1,096 research outputs found
Energy dependent wavelength of the ion induced nanoscale ripple
Wavelength variation of ion beam induced nanoscale ripple structure has
received much attention recently due to its possible application in
nanotechnology. We present here results of Ar bombarded Si in the energy
range 50 to 140 keV to demonstrate that with beam scanning the ripple
wavelength increases with ion energy and decreases with energy for irradiation
without ion beam scanning. An expression for the energy dependence of ripple
wavelength is proposed taking into simultaneous effect of thermally activated
surface diffusion and ion induced effective surface diffusion.Comment: REVTeX (4 pages), 3 EPS figure
Abundance of Plodia interpunctella (Hubner) and Cadra cautella (Walker) infesting maize stored on South Carolina farms: seasonal and non-seasonal variation
Seasonal trends and short-term fluctuations in abundance of Plodia interpunctella (Hubner) and Cadra cautella (Walker) infesting maize stored on two South Carolina farms were studied during three storage seasons (September 1990–June 1993). Coils of corrugated paper placed on the grain surface were used to trap mature larvae seeking pupation sites. Temperatures in the grain (18-cm-deep) and in the bin headspace were recorded hourly, and grain moisture content was measured weekly. Weekly mean numbers of moth larvae, and adults of two natural enemies, trapped in the coils were used for tracking changes in their abundance over time. The most significant findings were: (1) a seasonal pattern of abundance in both moth species that persisted from farm to farm and year to year, and (2) the coincidence of the highest population levels with the lowest temperatures. With few exceptions, the moth populations increased in the fall, reached their highest levels in winter, and then declined to low levels by early spring. The persistence of this pattern suggests a seasonal regulatory mechanism, with onset of low temperature as the primary initiator of population decline and adversely high temperature as a contributor to its protraction through spring into early summer. This view is supported by our observations of temperature and moth abundance, in conjunction with published information on the biological limitations of the two species. However, other factors, such as predators, parasitoids, and viral infection, may have contributed to the final population collapse. Superimposed upon the seasonal trends were short-term, non-seasonal cycles of abundance with variable periods. Population theory suggests that predation, parasitism, disease, and competition may have produced these cycles
Monitoramento da eficiência de remoção de nitrogênio no tratamento.
Projeto/Plano de Ação: 04.10.00.011
The Extraordinary Infrared Spectrum of NGC 1222 (Mkn 603)
The infrared spectra of starburst galaxies are dominated by the
low-excitation lines of [NeII] and [SIII], and the stellar populations deduced
from these spectra appear to lack stars larger than about 35 Msun. The only
exceptions to this result until now were low metallicity dwarf galaxies. We
report our analysis of the mid-infrared spectra obtained with IRS on Spitzer of
the starburst galaxy NGC 1222 (Mkn 603). NGC 1222 is a large spheroidal galaxy
with a starburst nucleus that is a compact radio and infrared source, and its
infrared emission is dominated by the [NeIII] line. This is the first starburst
of solar or near-solar metallicity, known to us, which is dominated by the
high-excitation lines and which is a likely host of high mass stars. We model
the emission with several different assumptions as to the spatial distibution
of the high- and low-excitation lines and find that the upper mass cutoff in
this galaxy is 40-100 Msun.Comment: accepted, Astronomical Journal. 29 pp, 4 figures. In replacement
version an acknowledgment to NRAO is adde
HD 152246 - a new high-mass triple system and its basic properties
Analyses of multi-epoch, high-resolution (R ~ 50.000) optical spectra of the
O-type star HD 152246 (O9 IV according to the most recent classification),
complemented by a limited number of earlier published radial velocities, led to
the finding that the object is a hierarchical triple system, where a close
inner pair (Ba-Bb) with a slightly eccentric orbit (e = 0.11) and a period of
6.0049 days revolves in a 470-day highly eccentric orbit (e = 0.865) with
another massive and brighter component A. The mass ratio of the inner system
must be low since we were unable to find any traces of the secondary spectrum.
The mass ratio A/(Ba+Bb) is 0.89. The outer system has recently been resolved
using long-baseline interferometry on three occasions. The interferometry
confirms the spectroscopic results and specifies elements of the system. Our
orbital solutions, including the combined radial-velocity and interferometric
solution indicate an orbital inclination of the outer orbit of 112{\deg} and
stellar masses of 20.4 and 22.8 solar masses. We also disentangled the spectra
of components A and Ba and compare them to synthetic spectra from two
independent programmes, TLUSTY and FASTWIND. In either case, the fit was not
satisfactory and we postpone a better determination of the system properties
for a future study, after obtaining observations during the periastron passage
of the outer orbit (the nearest chance being March 2015). For the moment, we
can only conclude that component A is an O9 IV star with v*sin(i) = 210 +\- 10
km/s and effective temperature of 33000 +\- 500 K, while component Ba is an O9
V object with v*sin(i) = 65 +/- 3 km/s and T_eff = 33600 +\- 600 K.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Influência da temperatura na eficiência de um reator com atividade ANAMMOX.
Projeto/Plano de Ação: 04.10.00.011
A multiwavelength study of young massive star forming regions: II. The dust environment
We present observations of 1.2-mm dust continuum emission, made with the
Swedish ESO Submillimeter Telescope, towards eighteen luminous IRAS point
sources, all with colors typical of compact HII regions and associated with
CS(2-1) emission, thought to be representative of young massive star forming
regions. Emission was detected toward all the IRAS objects. We find that the
1.2-mm sources associated with them have distinct physical parameters, namely
sizes of 0.4 pc, dust temperatures of 30 K, masses of 2x10^3 Msun, column
densities of 3x10^23 cm^-2, and densities of 4x10^5 cm^-3. We refer to these
dust structures as massive and dense cores. Most of the 1.2-mm sources show
single-peaked structures, several of which exhibit a bright compact peak
surrounded by a weaker extended envelope. The observed radial intensity
profiles of sources with this type of morphology are well fitted with power-law
intensity profiles with power-law indices in the range 1.0-1.7. This result
indicates that massive and dense cores are centrally condensed, having radial
density profiles with power-law indices in the range 1.5-2.2. We also find that
the UC HII regions detected with ATCA towards the IRAS sources investigated
here (Paper I) are usually projected at the peak position of the 1.2-mm dust
continuum emission, suggesting that massive stars are formed at the center of
the centrally condensed massive and dense cores.Comment: 6 figures, accepted by Ap
Avaliação da perda de eficiência devido ao arraste da biomassa em um reator com atividade
Projeto/Plano de Ação: 05.10.00.011
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