288 research outputs found
Stellar archaeology with Gaia: the Galactic white dwarf population
Gaia will identify several 1e5 white dwarfs, most of which will be in the
solar neighborhood at distances of a few hundred parsecs. Ground-based optical
follow-up spectroscopy of this sample of stellar remnants is essential to
unlock the enormous scientific potential it holds for our understanding of
stellar evolution, and the Galactic formation history of both stars and
planets.Comment: Summary of a talk at the 'Multi-Object Spectroscopy in the Next
Decade' conference in La Palma, March 2015, to be published in ASP Conference
Series (editors Ian Skillen & Scott Trager
Detection of filovirus-reactive antibodies in Australian bat species
Bats have been implicated as the reservoir hosts of filoviruses in Africa, with serological evidence of filoviruses in various bat species identified in other countries. Here, serum samples from 190 bats, comprising 12 different species, collected in Australia were evaluated for filovirus antibodies. An in-house indirect microsphere assay to detect antibodies that cross-react with Ebola virus (Zaire ebolavirus; EBOV) nucleoprotein (NP) followed by an immunofluorescence assay (IFA) were used to confirm immunoreactivity to EBOV and Reston virus (Reston ebolavirus; RESTV). We found 27 of 102 Yinpterochiroptera and 19 of 88 Yangochiroptera samples were positive to EBOV NP in the microsphere assay. Further testing of these NP positive samples by IFA revealed nine bat sera that showed binding to ebolavirus-infected cells. This is the first report of filovirus-reactive antibodies detected in Australian bat species and suggests that novel filoviruses may be circulating in Australian bats
Non-linear numerical simulations of magneto-acoustic wave propagation in small-scale flux tubes
We present results of non-linear, 2D, numerical simulations of
magneto-acoustic wave propagation in the photosphere and chromosphere of
small-scale flux tubes with internal structure. Waves with realistic periods of
three to five minutes are studied, after applying horizontal and vertical
oscillatory perturbations to the equilibrium model. Spurious reflections of
shock waves from the upper boundary are minimized thanks to a special boundary
condition. This has allowed us to increase the duration of the simulations and
to make it long enough to perform a statistical analysis of oscillations. The
simulations show that deep horizontal motions of the flux tube generate a slow
(magnetic) mode and a surface mode. These modes are efficiently transformed
into a slow (acoustic) mode in the vA < cS atmosphere. The slow (acoustic) mode
propagates vertically along the field lines, forms shocks and remains always
within the flux tube. It might deposit effectively the energy of the driver
into the chromosphere. When the driver oscillates with a high frequency, above
the cut-off, non-linear wave propagation occurs with the same dominant driver
period at all heights. At low frequencies, below the cut-off, the dominant
period of oscillations changes with height from that of the driver in the
photosphere to its first harmonic (half period) in the chromosphere. Depending
on the period and on the type of the driver, different shock patterns are
observed.Comment: 22 pages 6 color figures, submitted to Solar Physics, proceeding of
SOHO 19/ GONG 2007 meeting, Melbourne, Australi
Structural properties of Pb3Mn7O15 determined from high-resolution synchrotron powder diffraction
We report on the crystallographic structure of the layered compound
Pb3Mn7O15. Previous analysis based on laboratory X-ray data at room temperature
gave contradictory results in terms of the description of the unit cell.
Motivated by recent magnetic bulk measurements of this system, we
re-investigated the chemical structure with high-resolution synchrotron powder
diffraction at temperatures between 15 K and 295 K. Our results show that the
crystal structure of stoichiometric Pb3Mn7O15 has a pronounced 2-dimensional
character and can be described in the orthorhombic space group Pnma.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 2 table
Democracy and governance networks: compatible or not?
The relationship between representative democracy and governance networks is investigated
at a theoretical level. Four conjectures about the relationship are defined. The
incompatibility conjectures rests on the primacy of politics and sees governance networks as a
threat. The complementarity conjecture presents governance networks as a means of enabling
greater participation in the policy process and sensitivity in programme implementation. The
transitional conjecture posits a wider evolution of governance forms towards network
relationships. The instrumental conjecture views governance networks as a powerful means
through which dominant interests can achieve their goals. Illustrative implications for theory
and practice are identified, in relation to power in the policy process, the public interest, and
the role of public managers. The heuristic potential of the conjectures is demonstrated
through the identification of an outline research agenda
Propagating Disturbances in Coronal Loops: A Detailed Analysis of Propagation Speeds
Quasi-periodic disturbances have been observed in the outer solar atmosphere
for many years now. Although first interpreted as upflows (Schrijver et al.
