1,198 research outputs found
The impact of urban spatial structure on travel demand in the United States
The authors combine measures of urban form and public transit supply for 114 urbanized areas with the 1990 Nationwide Personal Transportation Survey to address two questions: (1) How do measures of urban form, including city shape, road density, the spatial distribution of population, and jobs-housing balance affect the annual miles driven and commute mode choices of U.S. households? (2) How does the supply of public transportation (annual route miles supplied and availability of transit stops) affect miles driven and commute mode choice? The authors find that jobs-housing balance, population centrality, and rail miles supplied significantly reduce the probability of driving to work in cities with some rail transit. Population centrality and jobs-housing balance have a significant impact on annual household vehicle miles traveled (VMT), as do city shape, road density, and (in rail cities) annual rail route miles supplied. The elasticity of VMT with respect to each variable is small, on the order of 0.10-0.20 in absolute value. However, changing several measures of form simultaneously can reduce annual VMT significantly. Moving the sample households from a city with the characteristics of Atlanta to a city with the characteristics of Boston reduces annual VMT by 25 percent.Housing&Human Habitats,Roads&Highways,Environmental Economics&Policies,Economic Theory&Research,Transport Economics Policy&Planning,Economic Theory&Research,Roads&Highways,Transport Economics Policy&Planning,Geographical Information Systems,Housing&Human Habitats
EUVE J0425.6-5714: A Newly Discovered AM Herculis Star
We detected a new AM Her star serendipitously in a 25 day observation with
the EUVE satellite. A coherent period of 85.82 min is present in the EUVE Deep
Survey imager light curve of this source. A spectroscopic identification is
made with a 19th magnitude blue star that has H and He emission lines, and
broad cyclotron humps typical of a magnetic cataclysmic variable. A lower limit
to the polar magnetic field of 46 MG is estimated from the spacing of the
cyclotron harmonics. EUVE J0425.6-5714 is also detected in archival ROSAT HRI
observations spanning two months, and its stable and highly structured light
curve permits us to fit a coherent ephemeris linking the ROSAT and EUVE data
over a 1.3 yr gap. The derived period is 85.82107 +/- 0.00020 min, and the
ephemeris should be accurate to 0.1 cycles until the year 2005. A narrow but
partial X-ray eclipse suggests that this object belongs to the group of Am Her
stars whose viewing geometry is such that the accretion stream periodically
occults the soft X-ray emitting accretion spot on the surface of the white
dwarf. A non-detection of hard X-rays from ASCA observations that are
contemporaneous with the ROSAT HRI shows that the soft X-rays must dominate by
at least an order of magnitude, which is consistent with a known trend among AM
Her stars with large magnetic field. This object should not be confused with
the Seyfert galaxy 1H 0419-577 (= LB 1727), another X-ray/EUV source which lies
only 4' away, and was the principal target of these monitoring observations.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, to appear in PASP, Dec. 1998 issu
The Shape of Cas A
Based on optical, IR and X-ray studies of Cas A, we propose a geometry for
the remnant based on a "jet-induced" scenario with significant systematic
departures from axial symmetry. In this model, the main jet axis is oriented in
the direction of strong blue-shifted motion at an angle of 110 - 120 degrees
East of North and about 40 - 50 degrees to the East of the line of sight.
Normal to this axis would be an expanding torus as predicted by jet-induced
models. In the proposed geometry, iron-peak elements in the main jet-like flow
could appear "beyond" the portions of the remnant rich in silicon by projection
effects, not the effect of mixing. In the context of the proposed geometry, the
displacement of the compact object from the kinematic center of the remnant at
a position angle of ~169 degrees can be accommodated if the motion of the
compact object is near to, but slightly off from, the direction of the main
"jet" axis by of order 30 degrees. In this model, the classical NE "jet," the
SW "counter-jet" and other protrusions, particularly the "hole" in the North,
are non-asymmetric flows approximately in the equatorial plane, e.g., out
through the perimeter of the expanding torus, rather than being associated with
the main jet. We explore the spoke-like flow in the equatorial plane in terms
of Rayleigh-Taylor, Richtmyer-Meshkov and Kelvin-Helmholz instabilities and
illustrate these instabilities with a jet-induced simulation.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
VLT/FORS2 observations of the optical counterpart of the isolated neutron star RBS 1774
X-ray observations performed with ROSAT led to the discovery of a group
(seven to date) of X-ray dim and radio-silent middle-aged isolated neutron
stars (a.k.a. XDINSs), which are characterised by pure blackbody spectra
(kT~40-100 eV), long X-ray pulsations (P=3-12 s), and appear to be endowed with
relatively high magnetic fields, (B~10d13-14 G). RBS 1774 is one of the few
XDINSs with a candidate optical counterpart, which we discovered with the VLT.
