5,743 research outputs found
Optical properties of materials at low temperature and their application to optical detection
A lumped model to represent the photodielectric effect is developed. An analog simulation for a sample in a microwave cavity with a static magnetic field is developed. A system to measure continuously the PDE is analyzed. A performance factor to compared PD detectors versus ac photoconductors is computed. The operating conditions are defined for the appropriate noise conditions. The detectivity of the detector is found to be limited by the semiconductor sample noise
Witnessing the birth of a supermassive protostar
The detection of quasars reveals the existence of supermassive
black holes of a few . One of the potential pathways to
explain their formation in the infant universe is the so-called direct collapse
model which provides massive seeds of . An isothermal
direct collapse mandates that halos should be of a primordial composition and
the formation of molecular hydrogen remains suppressed in the presence of a
strong Lyman Werner flux. In this study, we perform high resolution
cosmological simulations for two massive primordial halos employing a detailed
chemical model which includes cooling as well as realistic opacities
for both the bound-free emission and the Rayleigh scattering of
hydrogen atoms. We are able to resolve the collapse up to unprecedentedly high
densities of and to scales of about AU.
Our results show that the gas cools down to 5000 K in the presence
of cooling, and induces fragmentation at scales of about 8000 AU in
one of the two simulated halos, which may lead to the formation of a binary. In
addition, fragmentation also occurs on the AU scale in one of the halos but the
clumps are expected to merge on short time scales. Our results confirm that
cooling does not prevent the formation of a supermassive star and the
trapping of cooling radiation stabilises the collapse on small scales.Comment: Accpeted version, to appear in MNRAS, comments are still welcome and
high resolution version is available at
http://www2.iap.fr/users/latif/DCBH.pd
Evaluation of School Social Worker Tasks and Activities
The purpose of this study was to ascertain school social workers’ perception of how frequent they provide the activities of the school social workers job description. It was hypothesized that if school social worker is in one school building 100% of the time, they are able to provide all of the services required in the job description. Thirteen schools social workers indicated how frequent they provide services by percentage of time spent on each task. Overall, school social workers provided indirect social work services such as consultation with school personnel and crisis intervention. Those assigned to one building more individual counseling to students while those assigned to two buildings provided more diagnostic services such as home visits for special education assessment and writing special education reports. The priority of services showed overall consultation with school personnel as the highest rank services. For those workers assigned to one school services were spread out evenly among the tasks. For those workers assigned to two buildings consultation had the highest ranking
Experimental Effervescence and Freezing Point Depression Measurements of Nitrogen in Liquid Methane-Ethane Mixtures
NASA is designing an unmanned submarine to explore the depths of the hydrocarbon-rich seas on Saturn's moon Titan. Data from Cassini indicates that the Titan north polar environment sustains stable seas of variable concentrations of ethane, methane, and nitrogen, with a surface temperature near 93 K. The submarine must operate autonomously, study atmosphere/sea exchange, interact with the seabed, hover at the surface or any depth within the sea, and be capable of tolerating variable hydrocarbon compositions. Currently, the main thermal design concern is the effect of effervescence on submarine operation, which affects the ballast system, science instruments, and propellers. Twelve effervescence measurements on various liquid methane-ethane compositions with dissolved gaseous nitrogen are thus presented from 1.5 bar to 4.5 bar at temperatures from 92 K to 96 K to simulate the conditions of the seas. After conducting effervescence measurements, two freezing point depression measurements were conducted. The freezing liquid line was depressed more than 15 K below the triple point temperatures of pure ethane (90.4 K) and pure methane (90.7 K). Experimental effervescence measurements will be used to compare directly with effervescence modeling to determine if changes are required in the design of the thermal management system as well as the propellers
RTG/science instrument radiation interactions for deep space probes, phase 2, 3, and 4
Assessment of interference to scientific instruments onboard RTG powered spacecraft caused by radiation emanating from RTG unit with application to Pioneer F/G space probe
Recommended from our members
Processing of Silicon Carbide by Laser Micro Sintering
Silicon carbide – a solid with covalent bonds - is conventionally synthesized via the Acheson
process. Usually solid bodies of silicon carbide with definite shapes are generated from the
grained material via hot isostatic pressing or liquid phase sintering. Both processes are
conducted under well-controlled temperature regimes. Applying the freeform fabrication
technique “Laser Micro Sintering” poses a big challenge to experimental skill due to the nonequilibrium conditions that are characteristic features of laser material processing.
