419 research outputs found
Individual and collective behavior of dust particles in a protoplanetary nebula
We study the interaction between gas and dust particles in a protoplanetary
disk, comparing analytical and numerical results. We first calculate
analytically the trajectories of individual particles undergoing gas drag in
the disk, in the asymptotic cases of very small particles (Epstein regime) and
very large particles (Stokes regime). Using a Boltzmann averaging method, we
then infer their collective behavior. We compare the results of this analytical
formulation against numerical computations of a large number of particles.
Using successive moments of the Boltzmann equation, we derive the equivalent
fluid equations for the average motion of the particles; these are
intrinsically different in the Epstein and Stokes regimes. We are also able to
study analytically the temporal evolution of a collection of particles with a
given initial size-distribution provided collisions are ignored.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Ap
Structural and magnetic properties of a series of low doped ZnCoO thin films deposited from Zn and Co metal targets on (0001) AlO substrates
We report on the synthesis of low doping ZnCoO () thin
films on (0001)-AlO substrates. The films were prepared in an oxidizing
atmosphere, using the pulsed laser deposition technique starting from Zn and Co
metallic targets. We first studied the influence of the strains of ZnO and
their stuctural properties. Second, we have investigated the structural and the
magnetic properties of the ZnCoO films. We show that at low doping,
the lattice parameters and the magnetization of the ZnCoO films
depend strongly on the Co concentration.Comment: to be published in Journal Applied Physics (June 2004) as a
proceeding of the MMM/Intermag Conferenc
Wave Forcing of Saturn's Equatorial Oscillation
Ground-based measurements and Cassini data from CIRS thermal-infrared spectra and radio-occultation soundings have characterized the spatial structure and temporal behavior of a 15-year equatorial oscillation in Saturn's stratosphere. The equatorial region displays a vertical pattern of alternating warm and cold anomalies and, concomitantly, easterly and westerly winds relative to the cloud-top winds, with a peak-to-peak amplitude of 200 m/s. Comparison of the Cassini data over a four-year period has established that the pattern of mean zonal winds and temperatures descends at a rate of roughly I scale height over 4 years. This behavior is reminiscent of the equatorial oscillations in Earth's middle atmosphere. Here the zonal-mean spatial structure and descending pattern are driven by the absorption of vertically propagating waves. The maximum excursions in the pattern of easterly and westerly winds is determined by the limits of the zonal phase velocities of the waves. Here we report on the characterization of the waves seen in the temperature profiles retrieved from the Cassini radio-occultation soundings. The equatorial profiles exhibit a complex pattern of wavelike structure with dimensions one pressure scale height and smaller. We combine a spectral decomposition with a WKBJ analysis, where the vertical wavelength is assumed to vary slowly with the ambient static stability and doppler-shifted phase velocity of the wave. Use of the temperature and zonal wind maps from CIRS makes this approach viable. On Earth, the wave forcing associated with the equatorial oscillations generates secondary meridional circulations that affect the mean flow and planetary wave ducting well away from the equator. This may relate to the triggering of the recently reported mid-latitude storms on Saturn
Equatorial Oscillations in Jupiter's and Saturn's Atmospheres
Equatorial oscillations in the zonal-mean temperatures and zonal winds have been well documented in Earth's middle atmosphere. A growing body of evidence from ground-based and Cassini spacecraft observations indicates that such phenomena also occur in the stratospheres of Jupiter and Saturn. Earth-based midinfrared measurements spanning several decades have established that the equatorial stratospheric temperatures on Jupiter vary with a cycle of 4-5 years and on Saturn with a cycle of approximately 15 years. Spectra obtained by the Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) during the Cassini swingby at the end of 2000, with much better vertical resolution than the ground-based data, indicated a series of vertically stacked warm and cold anomalics at Jupiter's equator; a similar structurc was seen at Saturn's equator in CIRS limb measurements made in 2005, in the early phase of Cassini's orbital tour. The thermal wind equation implied similar patterns of mean zonal winds increasing and decreasing with altitude. On Saturn the peak-to-pcak amplitude of this variation was nearly 200 meters per second. The alternating vertical pattern of wanner and colder cquatorial tcmperatures and easterly and westerly tendencies of the zonal winds is seen in Earth's equatorial oscillations, where the pattern descends with time, The Cassini Jupiter and early Saturn observations were snapshots within a limited time interval, and they did not show the temporal evolution of the spatial patterns. However, more recent Saturn observations by CIRS (2010) and Cassini radio-occultation soundings (2009-2010) have provided an opportunity to follow the change of the temperature-zonal wind pattern, and they suggest there is descent, at a rate of roughly one scale height over four years. On Earth, the observed descent in the zonal-mean structure is associated with the absorption of a combination of vertically propagating waves with easlerly and westerly phase velocities. The peak-to-peak zonal wind amplitude in the oscillation pattern and the rate of descent constrain the absorbed wave flux of zonal momentum. On Saturn this is approximately 0.05 square meters per square seconds, which is comparable to if not greater than that associated with the terrestrial oscillations. We discuss possible candidates for the absorbed waves on Saturn. On Earth the wave forcing of the equatorial oscillation generales secondary circulations that can affcct the temperature and wind structure at latitudes well away from the equator, and we discuss possible evidence of that on Saturn
