503 research outputs found
Agricultural information and FM radio: acceptability of the combination in Tennessee
The overall objective of this study is to determine as far as possible from the data available whether agriculture has a place in FM broadcasting in Tennessee. This study has, in addition, several specific objectives: (1) to determine what the attitude of FM radio station program directors is in working with Extension subject matter material and Extension agents, (2) to determine what the attitude of Extension agents is in working with FM radio stations, (3) to determine what types of audiences own FM radio receivers and listen to FM radio stations, (4) to determine what Extension has to offer that these audiences might desire; e.g. commercial agricultural information, home economics, gardening, insect control, etc., and (5) to determine if Extension has a role in FM broadcasting and, if so, what is its role
The origin of the spurious iron spread in the globular cluster NGC 3201
NGC 3201 is a globular cluster suspected to have an intrinsic spread in the
iron content. We re-analysed a sample of 21 cluster stars observed with
UVES-FLAMES at the Very Large Telescope and for which Simmerer et al. found a
0.4 dex wide [Fe/H] distribution with a metal-poor tail. We confirmed that when
spectroscopic gravities are adopted, the derived [Fe/H] distribution spans ~0.4
dex. On the other hand, when photometric gravities are used, the metallicity
distribution from Fe I lines remains large, while that derived from Fe II lines
is narrow and compatible with no iron spread. We demonstrate that the
metal-poor component claimed by Simmerer et al. is composed by asymptotic giant
branch stars that could be affected by non local thermodynamical equilibrium
effects driven by iron overionization. This leads to a decrease of the Fe I
abundance, while leaving the Fe II abundance unaltered. A similar finding has
been already found in asymptotic giant branch stars of the globular clusters M5
and 47 Tucanae. We conclude that NGC 3201 is a normal cluster, with no evidence
of intrinsic iron spread.Comment: Accepted for publication by ApJ, 7 pages, 4 figure
Multiple populations in the old and massive Small Magellanic Cloud globular cluster NGC121
We used a combination of optical and near-UV Hubble Space Telescope
photometry and FLAMES/ESO-VLT high-resolution spectroscopy to characterize the
stellar content of the old and massive globular cluster (GC) NGC121 in the
Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). We report on the detection of multiple stellar
populations, the first case in the SMC stellar cluster system. This result
enforces the emerging scenario in which the presence of multiple stellar
populations is a distinctive-feature of old and massive GCs regardless of the
environment, as far as the light element distribution is concerned. We find
that second population (SG) stars are more centrally concentrated than first
(FG) ones. More interestingly, at odds with what typically observed in Galactic
GCs, we find that NGC121 is the only cluster so far to be dominated by FG stars
that account for more than 65% of the total cluster mass. In the framework
where GCs were born with a 90-95% of FG stars, this observational finding would
suggest that either NGC121 experienced a milder stellar mass-loss with respect
to Galactic GCs or it formed a smaller fraction of SG stars.Comment: 25 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables; accepted for publication in Ap
A chemical trompe-l'\oe{}il: no iron spread in the globular cluster M22
We present the analysis of high-resolution spectra obtained with UVES and
UVES-FLAMES at the Very Large Telescope of 17 giants in the globular cluster
M22, a stellar system suspected to have an intrinsic spread in the iron
abundance. We find that when surface gravities are derived spectroscopically
(by imposing to obtain the same iron abundance from FeI and FeII lines) the
[Fe/H] distribution spans ~0.5 dex, according to previous analyses. However,
the gravities obtained in this way correspond to unrealistic low stellar masses
(0.1-0.5 Msun) for most of the surveyed giants. Instead, when photometric
gravities are adopted, the [FeII/H] distribution shows no evidence of spread at
variance with the [FeI/H] distribution. This difference has been recently
observed in other clusters and could be due to non-local thermodynamical
equilibrium effects driven by over-ionization mechanisms, that mainly affect
the neutral species (thus providing lower [FeI/H]) but leave [FeII/H]
unaltered. We confirm that the s-process elements show significant star-to-star
variations and their abundances appear to be correlated with the difference
between [FeI/H] and [FeII/H]. This puzzling finding suggests that the peculiar
chemical composition of some cluster stars may be related to effects able to
spuriously decrease [FeI/H]. We conclude that M22 is a globular cluster with no
evidence of intrinsic iron spread, ruling out that it has retained the
supernovae ejecta in its gravitational potential well.Comment: Accepted for publication to ApJ; 33 pages, 10 figures, 6 table
Intrinsic instability of lean hydrogen/ammonia premixed flames: Influence of Soret effect and pressure
The addition of hydrogen in ammonia/air mixtures can lead to the onset of
intrinsic flame instabilities at conditions of technical relevance. The length
and time scales of intrinsic instabilities can be estimated by means of linear
stability analysis of planar premixed flames by evaluating the dispersion
relation. In this work, we perform such linear stability analysis for
hydrogen-enriched ammonia/air flames (50%H2-50%NH3 by volume) using direct
numerical simulation with a detailed chemical kinetic mechanism. The impact of
pressure and the inclusion of the Soret effect in the governing equations is
