251,637 research outputs found
Mediating exchange bias by Verwey transition in CoO/Fe3O4 thin film
We report the tunability of the exchange bias effect by the first-order
metal-insulator transition (known as the Verwey transition) of Fe3O4 in CoO (5
nm)/Fe3O4 (40 nm)/MgO (001) thin film. In the vicinity of the Verwey
transition, the exchange bias field is substantially enhanced because of a
sharp increase in magnetocrystalline anisotropy constant from high-temperature
cubic to lowtemperature monoclinic structure. Moreover, with respect to the
Fe3O4 (40 nm)/MgO (001) thin film, the coercivity field of the CoO (5 nm)/Fe3O4
(40 nm)/MgO (001) bilayer is greatly increased for all the temperature range,
which would be due to the coupling between Co spins and Fe spins across the
interface
Mass retention efficiencies of He accretion onto carbon-oxygen white dwarfs and type Ia supernovae
Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) play a crucial role in studying cosmology and
galactic chemical evolution. They are thought to be thermonuclear explosions of
carbon-oxygen white dwarfs (CO WDs) when their masses reach the Chandrasekar
mass limit in binaries. Previous studies have suggested that He novae may be
progenitor candidates of SNe Ia. However, the mass retention efficiencies
during He nova outbursts are still uncertain. In this article, we aim to study
the mass retention efficiencies of He nova outbursts and to investigate whether
SNe Ia can be produced through He nova outbursts. Using the stellar evolution
code Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics, we simulated a series of
multicycle He-layer flashes, in which the initial WD masses range from 0.7 to
1.35 Msun with various accretion rates. We obtained the mass retention
efficiencies of He nova outbursts for various initial WD masses, which can be
used in the binary population synthesis studies. In our simulations, He nova
outbursts can increase the mass of the WD to the Chandrasekar mass limit and
the explosive carbon burning can be triggered in the center of the WD; this
suggests that He nova outbursts can produce SNe Ia. Meanwhile, the mass
retention efficiencies in the present work are lower than those of previous
studies, which leads to a lower birthrates of SNe Ia through the WD + He star
channel. Furthermore, we obtained the elemental abundances distribution at the
moment of explosive carbon burning, which can be used as the initial input
parameters in studying explosion models of SNe Ia.Comment: 8 pages, 12 figures, 2 tables, published in Astronomy & Astrophysics
(A&A 604, A31, 2017
NASA Global Atmospheric Sampling Program (GASP) data report for tape VL0014
The data currently available from GASP, including flight routes and dates, instrumentation, data processing procedures, and data tape specifications are described. Measurements of atmospheric ozone, cabin ozine, carbon monoxide, water vapor, particles, clouds, condensation nuclei, filter samples and related meteorological and flight information obtained during 562 flights of aircraft N533PA, N4711U, N655PA, and VH-EBE from October 3, 1977 through January 5, 1978 are reported. Data representing tropopause pressures obtained from time and space interpolation of National Meteorological Center archived data for the dates of the flights are included
Polar codes and polar lattices for the Heegard-Berger problem
Explicit coding schemes are proposed to achieve the rate-distortion function of the Heegard-Berger problem using polar codes. Specifically, a nested polar code construction is employed to achieve the rate-distortion function for doublysymmetric binary sources when the side information may be absent. The nested structure contains two optimal polar codes for lossy source coding and channel coding, respectively. Moreover, a similar nested polar lattice construction is employed when the source and the side information are jointly Gaussian. The proposed polar lattice is constructed by nesting a quantization polar lattice and a capacity-achieving polar lattice for the additive white Gaussian noise channel
The gravity field of topography buried by sediments
The gravity field over topography in the northern Indian Ocean that was completely buried by sediments of the Bengal Fan was investigated to understand the effect of sedimentation on the continental gravity field. An isopach map made from the seismic reflection and refraction in the Bay of Bengal shows two prominent N-S trending features in the basement topography. The northernmost portion of the Ninetyeast Ridge is totally buried by sediments north of 10 deg N. The other buried ridge trends roughly N-S for 1400 km at 85 deg E to the latitude of Sri Lanka and then curves toward the west. It has basement relief up to 6 km. Two free air gravity anomaly profiles across the region show a strong gravity low over the 85 deg E ridge, while the Ninetyeast Ridge shows a gravity high
The acoustic monopole in motion
The results of an experiment are presented in which a small monochromatic source which behaves like an acoustic monopole when stationary is moved at a constant speed over an asphalt surface past stationary microphones. An analysis of the monopole moving above a finite impedance reflecting plane is given. The theoretical and experimental results are compared for different ground to observer heights, source frequencies, and source velocities. A computation of the effects of source acceleration on the noise radiated by the monopole is also presented
A search for a superconducting effect on alpha particle differential energy loss in type 1 superconductors
Superconducting effects on alpha particle differential energy loss in tin, vanadium, and lead superconductor
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