2,298 research outputs found
General tĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte graphs and Seifert manifolds
TĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte graphs and relative tĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte graphs were introduced by N.
AâCampo in 2010 to model monodromies of isolated plane curves. By recent work of
Fdez de Bobadilla, Pe Pereira and the author, they provide a way of modeling the periodic
mapping classes that leave some boundary component invariant. In this work we introduce
the notion of general tĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte graph and prove that they model all periodic mapping
classes. We also describe algorithms that take a Seifert manifold and a horizontal surface
and return a tĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte graph and vice versa
Mixed tĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte twists as monodromies associated with holomorphic function germs
TĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte graphs were introduced by N. AâCampo in 2010 with the goal of
modeling the monodromy of isolated plane curves. Mixed tĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte graphs provide a
generalization which define mixed tĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte twists, which are pseudo-periodic automorphisms
on surfaces. We characterize the mixed tĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte twists as those pseudo-periodic
automorphisms that have a power which is a product of right-handed Dehn twists around
disjoint simple closed curves, including all boundary components. It follows that the class
of tĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte twists coincides with that of monodromies associated with reduced function
germs on isolated complex surface singularities. Finally, using the language of plumbing
calculus, we relate horizontal open book decompositions of graph manifolds with mixed
tĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte graphs via two algorithms
Direct estimation of electron density in the Orion Bar PDR from mm-wave carbon recombination lines
A significant fraction of the molecular gas in star-forming regions is
irradiated by stellar UV photons. In these environments, the electron density
(n_e) plays a critical role in the gas dynamics, chemistry, and collisional
excitation of certain molecules. We determine n_e in the prototypical strongly
irradiated photodissociation region (PDR), the Orion Bar, from the detection of
new millimeter-wave carbon recombination lines (mmCRLs) and existing far-IR
[13CII] hyperfine line observations. We detect 12 mmCRLs (including alpha,
beta, and gamma transitions) observed with the IRAM 30m telescope, at ~25''
angular resolution, toward the H/H2 dissociation front (DF) of the Bar. We also
present a mmCRL emission cut across the PDR. These lines trace the C+/C/CO gas
transition layer. As the much lower frequency carbon radio recombination lines,
mmCRLs arise from neutral PDR gas and not from ionized gas in the adjacent HII
region. This is readily seen from their narrow line profiles (dv=2.6+/-0.4
km/s) and line peak LSR velocities (v_LSR=+10.7+/-0.2 km/s). Optically thin
[13CII] hyperfine lines and molecular lines - emitted close to the DF by trace
species such as reactive ions CO+ and HOC+ - show the same line profiles. We
use non-LTE excitation models of [13CII] and mmCRLs and derive n_e = 60-100
cm^-3 and T_e = 500-600 K toward the DF. The inferred electron densities are
high, up to an order of magnitude higher than previously thought. They provide
a lower limit to the gas thermal pressure at the PDR edge without using
molecular tracers. We obtain P_th > (2-4)x10^8 cm^-3 K assuming that the
electron abundance is equal or lower than the gas-phase elemental abundance of
carbon. Such elevated thermal pressures leave little room for magnetic pressure
support and agree with a scenario in which the PDR photoevaporates.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A Letters (includes language editor
corrections
ValidaciĂłn experimental de un modelo de mĂșsculo activado de forma artificial
Postprint (published version
Information on activities other than fishing (offshore oil and gas) in the NAFO Convention Area: Implications for the development of the Ecosystem Summary Sheets (Divisions 3LNO and 3M)
Updated available information on activities other than fishing in the NAFO Convention Area - with focus on oil and gas - was collected and summarized from publicly available data sources (e.g. websites and project reports). This information is relevant not only to produce advice on Commission Request #14, but also to the development of the ecosystem summary sheets for Divisions 3LNO and 3M (Commission Request #15). In general, data on geographical location of oil and gas activities is available (including spatial location and technical details of a development project in the Flemish Pass), but information on the adverse impacts of such activities (e.g. routine operations, accidental events, unauthorized discharges, exploratory drilling on VME closed areas, etc.), as well as mitigation measures, is scarce or difficult to obtain. Based on the available information, it is observed that offshore oil and gas activities in NAFO Divs. 3LNM increased in recent years, including drilling activities on NAFO VME closed areas (Areas 2 and 10). Moreover, a number of different types of âincidentsâ have occurred during the period 2015-2020 (e.g. the Hibernia oil spill in 2019, a transboundary incident, in which the oil was extended into the NAFO Regulatory Area).European Unionâs Horizon 2020, No 678760 (ATLAS).Postprint
Deep-sea: Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems in the North Atlantic Ocean: NEREIDA & ECOVUL/ARPA projects
Charla presentada en la DG Mare. European Commission. Directorate General for Maritime Affairs and Fisherie
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