2,927 research outputs found
Relation between dust and radio luminosity in optically selected early type galaxies
We have surveyed an optical/IR selected sample of nearby E/S0 galaxies with
and without nuclear dust structures with the VLA at 3.6 cm to a sensitivity of
100 Jy. We can construct a Radio Luminosity Function (RLF) of these
galaxies to ~10^19 W/Hz and find that ~50% of these galaxies have AGNs at this
level. The space density of these AGNs equals that of starburst galaxies at
this luminosity. Several dust-free galaxies have low luminosity radio cores,
and their RLF is not significantly less than that of the dusty galaxies.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Flight research capabilities of the NASA/Army rotor systems research aircraft
A description is given of the capabilities and limitations of the Rotor Systems Research Aircraft (RSRA) that was demonstrated during the development contract, and assesses the expected research capabilities of the RSRA on delivery to the government
Status of NASA/Army rotorcraft research and development piloted flight simulation
The status of the major NASA/Army capabilities in piloted rotorcraft flight simulation is reviewed. The requirements for research and development piloted simulation are addressed as well as the capabilities and technologies that are currently available or are being developed by NASA and the Army at Ames. The application of revolutionary advances (in visual scene, electronic cockpits, motion, and modelling of interactive mission environments and/or vehicle systems) to the NASA/Army facilities are also addressed. Particular attention is devoted to the major advances made in integrating these individual capabilities into fully integrated simulation environment that were or are being applied to new rotorcraft mission requirements. The specific simulators discussed are the Vertical Motion Simulator and the Crew Station Research and Development Facility
Design of recursive digital filters having specified phase and magnitude characteristics
A method for a computer-aided design of a class of optimum filters, having specifications in the frequency domain of both magnitude and phase, is described. The method, an extension to the work of Steiglitz, uses the Fletcher-Powell algorithm to minimize a weighted squared magnitude and phase criterion. Results using the algorithm for the design of filters having specified phase as well as specified magnitude and phase compromise are presented
Public Preferences and Values for Rural Land Preservation in Florida
This study develops a method to evaluate the influence of local geography on respondents values for land conservation programs. The study employs a choice experiment to evaluate alternative conservation plans. Results indicate that residents local landscapes do matter to the estimated values for such conservation programs. Our results also provide information about the divergence of political and economic jurisdictions for land conservation programs in Florida.Land Economics/Use,
Diamagnetic Phase Transition and Phase Diagrams in Beryllium
The model of diamagnetic phase transition in beryllium which takes into
account the quasi 2-dimensional shape of the Fermi surface of beryllium is
proposed. It explains correctly the recent experimental data on observation of
non-homogeneous phase in beryllium at the conditions of strong dHvA effect when
the strong correlation of electron gas results in instability of homogeneous
phase and formation of Condon domain structure.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Effective Hamiltonian for transition-metal compounds. Application to Na_xCoO_2
We describe a simple scheme to construct a low-energy effective Hamiltonian
H_eff for highly correlated systems containing non-metals like O, P or As (O in
what follows) and a transition-metal (M) as the active part in the electronic
structure, eliminating the O degrees of freedom from a starting Hamiltonian
that contains all M d orbitals and all non-metal p orbitals. We calculate all
interaction terms between d electrons originating from Coulomb repulsion, as a
function of three parameters (F_0, F_2 and F_4) and write them in a basis of
orbitals appropriate for cubic, tetragonal, tetrahedral or hexagonal symmetry
around M. The approach is based on solving exactly (numerically if necessary) a
MO_n cluster containing the transition-metal atom and its n nearest O atoms
(for example a CoO_6 cluster in the case of the cobaltates, or a CuO_n cluster
in the case of the cuprates, in which n depends on the number of apical O
atoms), and mapping them into many-body states of the same symmetry containing
d holes only. We illustrate the procedure for the case of Na_xCoO_2. The
resulting H_eff, including a trigonal distortion D, has been studied recently
and its electronic structure agrees well with angle-resolved photoemission
spectra [A. Bourgeois, A. A. Aligia, and M. J. Rozenberg, Phys. Rev. Lett. 102,
066402 (2009)]. Although H_eff contains only 3d t_2g holes, the highly
correlated states that they represent contain an important amount not only of O
2p holes but also of 3d e_g holes. When more holes are added, a significant
redistribution of charge takes place. As a consequence of these facts, the
resulting values of the effective interactions between t_2g states are smaller
than previously assumed, rendering more important the effect of D in obtaining
only one sheet around the center of the Brillouin zone for the Fermi surface
(without additional pockets).Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in Phys.Rev.
