22,343 research outputs found
Power supply Patent
Power supply with automatic power factor conversion syste
The magnetic field at milliarcsecond resolution around IRAS20126+4104
IRAS20126+4104 is a well studied B0.5 protostar that is surrounded by a ~1000
au Keplerian disk and is where a large-scale outflow originates. Both 6.7-GHz
CH3OH masers and 22-GHz H2O masers have been detected toward this young stellar
object. The CH3OH masers trace the Keplerian disk, while the H2O masers are
associated with the surface of the conical jet. Recently, observations of dust
polarized emission (350 um) at an angular resolution of 9 arcseconds (~15000
au) have revealed an S-shaped morphology of the magnetic field around
IRAS20126+4104. The observations of polarized maser emissions at milliarcsecond
resolution (~20 au) can make a crucial contribution to understanding the
orientation of the magnetic field close to IRAS20126+4104. This will allow us
to determine whether the magnetic field morphology changes from arcsecond
resolution to milliarcsecond resolution. The European VLBI Network was used to
measure the linear polarization and the Zeeman splitting of the 6.7-GHz CH3OH
masers toward IRAS20126+4104. The NRAO Very Long Baseline Array was used to
measure the linear polarization and the Zeeman splitting of the 22-GHz H2O
masers toward the same region. We detected 26 CH3OH masers and 5 H2O masers at
high angular resolution. Linear polarization emission was observed toward three
CH3OH masers and toward one H2O maser. Significant Zeeman splitting was
measured in one CH3OH maser (\Delta V_{Z}=-9.2 +/- 1.4 m/s). No significant (5
sigma) magnetic field strength was measured using the H2O masers. We found that
in IRAS20126+4104 the rotational energy is less than the magnetic energy.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables, accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysic
EVN observations of 6.7-GHz methanol maser polarization in massive star-forming regions II. First statistical results
Magnetic fields have only recently been included in theoretical simulations
of high-mass star formation. The simulations show that magnetic fields play an
important role in the formation and dynamics of molecular outflows. Masers, in
particular 6.7-GHz CH3OH masers, are the best probes of the magnetic field
morphologies around massive young stellar objects on the smallest scales of
10-100 AU. This paper focuses on 4 massive young stellar objects,
IRAS06058+2138-NIRS1, IRAS22272+6358A, S255-IR, and S231, which complement our
previous 2012 sample (the first EVN group). From all these sources, molecular
outflows have been detected in the past. Seven of the European VLBI Network
antennas were used to measure the linear polarization and Zeeman-splitting of
the 6.7-GHz CH3OH masers in the star-forming regions in this second EVN group.
We detected a total of 128 CH3OH masing cloudlets. Fractional linear
polarization (0.8%-11.3%) was detected towards 18% of the CH3OH masers in our
sample. The linear polarization vectors are well ordered in all the massive
young stellar objects. We measured significant Zeeman-splitting in
IRAS06058+2138-NIRS1 (DVz=3.8+/-0.6 m/s) and S255-IR (DVz=3.2+/-0.7 m/s). By
considering the 20 massive young stellar objects towards which the morphology
of magnetic fields was determined by observing 6.7-GHz CH3OH masers in both
hemispheres, we find no evident correlation between the linear distributions of
CH3OH masers and the outflows or the linear polarization vectors. On the other
hand, we present first statistical evidence that the magnetic field (on scales
10-100 AU) is primarily oriented along the large-scale outflow direction.
Moreover, we empirically find that the linear polarization fraction of
unsaturated CH3OH masers is P_l<4.5%.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, 7 tables, accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysic
Long term monitoring of mode switching for PSR B0329+54
The mode switching phenomenon of PSR B0329+54 is investigated based on the
long-term monitoring from September 2003 to April 2009 made with the Urumqi 25m
radio telescope at 1540 MHz. At that frequency, the change of relative
intensity between the leading and trailing components is the predominant
feature of mode switching. The intensity ratios between the leading and
trailing components are measured for the individual profiles averaged over a
few minutes. It is found that the ratios follow normal distributions, where the
abnormal mode has a wider typical width than the normal mode, indicating that
the abnormal mode is less stable than the normal mode. Our data show that 84.9%
of the time for PSR B0329+54 was in the normal mode and 15.1% was in the
abnormal mode. From the two passages of eight-day quasi-continuous observations
in 2004, and supplemented by the daily data observed with 15 m telescope at 610
MHz at Jodrell Bank Observatory, the intrinsic distributions of mode timescales
are constrained with the Bayesian inference method. It is found that the gamma
distribution with the shape parameter slightly smaller than 1 is favored over
the normal, lognormal and Pareto distributions. The optimal scale parameters of
the gamma distribution is 31.5 minutes for the abnormal mode and 154 minutes
for the normal mode. The shape parameters have very similar values, i.e.