(1999)), they have been widely regarded as slow magnetoacoustic waves, due to
observed velocities and periods. However, recent observations have questioned
this interpretation, as periodic disturbances in Doppler velocity, line width
and profile asymmetry were found to be in phase with the intensity oscillations
(De Pontieu et al. (2010),Tian1 et al. (2011))}, suggesting the disturbances
could be quasi-periodic upflows. Here we conduct a detailed analysis of the
velocities of these disturbances across several wavelengths using the
Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) on board the Solar Dynamics Observatory
(SDO). We analysed 41 examples, including both sunspot and non sunspot regions
of the Sun. We found that the velocities of propagating disturbances (PDs)
located at sunspots are more likely to be temperature dependent, whereas the
velocities of PDs at non sunspot locations do not show a clear temperature
dependence. We also considered on what scale the underlying driver is affecting
the properties of the PDs. Finally, we found that removing the contribution due
to the cooler ions in the 193 A wavelength suggests that a substantial part of
the 193 emission of sunspot PDs can be contributed to the cool component of
193\AA.Comment: 26 Papges, 15 Figure
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Energetic particle influence on the Earth's atmosphere
This manuscript gives an up-to-date and comprehensive overview of the effects of energetic particle precipitation (EPP) onto the whole atmosphere, from the lower thermosphere/mesosphere through the stratosphere and troposphere, to the surface. The paper summarizes the different sources and energies of particles, principally
galactic cosmic rays (GCRs), solar energetic particles (SEPs) and energetic electron precipitation (EEP). All the proposed mechanisms by which EPP can affect the atmosphere
are discussed, including chemical changes in the upper atmosphere and lower thermosphere, chemistry-dynamics feedbacks, the global electric circuit and cloud formation. The role of energetic particles in Earth’s atmosphere is a multi-disciplinary problem that requires expertise from a range of scientific backgrounds. To assist with this synergy, summary tables are provided, which are intended to evaluate the level of current knowledge of the effects of energetic particles on processes in the entire atmosphere
The JCMT Gould Belt Survey: evidence for radiative heating and contamination in the W40 complex
We present SCUBA-2 450 μm and 850 μm observations of the W40 complex in the Serpens-Aquila region as part of the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) Gould Belt Survey (GBS) of nearby star-forming regions. We investigate radiative heating by constructing temperature maps from the ratio of SCUBA-2 fluxes using a fixed dust opacity spectral index, β = 1.8, and a beam convolution kernel to achieve a common 14.8 arcsec resolution. We identify 82 clumps ranging between 10 and 36 K with a mean temperature of 20 ± 3 K. Clump temperature is strongly correlated with proximity to the external OB association and there is no evidence that the embedded protostars significantly heat the dust. We identify 31 clumps that have cores with densities greater than 105cm-3. 13 of these cores contain embedded Class 0/I protostars. Many cores are associated with bright-rimmed clouds seen in Herschel 70 μm images. From JCMT HARP observations of the 12CO 3-2 line, we find contamination of the 850 μm band of up to 20 per cent. We investigate the free-free contribution to SCUBA-2 bands from large-scale and ultracompact HII regions using archival VLA data and find the contribution is limited to individual stars, accounting for 9 per cent of flux per beam at 450 μm or 12 per cent at 850 μm in these cases. We conclude that radiative heating has potentially influenced the formation of stars in the Dust Arc sub-region, favouring Jeans stable clouds in the warm east and fragmentation in the cool west
The global atmospheric electrical circuit and climate
Evidence is emerging for physical links among clouds, global temperatures, the global atmospheric electrical circuit and cosmic ray ionisation. The global circuit extends throughout the atmosphere from the planetary surface to the lower layers of the ionosphere. Cosmic rays are the principal source of atmospheric ions away from the continental boundary layer: the ions formed permit a vertical conduction current to flow in the fair weather part of the global circuit. Through the (inverse) solar modulation of cosmic rays, the resulting columnar ionisation changes may allow the global circuit to convey a solar influence to meteorological phenomena of the lower atmosphere. Electrical effects on non-thunderstorm clouds have been proposed to occur via the ion-assisted formation of ultra-fine aerosol, which can grow to sizes able to act as cloud condensation nuclei, or through the increased ice nucleation capability of charged aerosols. Even small atmospheric electrical modulations on the aerosol size distribution can affect cloud properties and modify the radiative balance of the atmosphere, through changes communicated globally by the atmospheric electrical circuit. Despite a long history of work in related areas of geophysics, the direct and inverse relationships between the global circuit and global climate remain largely quantitatively unexplored. From reviewing atmospheric electrical measurements made over two centuries and possible paleoclimate proxies, global atmospheric electrical circuit variability should be expected on many timescale
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