485 research outputs found
Inhibition of thermohaline mixing by a magnetic field in Ap star descendants: Implications for the Galactic evolution of 3He
To reconcile the measurements of 3He/H in Galactic HII regions with high
values of 3He in a couple of planetary nebulae, we propose that thermohaline
mixing is inhibited by a fossil magnetic field in red giant stars that are
descendants of Ap stars. We examine the effect of a magnetic field on the
salt-finger instability, using a local analysis. We obtain a threshold for the
magnetic field of 10^4 - 10^5 Gauss, above which it inhibits thermohaline
mixing in red giant stars located at or above the bump. Fields of that order
are expected in the descendants of the Ap stars, taking into account the
contraction of their core. We conclude that in a large fraction of the
descendants of Ap stars thermohaline mixing does not occur. As a consequence
these objects must produce 3He as predicted by the standard theory of stellar
evolution and as observed in the planetary nebulae NGC3242 and J320. The
relative number of such stars with respect to non-magnetic objects that undergo
thermohaline mixing is consistent with the statistical constraint coming from
observations of the carbon isotopic ratio in red giant stars. It also satisfies
the Galactic requirements for the evolution of the 3He abundance.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A Letters (Vol.476
The Electron Temperature Gradient in the Galactic Disk
We derive the electron temperature gradient in the Galactic disk using a
sample of HII regions that spans Galactocentric distances 0--17 kpc. The
electron temperature was calculated using high precision radio recombination
line and continuum observations for more than 100 HII regions. Nebular
Galactocentric distances were calculated in a consistent manner using the
radial velocities measured by our radio recombination line survey. The large
number of nebulae widely distributed over the Galactic disk together with the
uniformity of our data provide a secure estimate of the present electron
temperature gradient in the Milky Way. Because metals are the main coolants in
the photoionized gas, the electron temperature along the Galactic disk should
be directly related to the distribution of heavy elements in the Milky Way. Our
best estimate of the electron temperature gradient is derived from a sample of
76 sources for which we have the highest quality data. The present gradient in
electron temperature has a minimum at the Galactic Center and rises at a rate
of 287 +/- 46 K/kpc. There are no significant variations in the value of the
gradient as a function of Galactocentric radius or azimuth. The scatter we find
in the HII region electron temperatures at a given Galactocentric radius is not
due to observational error, but rather to intrinsic fluctuations in these
temperatures which are almost certainly due to fluctuations in the nebular
heavy element abundances. Comparing the HII region gradient with the much
steeper gradient found for planetary nebulae suggests that the electron
temperature gradient evolves with time, becoming flatter as a consequence of
the chemical evolution of the Milky Way's disk.Comment: 43 pages, 9 figures (accepted for publication in the ApJ
Out-Of-Focus Holography at the Green Bank Telescope
We describe phase-retrieval holography measurements of the 100-m diameter
Green Bank Telescope using astronomical sources and an astronomical receiver
operating at a wavelength of 7 mm. We use the technique with parameterization
of the aperture in terms of Zernike polynomials and employing a large defocus,
as described by Nikolic, Hills & Richer (2006). Individual measurements take
around 25 minutes and from the resulting beam maps (which have peak signal to
noise ratios of 200:1) we show that it is possible to produce low-resolution
maps of the wavefront errors with accuracy around a hundredth of a wavelength.
Using such measurements over a wide range of elevations, we have calculated a
model for the wavefront-errors due to the uncompensated gravitational
deformation of the telescope. This model produces a significant improvement at
low elevations, where these errors are expected to be the largest; after
applying the model, the aperture efficiency is largely independent of
elevation. We have also demonstrated that the technique can be used to measure
and largely correct for thermal deformations of the antenna, which often exceed
the uncompensated gravitational deformations during daytime observing.
