1,451 research outputs found
The Solar Photospheric Nitrogen Abundance: Determination with 3D and 1D Model Atmospheres
We present a new determination of the solar nitrogen abundance making use of
3D hydrodynamical modelling of the solar photosphere, which is more physically
motivated than traditional static 1D models. We selected suitable atomic
spectral lines, relying on equivalent width measurements already existing in
the literature. For atmospheric modelling we used the co 5 bold 3D radiation
hydrodynamics code. We investigated the influence of both deviations from local
thermodynamic equilibrium (non-LTE effects) and photospheric inhomogeneities
(granulation effects) on the resulting abundance. We also compared several
atlases of solar flux and centre-disc intensity presently available. As a
result of our analysis, the photospheric solar nitrogen abundance is A(N) =
7.86 +/- 0.12.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
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A Study of Microstructural Length Scale Effects on the Behaviour of FCC Polycrystals Using Strain Gradient Concepts
Grain size is a critically important aspect of polycrystalline materials and experimental observations on Cu and Al polycrystals have shown that a Hall-Petchtype phenomenon does exist at the onset of plastic deformation. In this work, a parametric study is conducted to investigate the effect of microstructural and deformation-related length scales on the behavior of such FCC polycrystals. It relies on a recently proposed non-local dislocation-mechanics based crystallographic theory to describe the evolution of dislocation mean spacings within each grain, and on finite element techniques to incorporate explicitly grain interaction effects. Polycrystals are modeled as representative volume elements (RVEs) containing up to 64 randomly oriented grains. Predictions obtained from RVEs of Cu polycrystals with different grain sizes are shown to be consistent with experimental data. Furthermore, mesh sensitivity studies revealed that, when there is a predominance of geometrically necessary dislocations (GNDs) relative to statistically-stored dislocations (SSDs), the polycrystal response becomes increasingly mesh sensitive. This was found to occur specially during the early stages of deformation in polycrystals with small grains
The early evolution of Globular Clusters: the case of NGC 2808
Enhancement and spread of helium among globular cluster stars have been
recently suggested as a way to explain the horizontal branch blue tails, in
those clusters which show a primordial spread in the abundances of CNO and
other elements involved in advanced CNO burning (D'Antona et al. 2002). In this
paper we examine the implications of the hypothesis that, in many globular
clusters, stars were born in two separate events: an initial burst (first
generation), which gives origin to probably all high and intermediate mass
stars and to a fraction of the cluster stars observed today, and a second,
prolonged star formation phase (second generation) in which stars form directly
from the ejecta of the intermediate mass stars of the first generation. In
particular, we consider in detail the morphology of the horizontal branch in
NGC 2808 and argue that it unveils the early cluster evolution, from the birth
of the first star generation to the end of the second phase of star formation.
This framework provides a feasible interpretation for the still unexplained
dichotomy of NGC 2808 horizontal branch, attributing the lack of stars in the
RR Lyr region to the gap in the helium content between the red clump, whose
stars are considered to belong to the first stellar generation and have
primordial helium, and the blue side of the horizontal branch, whose minimum
helium content reflects the helium abundance in the smallest mass
(~4Msun)contributing to the second stellar generation. This scenario provides
constraints on the required Initial Mass Function, in a way that a great deal
of remnant neutron stars and stellar mass black holes might have been produced.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures, in press on The Astrophysical Journa
s-Process Nucleosynthesis in Carbon Stars
We present the first detailed and homogeneous analysis of the s-element
content in Galactic carbon stars of N-type. Abundances of Sr,Y, Zr (low-mass
s-elements, or ls) and of Ba, La, Nd, Sm and Ce (high-mass s-elements, hs) are
derived using the spectral synthesis technique from high-resolution spectra.
The N-stars analyzed are of nearly solar metallicity and show moderate
s-element enhancements, similar to those found in S stars, but smaller than
those found in the only previous similar study (Utsumi 1985), and also smaller
than those found in supergiant post-AGB stars. This is in agreement with the
present understanding of the envelope s-element enrichment in giant stars,
which is increasing along the spectral sequence M-->MS-->S-->SC-->C during the
AGB phase. We compare the observational data with recent -process
nucleosynthesis models for different metallicities and stellar masses. Good
agreement is obtained between low mass AGB star models (M < 3 M_o) and
s-elements observations. In low mass AGB stars, the 13C(alpha, n)16O reaction
is the main source of neutrons for the s-process; a moderate spread, however,
must exist in the abundance of 13C that is burnt in different stars. By
combining information deriving from the detection of Tc, the infrared colours
and the theoretical relations between stellar mass, metallicity and the final
C/O ratio, we conclude that most (or maybe all) of the N-stars studied in this
work are intrinsic, thermally-pulsing AGB stars; their abundances are the
consequence of the operation of third dredge-up and are not to be ascribed to
mass transfer in binary systems.Comment: 31 pages, 10 figures, 6 tables. Accepted in Ap
The Gattini cameras for optical sky brightness measurements at Dome C, Antarctica
The Gattini cameras are two site testing instruments for
the measurement of optical sky brightness, large area cloud cover and auroral detection of the night sky above the high altitude Dome C site in Antarctica. The cameras have been operating since installation in January 2006 and are currently at the end of the first Antarctic winter season. The cameras are transit in nature and are virtually identical both adopting Apogee Alta CCD detectors. By taking frequent images of the night sky we obtain long term cloud cover statistics, measure the sky background intensity as a function of solar and lunar altitude and
phase and directly measure the spatial extent of bright aurora if present and when they occur. The full data set will return in December 2006 however a limited amount of data has been transferred via the Iridium network enabling preliminary data reduction and system evaluation.
