463 research outputs found
Thematic Issue on the Hydrological Effects of the Vegetation-Soil Complex
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
The Fate of a WD Accreting H-Rich Material at High Rates
We study C/O white dwarfs with masses of 1.0 to 1.4 Msun accreting
solar-composition material at very high accretion rates. We address the secular
changes in the WDs, and in particular, the question whether accretion and the
thermonuclear runaways result is net accretion or erosion. The present
calculation is unique in that it follows a large number of cycles, thus
revealing the secular evolution of the WD system.
We find that counter to previous studies, accretion does not give rise to
steady state burning. Instead, it produces cyclic thermonuclear runaways of two
types. During most of the evolution, many small cycles of hydrogen ignition and
burning build a helium layer over the surface of the white dwarf. This He layer
gradually thickens and progressively becomes more degenerate. Once a sufficient
amount of He has accumulated, several very large helium burning flashes take
place and expel the accreted envelope, leaving no net mass accumulation.
The results imply that such a system will not undergo an accretion induced
collapse, nor will it lead to a SN Type Ia, unless a major new physical process
is found.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, submitted to MNRA
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A single "stopwatch" for duration estimation, A single "ruler" for size
Although observers can discriminate visual targets with long exposures from otherwise-identical targets with shorter exposures, temporally overlapping distracters with an intermediate exposure can produce a striking degradation in performance. This new finding suggests that observers can only estimate one duration at a time. Discrimination on the basis of size, rather than duration, did not degrade as rapidly with the number of distracters but was still worse than predicted by unlimited-capacity models. The critical difference between estimates of temporal length and estimates of spatial length seems to be that the former can only be made at the end of an exposure, while the latter can be made at any time during an exposure. When sizes varied throughout the trial and decisions were based on terminal sizes, the set-size effect was as large as that obtained for duration discrimination. We conclude that when textural filters are not available for segregating a target from distracters, efficient estimates of size or duration require the serial examination of individual display items
THE SENSITIVITY OF THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT TO CHANGES IN THE CONCENTRATION OF GASES IN PLANETARY ATMOSPHERES
We present a radiative transfer model for Earth-Like-Planets (ELP). The model allows the assessment of the effect of a change in the concentration of an atmospheric component, especially a greenhouse gas (GHG), on the surface temperature of a planet. The model is based on the separation between the contribution of the short wavelength molecular absorption and the long wavelength one. A unique feature of the model is the condition of energy conservation at every point in the atmosphere. The radiative transfer equation is solved in the two stream approximation without assuming the existence of an LTE in any wavelength range. The model allows us to solve the Simpson paradox, whereby the greenhouse effect (GHE) has no temperature limit. On the contrary, we show that the temperature saturates, and its value depends primarily on the distance of the planet from the central star. We also show how the relative humidity affects the surface temperature of a planet and explain why the effect is smaller than the one derived when the above assumptions are neglected
Long term evolution of an interacting binary system
We describe a new code to simulate the stellar evolution of a close
interacting binary system. It is then used to calculate the evolution of a
classical nova system composed of a 1.25 Msun Main-Sequence (MS) star and a 1.0
Msun white dwarf (WD) companion. The system begins as a well separated
non-interacting binary system. Initially, the two stars evolve independently of
each other. However, Roche lobe overflow begins as the MS star expands on its
way to become a Red Giant. We follow the mass accreted onto the WD and the
ensuing nuclear runaways for several thousand flashes. The main finding is that
the Roche-Lobe mass transfer rate is modulated by oscillations in the MS star,
with a period that is somewhat shorter than the thermal time scale of the star.
