9,580 research outputs found
Investigation of a liquid-fed water resistojet plume
Measurements of mass flux and flow angle were taken throughout the forward flow region of the exhaust of a liquid-fed water resistojet using a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM). The resistojet operated at a mass flow rate of 0.1 g/s with a power input of 330 Watts. Measured values were compared to theoretical predictions obtained by employing a source flow approximation. Excellent agreement between predicted and measured mass flux values was attained; however, this agreement was highly dependent on knowledge of nozzle flow conditions. Measurements of the temperature at which the exhaust condensed on the QCM were obtained as a function of incident mass flux
Diffraction Analysis of 2-D Pupil Mapping for High-Contrast Imaging
Pupil-mapping is a technique whereby a uniformly-illuminated input pupil,
such as from starlight, can be mapped into a non-uniformly illuminated exit
pupil, such that the image formed from this pupil will have suppressed
sidelobes, many orders of magnitude weaker than classical Airy ring
intensities. Pupil mapping is therefore a candidate technique for coronagraphic
imaging of extrasolar planets around nearby stars. Unlike most other
high-contrast imaging techniques, pupil mapping is lossless and preserves the
full angular resolution of the collecting telescope. So, it could possibly give
the highest signal-to-noise ratio of any proposed single-telescope system for
detecting extrasolar planets. Prior analyses based on pupil-to-pupil
ray-tracing indicate that a planet fainter than 10^{-10} times its parent star,
and as close as about 2 lambda/D, should be detectable. In this paper, we
describe the results of careful diffraction analysis of pupil mapping systems.
These results reveal a serious unresolved issue. Namely, high-contrast pupil
mappings distribute light from very near the edge of the first pupil to a broad
area of the second pupil and this dramatically amplifies diffraction-based edge
effects resulting in a limiting attainable contrast of about 10^{-5}. We hope
that by identifying this problem others will provide a solution.Comment: 23 pages, 13 figures, also posted to
http://www.orfe.princeton.edu/~rvdb/tex/piaaFresnel/ms.pd
First Canadian Record of \u3ci\u3eHexacola Neoscatellae\u3c/i\u3e (Hymenoptera: Figitidae: Eucoilinae), A Parasitoid of the Shore Fly, \u3ci\u3eScatella Stagnalis\u3c/i\u3e
This paper documents the first occurrence of Hexacola neoscatellae, a shore fly parasitoid, in Canada. The discovery of H. neoscatellae is significant because currently there are no suitable biological control agents available for shore fly control to the floriculture industry
Elemental Abundance Ratios in Stars of the Outer Galactic Disk. IV. A New Sample of Open Clusters
We present radial velocities and chemical abundances for nine stars in the
old, distant open clusters Be 18, Be 21, Be 22, Be 32, and PWM 4. For Be 18 and
PWM 4, these are the first chemical abundance measurements. Combining our data
with literature results produces a compilation of some 68 chemical abundance
measurements in 49 unique clusters. For this combined sample, we study the
chemical abundances of open clusters as a function of distance, age, and
metallicity. We confirm that the metallicity gradient in the outer disk is
flatter than the gradient in the vicinity of the solar neighborhood. We also
confirm that the open clusters in the outer disk are metal-poor with
enhancements in the ratios [alpha/Fe] and perhaps [Eu/Fe]. All elements show
negligible or small trends between [X/Fe] and distance (< 0.02 dex/kpc), but
for some elements, there is a hint that the local (RGC < 13 kpc) and distant
(RGC > 13 kpc) samples may have different trends with distance. There is no
evidence for significant abundance trends versus age (< 0.04 dex/Gyr). We
measure the linear relation between [X/Fe] and metallicity, [Fe/H], and find
that the scatter about the mean trend is comparable to the measurement
uncertainties. Comparison with solar neighborhood field giants shows that the
open clusters share similar abundance ratios [X/Fe] at a given metallicity.
While the flattening of the metallicity gradient and enhanced [alpha/Fe] ratios
in the outer disk suggest a different chemical enrichment history to the solar
neighborhood, we echo the sentiments expressed by Friel et al. that definitive
conclusions await homogeneous analyses of larger samples of stars in larger
numbers of clusters. Arguably, our understanding of the evolution of the outer
disk from open clusters is currently limited by systematic abundance
differences between various studies.Comment: Accepted for publication in A
Particle Dark Energy
We explore the physics of a gas of particles interacting with a condensate
that spontaneously breaks Lorentz invariance. The equation of state of this gas
varies from 1/3 to less than -1 and can lead to the observed cosmic
acceleration. The particles are always stable. In our particular class of
models these particles are fermions with a chiral coupling to the condensate.
