7,819 research outputs found
Manual control theory applied to air traffic controller-pilot cooperation
Reduced runway separation standards are among the means which have been proposed for increasing airport capacity. The probability of a blunder will dominate the calculation of safe separation standards. Then the determinant of safe system performance will be the system reaction time comprised of the air traffic controller's detection, decision and communication delays, and the response times of the pilot and aircraft in executing a collision avoidance manuever. Estimates of these times, based on existing data, show that the delays ascribable to the human portions of the man-machine system are comparatively unimportant. New developments in radar, computers, and data links will be required to provide any substantial improvement of the existing system, and the goal of 2500 ft of separation may not be achievable
X-ray monitoring of classical novae in the central region of M31. III. Autumn and winter 2009/10, 2010/11 and 2011/12
[Abridged] Classical novae (CNe) represent the major class of supersoft X-ray
sources (SSSs) in the central region of our neighbouring galaxy M31. We
performed a dedicated monitoring of the M31 central region, aimed to detect SSS
counterparts of CNe, with XMM-Newton and Chandra between Nov and Mar of the
years 2009/10, 2010/11 and 2011/12. In total we detected 24 novae in X-rays.
Seven of these sources were known from previous observations, including the M31
nova with the longest SSS phase, M31N~1996-08b, which was found to fade below
our X-ray detection limit 13.8 yr after outburst. Of the new discoveries
several novae exhibit significant variability in their short-term X-ray light
curves with one object showing a suspected period of about 1.3 h. We studied
the SSS state of the most recent outburst of a recurrent nova which had
previously shown the shortest time ever observed between two outbursts (about 5
yr). The total number of M31 novae with X-ray counterpart was increased to 79
and we subjected this extended catalogue to detailed statistical studies. Four
previously indicated correlations between optical and X-ray parameters could be
confirmed and improved. We found indications that the multi-dimensional
parameter space of nova properties might be dominated by a single physical
parameter. We discuss evidence for a different X-ray behaviour of novae in the
M31 bulge and disk. Exploration of the multi-wavelength parameter space of
optical and X-ray measurements is shown to be a powerful tool for examining
properties of extragalactic nova populations. While there are hints that the
different stellar populations of M31 (bulge vs disk) produce dissimilar nova
outbursts, there is also growing evidence that the overall behaviour of an
average nova might be understood in surprisingly simple terms.Comment: 39 pages (half of them for 9 tables), 14 figures, accepted for
publication in A&A; updated after language editing stag
Nuclear fission: The "onset of dissipation" from a microscopic point of view
Semi-analytical expressions are suggested for the temperature dependence of
those combinations of transport coefficients which govern the fission process.
This is based on experience with numerical calculations within the linear
response approach and the locally harmonic approximation. A reduced version of
the latter is seen to comply with Kramers' simplified picture of fission. It is
argued that for variable inertia his formula has to be generalized, as already
required by the need that for overdamped motion the inertia must not appear at
all. This situation may already occur above T=2 MeV, where the rate is
determined by the Smoluchowski equation. Consequently, comparison with
experimental results do not give information on the effective damping rate, as
often claimed, but on a special combination of local stiffnesses and the
friction coefficient calculated at the barrier.Comment: 31 pages, LaTex, 9 postscript figures; final, more concise version,
accepted for publication in PRC, with new arguments about the T-dependence of
the inertia; e-mail: [email protected]
Monte-Carlo radiative transfer simulation of the circumstellar disk of the Herbig Ae star HD 144432
Studies of pre-transitional disks, with a gap region between the inner
infrared-emitting region and the outer disk, are important to improving our
understanding of disk evolution and planet formation. Previous infrared
interferometric observations have shown hints of a gap region in the
protoplanetary disk around the Herbig Ae star HD~144432. We study the dust
distribution around this star with two-dimensional radiative transfer modeling.
We compare the model predictions obtained via the Monte-Carlo radiative
transfer code RADMC-3D with infrared interferometric observations and the
{\SED} of HD~144432. The best-fit model that we found consists of an inner
optically thin component at 0.21\enDash0.32~\AU and an optically thick outer
disk at 1.4\enDash10~\AU. We also found an alternative model in which the
inner sub-AU region consists of an optically thin and an optically thick
component. Our modeling suggests an optically thin component exists in the
inner sub-AU region, although an optically thick component may coexist in the
same region. Our modeling also suggests a gap-like discontinuity in the disk of
HD~144432.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figure
Consistency of Relevant Cosmological Deformations on all Scales
Using cosmological perturbation theory we show that the most relevant defor-
mation of gravity is consistent at the linear level. In particular, we prove
the absence of uni- tarity violating negative norm states in the weak coupling
regime from sub- to super-Hubble scales. This demonstrates that the recently
proposed classical self-protection mechanism of deformed gravity extends to the
entire kinematical domain.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figure
Measurement models for time-resolved spectroscopy: a comment
We present an exactly solvable model for photon emission, which allows us to
examine the evolution of the photon wavefunction in space and time. We apply
this model to coherent phenomena in three-level systems with a special emphasis
on the photon detection process.Comment: 14 pages RevTex, 4 figure
The inner circumstellar disk of the UX Ori star V1026 Sco
The UX Ori type variables (named after the prototype of their class) are
intermediate-mass pre-main sequence objects. One of the most likely causes of
their variability is the obscuration of the central star by orbiting dust
clouds. We investigate the structure of the circumstellar environment of the
UX~Ori star V1026 Sco (HD 142666) and test whether the disk inclination is
large enough to explain the UX Ori variability. We observed the object in the
low-resolution mode of the near-infrared interferometric VLTI/AMBER instrument
and derived H- and K-band visibilities and closure phases. We modeled our AMBER
observations, published Keck Interferometer observations, archival MIDI/VLTI
visibilities, and the spectral energy distribution using geometric and
temperature-gradient models. Employing a geometric inclined-ring disk model, we
find a ring radius of 0.15 +- 0.06 AU in the H band and 0.18 +- 0.06 AU in the
K band. The best-fit temperature-gradient model consists of a star and two
concentric, ring-shaped disks. The inner disk has a temperature of
1257^{+133}_{-53} K at the inner rim and extends from 0.19 +- 0.01 AU to 0.23
+- 0.02 AU. The outer disk begins at 1.35^{+0.19}_{-0.20} AU and has an inner
temperature of 334^{+35}_{-17} K. The derived inclination of
48.6^{+2.9}_{-3.6}deg approximately agrees with the inclination derived with
the geometric model (49 +- 5deg in the K band and 50 +- 11deg in the H band).
The position angle of the fitted geometric and temperature-gradient models are
163 +- 9deg (K band; 179 +- 17deg in the H band) and 169.3^{+4.2}_{-6.7}deg,
respectively. The narrow width of the inner ring-shaped model disk and the disk
gap might be an indication for a puffed-up inner rim shadowing outer parts of
the disk. The intermediate inclination of ~50deg is consistent with models of
UX Ori objects where dust clouds in the inclined disk obscure the central star
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