Resolving the Radio Source Background: Deeper Understanding Through Confusion
We used the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) to image one primary beam
area at 3 GHz with 8 arcsec FWHM resolution and 1.0 microJy/beam rms noise near
the pointing center. The P(D) distribution from the central 10 arcmin of this
confusion-limited image constrains the count of discrete sources in the 1 <
S(microJy/beam) < 10 range. At this level the brightness-weighted differential
count S^2 n(S) is converging rapidly, as predicted by evolutionary models in
which the faintest radio sources are star-forming galaxies; and ~96$% of the
background originating in galaxies has been resolved into discrete sources.
About 63% of the radio background is produced by AGNs, and the remaining 37%
comes from star-forming galaxies that obey the far-infrared (FIR) / radio
correlation and account for most of the FIR background at lambda = 160 microns.
Our new data confirm that radio sources powered by AGNs and star formation
evolve at about the same rate, a result consistent with AGN feedback and the
rough correlation of black hole and bulge stellar masses. The confusion at
centimeter wavelengths is low enough that neither the planned SKA nor its
pathfinder ASKAP EMU survey should be confusion limited, and the ultimate
source detection limit imposed by "natural" confusion is < 0.01 microJy at 1.4
GHz. If discrete sources dominate the bright extragalactic background reported
by ARCADE2 at 3.3 GHz, they cannot be located in or near galaxies and most are
< 0.03 microJy at 1.4 GHz.Comment: 28 pages including 16 figures. ApJ accepted for publicatio
RBSC-NVSS Sample. I. Radio and Optical Identifications of a Complete Sample of 1500 Bright X-ray Sources
We cross-identified the ROSAT Bright Source Catalog (RBSC) and the NRAO VLA
Sky Survey (NVSS) to construct the RBSC-NVSS sample of the brightest X-ray
sources (>= 0.1 counts/s or ~1E-12 ergs/cm/cm/s in the 0.1-2.4 keV band) that
are also radio sources (S >= 2.5 mJy at 1.4 GHz) in the 7.8 sr of extragalactic
sky with |b| > 15 degrees. and delta > -40 degrees. The sky density of NVSS
sources is low enough that they can be reliably identified with RBSC sources
having average rms positional uncertainties = 10 arcsec. We used the more
accurate radio positions to make reliable X-ray/radio/optical identifications
down to the POSS plate limits. We obtained optical spectra for many of the
bright identifications lacking published redshifts. The resulting X-ray/radio
sample is unique in its size (N ~ 1500 objects), composition (a mixture of
nearly normal galaxies, Seyfert galaxies, quasars, and clusters), and low
average redshift ( ~ 0.1).Comment: 35 LaTeX pages including 6 eps figures + 40 LaTeX page table2
(landscape) w/ AASTeX 5.0; accepted to ApJ
The higher order C_n dispersion coefficients for the alkali atoms
The van der Waals coefficients, from C_11 through to C_16 resulting from 2nd,
3rd and 4th order perturbation theory are estimated for the alkali (Li, Na, K
and Rb) atoms. The dispersion coefficients are also computed for all possible
combinations of the alkali atoms and hydrogen. The parameters are determined
from sum-rules after diagonalizing the fixed core Hamiltonian in a large basis.
Comparisons of the radial dependence of the C_n/r^n potentials give guidance as
to the radial regions in which the various higher-order terms can be neglected.
It is seen that including terms up to C_10/r^10 results in a dispersion
interaction that is accurate to better than 1 percent whenever the
inter-nuclear spacing is larger than 20 a_0. This level of accuracy is mainly
achieved due to the fortuitous cancellation between the repulsive (C_11, C_13,
C_15) and attractive (C_12, C_14, C_16) dispersion forces.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
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