24,968 research outputs found
Light detection instrument Patent
Detection instrument for light emitted from ATP biochemical reactio
Implicit marching solution of compressible viscous subsonic flow in planar and axisymmetric ducts
A new streamwise marching procedure was developed and coded for compressible viscous subsonic flow in planar or axisymmetric ducts with or without centerbodies. The continuity, streamwise momentum, cross-flow momentum, and energy equations are written in generalized orthogonal curvilinear coordinates. To allow the use of a marching procedure, second derivatives in the streamwise momentum equation are written as the sum of a known two dimensional imposed pressure field and an unknown one dimensional viscous correction. For turbulent flow, the Reynolds stress and heat flux terms are modeled using two-layer eddy viscosity turbulence models
Centrifugally Obtained Artificial Gravity
Centrifugally obtained artificial gravity effects on space station crew performanc
The Production of Ti44 and Co60 in Supernova
The production of the radioactive isotopes Ti and Co in all
types of supernovae is examined and compared to observational constraints
including Galactic --ray surveys, measurements of the diffuse 511 keV
radiation, --ray observations of Cas A, the late time light curve of SN
1987A, and isotopic anomalies found in silicon carbide grains in meteorites.
The (revised) line flux from Ti decay in the Cas A supernova remnant
reported by COMPTEL on the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory is near the upper
bound expected from our models. The necessary concurrent ejection of Ni
would also imply that Cas A was a brighter supernova than previously thought
unless extinction in the intervening matter was very large. Thus, if confirmed,
the reported amount of Ti in Cas A provides very interesting constraints
on both the supernova environment and its mechanism. The abundances of
Ti and Co ejected by Type II supernovae are such that
gamma-radiation from Ti decay SN 1987A could be detected by a future
generation of gamma-ray telescopes and that the decay of Co might
provide an interesting contribution to the late time light curve of SN 1987A
and other Type II supernovae. To produce the solar Ca abundance and
satisfy all the observational constraints, nature may prefer at least the
occasional explosion of sub-Chandrasekhar mass white dwarfs as Type Ia
supernovae. Depending on the escape fraction of positrons due to Co made
in all kinds of Type Ia supernovae, a significant fraction of the steady state
diffuse 511 keV emission may arise from the annihilation of positrons produced
during the decay of Ti to Ca. The Ca and Ti isotopic anomalies in
pre-solar grains confirm the production of Ti in supernovae and thatComment: 27 pages including 7 figures. uuencoded, compressed, postscript. in
press Ap
Nuclear Aspects of Nucleosynthesis in Massive Stars
Preliminary results of a new set of stellar evolution and nucleosynthesis
calculations for massive stars are presented. These results were obtained with
an extended reaction network up to Bi. The discussion focuses on the importance
of nuclear rates in pre- and post-explosive nucleosynthesis. The need for
further experiments to study specific reactions and nuclear properties (optical
alpha+nucleus potentials) is emphasized.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures; invited talk, to appear in the Proceedings of the
Int. Conf. "Structure of the Nucleus at the Dawn of the Century", May 2000,
Bologna, Ital
Nucleosynthesis in massive stars revisited
We have performed the first calculations to follow the evolution of all
stable nuclei and their radioactive progenitors in a finely-zoned stellar model
computed from the onset of central hydrogen burning through explosion as a Type
II supernova. Calculations were done for 15, 20, and 25 solar masses Pop I
stars using the most recently available set of experimental and theoretical
nuclear data, revised opacity tables, and taking into account mass loss due to
stellar winds. Here results are presented for one 15 solar masses model.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure; needs espcrc1.sty; talk at "Nuclei in the Cosmos
2000", Aarhus, Denmark, June 2000; will appear in Nucl. Phys.
Controlled Manipulation of Individual Vortices in a Superconductor
We report controlled local manipulation of single vortices by low temperature
magnetic force microscope (MFM) in a thin film of superconducting Nb. We are
able to position the vortices in arbitrary configurations and to measure the
distribution of local depinning forces. This technique opens up new
possibilities for the characterization and use of vortices in superconductors
Universality in one-dimensional fermions at finite temperature: Density, pressure, compressibility, and contact
We present finite-temperature, lattice Monte Carlo calculations of the
particle number density, compressibility, pressure, and Tan's contact of an
unpolarized system of short-range, attractively interacting spin-1/2 fermions
in one spatial dimension, i.e., the Gaudin-Yang model. In addition, we compute
the second-order virial coefficients for the pressure and the contact, both of
which are in excellent agreement with the lattice results in the low-fugacity
regime. Our calculations yield universal predictions for ultracold atomic
systems with broad resonances in highly constrained traps. We cover a wide
range of couplings and temperatures and find results that support the existence
of a strong-coupling regime in which the thermodynamics of the system is
markedly different from the noninteracting case. We compare and contrast our
results with identical systems in higher dimensions.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures; improved, published versio
Off-lattice Monte Carlo Simulation of Supramolecular Polymer Architectures
We introduce an efficient, scalable Monte Carlo algorithm to simulate
cross-linked architectures of freely-jointed and discrete worm-like chains.
Bond movement is based on the discrete tractrix construction, which effects
conformational changes that exactly preserve fixed-length constraints of all
bonds. The algorithm reproduces known end-to-end distance distributions for
simple, analytically tractable systems of cross-linked stiff and freely jointed
polymers flawlessly, and is used to determine the effective persistence length
of short bundles of semi-flexible worm-like chains, cross-linked to each other.
It reveals a possible regulatory mechanism in bundled networks: the effective
persistence of bundles is controlled by the linker density.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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