50,506 research outputs found
Summary of 1978 Southeastern Virginia Urban Plume study: Aircraft results for carbon monoxide, methane, nonmethane hydrocarbons, and ozone
The characteristics of the Southeastern Virginia urban plume were defined with emphasis on the photon-oxidant species. The measurement area was a rectangle, approximately 150 km by 100 km centered around Cape Charles, Virginia. Included in this area are the cities of Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Newport News, and Hampton. The area is bounded on the north by Wallops Island, Virginia, and on the south by the Hampton Roads area of Tidewater Virginia. The major axis of the rectangle is oriented in the southwest-northeast direction. The data set includes aircraft measurements for carbon monoxide, methane, nonmethane hydrocarbons, and ozone. The experiment shows that CO can be successfully measured as a tracer gas and used as an index for determining localized and urban plumes. The 1978 data base provided sufficient data to assess an automated chromatograph with flame ionization detection used for measuring methane and nonmethane hydrocarbons in flight
Helioseismic Ring Analysis of CME Source Regions
We apply the ring diagram technique to source regions of halo coronal mass
ejections (CMEs) to study changes in acoustic mode parameters before, during,
and after the onset of CMEs. We find that CME regions associated with a low
value of magnetic flux have line widths smaller than the quiet regions implying
a longer life-time for the oscillation modes. We suggest that this criterion
may be used to forecast the active regions which may trigger CMEs.Comment: Accepted for publication in J. Astrophys. Astr. Also available at
http://www2.nso.edu/staff/sushant/paper.htm
Lambda-Cold Dark Matter, Stellar Feedback, and the Galactic Halo Abundance Pattern
(Abridged) The hierarchical formation scenario for the stellar halo requires
the accretion and disruption of dwarf galaxies, yet low-metallicity halo stars
are enriched in alpha-elements compared to similar, low-metallicity stars in
dwarf spheroidal (dSph) galaxies. We address this primary challenge for the
hierarchical formation scenario for the stellar halo by combining chemical
evolution modelling with cosmologically-motivated mass accretion histories for
the Milky Way dark halo and its satellites. We demonstrate that stellar halo
and dwarf galaxy abundance patterns can be explained naturally within the LCDM
framework. Our solution relies fundamentally on the LCDM model prediction that
the majority of the stars in the stellar halo were formed within a few
relatively massive, ~5 x 10^10 Msun, dwarf irregular (dIrr)-size dark matter
halos, which were accreted and destroyed ~10 Gyr in the past. These systems
necessarily have short-lived, rapid star formation histories, are enriched
primarily by Type II supernovae, and host stars with enhanced [a/Fe]
abundances. In contrast, dwarf spheroidal galaxies exist within low-mass dark
matter hosts of ~10^9 Msun, where supernovae winds are important in setting the
intermediate [a/Fe] ratios observed. Our model includes enrichment from Type Ia
and Type II supernovae as well as stellar winds, and includes a
physically-motivated supernovae feedback prescription calibrated to reproduce
the local dwarf galaxy stellar mass - metallicity relation. We use
representative examples of the type of dark matter halos we expect to host a
destroyed ``stellar halo progenitor'' dwarf, a surviving dIrr, and a surviving
dSph galaxy, and show that their derived abundance patterns, stellar masses,
and gas masses are consistent with those observed for each type of system.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, version accepted by Ap
Saddles in the energy landscape: extensivity and thermodynamic formalism
We formally extend the energy landscape approach for the thermodynamics of
liquids to account for saddle points. By considering the extensive nature of
macroscopic potential energies, we derive the scaling behavior of saddles with
system size, as well as several approximations for the properties of low-order
saddles (i.e., those with only a few unstable directions). We then cast the
canonical partition function in a saddle-explicit form and develop, for the
first time, a rigorous energy landscape approach capable of reproducing trends
observed in simulations, in particular the temperature dependence of the energy
and fractional order of sampled saddles.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Kinematical & Chemical Characteristics of the Thin and Thick Disks
I discuss how the chemical abundance distributions, kinematics and age
distributions of stars in the thin and thick disks of the Galaxy can be used to
decipher the merger history of the Milky Way, a typical large galaxy. The
observational evidence points to a rather quiescent past merging history,
unusual in the context of the `consensus' cold-dark-matter cosmology favoured
from observations of structure on scales larger than individual galaxies.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures; review at IAU Symposium 254, `The Galaxy Disk in
Cosmological Context', Copenhagen, June 2008, eds J. Andersen, J.
Bland-Hawthorn & B. Nordstro
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