0.75^{+0.22}_{-0.17} for the normal mode and 0.84^{+0.28}_{-0.22} for the
abnormal mode, indicating the physical mechanisms in both modes may be the
same. No long-term modulation of the relative intensity ratios was found for
both the modes, suggesting that the mode switching was stable. The intrinsic
timescale distributions, for the first time constrained for this pulsar,
provide valuable information to understand the physics of mode switching.Comment: 31 pages,12 figures, Accepted by the Ap
On some geometric features of the Kramer interior solution for a rotating perfect fluid
Geometric features (including convexity properties) of an exact interior
gravitational field due to a self-gravitating axisymmetric body of perfect
fluid in stationary, rigid rotation are studied. In spite of the seemingly
non-Newtonian features of the bounding surface for some rotation rates, we
show, by means of a detailed analysis of the three-dimensional spatial
geodesics, that the standard Newtonian convexity properties do hold. A central
role is played by a family of geodesics that are introduced here, and provide a
generalization of the Newtonian straight lines parallel to the axis of
rotation.Comment: LaTeX, 15 pages with 4 Poscript figures. To be published in Classical
and Quantum Gravit
Jamming under tension in polymer crazes
Molecular dynamics simulations are used to study a unique expanded jammed
state. Tension transforms many glassy polymers from a dense glass to a network
of fibrils and voids called a craze. Entanglements between polymers and
interchain friction jam the system after a fixed increase in volume. As in
dense jammed systems, the distribution of forces is exponential, but they are
tensile rather than compressive. The broad distribution of forces has important
implications for fibril breakdown and the ultimate strength of crazes.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Control circuit maintains unity power factor of reactive load
Circuit including feedback control elements automatically corrects the power factor of a reactive load. It maintains power supply efficiency where negative load reactance changes and varies by providing corrective error signals to the control windings of a power supply transformer
Association Between Air Pollution and Low Birth Weight: A Community-Based Study
The relationship between maternal exposure to air pollution during periods of pregnancy (entire and specific periods) and birth weight was investigated in a well-defined cohort. Between 1988 and 1991, all pregnant women living in four residential areas of Beijing were registered and followed from early pregnancy until delivery. Information on individual mothers and infants was collected. Daily air pollution data were obtained independently. The sample for analysis included 74,671 first-parity live births were gestational age 37-44 weeks. Multiple linear regression and logistic regression were used to estimate the effects of air pollution on birth weight and low birth weight (< 2,500 g), adjusting for gestational age, residence, year of birth, maternal age, and infant gender. There was a significant exposure-response relationship between maternal exposures to sulfur dioxide (SO2) and total suspended particles (TSP) during the third trimester of pregnancy and infant birth weight. The adjusted odds ratio for low birth weight was 1.11 (95% CI, 1.06-1.16) for each 100 micrograms/m3 increase in SO2 and 1.10 (95% CI, 1.05-1.14) for each 100 micrograms/m3 increase in TSP. The estimated reduction in birth weight was 7.3 g and 6.9 g for each 100 micrograms/m3 increase in SO2 and in TSP, respectively. The birth weight distribution of the high-exposure group was more skewed toward the left tail (i.e., with higher proportion of births < 2,500 g) than that of the low-exposure group. Although the effects of other unmeasured risk factors cannot be excluded with certainty, our data suggests that TSP and SO2, or a more complex pollution mixture associated with these pollutants, contribute to an excess risk of low birth weight in the Beijing population.National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (ES05947, ES08337); National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (R01 HD32505); Department of Health and Human Services (MCJ-259501, HRSA 5 T32 PE10014
Possible way out of the Hawking paradox: Erasing the information at the horizon
We show that small deviations from spherical symmetry, described by means of
exact solutions to Einstein equations, provide a mechanism to "bleach" the
information about the collapsing body as it falls through the aparent horizon,
thereby resolving the information loss paradox. The resulting picture and its
implication related to the Landauer's principle in the presence of a
gravitational field, is discussed.Comment: 11 pages, Latex. Some comments added to answer to some raised
questions. Typos corected. Final version, to appear in Int. J. Modern. Phys.
Temporal response to harmonic driving in electroconvection
The temporal evolution of the spatially periodic electroconvection (EC)
patterns has been studied within the period of the driving ac voltage by
monitoring the light intensity diffracted from the pattern. Measurements have
been carried out on a variety of nematic systems, including those with negative
dielectric and positive conductivity anisotropy, exhibiting "standard EC"
(s-EC), those with both anisotropies negative exhibiting "non-standard EC"
(ns-EC), as well as those with the two anisotropies positive. Theoretical
predictions have been confirmed for stationary s-EC and ns-EC patterns.
Transitions with Hopf bifurcation have also been studied. While traveling had
no effect on the temporal evolution of dielectric s-EC, traveling conductive
s-EC and ns-EC patterns exhibited a substantially altered temporal behavior
with a dependence on the Hopf frequency. It has also been shown that in
nematics with both anisotropies positive, the pattern develops and decays
within an interval much shorter than the period, even at relatively large
driving frequencies.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure
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