3,443 research outputs found
Hard X-ray imaging and the relative contribution of thermal and nonthermal emission in flares
The question of whether the impulsive 25 to 100 keV X-ray emission from solar flares is thermal or nonthermal has been a long-standing controversy. Both thermal and nonthermal (beam) models have been developed and applied to the hard X-ray data. It now seems likely that both thermal and nonthermal emission have been observed at hard X-ray energies. The Hinotori classification scheme, for example, is an attempt to associate the thermal-nonthermal characteristics of flare hard X-ray emission with other flare properties. From a theoretical point of view, it is difficult to generate energetic, nonthermal electrons without dumping an equal or greater amount of energy into plasma heating. On the other hand, any impulsive heating process will invariably generate at least some nonthermal particles. Hence, strictly speaking, although thermal or nonthermal emission may dominate the hard X-ray emission in a given energy range for a given flare, there is no such thing as a purely thermal or nonthermal flare mechanism
Acceleration of runaway electrons and Joule heating in solar flares
The electric field acceleration of electrons out of a thermal plasma and the simultaneous Joule heating of the plasma are studied. Acceleration and heating timescales are derived and compared, and upper limits are obtained on the acceleration volume and the rate at which electrons can be accelerated. These upper limits, determined by the maximum magnetic field strength observed in flaring regions, place stringent restrictions upon the acceleration process. The role of the plasma resistivity in these processes is examined, and possible sources of anomalous resistivity are summarized. The implications of these results for the microwave and hard X-ray emission from solar flares are examined
Low-Altitude Reconnection Inflow-Outflow Observations during a 2010 November 3 Solar Eruption
For a solar flare occurring on 2010 November 3, we present observations using
several SDO/AIA extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) passbands of an erupting flux rope
followed by inflows sweeping into a current sheet region. The inflows are soon
followed by outflows appearing to originate from near the termination point of
the inflowing motion - an observation in line with standard magnetic
reconnection models. We measure average inflow plane-of-sky speeds to range
from ~150-690 km/s with the initial, high-temperature inflows being the
fastest. Using the inflow speeds and a range of Alfven speeds, we estimate the
Alfvenic Mach number which appears to decrease with time. We also provide
inflow and outflow times with respect to RHESSI count rates and find that the
fast, high-temperature inflows occur simultaneously with a peak in the RHESSI
thermal lightcurve. Five candidate inflow-outflow pairs are identified with no
more than a minute delay between detections. The inflow speeds of these pairs
are measured to be 10^2 km/s with outflow speeds ranging from 10^2-10^3 km/s -
indicating acceleration during the reconnection process. The fastest of these
outflows are in the form of apparently traveling density enhancements along the
legs of the loops rather than the loop apexes themselves. These flows could
either be accelerated plasma, shocks, or waves prompted by reconnection. The
measurements presented here show an order of magnitude difference between the
retraction speeds of the loops and the speed of the density enhancements within
the loops - presumably exiting the reconnection site.Comment: 31 pages, 13 figures, 1 table, Accepted to ApJ (expected publication
~July 2012
Occupational and physical therapists’ use of intrapersonal and interpersonal emotion regulation strategies during patient interactions: a qualitative study
Importance: Occupational and physical therapists’ use of intrapersonal and interpersonal emotion regulation strategies may play an important role in building therapeutic relationships, but little is known about how they use these strategies during patient interactions. Objective: To understand how therapists use intrapersonal and interpersonal emotion regulation strategies during their patient interactions. Design: This qualitative study consisted of two stages of data collection. In Stage 1, therapists were interviewed regarding how they use emotion regulation strategies in their therapeutic relationships. In Stage 2, patient–therapist dyads were observed during treatment sessions and then interviewed at the end of the therapeutic relationship. Setting: Inpatient and outpatient rehabilitation hospitals and clinics in the United Kingdom. Participants: In Stage 1, 13 occupational therapists and 9 physical therapists participated; in Stage 2, 14 patient–therapist dyads participated. Outcome and Measures: A semistructured interview guide was used to ask therapists how they use emotion regulation strategies during patient interactions. Results: Therapists used a wide range of interpersonal and intrapersonal emotion regulation strategies that can be categorized in prominent emotion regulation strategy taxonomies. They used these strategies both proactively, in anticipation of emotional events, and reactively, in response to emotional events. Their use helped them to build and maintain the therapeutic relationship and to protect themselves, feel better, and get their jobs done. Conclusions and Relevance: The ability to regulate one’s own and others’ emotions is an essential part of therapists’ work. In this study, therapists used a wide range of emotion regulation strategies to benefit themselves and their patients. What This Article Adds: This is the first study to identify the specific intrapersonal and interpersonal emotion regulation strategies used by occupational and physical therapists during patient–therapist interactions. This study makes an important contribution to understanding therapists’ use of proactive and reactive emotion regulation strategies to build and maintain therapeutic relationships
Super-alfvenic propagation of cosmic rays: The role of streaming modes
Numerous cosmic ray propagation and acceleration problems require knowledge of the propagation speed of relativistic particles through an ambient plasma. Previous calculations indicated that self-generated turbulence scatters relativistic particles and reduces their bulk streaming velocity to the Alfven speed. This result was incorporated into all currently prominent theories of cosmic ray acceleration and propagation. It is demonstrated that super-Alfvenic propagation is indeed possible for a wide range of physical parameters. This fact dramatically affects the predictions of these models
Long-Term Stability of Planets in Binary Systems
A simple question of celestial mechanics is investigated: in what regions of
phase space near a binary system can planets persist for long times? The
planets are taken to be test particles moving in the field of an eccentric
