338 research outputs found

    Some reflections on globalization, development and the less developed countries

    Get PDF
    The aim of the paper is to show that in reality globalization is an effectively global process because it is of extreme importance for all the countries on earth, including the poorest and least developed of them. Aside from the current impact of globalization on these latter countries, the paper argues that it is not possible to find a solution to the problem of development which does not involve globalization – which accordingly assumes (at least potentially) a strongly positive connotation. On the other hand, it is precisely the existence of problems of global scope – those of development, and in particular of its sustainability – which shows, I believe, the validity and utility of the concept of globalization, distinguishing it from mere internationalization and marking a sharp break with the past

    Interstellar dust charging in dense molecular clouds: cosmic ray effects

    Get PDF
    The local cosmic-ray (CR) spectra are calculated for typical characteristic regions of a cold dense molecular cloud, to investigate two so far neglected mechanisms of dust charging: collection of suprathermal CR electrons and protons by grains, and photoelectric emission from grains due to the UV radiation generated by CRs. The two mechanisms add to the conventional charging by ambient plasma, produced in the cloud by CRs. We show that the CR-induced photoemission can dramatically modify the charge distribution function for submicron grains. We demonstrate the importance of the obtained results for dust coagulation: While the charging by ambient plasma alone leads to a strong Coulomb repulsion between grains and inhibits their further coagulation, the combination with the photoemission provides optimum conditions for the growth of large dust aggregates in a certain region of the cloud, corresponding to the densities n(H2)n(\mathrm{H_2}) between ∌104\sim10^4 cm−3^{-3} and ∌106\sim10^6 cm−3^{-3}. The charging effect of CR is of generic nature, and therefore is expected to operate not only in dense molecular clouds but also in the upper layers and the outer parts of protoplanetary discs.Comment: accepted by Ap

    Cosmic-ray ionisation in circumstellar discs

    Get PDF
    Galactic cosmic rays are a ubiquitous source of ionisation of the interstellar gas, competing with UV and X-ray photons as well as natural radioactivity in determining the fractional abundance of electrons, ions and charged dust grains in molecular clouds and circumstellar discs. We model the propagation of different components of Galactic cosmic rays versus the column density of the gas. Our study is focussed on the propagation at high densities, above a few g cm−2^{-2}, especially relevant for the inner regions of collapsing clouds and circumstellar discs. The propagation of primary and secondary CR particles (protons and heavier nuclei, electrons, positrons, and photons) is computed in the continuous slowing down approximation, diffusion approximation, or catastrophic approximation, by adopting a matching procedure for the different transport regimes. A choice of the proper regime depends on the nature of the dominant loss process, modelled as continuous or catastrophic. The CR ionisation rate is determined by CR protons and their secondary electrons below ≈130\approx 130 g cm−2^{-2} and by electron/positron pairs created by photon decay above ≈600\approx600 g cm−2^{-2}. We show that a proper description of the particle transport is essential to compute the ionisation rate in the latter case, since the electron/positron differential fluxes depend sensitively on the fluxes of both protons and photons. Our results show that the CR ionisation rate in high-density environments, like, e.g., the inner parts of collapsing molecular clouds or the mid-plane of circumstellar discs, is larger than previously assumed. It does not decline exponentially with increasing column density, but follows a more complex behaviour due to the interplay of different processes governing the generation and propagation of secondary particles.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, accepted by A&

    Dust temperature and time-dependent effects in the chemistry of photodissociation regions

    Get PDF
    When studying the chemistry of PDRs, time dependence becomes important as visual extinction increases, since certain chemical timescales are comparable to the cloud lifetime. Dust temperature is also a key factor, since it significantly influences gas temperature and mobility on dust grains, determining the chemistry occurring on grain surfaces. We present a study of the dust temperature impact and time effects on the chemistry of different PDRs, using an updated version of the Meijerink PDR code and combining it with the time-dependent code Nahoon. We find the largest temperature effects in the inner regions of high GG0_{\mathrm{0}} PDRs, where high dust temperatures favour the formation of simple oxygen-bearing molecules (especially that of O2_2), while the formation of complex organic molecules is much more efficient at low dust temperatures. We also find that time-dependent effects strongly depend on the PDR type, since long timescales promote the destruction of oxygen-bearing molecules in the inner parts of low GG0_{\mathrm{0}} PDRs, while favouring their formation and that of carbon-bearing molecules in high GG0_{\mathrm{0}} PDRs. From the chemical evolution, we also conclude that, in dense PDRs, CO2_2 is a late-forming ice compared to water ice, and confirm a layered ice structure on dust grains, with H2_2O in lower layers than CO2_2. Regarding steady state, the PDR edge reaches chemical equilibrium at early times (â‰Č\lesssim105^5 yr). This time is even shorter (<<104^4 yr) for high GG0_{\mathrm{0}} PDRs. By contrast, inner regions reach equilibrium much later, especially low GG0_{\mathrm{0}} PDRs, where steady state is reached at ∌\sim106^6-107^7 yr.Comment: 24 pages, 15 figures, 9 table

