2,217 research outputs found

    Lyman alpha line shapes from electron impact H2 dissociative processes in the Jovian auroral zone

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    Over the past two years several Lyman alpha line profile spectra of Jupiter were obtained using the International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE) telescope. Several different regions of the planet were observed including the auroral zone, the low and mid latitudes, and the equatorial region which includes the Lyman alpha bulge region. These results have presented a very interesting picture of atomic hydrogen on Jupiter with explanations that range from ion outflow in the auroral zone to large thermospheric winds at low and mid latitudes. New data are needed to address the outstanding questions. Almost certainly, high resolution spectra from the Hubble Space Telescope will play a role in new observations. Better data also require better models, and better models require new laboratory data as inputs. The purpose of this program is two-fold: (1) to introduce a method by which new laboratory electron impact measurements of H2 dissociation can be used to calculate both the slow and fast H(S-2) and H(P-2) fragments in an H2 atmosphere; and (2) to determine the predicted Lyman alpha line shape that would result from electron impact production of these dissociative fragments in the Jovian auroral zone

    An updated hydrocarbon photochemical model for the Jovian atmosphere from the troposphere through the homopause: A prelude to Galileo

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    A photochemical model for the atmosphere of Jupiter, including 1-D vertical eddy diffusive transport, was developed. It extends from the upper troposphere through the homopause. The hydrocarbon chemistry involves species containing up to four carbon atoms (and polyynes through C8H2). The calculations show that a large fraction of photochemical carbon may be contained in molecules with more than two carbon atoms. At the tropopause, C2H6 is the major photochemical species and C2H2, C3H8, and C4H10 are of comparable abundance and down from C2H6 by a factor of ten. These species may be detectable with the mass spectrometer of the Galileo Probe. The vertical distributions of the photochemical species are sensitive to the magnitude of eddy diffusive mixing in the troposphere and stratosphere and the details of the interface region

    Impacts of docks on seagrass and effects of management practices to ameliorate these impacts

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    © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. Seagrasses have high conservation and human-use values, but around the world they are being damaged by human activities. Compared to the larger spatial scale at which some human activities affect estuaries and their seagrasses (e.g. catchment disturbance, dredging, pollution, trawling), recreational boating and infrastructure of moorings and docks act at smaller scales. However, the cumulative effects contribute to stresses acting on seagrass beds. This study assessed the effects of docks on the native seagrass Zostera muelleri subsp. capricorni in an estuary in south-east Australia and of current management practices designed to reduce dock impacts on this seagrass. A field survey found that seagrass biomass was significantly reduced below docks, and the effects were not influenced by dock orientation. Management practices requiring the use of a mesh decking to provide greater light penetration reduced, but did not eliminate, the reduction in seagrass biomass caused by docks. A modified beyond BACI experiment provided evidence for a causal link between the installation of wooden or mesh docks and reductions in biomass of seagrass. The reduction in biomass was apparent 6 mo after dock installation, and by 26 mo seagrass biomass had declined by at least 90%. Faced with increasing coastal populations, increases in recreational use, and continued pressures from other human activities, alternative management practices that further minimize the effects of docks are needed

    Latest results on Jovian disk X-rays from XMM-Newton

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    We present the results of a spectral study of the soft X-ray emission (0.2-2.5 keV) from low-latitude (`disk') regions of Jupiter. The data were obtained during two observing campaigns with XMM-Newton in April and November 2003. While the level of the emission remained approximately the same between April and the first half of the November observation, the second part of the latter shows an enhancement by about 40% in the 0.2-2.5 keV flux. A very similar, and apparently correlated increase, in time and scale, was observed in the solar X-ray and EUV flux. The months of October and November 2003 saw a period of particularly intense solar activity, which appears reflected in the behaviour of the soft X-rays from Jupiter's disk. The X-ray spectra, from the XMM-Newton EPIC CCD cameras, are all well fitted by a coronal model with temperatures in the range 0.4-0.5 keV, with additional line emission from Mg XI (1.35 keV) and Si XIII (1.86 keV): these are characteristic lines of solar X-ray spectra at maximum activity and during flares. The XMM-Newton observations lend further support to the theory that Jupiter's disk X-ray emission is controlled by the Sun, and may be produced in large part by scattering, elastic and fluorescent, of solar X-rays in the upper atmosphere of the planet.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in a special issue of Planetary and Space Scienc

    High-Resolution Spectroscopy of Auroras on Jupiter and Saturn/Earth Dayglow

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    The purpose of the grant was to allow the researcher to: (1) reduce and analyze Orbiting and Retrievable Far and Extreme Ultraviolet Spectrometers (ORFEUS) II observations of Jupiter (200s) and Saturn (1200s); (2) Reduce and analyze selected ORFEUS-II Earth Far Ultraviolet (FUV) airglow data; (3) Modify existing scripts for simulating Earth FUV airglow emissions to model a subset of the ORFEUS data

    Specific heat evidence for two-gap superconductivity in ternary-iron silicide Lu2_{2}Fe3_{3}Si5_{5}

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    We report low-temperature specific heat studies on single-crystalline ternary-iron silicide superconductor Lu2_{2}Fe3_{3}Si5_{5} withTcT_c = 6.1 K down to ∼Tc/20\sim T_c/20. We confirm a reduced normalized jump in specific heat at TcT_c, and find that the specific heat divided by temperature C/TC/T shows sudden drop at ∼Tc/5\sim T_c/5 and goes to zero with further decreasing temperature. These results indicate the presence of two distinct superconducting gaps in Lu2_{2}Fe3_{3}Si5_{5}, similar to a typical two-gap superconductor MgB2_{2}. We also report Hall coefficients, band structure calculation, and the anisotropy of upper critical fields for Lu2_{2}Fe3_{3}Si5_{5}, which support the anisotropic multiband nature and reinforce the existence of two superconducting gaps in Lu2_{2}Fe3_{3}Si5_{5}.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure

    Brisbane town in 1829

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