This periodically modulates the rate of thermonuclear flashes on the WD,
between once every 12000 yrs, such that the WD can cool, to once every 300 yrs,
such that it cannot. The system is further complicated by the secular drift in
the secondary modulation. Such secondary modulation could explain systems like
T Pyxidis. Last, we find that the overall process of mass gain by the WD has an
efficiency of roughly 9%, thus requiring a donor with an initial mass of larger
than about 5 Msun MS for an initial 1 Msun WD, if the WD is to reach the
Chandrasekhar mass.Comment: submitted to MNRA
Stable isotopic evidence in support of active microbial methane cycling in low-temperature diffuse flow vents at 9°50’N East Pacific Rise
Author Posting. © Elsevier B.V., 2008. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 72 (2008): 2005-2023, doi:10.1016/j.gca.2008.01.025.A unique dataset from paired low- and high-temperature vents at 9°50’N East Pacific Rise
provides insight into the microbiological activity in low-temperature diffuse fluids. The stable
carbon isotopic composition of CH4 and CO2 in 9°50’N hydrothermal fluids indicates microbial
methane production, perhaps coupled with microbial methane consumption. Diffuse fluids are
depleted in 13C by ~10‰ in values of δ13C of CH4, and by ~0.55‰ in values of δ13C of CO2,
relative to the values of the high-temperature source fluid (δ13C of CH4 = -20.1 ± 1.2‰, δ13C of
CO2 = -4.08 ± 0.15‰). Mixing of seawater or thermogenic sources cannot account for the
depletions in 13C of both CH4 and CO2 at diffuse vents relative to adjacent high-temperature
vents. The substrate utilization and 13C fractionation associated with the microbiological
processes of methanogenesis and methane oxidation can explain observed steady-state CH4 and
CO2 concentrations and carbon isotopic compositions. A mass-isotope numerical box-model of
these paired vent systems is consistent with the hypothesis that microbial methane cycling is
active at diffuse vents at 9°50’N. The detectable 13C modification of fluid geochemistry by
microbial metabolisms may provide a useful tool for detecting active methanogenesis.This work was supported
by NSF grants from the division of Ocean Science’s MG&G and RIDGE programs
The State Be7 in the Core of the Sun and the Solar Neutrino Flux
The exact ionization state of Be7 in the solar core is crucial for the
precise prediction of the solar B8 neutrino flux. We therefore examine the
effect of pressure ionization on the ionization state of Be7 and all elements
with 12 >= Z >= 4. We show that under the conditions prevailing in the solar
core, one has to consider the effect of the nearest neighbor on the electronic
structure of a given ion. To this goal, we first solve the Schroedinger and
then the Kohn-Sham equations for an ion immersed in a dense plasma under
conditions for which the mean interparticle distance is smaller than the Debye
radius. The question of which boundary conditions should be imposed on the wave
function is discussed, examined and found to be crucial.
Contrary to previous estimates showing that Beryllium is partially ionized,
we find that it is fully ionized. As a consequence, the predicted rate of the
Be7 + e- reaction is reduced by 20-30%, depending on the exact solar model.
Since Be7 is a trace element, its total production is controlled by the
unchanged He4+He3 reaction rate, and its destruction is determined by the rate
of electron capture. As the latter rate decreases when the Beryllium is fully
ionized (relative to the case of partially ionized Be), the estimate for the
abundance of Be7 increases and with it the B8 neutrino flux. The increase in
phi_nu(B8) is by about 20-30%. The neutrino flux due to Be7 electron capture
remains effectively unchanged because the change in the rate is compensated for
by a change in the abundance. Hence the prediction for the ratio of phi_nu(B8)
/ phi_nu(Be7) changes as well.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures. Submitted to MNRA
The Maximal Runaway Temperature of Earth-like Planets
We generalize the problem of the semi-gray model to cases in which a
non-negligible fraction of the stellar radiation falls on the long-wavelength
range, and/or that the planetary long-wavelength emission penetrates into the
transparent short wavelength domain of the absorption.
Second, applying the most general assumptions and independently of any
particular properties of an absorber, we show that the greenhouse effect
saturates and any Earth-like planet has a maximal temperature which depends on
the type of and distance to its main-sequence star, its albedo and the primary
atmospheric components which determine the cutoff frequency below which the
atmosphere is optically thick. For example, a hypothetical convection-less
planet similar to Venus, that is optically thin in the visible, could have at
most a surface temperature of 1200-1300K irrespective of the nature of the
greenhouse gas.
We show that two primary mechanisms are responsible for the saturation of the
runaway greenhouse effect, depending on the value of the wavelength above which
the atmosphere becomes optically thick. Unless this wavelength is small and
resides in the optical region, saturation is achieved by radiating the thermal
flux of the planet through the short wavelength tail of the thermal
distribution. This has the observational implication, the radiation from such a
planet should be skewed towards the NIR. Otherwise, saturation takes place by
radiating through windows in the FIR.Comment: 13 pages 14 figure
Effect of the sphingosine kinase 1 selective inhibitor, PF-543 on arterial and cardiac remodeling in a hypoxic model of pulmonary arterial hypertension
Recent studies have demonstrated that the expression of sphingosine kinase 1, the enzyme that catalyses formation of the bioactive lipid, sphingosine 1-phosphate, is increased in lungs from patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension. In addition, Sk1-/- mice are protected from hypoxic-induced pulmonary arterial hypertension. Therefore, we assessed the effect of the sphingosine kinase 1 selective inhibitor, PF-543 and a sphingosine kinase 1/ceramide synthase inhibitor, RB-005 on pulmonary and cardiac remodeling in a mouse hypoxic model of pulmonary arterial hypertension. Administration of the potent sphingosine kinase 1 inhibitor, PF-543 in a mouse hypoxic model of pulmonary hypertension had no effect on vascular remodeling but reduced right ventricular hypertrophy. The latter was associated with a significant reduction in cardiomyocyte death. The protection involves a reduction in the expression of p53 (that promotes cardiomyocyte death) and an increase in the expression of anti-oxidant nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 (Nrf-2). In contrast, RB-005 lacked effects on right ventricular hypertrophy, suggesting that SK1 inhibition might be nullified by concurrent inhibition of ceramide synthase. Therefore, our findings with PF-543 suggest an important role for SK1 in the development of hypertrophy in PAH
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