1,323 research outputs found
Synthesis of the elements in stars: forty years of progress
Forty years ago Burbidge, Burbidge, Fowler, and Hoyle combined what we would now call fragmentary evidence from nuclear physics, stellar evolution and the abundances of elements and isotopes in the solar system as well as a few stars into a synthesis of remarkable ingenuity. Their review provided a foundation for forty years of research in all of the aspects of low energy nuclear experiments and theory, stellar modeling over a wide range of mass and composition, and abundance studies of many hundreds of stars, many of which have shown distinct evidence of the processes suggested by B2FH. In this review we summarize progress in each of these fields with emphasis on the most recent developments
Kinetics of photoinduced ordering in azo-dye films: two-state and diffusion models
We study the kinetics of photoinduced ordering in the azo-dye SD1
photoaligning layers and present the results of modeling performed using two
different phenomenological approaches. A phenomenological two state model is
deduced from the master equation for an ensemble of two-level molecular
systems. Using an alternative approach, we formulate the two-dimensional (2D)
diffusion model as the free energy Fokker-Planck equation simplified for the
limiting regime of purely in-plane reorientation. The models are employed to
interpret the irradiation time dependence of the absorption order parameters
extracted from the available experimental data by using the exact solution to
the light transmission problem for a biaxially anisotropic absorbing layer. The
transient photoinduced structures are found to be biaxially anisotropic whereas
the photosteady and the initial states are uniaxial.Comment: revtex4, 34 pages, 9 figure
Cataclysmic Variables in the First Year of the Zwicky Transient Facility
Using selection criteria based on amplitude, time, and color, we have identified 329 objects as known or candidate cataclysmic variables (CVs) during the first year of testing and operation of the Zwicky Transient Facility. Of these, 90 are previously confirmed CVs, 218 are strong candidates based on the shape and color of their light curves obtained during 3–562 days of observation, and the remaining 21 are possible CVs but with too few data points to be listed as good candidates. Almost half of the strong candidates are within 10 deg of the galactic plane, in contrast to most other large surveys that have avoided crowded fields. The available Gaia parallaxes are consistent with sampling the low mass transfer CVs, as predicted by population models. Our follow-up spectra have confirmed Balmer/helium emission lines in 27 objects, with four showing high-excitation He ii emission, including candidates for an AM CVn, a polar, and an intermediate polar. Our results demonstrate that a complete survey of the Galactic plane is needed to accomplish an accurate determination of the number of CVs existing in the Milky Way
Photoinduced reordering in thin azo-dye films and light-induced reorientation dynamics of nematic liquid-crystal easy axis
We theoretically study the kinetics of photoinduced reordering triggered by
linearly polarized (LP) reorienting light in thin azo-dye films that were
initially illuminated with LP ultraviolet (UV) pumping beam. The process of
reordering is treated as a rotational diffusion of molecules in the light
intensity-dependent mean-field potential. The two dimensional diffusion model
which is based on the free energy rotational Fokker-Planck equation and
describes the regime of in-plane reorientation is generalized to analyze the
dynamics of the azo-dye order parameter tensor at varying polarization azimuth
of the reorienting light. It is found that, in the photosteady state, the
intensity of LP reorienting light determines the scalar order parameter (the
largest eigenvalue of the order parameter tensor), whereas the steady state
orientation of the corresponding eigenvector (the in-plane principal axis)
depends solely on the polarization azimuth. We show that, under certain
conditions, reorientation takes place only if the reorienting light intensity
exceeds its critical value. Such threshold behavior is predicted to occur in
the bistability region provided that the initial principal axis lies in the
polarization plane of reorienting light. The model is used to interpret the
experimental data on the light-induced azimuthal gliding of liquid-crystal easy
axis on photoaligned azo-dye substrates.Comment: 27 pages, 11 fugure
SN 2020jgb: A Peculiar Type Ia Supernova Triggered by a Massive Helium-Shell Detonation in a Star-Forming Galaxy
The detonation of a thin () helium shell
(He-shell) atop a white dwarf (WD) is a promising
mechanism to explain normal Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia), while thicker
He-shells and less massive WDs may explain some recently observed peculiar SNe
Ia. We present observations of SN 2020jgb, a peculiar SN Ia discovered by the
Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF). Near maximum light, SN 2020jgb is slightly
subluminous (ZTF -band absolute magnitude between and
mag depending on the amount of host galaxy extinction) and shows an unusually
red color ( between 0.4 and 0.2 mag) due to
strong line-blanketing blueward of 5000 . These properties
resemble those of SN 2018byg, a peculiar SN Ia consistent with a thick He-shell
double detonation (DDet) SN. Using detailed radiative transfer models, we show
that the optical spectroscopic and photometric evolution of SN 2020jgb are
broadly consistent with a (C/O core + He-shell;
up to depending on the total host extinction)
progenitor ignited by a thick () He-shell. We
detect a prominent absorption feature at 1 in the
near-infrared (NIR) spectrum of SN 2020jgb, which could originate from unburnt
helium in the outermost ejecta. While the sample size is limited, similar 1
features have been detected in all the thick He-shell DDet
candidates with NIR spectra obtained to date. SN 2020jgb is also the first
subluminous, thick He-shell DDet SN discovered in a star-forming galaxy,
indisputably showing that He-shell DDet objects occur in both star-forming and
passive galaxies, consistent with the normal SN Ia population.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures. Updated to accepted version (ApJ
MIGHTEE: multi-wavelength counterparts in the COSMOS field
In this paper we combine the Early Science radio continuum data from the
MeerKAT International GHz Tiered Extragalactic Exploration (MIGHTEE) Survey,
with optical and near-infrared data and release the cross-matched catalogues.
