2,625 research outputs found
Differential elastic scattering cross sections for 54.9eV positrons incident on helium
Absolute differential elastic scattering cross sections measured with the 3-m, high resolution, time-of-flight spectrometer are presented for 54.9eV positrons incident on He. Five point moving average differential cross sections are plotted against average scattering angles which range from 14 to 36 deg. Also the averages of five differential cross sections which have adjacent values of scattering angle are plotted versus the corresponding averages of the scattering angles. The curve fitted to these data is shaped like the theoretical curve but has its minimum and its maximum at scattering angles that are about 4 deg higher and 15 deg lower respectively than predicted by theory
Spectroscopic measurements of temperature and plasma impurity concentration during magnetic reconnection at the Swarthmore Spheromak Experiment
Electron temperature measurements during counterhelicity spheromak merging studies at the Swarthmore Spheromak Experiment (SSX) [M. R. Brown, Phys. Plasmas 6, 1717 (1999)] are presented. VUV monochromator measurements of impurity emission lines are compared with model spectra produced by the non-LTE excitation kinematics code PRISMSPECT [J. J. MacFarlane et al., in Proceedings of the Third Conference on Inertial Fusion Science and Applications (2004)] to yield the electron temperature in the plasma with 1 µs time resolution. Average T_e is seen to increase from 12 to 19 eV during spheromak merging. Average C III ion temperature, measured with a new ion Doppler spectrometer (IDS) [C. D. Cothran et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 77, 063504 (2006)], likewise rises during spheromak merging, peaking at ~22 eV, but a similar increase in T_i is seen during single spheromak discharges with no merging. The VUV emission line measurements are also used to constrain the concentrations of various impurities in the SSX plasma, which are dominated by carbon, but include some oxygen and nitrogen. A burst of soft x-ray emission is seen during reconnection with a new four-channel detector (SXR). There is evidence for spectral changes in the soft x-ray emission as reconnection progresses, although our single-temperature equilibrium spectral models are not able to provide adequate fits to all the SXR data
Total cross sections for positrons scattered elastically from helium based on new measurements of total ionization cross sections
An improved technique is presented for employing the 2.3m spectrometer to measure total ionization cross sections, Q sub ion, for positrons incident on He. The new ionization cross section agree with the values reported earlier. Estimates are also presented of total elastic scattering cross section, Q sub el, obtained by subtracting from total scattering cross sections, Q sub tot, reported in the literature, the Q sub ion and Q sub Ps (total positronium formation cross sections) and total excitation cross sections, Q sub ex, published by another researcher. The Q sub ion and Q sub el measured with the 3m high resolution time-of-flight spectrometer for 54.9eV positrons are in accord with the results from the 2.3m spectrometer. The ionization cross sections are in fair agreement with theory tending for the most part to be higher, especially at 76.3 and 88.5eV. The elastic cross section agree quite well with theory to the vicinity of 50eV, but at 60eV and above the experimental elastic cross sections climb to and remain at about 0.30 pi a sub o sq while the theoretical values steadily decrease
Preventing Adolescents\u27 Externalizing And Internalizing Symptoms: Effects Of The Penn Resiliency Program
Toward a New Kind of Asteroseismic Grid Fitting
Recent developments in instrumentation (e.g., in particular the Kepler and
CoRoT satellites) provide a new opportunity to improve the models of stellar
pulsations. Surface layers, rotation, and magnetic fields imprint erratic
frequency shifts, trends, and other non-random behavior in the frequency
spectra. As our observational uncertainties become smaller, these are
increasingly important and difficult to deal with using standard fitting
techniques. To improve the models, new ways to compare their predictions with
observations need to be conceived. In this paper we present a completely
probabilistic (Bayesian) approach to asteroseismic model fitting. It allows for
varying degrees of prior mode identification, corrections for the discrete
nature of the grid, and most importantly implements a treatment of systematic
errors, such as the "surface effects." It removes the need to apply semi-
empirical corrections to the observations prior to fitting them to the models
and results in a consistent set of probabilities with which the model physics
can be probed and compared. As an example, we show a detailed asteroseismic
analysis of the Sun. We find a most probable solar age, including a 35 +- 5
million year pre-main sequence phase, of 4.591 billion years, and initial
element mass fractions of X_0 = 0.72, Y_0 = 0.264, Z_0 = 0.016, consistent with
recent asteroseismic and non-asteroseismic studies.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journal; v2 contains minor changes made in the proofs (updated references &
corrected typos
A discrete model of water with two distinct glassy phases
We investigate a minimal model for non-crystalline water, defined on a Husimi
lattice. The peculiar random-regular nature of the lattice is meant to account
for the formation of a random 4-coordinated hydrogen-bond network. The model
turns out to be consistent with most thermodynamic anomalies observed in liquid
and supercooled-liquid water. Furthermore, the model exhibits two glassy phases
with different densities, which can coexist at a first-order transition. The
onset of a complex free-energy landscape, characterized by an exponentially
large number of metastable minima, is pointed out by the cavity method, at the
level of 1-step replica symmetry breaking.Comment: expanded version: 6 pages, 7 figure
Follow-up observations of pulsating subdwarf B stars: Multisite campaigns on PG 1618+563B and PG 0048+091
We present follow-up observations of pulsating subdwarf B (sdB) stars as part
of our efforts to resolve the pulsation spectra for use in asteroseismological
analyses. This paper reports on multisite campaigns of the pulsating sdB stars
PG 1618+563B and PG 0048+091. Data were obtained from observatories placed
around the globe for coverage from all longitudes. For PG 1618+563B, our
five-site campaign uncovered a dichotomy of pulsation states: Early during the
campaign the amplitudes and phases (and perhaps frequencies) were quite
variable while data obtained late in the campaign were able to fully resolve
five stable pulsation frequencies. For PG 0048+091, our five-site campaign
uncovered a plethora of frequencies with short pulsation lifetimes. We find
them to have observed properties consistent with stochastically excited
oscillations, an unexpected result for subdwarf B stars. We discuss our
findings and their impact on subdwarf B asteroseismology.Comment: 50 pages including 17 figures and 10 tables. Accepted for publication
in the Astrophysical Journa
Preparation of Kepler lightcurves for asteroseismic analyses
The Kepler mission is providing photometric data of exquisite quality for the
asteroseismic study of different classes of pulsating stars. These analyses
place particular demands on the pre-processing of the data, over a range of
timescales from minutes to months. Here, we describe processing procedures
developed by the Kepler Asteroseismic Science Consortium (KASC) to prepare
light curves that are optimized for the asteroseismic study of solar-like
oscillating stars in which outliers, jumps and drifts are corrected.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 5 pages, 2 figure
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