We performed deep observations of RBS 1774 in the R band with the VLT to
disentangle a non-thermal power-law spectrum from a Rayleigh-Jeans, whose
contributions are expected to be very much different in the red part of the
spectrum. We did not detect the RBS 1774 candidate counterpart down to a 3
sigma limiting magnitude of R~27. The constraint on its colour, (B-R)<0.6,
rules out that it is a background object, positionally coincident with the
X-ray source. Our R-band upper limit is consistent with the extrapolation of
the B-band flux (assuming a 3 sigma uncertainty) for a set of power-laws F_nu
~nu^alpha with spectral indeces alpha<0.07. If the optical spectrum of RBS 1774
were non-thermal, its power-law slope would be very much unlike those of all
isolated neutron stars with non-thermal optical emission, suggesting that it is
most likely thermal. For instance, a Rayleigh-Jeans with temperature T_O = 11
eV, for an optically emitting radius r_O=15 km and a source distance d=150 pc,
would be consistent with the optical measurements. The implied low distance is
compatible with the 0.04 X-ray pulsed fraction if either the star spin axis is
nearly aligned with the magnetic axis or with the line of sight, or it is
slightly misaligned with respect to both the magnetic axis and the line of
sight by 5-10 degreesComment: 8 pages, 8 postscript figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy
& Astrophysic
The birthplace and age of the isolated neutron star RX J1856.5-3754
X-ray observations unveiled various types of radio-silent Isolated Neutron
Stars (INSs), phenomenologically very diverse, e.g. the Myr old X-ray Dim INS
(XDINSs) and the kyr old magnetars. Although their phenomenology is much
diverse, the similar periods (P=2--10 s) and magnetic fields (~10^{14} G)
suggest that XDINSs are evolved magnetars, possibly born from similar
populations of supermassive stars. One way to test this hypothesis is to
identify their parental star clusters by extrapolating backward the neutron
star velocity vector in the Galactic potential. By using the information on the
age and space velocity of the XDINS RX J1856.5-3754, we computed backwards its
orbit in the Galactic potential and searched for its parental stellar cluster
by means of a closest approach criterion. We found a very likely association
with the Upper Scorpius OB association, for a neutron star age of 0.42+/-0.08
Myr, a radial velocity V_r^NS =67+/- 13$ km s^{-1}, and a present-time
parallactic distance d_\pi^NS = 123^{+11}_{-15} pc. Our result confirms that
the "true" neutron star age is much lower than the spin-down age (tau_{sd}=3.8
Myrs), and is in good agreement with the cooling age, as computed within
standard cooling scenarios. The mismatch between the spin-down and the
dynamical/cooling age would require either an anomalously large breaking index
(n~20) or a decaying magnetic field with initial value B_0 ~ 10^{14} G.
Unfortunately, owing to the uncertainty on the age of the Upper Scorpius OB
association and the masses of its members we cannot yet draw firm conclusions
on the estimated mass of the RX J1856.5-3754 progenitor.Comment: 6 pages, accepted for publication on Monthly Notices of the Royal
Astronomical Societ
Polarimetry of the Type Ia Supernova SN 1996X
We present broad-band and spectropolarimetry of the Type Ia SN 1996X obtained
on April 14, 1996 (UT), and broad-band polarimetry of SN 1996X on May 22,1996,
when the supernova was about a week before and 4 weeks after optical maximum,
respectively. The Stokes parameters derived from the broad-band polarimetry are
consistent with zero polarization. The spectropolarimetry, however, shows broad
spectral features which are due intrinsically to an asymmetric SN atmosphere.
The spectral features in the flux spectrum and the polarization spectrum show
correlations in the wavelength range from 4900 AA up to 5500 AA. The degree of
this intrinsic component is low (<0.3 %). Theoretical polarization spectra have
been calculated. It is shown that the polarization spectra are governed by line
blending. Consequently, for similar geometrical distortions, the residual
polarization is smaller by about a factor of 2 to 3 compared to the less
blended Type II atmosphere, making it intrinsically harder to detect
asphericities in SNIa. Comparison with theoretical model polarization spectra
shows a resemblance to the observations. Taken literally, this implies an
asphericity of about 11 % in the chemical distribution in the region of partial
burning. This may not imperil the use of Type Ia supernovae as standard candles
for distance determination, but nontheless poses a source of uncertainty. SN
1996X is the first Type Ia supernova for which spectropolarimetry revealed a
polarized component intrinsic to the supernova and the first Type Ia with
spectropolarimetry well prior to optical maximum.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, macros 'aas2pp4.sty,psfig.tex'. LaTeX Style.
