1,872 research outputs found
Alien Registration- Canning, John R. (Portland, Cumberland County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/24289/thumbnail.jp
Hydrogen Two-Photon Continuum Emission from the Horseshoe Filament in NGC 1275
Far ultraviolet emission has been detected from a knot of Halpha emission in
the Horseshoe filament, far out in the NGC 1275 nebula. The flux detected
relative to the brightness of the Halpha line in the same spatial region is
very close to that expected from Hydrogen two-photon continuum emission in the
particle heating model of Ferland et al. (2009) if reddening internal to the
filaments is taken into account. We find no need to invoke other sources of far
ultraviolet emission such as hot stars or emission lines from CIV in
intermediate temperature gas to explain these data.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Fiscal year 1976 progress report on a feasibility study evaluating the use of surface penetrators for planetary exploration
The feasibility of employing penetrators for exploring Mars was examined. Eight areas of interest for key scientific experiments were identified. These include: seismic activity, imaging, geochemistry, water measurement, heatflow, meteorology, magnetometry, and biochemistry. In seven of the eight potential experiment categories this year's progress included: conceptual design, instrument fabrication, instrument performance evaluation, and shock loading of important components. Most of the components survived deceleration testing with negligible performance changes. Components intended to be placed inside the penetrator forebody were tested up to 3,500 g and components intended to be placed on the afterbody were tested up to 21,000 g. A field test program was conducted using tentative Mars penetrator mission constraints. Drop tests were performed at two selected terrestrial analog sites to determine the range of penetration depths for anticipated common Martian materials. Minimum penetration occurred in basalt at Amboy, California. Three full-scale penetrators penetrated 0.4 to 0.9 m into the basalt after passing through 0.3 to 0.5 m of alluvial overburden. Maximum penetration occurred in unconsolidated sediments at McCook, Nebraska. Two full-scale penetrators penetrated 2.5 to 8.5 m of sediment. Impact occurred in two kinds of sediment: loess and layered clay. Deceleration g loads of nominally 2,000 for the forebody and 20,000 for the afterbody did not present serious design problems for potential experiments. Penetrators have successfully impacted into terrestrial analogs of the probable extremes of potential Martian sites
Collisional excitation of [C II], [O I] and CO in Massive Galaxies
Many massive galaxies at the centres of relaxed galaxy clusters and groups
have vast reservoirs of cool (~10,000 K) and cold (~100 K) gas. In many low
redshift brightest group and cluster galaxies this gas is lifted into the hot
ISM in filamentary structures, which are long lived and are typically not
forming stars. Two important questions are how far do these reservoirs cool and
if cold gas is abundant what is the cause of the low star formation efficiency?
Heating and excitation of the filaments from collisions and mixing of hot
particles in the surrounding X-ray gas describes well the optical and near
infra-red line ratios observed in the filaments. In this paper we examine the
theoretical properties of dense, cold clouds emitting in the far infra-red and
submillimeter through the bright lines of [C II]157 \mu m , [O I]63 \mu m and
CO, exposed to these energetic ionising particles. While some emission lines
may be optically thick we find this is not sufficient to model the emission
line ratios. Models where the filaments are supported by thermal pressure
support alone also cannot account for the cold gas line ratios but a very
modest additional pressure support, either from turbulence or magnetic fields
can fit the observed [O I]/[C II] line ratios by decreasing the density of the
gas. This may also help stabilise the filaments against collapse leading to the
low rates of star formation. Finally we make predictions for the line ratios
expected from cold gas under these conditions and present diagnostic diagrams
for comparison with further observations. We provide our code as an Appendix.Comment: 17 pages, submitted to MNRA
Glial Cell Extracellular Matrix in Alzheimer’s Disease
Many studies have yielded conflicting results regarding the toxicity of AB, the peptide which is the principal component of senile plaques in brains of patients with Alzheimer\u27s disease. Using in vitro and in vivo models, we have studied the role of glial cells and extracellular matrix molecules m mediating the effects of AB. Glial cells respond to AB substrate by accumulating and depositing chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs) which are inhibitory to neurite outgrowth. CSPGs are present around the senile plaque core, an area with both dystrophic neurites and a general decrease in normal neurites. We suggest that CSPG may contribute to the pathology by leading to regenerative failure of neurites surrounding senile plaques
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