5,607 research outputs found

    Low delta-V near-Earth asteroids: A survey of suitable targets for space missions

    Full text link
    In the last decades Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) have become very important targets to study, since they can give us clues to the formation, evolution and composition of the Solar System. In addition, they may represent either a threat to humankind, or a repository of extraterrestrial resources for suitable space-borne missions. Within this framework, the choice of next-generation mission targets and the characterisation of a potential threat to our planet deserve special attention. To date, only a small part of the 11,000 discovered NEOs have been physically characterised. From ground and space-based observations one can determine some basic physical properties of these objects using visible and infrared spectroscopy. We present data for 13 objects observed with different telescopes around the world (NASA-IRTF, ESO-NTT, TNG) in the 0.4 - 2.5 um spectral range, within the NEOSURFACE survey (http://www.oa-roma.inaf.it/planet/NEOSurface.html). Objects are chosen from among the more accessible for a rendez-vous mission. All of them are characterised by a delta-V (the change in velocity needed for transferring a spacecraft from low-Earth orbit to rendez-vous with NEOs) lower than 10.5 km/s, well below the Solar System escape velocity (12.3 km/s). We taxonomically classify 9 of these objects for the first time. 11 objects belong to the S-complex taxonomy; the other 2 belong to the C-complex. We constrain the surface composition of these objects by comparing their spectra with meteorites from the RELAB database. We also compute olivine and pyroxene mineralogy for asteroids with a clear evidence of pyroxene bands. Mineralogy confirms the similarity with the already found H, L or LL ordinary chondrite analogues.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, to be published in A&A Minor changes by language edito

    1.4 GHz polarimetric observations of the two fields imaged by the DASI experiment

    Get PDF
    We present results of polarization observations at 1.4 GHz of the two fields imaged by the DASI experiment (α=23h30m\alpha = 23^{\rm h} 30^{\rm m}, δ=55\delta = -55^{\circ} and α=00h30m\alpha = 00^{\rm h} 30^{\rm m}, δ=55\delta = -55^{\circ}, respectively). Data were taken with the Australia Telescope Compact Array with 3.4 arcmin resolution and 0.18\sim 0.18 mJy beam1^{-1} sensitivity. The emission is dominated by point sources and we do not find evidence for diffuse synchrotron radiation even after source subtraction. This allows to estimate an upper limit of the diffuse polarized emission. The extrapolation to 30 GHz suggests that the synchrotron radiation is lower than the polarized signal measured by the DASI experiment by at least 2 orders of magnitude. This further supports the conclusions drawn by the DASI team itself about the negligible Galactic foreground contamination in their data set, improving by a factor 5\sim 5 the upper limit estimated by Leitch et al. (2005). The dominant point source emission allows us to estimate the contamination of the CMB by extragalactic foregrounds. We computed the power spectrum of their contribution and its extrapolation to 30 GHz provides a framework where the CMB signal should dominate. However, our results do not match the conclusions of the DASI team about the negligibility of point source contamination, suggesting to take into account a source subtraction from the DASI data.Comment: 7 pages, six figures, submitted to MNRA

    Short Range Ising Spin Glasses: a critical exponent study

    Full text link
    The critical properties of short-range Ising spin-glass models, defined on a diamond hierarchical lattice of graph fractal dimension df=2.58d_{f}=2.58, 3, and 4, and scaling factor 2 are studied via a method based on the Migdal-Kadanoff renormalization-group scheme. The order parameter critical exponent β\beta is directly estimated from the data of the local Edwards- Anderson (EA) order parameter, obtained through an exact recursion procedure. The scaling of the EA order parameter, leading to estimates of the ν\nu exponent of the correlation length is also performed. Four distinct initial distributions of the quenched coupling constants (Gaussian, bimodal, uniform and exponential) are considered. Deviations from a universal behaviour are observed and analysed in the framework of the renormalized flow in a two dimensional appropriate parameter space.Comment: 9 pages, 01 figure (ps

    A polarized synchrotron template for CMBP experiments after WMAP data

    Full text link
    We build template maps for the polarized Galactic--synchrotron emission on large angular scales (FWHM =~7^\circ), in the 20-90 GHz microwave range, by using WMAP data. The method, presented in a recent work, requires a synchrotron total intensity survey and the {\it polarization horizon} to model the polarized intensity and a starlight polarization map to model polarization angles. The basic template is obtained directly at 23 GHz with about 94% sky--coverage by using the synchrotron map released by the WMAP team. Extrapolations to 32, 60 and 90 GHz are performed by computing a synchrotron spectral index map, which strongly reduces previous uncertainties in passing from low (1.4 GHz) to microwave frequencies. Differing from low frequency data, none of our templates presents relevant structures out of the Galactic Plane. Our map at 90 GHz suggests that the synchrotron emission at high Galactic latitudes is low enough to allow a robust detection of the EE--mode component of the cosmological signal on large--scale, even in models with low--reionization (τ=0.05\tau = 0.05). Detection of the weaker BB--mode on the largest scales (<10\ell < 10) might be jeopardized unless the value τ=0.17\tau = 0.17 found by WMAP is confirmed, and T/S>0.1T/S > 0.1. For lower levels of the gravitational--wave background the BB--mode seems to be accessible only at the 100\ell \sim 100 peak and in selected low--synchrotron emission areas.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figures, accepted for pubblications by MNRAS. For a version with full resolution color figures see http://sp0rt.bo.iasf.cnr.it:8080/Docs/Public/papers.ph

    Efeito da correção do solo e adubação potássica sobre a produção de matéria seca da alfafa sob pastejo e a ocorrência de plantas daninhas.

    Get PDF
    bitstream/item/29223/1/Circular67.pdfISSN 1981-208

    Realistic Simulations of the Galactic Polarized Foreground: Consequences for 21-cm Reionization Detection Experiments

    Get PDF
    Experiments designed to measure the redshifted 21~cm line from the Epoch of Reionization (EoR) are challenged by strong astrophysical foreground contamination, ionospheric distortions, complex instrumental response and other different types of noise (e.g. radio frequency interference). The astrophysical foregrounds are dominated by diffuse synchrotron emission from our Galaxy. Here we present a simulation of the Galactic emission used as a foreground module for the LOFAR- EoR key science project end-to-end simulations. The simulation produces total and polarized intensity over 10×1010^\circ \times 10^\circ maps of the Galactic synchrotron and free-free emission, including all observed characteristics of the emission: spatial fluctuations of amplitude and spectral index of the synchrotron emission, together with Faraday rotation effects. The importance of these simulations arise from the fact that the Galactic polarized emission could behave in a manner similar to the EoR signal along the frequency direction. As a consequence, an improper instrumental calibration will give rise to leakages of the polarized to the total signal and mask the desired EoR signal. In this paper we address this for the first time through realistic simulations.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, published in MNRA
    corecore