237,364 research outputs found
A continuum model for entangled fibres
Motivated by the study of fibre dynamics in the carding machine, a continuum model for the motion of a medium composed of fibres is derived under the assumption that the dominant forces are due to fibre-fibre interactions and that the material is in tension. To characterise the material we include the averaged values of density and velocity and introduce variables to describe the mean direction, alignment and entanglement. We assume that the bulk stress of the material depends on the density, entanglement, degree of alignment, average direction and shear-rates. A kinematic equation for the average direction and two proposed heuristic laws for the evolution of entanglement and degree of alignment are given to close the system. Extensional and shearing simulations are in good qualitative agreement with experimental results
Polarization Structures in the Thomson-Scattered Emission Lines in Active Galactic Nuclei
A line photon incident in an electron-scattering medium is transferred in a
diffusive way both in real space and in frequency space, and the mean number of
scatterings changes as the wavelength shifts from the line center. This leads
to the profile broadening and polarization dependence on the wavelength shift
as a function of the Thomson optical depth . We find that the
polarization of the Thomson-scattered emission lines has a dip around the line
center when does not exceed a few. Various structures such as the
polarization flip are also seen. An application to an ionized halo component
surrounding the broad emission line region in active galactic nuclei is
considered and it is found that the polarization structures may still persist.
Brief discussions on observational implications are given.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
A simulation study on the interactive effects of radiation and plant density on growth of cut chrysanthemum
In the present study, we used a photosynthesis-driven crop growth model to determine acceptable plant densities for cut chrysanthemum throughout the year at different intensities of supplementary light. Dry matter partitioning between leaves, stems, and flowers was simulated as a function of crop developmental stage. Leaf area index was simulated as leaf dry mass multiplied by specific leaf area, the latter being a function of season. Climatic data (hourly global radiation, greenhouse temperature, and CO2 concentration) and initial organ dry mass were model inputs. Assimilation lights were switched on and off based on time and ambient global radiation intensity. Simulated plant fresh mass with supplementary light (49 µmol m-2 s-1) for 52 cultivations (weekly plantings, reference plant densities, and length of the long and short day period) was used as reference plant fresh mass. For four other supplementary light intensities (31, 67, 85, and 104 µmol m-2 s-1), dry matter production was simulated with the reference plant density and length of the long and short day period for each planting week and plant fresh mass was calculated. The acceptable plant density was then calculated as the ratio between plant fresh mass and reference plant fresh mass multiplied by the reference density. Under low natural light intensities, plant density could be increased substantially (>30%) at increased supplementary light intensities, while maintaining the desired plant mass. Simulated light use efficiency (g additional dry mass ¿ MJ-1 additional supplementary light) was higher in winter (4.7) than in summer (3.5), whereas it hardly differed between the supplementary light intensities. This type of simulations can be used to support decisions on the acceptable level of plant density at different intensities of supplementary lighting or lighting strategies and on optimum supplementary light intensities
The Formation of High-Mass Black Holes in Low Mass X-ray Binaries
In this note we suggest that high-mass black holes; i.e., black holes of
several solar masses, can be formed in binaries with low-mass main-sequence
companions, provided that the hydrogen envelope of the massive star is removed
in common envelope evolution which begins only after the massive star has
finished He core burning. That is, the massive star is in the supergiant stage,
which lasts only years, so effects of mass loss by He winds are
small. Since the removal of the hydrogen envelope of the massive star occurs so
late, it evolves essentially as a single star, rather than one in a binary.
Thus, we can use evolutionary calculations of Woosley & Weaver (1995) of single
stars. We find that the black holes in transient sources can be formed from
stars with ZAMS masses in the interval 20-35\msun. The black hole mass is
only slightly smaller than the He core mass, typically \sim 7\msun.Comment: 19 pages, substantial changes, accepted in New Astronom
Evolution and Merging of Binaries with Compact Objects
In the light of recent observations in which short gamma-ray bursts are
interpreted as arising from black-hole(BH), neutron-star(NS) or NS-NS mergings
we would like to review our research on the evolution of compact binaries,
especially those containing NS's. These were carried out with predictions for
LIGO in mind, but are directly applicable to short gamma-ray bursts in the
interpretation above.
Most important in our review is that we show that the standard scenario for
evolving NS-NS binaries always ends up with a low-mass BH (LMBH), NS binary.
Bethe and Brown (1998) showed that this fate could be avoided if the two giants
in the progenitor binary burned He at the same time, and that in this way the
binary could avoid the common envelope evolution of the NS with red giant
companion which sends the first born NS into a BH in the standard scenario. The
burning of He at the same time requires, for the more massive giants such as
the progenitors of the Hulse-Taylor binary NS that the two giants be within 4%
of each other in ZAMS mass. Applying this criterion to all binaries results in
a factor 5 of LMBH-NS binaries as compared with NS-NS binaries.
Our scenario of NS-NS binaries as having been preceded by a double He-star
binary is collecting observational support in terms of the nearly equal NS
masses within a given close binary.Comment: 32 pages, 1 figure, substantial changes from v
A Chemical turnstile
A chemical turnstile is a device for transporting small, well-characterised
doses of atoms from one location to another. A working turnstile has yet to be
built, despite the numerous technological applications available for such a
device. The key difficulty in manufacturing a chemical turnstile is finding a
medium which will trap and transport atoms. Here we propose that ferroelastic
twin walls are suitable for this role. Previous work shows that twin walls can
act as two-dimensional trapping planes within which atomic transport is fast.
We report simulations showing that a stress-induced reorientation of a twin
wall can occur. This behaviour is ideal for chemical turnstile applications.Comment: 2 pages, 3 figure
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