1,003 research outputs found
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Behavior of Explosives Under Pressure in a Diamond Anvil Cell
Diamond anvil cell (DAC) studies can yield information about the pressure dependence of materials and reactions under conditions comparable to shock loading. The pressure gradient across the face of the diamonds is often deliberately minimized to create uniform pressure over much of the sample and a simplified data set. To reach very high pressures (30-40 GPa), however, it may be necessary to use ''softer'', high nitrogen content diamonds that are more susceptible to bending under pressure. The resulting enhanced pressure gradient then provides a view of high-pressure behavior under anisotropic conditions similar to those found at the burn front in a bulk sample. We discuss visual observations of pressure-induced changes relative to variations in burn rate of several explosives (Triaminotrinitrobenzene, Nitromethane, CL-20) in the DAC. The burn rate behavior of both Nitromethane (NM) and Triaminotrinitrobenzene (TATB) were previously reported for pressures up to {approx}40 GPa. Nitromethane showed a near monotonic increase in burn rate to a maximum at {approx}30 GPa after which the burn rate decreased, all without color change. At higher pressures, the TATB samples had shiny (metallic) polycrystalline zones or inclusions where the pressure was highest in the sample. Around the shiny zones was a gradation of color (red to yellow) that appeared to follow the pressure gradient. The color changes are believed related to disturbances in the resonance structure of this explosive as the intermolecular separations decrease with pressure. The color and type of residue found in unvented gaskets after the burn was complete also varied with pressure. The four polymorphs of CL-20 ({alpha}, {beta}, {gamma}, {var_epsilon}-Hexanitrohexaazaisowurtzitane, HNIW) did not change color up to the highest pressure applied ({approx}30 GPa), and each polymorph demonstrated a distinctly different burn rate signature. One polymorph {beta} was so sensitive to laser ignition over a narrow pressure range that the sample could not be aligned with a low power laser without ignition. The burn rate for that one polymorph could only be measured at pressures above and below that unique pressure. This anomalous ignition threshold is discussed with respect to the matrix of possible polymorphs, most of which have not been isolated in the laboratory. The changes in behavior, color and reaction rates of all samples are discussed with respect to possible implications to chemistry at high pressure
KECK HIRES Spectroscopy of APM 08279+5255
With an optical R-band magnitude of 15.2, the recently discovered z=3.911 BAL
quasar APM 08279+5255 is an exceptionally bright high redshift source. Its
brightness has allowed us to acquire a high signal-to-noise ratio (~100), high
resolution (~6 km/s) spectrum using the HIRES echelle spectrograph on the 10-m
Keck I telescope. Given the quality of the data, these observations provide an
unprecedented view of associated and intervening absorption systems. Here we
announce the availability of this spectrum to the general astronomical
community and present a brief analysis of some of its main features.Comment: 21 pages including 5 figures. Accepted for publication by PAS
A spectroscopic study of component C and the extended emission around I Zw 18
Long-slit Keck II, 4m Kitt Peak, and 4.5m MMT spectrophotometric data are
used to investigate the stellar population and the evolutionary status of I Zw
18C, the faint C component of the nearby blue compact dwarf galaxy I Zw 18.
Hydrogen H and H emission lines are detected in the spectra of I
Zw 18C, implying that ionizing massive stars are present. High signal-to-noise
Keck II spectra of different regions in I Zw 18C reveal H, H
and higher order hydrogen lines in absorption. Several techniques are used to
constrain the age of the stellar population in I Zw 18C. Ages derived from two
different methods, one based on the equivalent widths of the H,
H emission lines and the other on H, H absorption lines
are consistent with a 15 Myr instantaneous burst model. We find that a small
extinction in the range = 0.20 -- 0.65 mag is needed to fit the observed
spectral energy distribution of I Zw 18C with that model. In the case of
constant star formation, all observed properties are consistent with stars
forming continuously between ~ 10 Myr and < 100 Myr ago. We use all available
observational constraints for I Zw 18C, including those obtained from Hubble
Space Telescope color-magnitude diagrams, to argue that the distance to I Zw 18
should be as high as ~ 15 Mpc. The deep spectra also reveal extended ionized
gas emission around I Zw 18. H emission is detected as far as 30" from
it. To a B surface brightness limit of ~ 27 mag arcsec we find no
observational evidence for extended stellar emission in the outermost regions,
at distances > 15" from I Zw 18.Comment: 38 pages, 11 Postscript figures, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
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LLNL small-scale drop-hammer impact sensitivity test
