45,888 research outputs found
Chemical abundances in LMC stellar populations. II. The bar sample
This paper compares the chemical evolution of the Large Magellanic Cloud
(LMC) to that of the Milky Way (MW) and investigates the relation between the
bar and the inner disc of the LMC in the context of the formation of the bar.
We obtained high-resolution and mid signal-to-noise ratio spectra with
FLAMES/GIRAFFE at ESO/VLT and performed a detailed chemical analysis of 106 and
58 LMC field red giant stars (mostly older than 1 Gyr), located in the bar and
the disc of the LMC respectively. We measured elemental abundances for O, Mg,
Si, Ca, Ti, Na, Sc, V, Cr, Co, Ni, Cu, Y, Zr, Ba, La and Eu. We find that the
{\alpha}-element ratios [Mg/Fe] and [O/Fe] are lower in the LMC than in the MW
while the LMC has similar [Si/Fe], [Ca/Fe], and [Ti/Fe] to the MW. As for the
heavy elements, [Ba,La/Eu] exhibit a strong increase with increasing
metallicity starting from [Fe/H]=-0.8 dex, and the LMC has lower [Y+Zr/Ba+La]
ratios than the MW. Cu is almost constant over all metallicities and about 0.5
dex lower in the LMC than in the MW. The LMC bar and inner disc exhibit
differences in their [{\alpha}/Fe] (slightly larger scatter for the bar in the
metallicity range [-1,-0.5]), their Eu (the bar trend is above the disc trend
for [Fe/H] > -0.5 dex), their Y and Zr, their Na and their V (offset between
bar and disc distributions). Our results show that the chemical history of the
LMC experienced a strong contribution from type Ia supernovae as well as a
strong s-process enrichment from metal-poor AGB winds. Massive stars made a
smaller contribution to the chemical enrichment compared to the MW. The
observed differences between the bar and the disc speak in favour of an episode
of enhanced star formation a few Gyr ago, occurring in the central parts of the
LMC and leading to the formation of the bar. This is in agreement with recently
derived star formation histories.Comment: 22 pages, 20 figures; Accepted for publication in A&
Weak measurement and control of entanglement generation
In this paper we show how weak joint measurement and local feedback can be
used to control entanglement generation between two qubits. To do this, we make
use of a decoherence free subspace (DFS). Weak measurement and feedback can be
used to drive the system into this subspace rapidly. Once within the subspace,
feedback can generate entanglement rapidly, or turn off entanglement generation
dynamically. We also consider, in the context of weak measurement, some of
differences between purification and generating entanglement
The asymmetric sandwich theorem
We discuss the asymmetric sandwich theorem, a generalization of the
Hahn-Banach theorem. As applications, we derive various results on the
existence of linear functionals that include bivariate, trivariate and
quadrivariate generalizations of the Fenchel duality theorem. Most of the
results are about affine functions defined on convex subsets of vector spaces,
rather than linear functions defined on vector spaces. We consider both results
that use a simple boundedness hypothesis (as in Rockafellar's version of the
Fenchel duality theorem) and also results that use Baire's theorem (as in the
Robinson-Attouch-Brezis version of the Fenchel duality theorem). This paper
also contains some new results about metrizable topological vector spaces that
are not necessarily locally convex.Comment: 17 page
The AMBRE Project: Stellar Parameterisation of the ESO:UVES archived spectra
The AMBRE Project is a collaboration between the European Southern
Observatory (ESO) and the Observatoire de la Cote d'Azur (OCA) that has been
established in order to carry out the determination of stellar atmospheric
parameters for the archived spectra of four ESO spectrographs.
The analysis of the UVES archived spectra for their stellar parameters has
been completed in the third phase of the AMBRE Project. From the complete
ESO:UVES archive dataset that was received covering the period 2000 to 2010,
51921 spectra for the six standard setups were analysed. The AMBRE analysis
pipeline uses the stellar parameterisation algorithm MATISSE to obtain the
stellar atmospheric parameters. The synthetic grid is currently constrained to
FGKM stars only.
Stellar atmospheric parameters are reported for 12,403 of the 51,921 UVES
archived spectra analysed in AMBRE:UVES. This equates to ~23.9% of the sample
and ~3,708 stars. Effective temperature, surface gravity, metallicity and alpha
element to iron ratio abundances are provided for 10,212 spectra (~19.7%),
while at least effective temperature is provided for the remaining 2,191
spectra. Radial velocities are reported for 36,881 (~71.0%) of the analysed
archive spectra. Typical external errors of sigmaTeff~110dex,
sigmalogg~0.18dex, sigma[M/H]~0.13dex, and sigma[alpha/Fe]~0.05dex with some
reported variation between giants and dwarfs and between setups are reported.
UVES is used to observe an extensive collection of stellar and non-stellar
objects all of which have been included in the archived dataset provided to OCA
by ESO. The AMBRE analysis extracts those objects which lie within the FGKM
parameter space of the AMBRE slow rotating synthetic spectra grid. Thus by
homogeneous blind analysis AMBRE has successfully extracted and parameterised
the targeted FGK stars (23.9% of the analysed sample) from within the ESO:UVES
archive.Comment: 19 pages, 16 figures, 11 table
Chiral Hierarchies, Compositeness and the Renormalization Group
A wide class of models involve the fine--tuning of significant hierarchies
between a strong--coupling ``compositeness'' scale, and a low energy dynamical
symmetry breaking scale. We examine the issue of whether such hierarchies are
generally endangered by Coleman--Weinberg instabilities. A careful study using
perturbative two--loop renormalization group methods finds that consistent
large hierarchies are not generally disallowed.Comment: 22 pp + 5 figs (uuencoded and submitted separately),
SSCL-Preprint-490; FERMI-PUB-93/035-
Current activities at IITRI on high- temperature protective coatings
Heat resistant protective coatings for use in liquid propellant rocket engine
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