    Production of atomic hydrogen by cosmic rays in dark clouds

    Get PDF
    The presence of small amounts of atomic hydrogen, detected as absorption dips in the 21 cm line spectrum, is a well-known characteristic of dark clouds. The abundance of hydrogen atoms measured in the densest regions of molecular clouds can be only explained by the dissociation of H2_2 due to cosmic rays. We want to assess the role of Galactic cosmic rays in the formation of atomic hydrogen, by using recent developments in the characterisation of the low-energy spectra of cosmic rays and advances in the modelling of their propagation in molecular clouds. We model the attenuation of the interstellar cosmic rays entering a cloud and compute the dissociation rate of molecular hydrogen due to collisions with cosmic-ray protons and electrons as well as fast hydrogen atoms. We compare our results with the available observations. The cosmic-ray dissociation rate is entirely determined by secondary electrons produced in primary ionisation collisions. These secondary particles constitute the only source of atomic hydrogen at column densities above ∌1021\sim10^{21} cm−2^{-2}. We also find that the dissociation rate decreases with column density, while the ratio between the dissociation and ionisation rates varies between about 0.6 and 0.7. From comparison with observations we conclude that a relatively flat spectrum of interstellar cosmic-ray protons, as the one suggested by the most recent Voyager 1 data, can only provide a lower bound for the observed atomic hydrogen fraction. An enhanced spectrum of low-energy protons is needed to explain most of the observations. Our findings show that a careful description of molecular hydrogen dissociation by cosmic rays can explain the abundance of atomic hydrogen in dark clouds. An accurate characterisation of this process at high densities is crucial for understanding the chemical evolution of star-forming regions.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysic

    Power Management Circuits for Low-Power RF Energy Harvesters

    Get PDF
    The paper describes the design and implementation of power management circuits for RF energy harvesters suitable for integration in wireless sensor nodes. In particular, we report the power management circuits used to provide the voltage supply of an integrated temperature sensor with analog-to-digital converter. A DC-DC boost converter is used to transfer efficiently the energy harvested from a generic radio-frequency rectifier into a charge reservoir, whereas a linear regulator scales the voltage supply to a suitable value for a sensing and conversion circuit. Implemented in a 65 nm CMOS technology, the power management system achieves a measured overall efficiency of 20%, with an available power of 4.5 ÎŒW at the DC-DC converter input. The system can sustain a temperature measurement rate of one sample/s with an RF input power of −28 dBm, making it compatible with the power levels available in generic outdoor environments

    Living through the Apocalypse(s): climate change and (non)human boundaries in Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower and N.K. Jemisin’s The Broken Earth trilogy

    Get PDF
    Climate change is one of the most pressing issues of our time, and literature is one way of dealing with this seemingly incomprehensible phenomenon we are now called to face. Challenging the predominance of white and male writers in science fiction, cli-fi novels by African American authors N.K. Jemisin and Octavia Butler showcase new approaches to the issue of climate change and portray new possibilities for imagining a different future. Through the powers of the protagonists of their respective series and the journeys they go through, the two authors also problematize the relationship between humanity and life on/of the planet, in alignment with the posthuman strand of thought that has recently challenged the position of Man on Earth. Through a close reading of Jemisin’s The Broken Earth trilogy and Butler’s Parable of the Sower, the aim of this thesis is then to analyse how the two aforementioned authors depict the issue of climate change and the consequent shift in human-nonhuman boundaries in their novels

    The first frost in the Pipe Nebula

    Get PDF
    Spectroscopic studies of ices in nearby star-forming regions indicate that ice mantles form on dust grains in two distinct steps, starting with polar ice formation (H2O rich) and switching to apolar ice (CO rich). We test how well the picture applies to more diffuse and quiescent clouds where the formation of the first layers of ice mantles can be witnessed. Medium-resolution near-infrared spectra are obtained toward background field stars behind the Pipe Nebula. The water ice absorption is positively detected at 3.0 micron in seven lines of sight out of 21 sources for which observed spectra are successfully reduced. The peak optical depth of the water ice is significantly lower than those in Taurus with the same visual extinction. The source with the highest water-ice optical depth shows CO ice absorption at 4.7 micron as well. The fractional abundance of CO ice with respect to water ice is 16+7-6 %, and about half as much as the values typically seen in low-mass star-forming regions. A small fractional abundance of CO ice is consistent with some of the existing simulations. Observations of CO2 ice in the early diffuse phase of a cloud play a decisive role in understanding the switching mechanism between polar and apolar ice formation.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, accepted by A&
    • 

    corecore