We conclude that the aberrations induced by gravity and thermal effects are
large-scale and the technique used here is particularly suitable for measuring
such deformations in large millimetre wave radio telescopes.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures (accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics
Effects of thermohaline instability and rotation-induced mixing on the evolution of light elements in the Galaxy : D, 3He and 4He
Recent studies of low- and intermediate-mass stars show that the evolution of
the chemical elements in these stars is very different from that proposed by
standard stellar models. Rotation-induced mixing modifies the internal chemical
structure of main sequence stars, although its signatures are revealed only
later in the evolution when the first dredge-up occurs. Thermohaline mixing is
likely the dominating process that governs the photospheric composition of
low-mass red giant branch stars and has been shown to drastically reduce the
net 3He production in these stars. The predictions of these new stellar models
need to be tested against galaxy evolution. In particular, the resulting
evolution of the light elements D, 3He and 4He should be compared with their
primordial values inferred from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe data
and with the abundances derived from observations of different Galactic
regions. We study the effects of thermohaline mixing and rotation-induced
mixing on the evolution of the light elements in the Milky Way. We compute
Galactic evolutionary models including new yields from stellar models computed
with thermohaline instability and rotation-induced mixing. We discuss the
effects of these important physical processes acting in stars on the evolution
of the light elements D, 3He, and 4He in the Galaxy. Galactic chemical
evolution models computed with stellar yields including thermohaline mixing and
rotation fit better observations of 3He and 4He in the Galaxy than models
computed with standard stellar yields. The inclusion of thermohaline mixing in
stellar models provides a solution to the long-standing "3He problem" on a
Galactic scale. Stellar models including rotation-induced mixing and
thermohaline instability reproduce also the observations of D and 4He.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Thermohaline Mixing and its Role in the Evolution of Carbon and Nitrogen Abundances in Globular Cluster Red Giants: The Test Case of Messier 3
We review the observational evidence for extra mixing in stars on the red
giant branch (RGB) and discuss why thermohaline mixing is a strong candidate
mechanism. We recall the simple phenomenological description of thermohaline
mixing, and aspects of mixing in stars in general. We use observations of M3 to
constrain the form of the thermohaline diffusion coefficient and any associated
free parameters. This is done by matching [C/Fe] and [N/Fe] along the RGB of
M3. After taking into account a presumed initial primordial bimodality of
[C/Fe] in the CN-weak and CN-strong stars our thermohaline mixing models can
explain the full spread of [C/Fe]. Thermohaline mixing can produce a
significant change in [N/Fe] as a function of absolute magnitude on the RGB for
initially CN-weak stars, but not for initially CN-strong stars, which have so
much nitrogen to begin with that any extra mixing does not significantly affect
the surface nitrogen composition.Comment: 33 Pages, 10 Figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
An open extensible tool environment for Event-B
Abstract. We consider modelling indispensable for the development of complex systems. Modelling must be carried out in a formal notation to reason and make meaningful conjectures about a model. But formal modelling of complex systems is a difficult task. Even when theorem provers improve further and get more powerful, modelling will remain difficult. The reason for this that modelling is an exploratory activity that requires ingenuity in order to arrive at a meaningful model. We are aware that automated theorem provers can discharge most of the onerous trivial proof obligations that appear when modelling systems. In this article we present a modelling tool that seamlessly integrates modelling and proving similar to what is offered today in modern integrated development environments for programming. The tool is extensible and configurable so that it can be adapted more easily to different application domains and development methods.
Thermohaline instability and rotation-induced mixing. I - Low- and intermediate-mass solar metallicity stars up to the end of the AGB
(abridged) Numerous spectroscopic observations provide compelling evidence
for non-canonical processes that modify the surface abundances of low- and
intermediate-mass stars beyond the predictions of standard stellar theory. We
study the effects of thermohaline instability and rotation-induced mixing in
the 1-4 Msun range at solar metallicity. We present evolutionary models by
considering both thermohaline and rotation-induced mixing in stellar interior.