Gap Formation in the Dust Layer of 3D Protoplanetary Disks
We numerically model the evolution of dust in a protoplanetary disk using a
two-phase (gas+dust) Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) code, which is
non-self-gravitating and locally isothermal. The code follows the three
dimensional distribution of dust in a protoplanetary disk as it interacts with
the gas via aerodynamic drag. In this work, we present the evolution of a disk
comprising 1% dust by mass in the presence of an embedded planet for two
different disk configurations: a small, minimum mass solar nebular (MMSN) disk
and a larger, more massive Classical T Tauri star (CTTS) disk. We then vary the
grain size and planetary mass to see how they effect the resulting disk
structure. We find that gap formation is much more rapid and striking in the
dust layer than in the gaseous disk and that a system with a given stellar,
disk and planetary mass will have a different appearance depending on the grain
size and that such differences will be detectable in the millimetre domain with
ALMA. For low mass planets in our MMSN models, a gap can open in the dust disk
while not in the gas disk. We also note that dust accumulates at the external
edge of the planetary gap and speculate that the presence of a planet in the
disk may facilitate the growth of planetesimals in this high density region.Comment: 5 page, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Astrophysics & Space
Scienc
Non-epileptic seizures: delayed diagnosis in patients presenting with electroencephalographic (EEG) or clinical signs of epileptic seizures
AbstractThe clinical differentiation between epileptic seizures (ES) and non-epileptic seizures (NES) is often difficult and mostly based on the presence or absence of widely recognized features of ES such as tongue biting, falling, incontinence or concomitant epileptic abnormalities in the electroencephalogram (EEG). We retrospectively analysed the records of all patients referred to our Epilepsy Centre for refractory epilepsy and finally diagnosed with NES between 1980 and 1999 ( n= 103), half of them also exhibiting ES. The mean time-lapse between first attack and NES diagnosis was 8.7 ± 1.3 years and 16.5 ± 1.4 years for the NES and NES + ES groups respectively. At least one of the usual signs associated with generalized tonic–clonic seizures (tongue biting, falling or incontinence) was reported by 66% and 60% of patients with NES or NES + ES respectively. Interictal EEG abnormalities were recorded in 16% of NES patients vs. 80% of NES + ES patients. In the NES group, delay before establishing the correct diagnosis was significantly longer when the patients exhibited ≥1 symptom(s) of generalized seizures, or when patients exhibited interictal EEG abnormalities. Upon admission, 72% of NES patients and all NES + ES patients were being treated with antiepileptic drugs (AEDs).We conclude that EEG or clinical abnormalities suggestive of epileptic seizures are common in undiagnosed NES patients. Such diagnostic pitfalls, besides considerably delaying NES diagnosis, also considerably delay appropriate treatment implementation
First observation of CO at 345 GHz in the atmosphere of Saturn with the JCMT. New constaints on its origin
International audienceWe have performed the first observation of the CO(3-2) spectral line in the atmosphere of Saturn with the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. We have used a transport model of the atmosphere of Saturn to constrain the origin of the observed CO. The CO line is best-fit when the CO is located at pressures less than (15± 2) mbar with a mixing ratio of (2.5±0.6)×10-8 implying an external origin. By modelling the transport in Saturn's atmosphere, we find that a cometary impact origin with an impact 200-350 years ago is more likely than continuous deposition by interplanetary dust particles (IDP) or local sources (rings/satellites). This result would confirm that comet impacts are relatively frequent and efficient providers of CO to the atmospheres of the outer planets. However, a diffuse and/or local source cannot be rejected, because we did not account for photochemistry of oxygen compounds. Finally, we have derived an upper limit of 1×10-9 on the tropospheric CO mixing ratio
Detection of N15NH+ in L1544
Excess levels of 15N isotopes which have been detected in primitive solar
system materials are explained as a remnant of interstellar chemistry which
took place in regions of the protosolar nebula. Chemical models of nitrogen
fractionation in cold clouds predict an enhancement in the gas-phase abundance
of 15N-bearing molecules, thus we have searched for 15N variants of the N2H+
ion in L1544, which is one of the best candidate sources for detection owing to
its low central core temperature and high CO depletion. With the IRAM 30m
telescope we have obtained deep integrations of the N2H+(1-0) line at 91.2 GHz.
The N2H+(1-0) line has been detected toward the dust emission peak of L1544.
The 14N/15N abundance ratio in N2H+ resulted 446+/-71, very close to the
protosolar value of ~450, higher than the terrestrial ratio of ~270, and
significantly lower than the lower limit in L1544 found by Gerin et al. (2009,
ApJ, 570, L101) in the same object using ammonia isotopologues.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
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