4,496 research outputs found
Electroexcitation of the Roper resonance from CLAS data
The helicity amplitudes of the electroexcitation of the Roper resonance on
proton are extracted at 1.7 < Q2 < 4.2 GeV2 from recent high precision
JLab-CLAS cross sections data and longitudinally polarized beam asymmetry for
pi+ electroproduction on protons. The analysis is made using two approaches,
dispersion relations and unitary isobar model, which give consistent results.
It is found that the transverse helicity amplitude for the gamma* p -->
P11(1440) transition, which is large and negative at Q2=0, becomes large and
positive at Q2 ~ 2 GeV2, and then drops slowly with Q2. Longitudinal helicity
amplitude, that was previously found from CLAS data as large and positive at
Q2=0.4,0.65 GeV2, drops with Q2. These results rule out the presentation of
P11(1440) as a 3qG hybrid state, and provide strong evidence in favor of this
resonance as a first radial excitation of the 3q ground state.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, Talk on the Workshop on "The Physics of Excited
Nucleons", Bonn, Germany, October 200
Broad-lined type Ic supernova iPTF16asu: A challenge to all popular models
It is well-known that ordinary supernovae (SNe) are powered by 56Ni cascade
decay. Broad-lined type Ic SNe (SNe Ic-BL) are a subclass of SNe that are not
all exclusively powered by 56Ni decay. It was suggested that some SNe Ic-BL are
powered by magnetar spin-down. iPTF16asu is a peculiar broad-lined type Ic
supernova discovered by the intermediate Palomar Transient Factory. With a
rest-frame rise time of only 4 days, iPTF16asu challenges the existing popular
models, for example, the radioactive heating (56Ni-only) and the magnetar+56Ni
models. Here we show that this rapid rise could be attributed to interaction
between the SN ejecta and a pre-existing circumstellar medium ejected by the
progenitor during its final stages of evolution, while the late-time light
curve can be better explained by energy input from a rapidly spinning magnetar.
This model is a natural extension to the previous magnetar model. The mass-loss
rate of the progenitor and ejecta mass are consistent with a progenitor that
experienced a common envelope evolution in a binary. An alternative model for
the early rapid rise of the light curve is the cooling of a shock propagating
into an extended envelope of the progenitor. It is difficult at this stage to
tell which model (interaction+magnetar+56Ni or cooling+magnetar+56Ni) is better
for iPTF16asu. However, it is worth noting that the inferred envelope mass in
the cooling+magnetar+56Ni is very high.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, 3 table
The host of the Type I SLSN 2017egm: A young, sub-solar metallicity environment in a massive spiral galaxy
Here we present an integral-field study of the massive, high-metallicity
spiral NGC 3191, the host of SN 2017egm, the closest SLSN Type I to date. We
use data from PMAS/CAHA and the public MaNGA survey to shed light on the
properties of the SLSN site and the origin of star-formation in this
non-starburst spiral galaxy. We map the physical properties different
\ion{H}{II} regions throughout the galaxy and characterize their stellar
populations using the STARLIGHT fitting code. Kinematical information allows to
study a possible interaction with its neighbouring galaxy as the origin of
recent star formation activity which could have caused the SLSN. NGC 3191 shows
intense star-formation in the western part with three large SF regions of low
metallicity. The central regions of the host have a higher metallicity, lower
specific star-formation rate and lower ionization. Modeling the stellar
populations gives a different picture: The SLSN region has two dominant stellar
populations with different ages, the youngest one with an age of 2-10 Myr and
lower metallicity, likely the population from which the SN progenitor
originated. Emission line kinematics of NGC 3191 show indications of
interaction with its neighbour MCG+08-19-017 at 45 kpc, which might be
responsible for the recent starburst. In fact, this galaxy pair has in total
hosted 4 SNe, 1988B (Type Ia), SN 2003ds (Type Ic in MCG+08-19-017), PTF10bgl
(SLSN-Type II) and 2017egm, underlying the enhanced SF in both galaxies due to
interaction. Our study shows that one has to be careful interpreting global
host and even gas properties without looking at the stellar population history
of the region. SLSNe seem to still be consistent with massive stars ( 20
M) requiring low () metallicity and those environments
can also occur in massive, late-type galaxies but not necessarily starbursts.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 13 pages, 11 figures, 7 tables.