assessed by comparing the resulting dispersion relation at atmospheric pressure
and 10 atm. Our data indicate that both pressure and the Soret effects promote
the onset of intrinsic instabilities. Comparisons with available numerical
literature data as well as theoretical models are also discussed
Searching in the dark: the dark mass content of the Milky Way globular clusters NGC288 and NGC6218
We present an observational estimate of the fraction and distribution of dark
mass in the innermost region of the two Galactic globular clusters NGC 6218
(M12) and NGC 288. Such an assessment has been made by comparing the dynamical
and luminous mass profiles derived from an accurate analysis of the most
extensive spectroscopic and photometric surveys performed on these stellar
systems. We find that non-luminous matter constitutes more than 60% of the
total mass in the region probed by our data (R<1.6 arcmin~r_h) in both
clusters. We have carefully analyzed the effects of binaries and tidal heating
on our estimate and ruled out the possibility that our result is a spurious
consequence of these effects. The dark component appears to be more
concentrated than the most massive stars suggesting that it is likely composed
of dark remnants segregated in the cluster core.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication by MNRA
Mitigation of Darrieus-Landau instability effects on turbulent premixed flames
Theoretical considerations on the competition between the most amplified modes for Darrieus-Landau (DL) hydrodynamic instability and turbulence timescales, show that, two extremal regimes can be identified: the instability-dominated and turbulence-dominated regimes. In the latter, also denoted as unified regime, both experiments and numerical simulations give evidence showing how the large scale, cusp-like structures of the flame front surface, typical of DL instability, are hindered by turbulent fluctuations. The result is that quantities such as turbulent flame propagation and front curvature statistics, which in the instability dominated regime are enhanced or modified by the overwhelming presence of hydrodynamic instability, are now mitigated and a unified regime is reached in which the characteristics of DL unstable and stable flame configurations become indistinguishable. In this work we analyze the concealing effects of increasing level of turbulence over the hydrodynamic Darrieus-Landau instability, and we show that, although some global indices such as the skewness of the curvature p.d.f. suggest that a unified regime is reached, others show the persistence of residual differences: in particular, the power spectral density of the flame front curvature. We use both experimental and numerical datasets of stable and unstable (based on linear stability analysis) flames, in conditions ranging from quasi laminar to significantly turbulent regimes
GALA: AN AUTOMATIC TOOL FOR THE ABUNDANCE ANALYSIS OF STELLAR SPECTRA
none5noGALA is a freely distributed Fortran code for automatically deriving the atmospheric parameters (temperature, gravity, microturbulent velocity, and overall metallicity) and abundances for individual species of stellar spectra using the classical method based on the equivalent widths of metallic lines. The abundances of individual spectral lines are derived by using the WIDTH9 code developed by R. L. Kurucz. GALA is designed to obtain the best model atmosphere by optimizing temperature, surface gravity, microturbulent velocity, and metallicity after rejecting the discrepant lines. Finally, it computes accurate internal errors for each atmospheric parameter and abundance. GALA is suitable for analyzing both early- and late-type stars, under the assumption of local thermodynamical equilibrium. The code permits us to obtain chemical abundances and atmospheric parameters for large stellar samples in a very short time, thus making GALA a useful tool in the epoch of multi-object spectrographs and large surveys. An extensive set of tests with both synthetic and observed spectra is performed and discussed to explore the capabilities and robustness of the code.openAlessio Mucciarelli;Elena Pancino;Loredana Lovisi;Francesco R. Ferraro;Emilio LapennaAlessio Mucciarelli;Elena Pancino;Loredana Lovisi;Francesco R. Ferraro;Emilio Lapenn
An efficient modeling framework for wall heat flux prediction in rocket combustion chambers using non adiabatic flamelets and wall-functions
In this work an efficient numerical framework for the prediction of wall heat loads in Liquid Rocket Engine combustion chambers is presented. The proposed framework is based on a new version of the non-adiabatic flamelet model and on wall functions for turbulent boundary layer modeling. Different wall function models are applied to 2D and 3D wall heat flux simulations of an experimental single-element gaseous oxygen-gaseous methane combustor in an Unsteady Reynolds Averaged Navier Stokes context. A systematic analysis and a comprehensive comparison of the selected wall models is carried out. The role of the constant or variable properties assumption on the near-wall turbulent quantities affecting the wall heat flux is assessed and the resulting friction velocity scaling investigated. When the skin friction velocity based on the local turbulent kinetic energy is defined by considering constant properties across the boundary layer, the equilibrium boundary layer assumption is not fulfilled and a significant overestimation of the wall heat flux is observed. Results obtained with the corrected near-wall turbulence modeling, on the other hand, showed a substantial improvement in terms of wall heat flux when compared with both experimental data and higher fidelity simulations results
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