binary system. A range of values of the binary eccentricity and mass ratio is
studied, and both the case of planets orbiting close to one of the stars, and
that of planets outside the binary orbiting the system's center of mass, are
examined. From the results, empirical expressions are developed for both 1) the
largest orbit around each of the stars, and 2) the smallest orbit around the
binary system as a whole, in which test particles survive the length of the
integration (10^4 binary periods). The empirical expressions developed, which
are roughly linear in both the mass ratio mu and the binary eccentricity e, are
determined for the range 0.0 <= e <= 0.7-0.8 and 0.1 <= mu <= 0.9 in both
regions, and can be used to guide searches for planets in binary systems. After
considering the case of a single low-mass planet in binary systems, the
stability of a mutually-interacting system of planets orbiting one star of a
binary system is examined, though in less detail.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, 7 tables, accepted by the Astronomical Journa
Re-entrant ferroelectricity in liquid crystals
The ferroelectric (Sm C) -- antiferroelectric (Sm C) -- reentrant
ferroelectric (re Sm C) phase temperature sequence was observed for system
with competing synclinic - anticlinic interactions. The basic properties of
this system are as follows (1) the Sm C phase is metastable in temperature
range of the Sm C stability (2) the double inversions of the helix
handedness at Sm C -- Sm C and Sm C% -- re-Sm C phase
transitions were found (3) the threshold electric field that is necessary to
induce synclinic ordering in the Sm C phase decreases near both Sm
C -- Sm C and Sm C -- re-Sm C phase boundaries, and it has
maximum in the middle of the Sm C stability region. All these properties
are properly described by simple Landau model that accounts for nearest
neighboring layer steric interactions and quadrupolar ordering only.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PR
The Size Distribution of Trans-Neptunian Bodies
[Condensed] We search 0.02 deg^2 for trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) with
m<=29.2 (diameter ~15 km) using the ACS on HST. Three new objects are
discovered, roughly 25 times fewer than expected from extrapolation of the
differential sky density Sigma(m) of brighter objects. The ACS and other recent
TNO surveys show departures from a power law size distribution. Division of the
TNO sample into ``classical Kuiper belt'' (CKB) and ``Excited'' samples reveals
that Sigma(m) differs for the two populations at 96% confidence. A double power
law adequately fits all data. Implications include: The total mass of the CKB
is ~0.010 M_Earth, only a few times Pluto's mass, and is predominately in the
form of ~100 km bodies. The mass of Excited objects is perhaps a few times
larger. The Excited class has a shallower bright-end size distribution; the
largest objects, including Pluto, comprise tens of percent of the total mass
whereas the largest CKBOs are only ~2% of its mass. The predicted mass of the
largest Excited body is close to the Pluto mass; the largest CKBO is ~60 times
less massive. The deficit of small TNOs occurs for sizes subject to disruption
by present-day collisions, suggesting extensive depletion by collisions. Both
accretion and erosion appearing to have proceeded to more advanced stages in
the Excited class than the CKB. The absence of distant TNOs implies that any
distant (60 AU) population must have less than the CKB mass in the form of
objects 40 km or larger. The CKB population is sparser than theoretical
estimates of the required precursor population for short period comets, but the
Excited population could be a viable precursor population.Comment: Revised version accepted to the Astronomical Journal. Numerical
results are very slightly revised. Implications for the origins of
short-period comets are substantially revised, and tedious material on
statistical tests has been collected into a new Appendi
Improved parameters for extrasolar transiting planets
We present refined values for the physical parameters of transiting
exoplanets, based on a self-consistent and uniform analysis of transit light
curves and the observable properties of the host stars. Previously it has been
difficult to interpret the ensemble properties of transiting exoplanets,
because of the widely different methodologies that have been applied in
individual cases. Furthermore, previous studies often ignored an important
constraint on the mean stellar density that can be derived directly from the
light curve. The main contributions of this work are 1) a critical compilation
and error assessment of all reported values for the effective temperature and
metallicity of the host stars; 2) the application of a consistent methodology
and treatment of errors in modeling the transit light curves; and 3) more
accurate estimates of the stellar mass and radius based on stellar evolution
models, incorporating the photometric constraint on the stellar density. We use
our results to revisit some previously proposed patterns and correlations
within the ensemble. We confirm the mass-period correlation, and we find
evidence for a new pattern within the scatter about this correlation: planets
around metal-poor stars are more massive than those around metal-rich stars at
a given orbital period. Likewise, we confirm the proposed dichotomy of planets
according to their Safronov number, and we find evidence that the systems with
small Safronov numbers are more metal-rich on average. Finally, we confirm the
trend that led to the suggestion that higher-metallicity stars harbor planets
with a greater heavy-element content.Comment: To appear in The Astrophysical Journal. 23 pages in emulateapj
format, including figures and tables. Figures 7, 8, and 9 are low resolution;
higher resolution versions will be available from the journal when published.
Acknowledgement added, and minor changes made to TrES-3 and TrES-4 in the
Appendi
The architecture of the hierarchical triple star KOI 928 from eclipse timing variations seen in Kepler photometry
We present a hierarchical triple star system (KIC 9140402) where a low mass
eclipsing binary orbits a more massive third star. The orbital period of the
binary (4.98829 Days) is determined by the eclipse times seen in photometry
from NASA's Kepler spacecraft. The periodically changing tidal field, due to
the eccentric orbit of the binary about the tertiary, causes a change in the
orbital period of the binary. The resulting eclipse timing variations provide
insight into the dynamics and architecture of this system and allow the
inference of the total mass of the binary ()
and the orbital parameters of the binary about the central star.Comment: Submitted to MNRAS Letters. Additional tables with eclipse times are
included here. The Kepler data that was used for the analysis of this system
(Q1 through Q6) will be available on MAST after June 27, 201
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