The radio data used in this work covers deg of the COSMOS field,
reaches a thermal noise of Jy/beam and contains radio
components. We visually inspect and cross-match the radio sample with optical
and near-infrared data from the Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) and UltraVISTA surveys.
This allows the properties of active galactic nuclei and star-forming
populations of galaxies to be probed out to . Additionally, we use
the likelihood ratio method to automatically cross-match the radio and optical
catalogues and compare this to the visually cross-matched catalogue. We find
that 94 per cent of our radio source catalogue can be matched with this method,
with a reliability of per cent. We proceed to show that visual
classification will still remain an essential process for the cross-matching of
complex and extended radio sources. In the near future, the MIGHTEE survey will
be expanded in area to cover a total of 20~deg; thus the combination
of automated and visual identification will be critical. We compare redshift
distribution of SFG and AGN to the SKADS and T-RECS simulations and find more
AGN than predicted at .Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Cataclysmic Variables in the First Year of the Zwicky Transient Facility
Using selection criteria based on amplitude, time, and color, we have identified 329 objects as known or candidate cataclysmic variables (CVs) during the first year of testing and operation of the Zwicky Transient Facility. Of these, 90 are previously confirmed CVs, 218 are strong candidates based on the shape and color of their light curves obtained during 3–562 days of observation, and the remaining 21 are possible CVs but with too few data points to be listed as good candidates. Almost half of the strong candidates are within 10 deg of the galactic plane, in contrast to most other large surveys that have avoided crowded fields. The available Gaia parallaxes are consistent with sampling the low mass transfer CVs, as predicted by population models. Our follow-up spectra have confirmed Balmer/helium emission lines in 27 objects, with four showing high-excitation He ii emission, including candidates for an AM CVn, a polar, and an intermediate polar. Our results demonstrate that a complete survey of the Galactic plane is needed to accomplish an accurate determination of the number of CVs existing in the Milky Way
Low Complexity Regularization of Linear Inverse Problems
Inverse problems and regularization theory is a central theme in contemporary
signal processing, where the goal is to reconstruct an unknown signal from
partial indirect, and possibly noisy, measurements of it. A now standard method
for recovering the unknown signal is to solve a convex optimization problem
that enforces some prior knowledge about its structure. This has proved
efficient in many problems routinely encountered in imaging sciences,
statistics and machine learning. This chapter delivers a review of recent
advances in the field where the regularization prior promotes solutions
conforming to some notion of simplicity/low-complexity. These priors encompass
as popular examples sparsity and group sparsity (to capture the compressibility
of natural signals and images), total variation and analysis sparsity (to
promote piecewise regularity), and low-rank (as natural extension of sparsity
to matrix-valued data). Our aim is to provide a unified treatment of all these
regularizations under a single umbrella, namely the theory of partial
smoothness. This framework is very general and accommodates all low-complexity
regularizers just mentioned, as well as many others. Partial smoothness turns
out to be the canonical way to encode low-dimensional models that can be linear
spaces or more general smooth manifolds. This review is intended to serve as a
one stop shop toward the understanding of the theoretical properties of the
so-regularized solutions. It covers a large spectrum including: (i) recovery
guarantees and stability to noise, both in terms of -stability and
model (manifold) identification; (ii) sensitivity analysis to perturbations of
the parameters involved (in particular the observations), with applications to
unbiased risk estimation ; (iii) convergence properties of the forward-backward
proximal splitting scheme, that is particularly well suited to solve the
corresponding large-scale regularized optimization problem
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