We discuss the effects of these processes on the chemical properties of stars
from the zero age main sequence up to the end of the second dredge-up on the
early-AGB for intermediate-mass stars and up to the AGB tip for low-mass stars.
Model predictions are compared to observational data for
lithium,12C/13C,[N/C],[Na/Fe],16O/17O, and 16O/18O in Galactic open clusters
and in field stars with well-defined evolutionary status,as well as in
planetary nebulae. Thermohaline mixing simultaneously accounts for the observed
behaviour of 12C/13C,[N/C], and lithium in low-mass stars that are more
luminous than the RGB bump, and its efficiency is increasing with decreasing
initial stellar mass. On the TP-AGB,thermohaline mixing leads to lithium
production, although the 7Li yields remain negative. Although the 3He stellar
yields are much reduced thanks to this process, we find that solar-metallicity,
low-mass stars remain net 3He producers. Rotation-induced mixing is found to
change the stellar structure so that in the mass range between \sim 1.5 and 2.2
Msun the thermohaline instability occurs earlier on the red giant branch than
in non-rotating models. Finally rotation accounts for the observed star-to-star
abundance variations at a given evolutionary status, and is necessary to
explain the features of CN-processed material in intermediate-mass stars.Comment: 18 pages, 22 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Stability conditions and Stokes factors
Let A be the category of modules over a complex, finite-dimensional algebra.
We show that the space of stability conditions on A parametrises an
isomonodromic family of irregular connections on P^1 with values in the Hall
algebra of A. The residues of these connections are given by the holomorphic
generating function for counting invariants in A constructed by D. Joyce.Comment: Very minor changes. Final version. To appear in Inventione
Microbial Community Structure of Leaf-Cutter Ant Fungus Gardens and Refuse Dumps
BACKGROUND: Leaf-cutter ants use fresh plant material to grow a mutualistic fungus that serves as the ants' primary food source. Within fungus gardens, various plant compounds are metabolized and transformed into nutrients suitable for ant consumption. This symbiotic association produces a large amount of refuse consisting primarily of partly degraded plant material. A leaf-cutter ant colony is thus divided into two spatially and chemically distinct environments that together represent a plant biomass degradation gradient. Little is known about the microbial community structure in gardens and dumps or variation between lab and field colonies. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using microbial membrane lipid analysis and a variety of community metrics, we assessed and compared the microbiota of fungus gardens and refuse dumps from both laboratory-maintained and field-collected colonies. We found that gardens contained a diverse and consistent community of microbes, dominated by Gram-negative bacteria, particularly gamma-Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes. These findings were consistent across lab and field gardens, as well as host ant taxa. In contrast, dumps were enriched for Gram-positive and anaerobic bacteria. Broad-scale clustering analyses revealed that community relatedness between samples reflected system component (gardens/dumps) rather than colony source (lab/field). At finer scales samples clustered according to colony source. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Here we report the first comparative analysis of the microbiota from leaf-cutter ant colonies. Our work reveals the presence of two distinct communities: one in the fungus garden and the other in the refuse dump. Though we find some effect of colony source on community structure, our data indicate the presence of consistently associated microbes within gardens and dumps. Substrate composition and system component appear to be the most important factor in structuring the microbial communities. These results thus suggest that resident communities are shaped by the plant degradation gradient created by ant behavior, specifically their fungiculture and waste management
Rank rigidity for CAT(0) cube complexes
We prove that any group acting essentially without a fixed point at infinity
on an irreducible finite-dimensional CAT(0) cube complex contains a rank one
isometry. This implies that the Rank Rigidity Conjecture holds for CAT(0) cube
complexes. We derive a number of other consequences for CAT(0) cube complexes,
including a purely geometric proof of the Tits Alternative, an existence result
for regular elements in (possibly non-uniform) lattices acting on cube
complexes, and a characterization of products of trees in terms of bounded
cohomology.Comment: 39 pages, 4 figures. Revised version according to referee repor
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