Successive layers SiC layers with a thickness of 1μm were processed with coherent
radiation of 1064 nm. The specific behavior of two different silicon carbide powders - one of
them blended with additives - are reported along with interpretational approaches.Mechanical Engineerin
How an improved implementation of H2 self-shielding influences the formation of massive stars and black holes
High redshift quasars at z>6 have masses up to ~ M. One of the
pathways to their formation includes direct collapse of gas, forming a
supermassive star, precursor of the black hole seed. The conditions for direct
collapse are more easily achievable in metal-free haloes, where atomic hydrogen
cooling operates and molecular hydrogen (H2) formation is inhibited by a strong
external UV flux. Above a certain value of UV flux (J_crit), the gas in a halo
collapses isothermally at ~ K and provides the conditions for
supermassive star formation. However, H2 can self-shield, reducing the effect
of photodissociation. So far, most numerical studies used the local Jeans
length to calculate the column densities for self-shielding. We implement an
improved method for the determination of column densities in 3D simulations and
analyse its effect on the value of J_crit. This new method captures the gas
geometry and velocity field and enables us to properly determine the
direction-dependent self-shielding factor of H2 against photodissociating
radiation. We find a value of J_crit that is a factor of two smaller than with
the Jeans approach (~2000 J_21 vs. ~4000 J_21). The main reason for this
difference is the strong directional dependence of the H2 column density. With
this lower value of J_crit, the number of haloes exposed to a flux >J_crit is
larger by more than an order of magnitude compared to previous studies. This
may translate into a similar enhancement in the predicted number density of
black hole seeds.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, published in MNRA
Intracapillary leucocyte accumulation as a novel antihaemorrhagic mechanism in acute pancreatitis in mice
Background: Pancreatic infiltration by leucocytes represents a hallmark in acute pancreatitis. Although leucocytes play an active role in the pathophysiology of this disease, the relation between leucocyte activation, microvascular injury and haemorrhage has not been adequately addressed.Methods: We investigated intrapancreatic leucocyte migration, leucocyte extravasation and pancreatic microperfusion in different models of oedematous and necrotising acute pancreatitis in lys-EGFP-ki mice using fluorescent imaging and time-lapse intravital microscopy.Results: In contrast to the current paradigm of leucocyte recruitment, the initial event of leucocyte activation in acute pancreatitis was represented through a dose- and time-dependent occlusion of pancreatic capillaries by intraluminally migrating leucocytes. Intracapillary leucocyte accumulation (ILA) resulted in dense filling of almost all capillaries close to the area of inflammation and preceded transvenular leucocyte extravasation. ILA was also initiated by isolated exposure of the pancreas to interleukin 8 or fMLP, demonstrating the causal role of chemotactic stimuli in the induction of ILA. The onset of intracapillary leucocyte accumulation was strongly inhibited in LFA-1-/- and ICAM-1-/- mice, but not in Mac-1-/- mice. Moreover, prevention of intracapillary leucocyte accumulation led to the development of massive capillary haemorrhages and transformed mild pancreatitis into lethal haemorrhagic disease.Conclusions: ILA represents a novel protective and potentially lifesaving mechanism of haemostasis in acute pancreatitis. This process depends on expression of LFA-1 and ICAM-1 and precedes the classical steps of the leucocyte recruitment cascade
- …