Abstract has been reduced to match arXiv form requirement
Optical biosensor for catechol determination based on laccase‐immobilized anionic polyamide 6 microparticles
This work presents the preparation, optimization, and testing of an enzymebased optical biosensor for catechol determination. The sensing area is attached to a glass support and contains: anionic polyamide 6 (PA6) porous
microparticles supporting laccase from Trametes Versicolor, embedded in a Pebax® MH1657 polymer binder that contains the optical indicator dye 3-methyl-2-benzothiazolinone hydrazone (MBTH), responsible for the optical transduction. The catechol analyte, after its enzymatic oxidation, forms o-benzoquinone that can be detected by oxidative coupling with MBTH giving rise to a colored product. The latter can be quantified easuring the UV/VIS absorbance at 500 nm. The PA6 microparticles performed as useful laccase carriers reaching high immobilization yields of up to 99.8% and preserving the enzyme catalytic activity. This permitted the reparation of a new biosensor presenting a detection limit of 11 μM and responding linearly to up to 118 μM of catechol. Biosensor applicability was tested in spiked natural water samples from river and spring. The recovery rates observed were in the range of 97–108% that proves the good accuracy of the proposed biosensor.All authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the project TSSiPRO NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000015, supported by the regional operation program NORTE2020, under the Portugal 2020 Partnership Agreement, through the European Regional Development Fund, as well as the support by National Funds through Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (FCT), project UID/CTM/50025/2019. Special thank is due to the ALBA synchrotron governance for financing our WAXS/SAXS experiments at NCD SWEET beamline in the framework of the approved pro posal ID 2018/022726. N. Dencheva is also grateful for the financial support of FCT in the frames of the strategic project UID/CTM/50025/2013 and the personal program contract CTTI-51/18-IPC. The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of Dr. Amélie Noel (Arkema, France) for providing a free sample of Pebax® MH 1657
GRB 130427A Afterglow: A Test for GRB Models
Gamma-ray Burst 130427A had the largest fluence for almost 30 years. With an isotropic energy output of 8.5×1053 erg and redshift of 0.34, it combined a very high energy release with a relative proximity to Earth in an unprecedented fashion. Sensitive X-ray facilities such as {\it XMM-Newton} and {\it Chandra} detected the afterglow of this event for a record-breaking baseline of 90 Ms. We show the X-ray light curve of GRB 130427A of this event over such an interval. The light curve shows an unbroken power law decay with a slope of α=1.31 over more than three decades in time. In this presentation, we investigate the consequences of this result for the scenarios proposed to interpret GRB 130427A and the implications in the context of the forward shock model (jet opening angle, energetics, surrounding medium). We also remark the chance of extending GRB afterglow observations for several hundreds of Ms with {\it Athena}
The rp-process and new measurements of beta-delayed proton decay of light Ag and Cd isotopes
Recent network calculations suggest that a high temperature rp-process could
explain the abundances of light Mo and Ru isotopes, which have long challenged
models of p-process nuclide production. Important ingredients to network
calculations involving unstable nuclei near and at the proton drip line are
-halflives and decay modes, i.e., whether or not -delayed proton
decay takes place. Of particular importance to these network calculation are
the proton-rich isotopes Ag, Ag, Cd and Cd. We
report on recent measurements of -delayed proton branching ratios for
Ag, Ag, and Cd at the on-line mass separator at GSI.Comment: 4 pages, uses espcrc1.sty. Proceedings of the 4th International
Symposium Nuclei in the Cosmos, June 1996, Notre Dame/IN, USA, Ed. M.
Wiescher, to be published in Nucl.Phys.A. Also available at
ftp://ftp.physics.ohio-state.edu/pub/nucex/nic96-gs
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