Small-scale safety testing of explosives and other energetic materials is done to determine their sensitivity to various stimuli including friction, static spark, and impact. This testing is typically done to discover potential handling problems for either newly synthesized materials of unknown behavior or materials that have been stored for long periods of time. This report describes the existing ``ERL Type 12 Drop Weight Impact Sensitivity Apparatus``, or ``Drop Hammer Machine``, and the methods used to determine the impact sensitivity of energetic materials, Also discussed are changes made to both the machine and methods since the inception of impact sensitivity testing at LLNL in 1956. The accumulated data for the materials tested in not listed here, the exception being the discussion of those specific materials (primary calibrants: PETN, RDX, Comp-B3,and TNT; secondary calibrants: K-6, RX-26-AF, and TATB) used to calibrate the machine
Continuum and Emission Line Strength Relations for a large Active Galactic Nuclei Sample
We report on the analysis of a large sample of 744 type 1 Active Galactic Nuclei, including quasars and Seyfert 1 galaxies across the redshift range from 0 < z < 5 and spanning nearly 6 orders of magnitude in continuum luminosity. We discuss correlations of continuum and emission line properties in the rest-frame ultraviolet and optical spectral ranges. The well established Baldwin Effect is detected for almost all emission lines from OVI1034 to [OIII]5007. Their equivalent widths are significantly anti-correlated with the continuum strength, while they are nearly independent of redshift. This is the well known Baldwin Effect. Its slope beta, measured as log W_lambda ~ beta * log lambda * L_lambda (1450A), shows a tendency to become steeper towards higher luminosity. The slope of the Baldwin Effect also increases with the ionization energy needed to create the individual lines. In contrast to this general trend, the NV1240 equivalent width is nearly independent of continuum luminosity and remains nearly constant. The overall line behaviors are consistent with softer UV continuum shapes and perhaps increasing gas metallicity in more luminous Active Galactic Nuclei
High-Resolution Keck Spectra of the Associated Absorption Lines in 3C 191
Associated absorption lines (AALs) are valuable probes of the gaseous
environments near quasars. Here we discuss high-resolution (6.7 km/s) spectra
of the AALs in the radio-loud quasar 3C 191 (redshift z=1.956). The measured
AALs have ionizations ranging from Mg I to N V, and multi-component profiles
that are blueshifted by ~400 to ~1400 km/s relative to the quasar's broad
emission lines. These data yield the following new results. 1) The density
based on Si II*/Si II lines is ~300 cm-3, implying a distance of ~28 kpc from
the quasar if the gas is photoionized. 2) The characteristic flow time is thus
\~3 x 10^7 yr. 3) Strong Mg I AALs identify neutral gas with very low
ionization parameter and high density. We estimate n_H > 5 x 10^4 cm-3 in this
region, compared to ~15 cm-3 where the N V lines form. 4) The total column
density is N_H < 4 x 10^18 cm-2 in the neutral gas and N_H ~ 2 x 10^20 cm-2 in
the moderately ionized regions. 5) The total mass in the AAL outflow is M ~ 2 x
10^9 Mo, assuming a global covering factor (as viewed from the quasar) of ~10%
>. 6) The absorbing gas only partially covers the background light source(s)
along our line(s) of sight, requiring absorption in small clouds or filaments
<0.01 pc across. The ratio N_H/n_H implies that the clouds have radial (line-
of-sight) thicknesses <0.2 pc. These properties might characterize a sub-class
of AALs that are physically related to quasars but form at large distances. We
propose a model for the absorber in which pockets of dense neutral gas are
surrounded by larger clouds of generally lower density and higher ionization.
This outflowing material might be leftover from a blowout associated with a
nuclear starburst, the onset of quasar activity or a past broad absorption line
(BAL) wind phase.Comment: 15 pages text plus 6 figures, in press with Ap
Moderate-Resolution Spectroscopy of the Lensed Quasar 2237+0305: A search for Ca ii Absorption Due to the Interstellar Medium in the Foreground Lensing Galaxy
The gravitational lens system 2237 + 0305 consists of a low-redshift barred spiral galaxy (z = 0.0394) centered on a more distant quasar (z = 1.695). Because the lensing galaxy is nearly face on, spectroscopy of the background quasar affords a unique opportunity to study the interstellar medium in the galaxy\u27s center and buW:. We report moderate-resolution spectroscopy of QS02237 + 0305 yielding a 3u upper limit of 72 rnA forthe rest equivalent width of Ca II K absorption d);le to gas in the intervening galaxy. Since gas in the Milky Way thick disk typically produces 220 mA Ca II lines along lines of sight at high galactic latitude, while our line of sight to QSO 2237 + 0305 is effectively the weighted mean of four lines of sight, each of which transects an entire halo diameter in the lensing galaxy rather than just a radius, our Ca II upper limit argues against the presence. of such a thick disk near the center of the lensing galaxy. Also, published studies indicate that at 8200 A, QSO 2237 + 0305 suffers roughly 0.5 mag of extinction due to the lensing galaxy. Assuming a normal gas-to-dust ratio and allowing for various sources of uncertainty, this absorption estimate combined with our Ca II Kupper limit implies that calcium is depleted with respect to hydrogen by at least 2.7-3.7 dex, compared to solar abundances. This depletion is similar to the more extreme cases seen in our own galaxy, and higher-dispersion observations may further decrease the upper limit on Ca II absorption
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