An update of the project is presented together with preliminary results from data taken since commencement of the winter season
Galactic chemical evolution of heavy elements: from Barium to Europium
We follow the chemical evolution of the Galaxy for elements from Ba to Eu,
using an evolutionary model suitable to reproduce a large set of Galactic
(local and non local) and extragalactic constraints. Input stellar yields for
neutron-rich nuclei have been separated into their s-process and r-process
components. The production of s-process elements in thermally pulsing
asymptotic giant branch stars of low mass proceeds from the combined operation
of two neutron sources: the dominant reaction 13C(alpha,n)16O, which releases
neutrons in radiative conditions during the interpulse phase, and the reaction
22Ne(alpha,n)25Mg, marginally activated during thermal instabilities. The
resulting s-process distribution is strongly dependent on the stellar
metallicity. For the standard model discussed in this paper, it shows a sharp
production of the Ba-peak elements around Z = Z_sun/4. Concerning the r-process
yields, we assume that the production of r-nuclei is a primary process
occurring in stars near the lowest mass limit for Type II supernova
progenitors. The r-contribution to each nucleus is computed as the difference
between its solar abundance and its s-contribution given by the Galactic
chemical evolution model at the epoch of the solar system formation. We compare
our results with spectroscopic abundances of elements from Ba to Eu at various
metallicities (mainly from F and G stars) showing that the observed trends can
be understood in the light of the present knowledge of neutron capture
nucleosynthesis. Finally, we discuss a number of emerging features that deserve
further scrutiny.Comment: 34 pages, 13 figures. accepted by Ap
Entropy in the Classical and Quantum Polymer Black Hole Models
We investigate the entropy counting for black hole horizons in loop quantum
gravity (LQG). We argue that the space of 3d closed polyhedra is the classical
counterpart of the space of SU(2) intertwiners at the quantum level. Then
computing the entropy for the boundary horizon amounts to calculating the
density of polyhedra or the number of intertwiners at fixed total area.
Following the previous work arXiv:1011.5628, we dub these the classical and
quantum polymer models for isolated horizons in LQG. We provide exact
micro-canonical calculations for both models and we show that the classical
counting of polyhedra accounts for most of the features of the intertwiner
counting (leading order entropy and log-correction), thus providing us with a
simpler model to further investigate correlations and dynamics. To illustrate
this, we also produce an exact formula for the dimension of the intertwiner
space as a density of "almost-closed polyhedra".Comment: 24 page
Cool bottom processes on the thermally-pulsing AGB and the isotopic composition of circumstellar dust grains
(Abridged) We examine the effects of cool bottom processing (CBP) on several
isotopic ratios in the convective envelope during the TP-AGB phase of evolution
in a 1.5 M_sun initial-mass star of solar initial composition. We use a
parametric model which treats extra mixing by introducing mass flow between the
convective envelope and the underlying radiative zone. The parameters of this
model are the mass circulation rate (Mdot) and the maximum temperature (T_P)
experienced by the circulating material. The effects of nuclear reactions in
the flowing matter were calculated using a set of structures of the radiative
zone selected from a complete stellar evolution calculation. The compositions
of the flowing material were obtained and the resulting changes in the envelope
determined. Abundant ^26Al was produced by CBP for log T_P > 7.65. While
^26Al/^27Al depends on T_P, the isotopic ratios in CNO elements depend
dominantly on the circulation rate. The correspondence is shown between models
of CBP as parameterized by a diffusion formalism within the stellar evolution
model and those using the mass-flow formalism employed here. The isotopic
ratios are compared with the data on circumstellar dust grains. It is found
that the ratios ^{18}O/^{16}O, ^{17}O/^{16}O, and ^26Al/^27Al observed for
oxide grains formed at C/O < 1 are reasonably well-understood. However, the
^15N/^14N, ^12C/^13C, and ^26Al/^27Al in carbide grains (C/O > 1) require many
stellar sources with ^14N/^15N at least a factor of 4 below solar. The rare
grains with ^12C/^13C < 10 cannot be produced by any red-giant or AGB source.Comment: 35 pages, plus 18 included figures. Scheduled for January 10, 2003
issue of Ap
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