddening
prediction are 0.011 mag, and the 1-sigma agreement between the two reddening
predictions is 0.007 mag. IR predictions have an accuracy of 0.010-0.011 mag in
directions with E(B-V)>= 0.100 mag, significantly better than those of the BH
predictions (0.024-0.025). Gas-to-dust variations that vary by a factor of 3,
both high and low, exist along many lines-of-sight in our Galaxy. The approx
0.02 higher reddening zero point in E(B-V) previously determined by Schlegel et
al. is confirmed, primarily at the Galactic poles. Despite this, both methods
also predict many directions with E(B-V)<0.015 mag. Independent evidence of
reddening at the North Galactic pole is reviewed, with the conclusion that
there still exists directions at the NGP that have E(B-V)<<0.01. Two lines of
evidence suggest that IR reddenings are overpredicted in directions with high
gas-to-dust ratios. As high gas-to-dust directions in the ISM also include the
Galactic poles, this overprediction is the likely cause of the E(B-V) = 0.02
mag larger IR reddening zero point.Comment: 5 figure
A Statistical Treatment of the Gamma-Ray Burst "No Host Galaxy" Problem: II. Energies of Standard Candle Bursts
With the discovery that the afterglows after some bursts are coincident with
faint galaxies, the search for host galaxies is no longer a test of whether
bursts are cosmological, but rather a test of particular cosmological models.
The methodology we developed to investigate the original "no host galaxy"
problem is equally valid for testing different cosmological models, and is
applicable to the galaxies coincident with optical transients. We apply this
methodology to a family of models where we vary the total energy of standard
candle bursts. We find that total isotropic energies of E<2e52~erg are ruled
out while log(E)~53 erg is favored.Comment: To appear in Ap.J., 514, 15 pages + 7 figures, AASTeX 4.0. Revisions
are: additional author, updated data, and minor textual change
Spontaneous emission of radiation by metallic electrons in the presence of electromagnetic fields of surface plasmon oscillations
The spontaneous emission of radiation of metallic electrons embedded in a
high-intensity enhanced surface plasmon field is considered analytically. The
electrons are described by exact dressed quantum states which contain the
interaction with the plasmon field non-perturbatively. Considerable deviations
from the pertubative behaviour have been found in the intensity dependence of
the emitted fundamental and the second harmonic signals, even at moderate
incoming laser intensities. The theoretical predictions deduced from the
formalism are in good qualitative agreement with the experimental results.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figure
Galactic Extinction from Colors and Counts of Field Galaxies in WFPC2 Frames: An Application to GRB 970228
We develop the ``simulated extinction method'' to measure average foreground
Galactic extinction from field galaxy number-counts and colors. The method
comprises simulating extinction in suitable reference fields by changing the
isophotal detection limit. This procedure takes into account selection effects,
in particular, the change in isophotal detection limit (and hence in isophotal
magnitude completeness limit) with extinction, and the galaxy color--magnitude
relation.
We present a first application of the method to the HST WFPC2 images of the
gamma-ray burster GRB 970228. Four different WFPC2 high-latitude fields,
including the HDF, are used as reference to measure the average extinction
towards the GRB in the F606W passband. From the counts, we derive an average
extinction of A_V = 0.5 mag, but the dispersion of 0.4 mag between the
estimates from the different reference fields is significantly larger than can
be accounted by Poisson plus clustering uncertainties. Although the counts
differ, the average colors of the field galaxies agree well. The extinction
implied by the average color difference between the GRB field and the reference
galaxies is A_V = 0.6 mag, with a dispersion in the estimated extinction from
the four reference fields of only 0.1 mag. All our estimates are in good
agreement with the value of 0.81\pm0.27 mag obtained by Burstein & Heiles, and
with the extinction of 0.78\pm0.12 measured by Schlegel et al. from maps of
dust IR emission. However, the discrepancy between the widely varying counts
and the very stable colors in these high-latitude fields is worth
investigating.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures; submitted to the Astrophysical Journa
Dynamics of Bulk vs. Nanoscale WS_2: Local Strain and Charging Effects
We measured the infrared vibrational properties of bulk and nanoparticle
WS in order to investigate the structure-property relations in these novel
materials. In addition to the symmetry-breaking effects of local strain,
nanoparticle curvature modifies the local charging environment of the bulk
material. Performing a charge analysis on the \emph{xy}-polarized E
vibrational mode, we find an approximate 1.5:1 intralayer charge difference
between the layered 2H material and inorganic fullerene-like (IF)
nanoparticles. This effective charge difference may impact the solid-state
lubrication properties of nanoscale metal dichalcogenides.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Observations of Lick Standard Stars Using the SCORPIO Multi-Slit Unit at the SAO 6-m Telescope
We present Lick line-index measurements of standard stars from the list of
Worthey. The spectra were taken with the multi-slit unit of the SCORPIO
spectrograph at the 6-m Special Astrophysical observatory telescope. We
describe in detail our method of analysis and explain the importance of using
the Lick index system for studying extragalactic globular clusters. Our results
show that the calibration of our instrumental system to the standard Lick
system can be performed with high confidence.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
Radial velocities and membership of stars in the old, distant open cluster Berkeley 29
Multi slit spectroscopy at the Telescopio Nazionale Galileo was employed to
measure radial velocities for 20 stars in the direction of the old open cluster
Berkeley 29, the farthest known in our Galaxy. Membership information was
derived for stars along all the red giant branch, in particular near its tip,
and on the red clump. The sample of bona-fide cluster members was used to
revise the cluster distance to about 15 kpc, on the basis of an empirical
comparison with the red clump in open clusters with known distances. A
metallicity [Fe/H] = -0.74 +/- 0.18 was also estimated using the colours of
spectroscopically confirmed red giant stars.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures (fig. 1 at low-res, but JPEG version included
too), accepted for publication in A&
Supernova 1996L: evidence of a strong wind episode before the explosion
Observations of the type II SN 1996L reveal the presence of a slowly
expanding (V~700$ km/s) shell at ~ 10^(16) cm from the exploding star. Narrow
emission features are visible in the early spectra superposed on the normal SN
spectrum. Within about two months these features develop narrow symmetric
P-Cygni profiles. About 100 days after the explosion the light curve suddenly
flattens, the spectral lines broaden and the Halpha flux becomes larger than
what is expected from a purely radioactive model. These events are interpreted
as signatures of the onset of the interaction between the fast moving ejecta
and a slowly moving outer shell of matter ejected before the SN explosion. At
about 300 days the narrow lines disappear and the flux drops until the SN fades
away, suggesting that the interaction phase is over and that the shell has been
swept away. Simple calculations show that the superwind episode started 9 yr
before the SN explosion and lasted 6 yr, with an average dM/dt=10^(-3)
M_solar/yr. Even at very late epochs (up to day 335) the typical forbidden
lines of [OI], CaII], [FeII] remain undetected or very weak. Spectra after day
270 show relatively strong emission lines of HeI. These lines are narrower than
other emission lines coming from the SN ejecta, but broader than those from the
CSM. These high excitation lines are probably the result of non-thermal
excitation and ionization caused by the deposition of the gamma-rays emitted in
the decay of radioactive material mixed in the He layer.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, Latex, To appear in M.N.R.A.
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