Astrophysical Journal Letters, submitted September 199
Solid phase micro extraction for organic contamination control throughout assembly and operational phases of space missions
Space missions concerned with life detection contain highly sensitive instruments for the detection of organics. Terrestrial contamination can interfere with signals of indigenous organics in samples and has the potential to cause false positive biosignature detections, which may lead to incorrect suggestions of the presence of life elsewhere in the Solar System. This study assessed the capability of solid phase micro extraction (SPME) as a method for monitoring organic contamination encountered by spacecraft hardware during assembly and operation. SPME-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (SPME-GC-MS) analysis was performed on potential contaminant source materials, which are commonly used in spacecraft construction. The sensitivity of SPME-GC-MS to organics was assessed in the context of contaminants identified in molecular wipes taken from hardware surfaces on the ExoMars Rosalind Franklin rover. SPME was found to be effective at detecting a wide range of common organic contaminants that include aromatic hydrocarbons, non-aromatic hydrocarbons, nitrogen-containing compounds, alcohols and carbonyls. A notable example of correlation of contaminant with source material was the detection of benzenamine compounds in an epoxy adhesive analyzed by SPME-GC-MS and in the ExoMars rover surface wipe samples. The current form of SPME-GC-MS does not enable quantitative evaluation of contaminants, nor is it suitable for the detection of every group of organic molecules relevant to astrobiological contamination concerns, namely, large and/or polar molecules such as amino acids. However, it nonetheless represents an effective new monitoring method for rapid, easy identification of organic contaminants commonly present on spacecraft hardware and could thus be utilized in future space missions as part of their contamination control and mitigation protocols
V405 Aurigae: A High Magnetic Field Intermediate Polar
Our simultaneous multicolor (UBVRI) circular polarimetry has revealed nearly
sinusoidal variation over the WD spin cycle, and almost symmetric positive and
negative polarization excursions. Maximum amplitudes are observed in the B and
V bands (+-3 %). This is the first time that polarization peaking in the blue
has been discovered in an IP, and suggests that V405 Aur is the highest
magnetic field IP found so far. The polarized flux spectrum is similar to those
found in polars with magnetic fields in the range B ~ 25-50 MG. Our low
resolution circular spectropolarimetry has given evidence of transient features
which can be fitted by cyclotron harmonics n = 6, 7, and 8, at a field of B =
31.5 +- 0.8 MG, consistent with the broad-band polarized flux spectrum. Timings
of the circular polarization zero crossovers put strict upper limits on WD spin
period changes and indicate that the WD in V405 Aur is currently accreting
closely at the spin equilibrium rate, with very long synchronization
timescales, T_s > 10^9 yr. For the observed spin to orbital period ratio,
P_{spin}/P_{orb} = 0.0365, and P_{orb} ~ 4.15 hr, existing numerical accretion
models predict spin equilibrium condition with B ~ 30 MG if the mass ratio of
the binary components is q_1 ~ 0.4. The high magnetic field makes V405 Aur a
likely candidate as a progenitor of a polar.Comment: To appear in The Astrophysical Journal, September 1 Issue (2008), 9
pages, 10 figure
Polars Changing State: Multiwavelength Long Term Photometry and Spectroscopy of QS Tel, V834 Cen, and BL Hyi
Long term optical and near-infrared photometric and blue spectroscopic
observations were obtained for QS Tel, V834 Cen, and BL Hyi. The optical light
curves of all three polars displayed large magnitude changes during our
observations. These same high/low state transitions were also apparent in
near-infrared JHK photometry, though with decreased amplitude. The color of the
polar with respect to its state was examined and found not to be a good
indicator of the instantaneous state. During low to high state transitions, a
nearly constant magnitude difference was observed in all three polars. This
m value was found to be consistent with the level expected to occur if
accretion onto the white dwarf reached the Eddington luminosity during the high
state. The high state Balmer decrement was measured for each star and used to
estimate that the temperature of the emission line forming region was ~12,000K
with N near 12.8 dex. No relationship between the Balmer emission line
strength and the white dwarf magnetic field strength was seen, in contrast to a
good correlation between these two parameters observed for UV emission lines.Comment: 9 figures, 4 tables; accepted for publication in PAS
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