They may behave as relativistic matter at early times, produce a brief period
where they dominate the expansion with w<0 today, and behave as matter at late
time. There are no small parameters in our models, which generically lead to
dark energy clustering and, depending on the choice of parameters, smoothing of
small scale power.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures; minor update with added refs; version appearing
in Phys. Rev.
Increased HCO production in the outer disk around HD 163296
Three formaldehyde lines were observed (HCO 3--2, HCO
3--2, and HCO 3--2) in the protoplanetary disk
around the Herbig Ae star HD 163296 with ALMA at 0.5 arcsecond (60 AU) spatial
resolution. HCO 3--2 was readily detected via imaging, while
the weaker HCO 3--2 and HCO 3--2 lines
required matched filter analysis to detect. HCO is present throughout most
of the gaseous disk, extending out to 550 AU. An apparent 50 AU inner radius of
the HCO emission is likely caused by an optically thick dust continuum. The
HCO radial intensity profile shows a peak at 100 AU and a secondary bump at
around 300 AU, suggesting increased production in the outer disk. Different
parameterizations of the HCO abundance were compared to the observed
visibilities with minimization, using either a characteristic
temperature, a characteristic radius or a radial power law index to describe
the HCO chemistry. Similar models were applied to ALMA Science Verification
data of CO. In all modeling scenarios, fits to the HCO data show an
increased abundance in the outer disk. The overall best-fit HCO model shows
a factor of two enhancement beyond a radius of 27020 AU, with an inner
abundance of . The HCO emitting region has a lower
limit on the kinetic temperature of K. The CO modeling suggests
an order of magnitude depletion in the outer disk and an abundance of in the inner disk. The increase in HCO outer disk emission
could be a result of hydrogenation of CO ices on dust grains that are then
sublimated via thermal desorption or UV photodesorption, or more efficient
gas-phase production beyond about 300 AU if CO is photodisocciated in this
region
Chemical Abundance Study of One Red Giant Star in NGC 5694 : A Globular Cluster with Dwarf Spheroidals' Chemical Signature?
We report the abundance analysis of one red giant branch star in the
metal-poor outer halo globular cluster NGC 5694. We obtain [Fe/H] = -1.93,
based on the ionized lines, and our metallicity measurement is in good
agreement with previous estimates. We find that [Ca+Ti/2Fe] and [Cu/Fe] of NGC
5694 are about 0.3 -- 0.4 dex lower than other globular clusters with similar
metallicities, but similar to some LMC clusters and stars in some dwarf
spheroidal galaxies. Differences persist, however, in the abundances of neutron
capture elements. The unique chemical abundance pattern and the large
Galactocentric distance (30 kpc) and radial velocity (-138.6 +/- 1.0 km/sec)
indicate that NGC 5694 had an extragalactic origin.Comment: ApJL accepte
Draft Genome Sequence of the Salt Water Bacterium Oceanospirillum linum ATCC 11336T
Oceanospirillum linum ATCC 11336T is an aerobic, bipolar-tufted gammaproteobacterium first isolated in the Long Island Sound in the 1950s. This announcement offers a genome sequence for O. linum ATCC 11336T, which has a predicted genome size of 3,782,189 bp (49.13% G+C content) containing 3,540 genes and 3,361 coding sequences
Genome Sequencing of a Marine Spirillum, Oceanospirillum multiglobuliferum ATCC 33336T, from Japan
Oceanospirillum multiglobuliferum ATCC 33336T is a motile gammaproteobacterium with bipolar tufted flagella, noted for its low salt tolerance compared to other marine spirilla. This strain was originally isolated from the putrid infusions of Crassostrea gigas near Hiroshima, Japan. This paper presents a draft genome sequence for O. multiglobuliferum ATCC 33336T
Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV) Water Landing Simulation
Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV) water splashdowns were simulated in order to find maximum acceleration loads on the astronauts and spacecraft under various landing conditions. The acceleration loads were used in a Dynamic Risk Index (DRI) program to find the potential risk for injury posed on the astronauts for a range of landing conditions. The DRI results showed that greater risks for injury occurred for two landing conditions; when the vertical velocity was large and the contact angle between the spacecraft and the water impact surface was zero, and when the spacecraft was in a toe down configuration and both the vertical and horizontal landing velocities were large. Rollover was also predicted to occur for cases where there is high horizontal velocity and low contact angles in a toe up configuration, and cases where there was a high horizontal velocity with high contact angles in a toe down configuration
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