82,804 research outputs found
Characteristics and classification of A-type supergiants in the Small Magellanic Cloud
We address the relationship between spectral type and physical properties for
A-type supergiants in the SMC. We first construct a self-consistent
classification scheme for A supergiants, employing the calcium K to H epsilon
line ratio as a temperature-sequence discriminant. Following the precepts of
the `MK process', the same morphological criteria are applied to Galactic and
SMC spectra with the understanding there may not be a correspondence in
physical properties between spectral counterparts in different environments. We
then discuss the temperature scale, concluding that A supergiants in the SMC
are systematically cooler than their Galactic counterparts at the same spectral
type, by up to ~10%. Considering the relative line strengths of H gamma and the
CH G-band we extend our study to F and early G-type supergiants, for which
similar effects are found. We note the implications for analyses of
extragalactic luminous supergiants, for the flux-weighted gravity-luminosity
relationship and for population synthesis studies in unresolved stellar
systems.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, accepted by MNRAS; minor section removed prior
to final publicatio
A quantitative analysis of inter-island telephony traffic in the Pacific Basin Region (PBR)
As part of NASA's continuing assessment of future communication satellite requirements, a study was conducted to quantitatively scope current and future telecommunication traffic demand in the South Pacific Archipelagos. This demand was then converted to equivalent satellite transponder capacities. Only inter-island telephony traffic for the Pacific Basin Region was included. The results show that if all this traffic were carried by a satellite system, one-third of a satellite transponder would be needed to satisfy the base-year (1976-1977) requirement and about two-thirds of a satellite transponder would be needed to satisfy the forecasted 1985 requirement
Autoignition test cell Patent
Test chamber for determining decomposition and autoignition of materials used in spacecraft under controlled environmental condition
Adaptive high-order finite element solution of transient elastohydrodynamic lubrication problems
This article presents a new numerical method to solve transient line contact elastohydrodynamic lubrication (EHL) problems. A high-order discontinuous Galerkin (DG) finite element method is used for the spatial discretization, and the standard Crank-Nicolson method is employed to approximate the time derivative. An h-adaptivity method is used for grid adaptation with the time-stepping, and the penalty method is employed to handle the cavitation condition.
The roughness model employed here is a simple indentation, which is located on the upper surface. Numerical results are presented comparing the DG method to standard finite difference (FD) techniques. It is shown that micro-EHL features are captured with far fewer degrees of freedom than when using low-order FD methods
Smilansky's model of irreversible quantum graphs, II: the point spectrum
In the model suggested by Smilansky one studies an operator describing the
interaction between a quantum graph and a system of K one-dimensional
oscillators attached at different points of the graph. This paper is a
continuation of our investigation of the case K>1. For the sake of simplicity
we consider K=2, but our argument applies to the general situation. In this
second paper we apply the variational approach to the study of the point
spectrum.Comment: 18 page
Highly loaded multi-stage fan drive turbine: Leaned stator configuration design
The results of the high lift blade configuration design study are reported. The three-stage constant-inside-diameter turbine utilizes a ten degree tangentially leaned stator in stage three. All other bladerows use plain blades. Analysis of the leaned stator is discussed, and detailed design data are summarized. Steady-state stresses are discussed, and the results of the mechanical design analysis are presented
The VLT-FLAMES Survey of Massive Stars: Observations centered on the Magellanic Cloud clusters NGC 330, NGC 346, NGC 2004, and the N11 region
We present new observations of 470 stars using the Fibre Large Array
Multi-Element Spectrograph (FLAMES) instrument in fields centered on the
clusters NGC 330 and NGC 346 in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), and NGC 2004
and the N11 region in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). A further 14 stars were
observed in the N11 and NGC 330 fields using the Ultraviolet and Visual Echelle
Spectrograph (UVES) for a separate programme. Spectral classifications and
stellar radial velocities are given for each target, with careful attention to
checks for binarity. In particular we have investigated previously unexplored
regions around the central LH9/LH10 complex of N11, finding ~25 new O-type
stars from our spectroscopy. We have observed a relatively large number of
Be-type stars that display permitted Fe II emission lines. These are primarily
not in the cluster cores and appear to be associated with classical Be-type
stars, rather than pre main-sequence objects. The presence of the Fe II
emission, as compared to the equivalent width of H, is not obviously
dependent on metallicity. We have also explored the relative fraction of Be- to
normal B-type stars in the field-regions near to NGC 330 and NGC 2004, finding
no strong evidence of a trend with metallicity when compared to Galactic
results. A consequence of service observations is that we have reasonable
time-sampling in three of our FLAMES fields. We find lower limits to the binary
fraction of O- and early B-type stars of 23 to 36%. One of our targets
(NGC346-013) is especially interesting with a massive, apparently hotter, less
luminous secondary component.Comment: 35 pages, 17 figures (some reduced in size). Replacement copy,
includes an erratum on the final page. A copy with full res. & embedded
figures is at http://www.roe.ac.uk/~cje/flamesMC.ps.g
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