28,481 research outputs found
Nature of W51e2: Massive Cores at Different Phases of Star Formation
We present high-resolution continuum images of the W51e2 complex processed
from archival data of the Submillimeter Array (SMA) at 0.85 and 1.3 mm and the
Very Large Array (VLA) at 7 and 13 mm. We also made line images and profiles of
W51e2 for three hydrogen radio recombination lines (H26\alpha, H53\alpha, and
H66\alpha) and absorption of two molecular lines of HCN(4-3) and CO(2-1). At
least four distinct continuum components have been detected in the 3" region of
W51e2 from the SMA continuum images at 0.85 and 1.3 mm with resolutions of
0.3"x0.2" and 1.4"x0.7", respectively. The west component, W51e2-W, coincides
with the UC HII region reported from previous radio observations. The H26\alpha
line observation reveals an unresolved hyper-compact ionized core (<0.06" or
<310 AU) with a high electron temperature of 1.2x10^4 K, with corresponding
emission measure EM>7x10^{10} pc cm^{-6} and electron density N_e>7x10^6
cm^{-3}. The inferred Lyman continuum flux implies that the HII region W51e2-W
requires a newly formed massive star, an O8 star or a cluster of B-type stars,
to maintain the ionization. The east component, W51e2-E, has a total mass of
~140 M_{\sun} according to our SED analysis and a large infall rate of >
1.3x10^{-3} M_{\sun}yr^{-1} inferred from the absorption of HCN. W51e2-E
appears to be the accretion center in W51e2 and to host one or more growing
massive proto-stars. Located 2" northwest from W51e2-E, W51e2-NW is not
detected in the continuum emission at \lambda>=7 mm. Along with the maser
activities previously observed, our analysis suggests that W51e2-NW is at an
earlier phase of star formation. W51e2-N is located 2" north of W51e2-E and has
only been detected at 1.3 mm with a lower angular resolution (~1"), suggesting
that it is a primordial, massive gas clump in the W51e2 complex.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 3 table, accepted for publication in Ap
Line versus Flux Statistics -- Considerations for the Low Redshift Lyman-alpha Forest
The flux/transmission power spectrum has become a popular statistical tool in
studies of the high redshift () Lyman-alpha forest. At low redshifts,
where the forest has thinned out into a series of well-isolated absorption
lines, the motivation for flux statistics is less obvious. Here, we study the
relative merits of flux versus line correlations, and derive a simple condition
under which one is favored over the other on purely statistical grounds.
Systematic errors probably play an important role in this discussion, and they
are outlined as well.Comment: 6 pages, to appear in "The IGM/Galaxy Connection: The Distribution of
Baryons at z=0", eds. J. L. Rosenberg and M. E. Putma
Compressive sampling for accelerometer signals in structural health monitoring
In structural health monitoring (SHM) of civil structures, data compression is often needed to reduce the cost of data transfer and storage, because of the large volumes of sensor data generated from the monitoring system. The traditional framework for data compression is to first sample the full signal and, then to compress it. Recently, a new data compression method named compressive sampling (CS) that can acquire the data directly in compressed form by using special sensors has been presented. In this article, the potential of CS for data compression of vibration data is investigated using simulation of the CS sensor algorithm. For reconstruction of the signal, both wavelet and Fourier orthogonal bases are examined. The acceleration data collected from the SHM system of Shandong Binzhou Yellow River Highway Bridge is used to analyze the data compression ability of CS. For comparison, both the wavelet-based and Huffman coding methods are employed to compress the data. The results show that the values of compression ratios achieved using CS are not high, because the vibration data used in SHM of civil structures are not naturally sparse in the chosen bases
Reading inflation expectations from CPI futures
Consumer price indexes ; Inflation (Finance)
Stress intensity factor in a tapered specimen
The general problem of a tapered specimen containing an edge crack is formulated in terms of a system of singular integral equations. The equations are solved and the stress intensity factor is calculated for a compact and for a slender tapered specimen, the latter simulating the double cantilever beam. The results are obtained primarily for a pair of concentrated forces and for crack surface wedge forces. The stress intensity factors are also obtained for a long strip under uniform tension which contains inclined edge cracks
Interaction between a crack and a soft inclusion
With the application to weld defects in mind, the interaction problem between a planar-crack and a flat inclusion in an elastic solid is considered. The elastic inclusion is assumed to be sufficiently thin so that the thickness distribution of the stresses in the inclusion may be neglected. The problem is reduced to a system of four integral equations having Cauchy-type dominant kernels. The stress intensity factors are calculated and tabulated for various crack-inclusion geometries and the inclusion to matrix modulus ratios, and for general homogeneous loadiong conditions away from the crack-inclusion region
Oil price volatility and U.S. macroeconomic activity
Oil shocks exert influence on macroeconomic activity through various channels, many of which imply a symmetric effect. However, the effect can also be asymmetric. In particular, sharp oil price changes-either increases or decreases-may reduce aggregate output temporarily because they delay business investment by raising uncertainty or induce costly sectoral resource reallocation. Consistent with these asymmetric-effect hypotheses, the authors find that a volatility measure constructed using daily crude oil futures prices has a negative and significant effect on future gross domestic product (GDP) growth over the period 1984-2004. Moreover, the effect becomes more significant after oil price changes are also included in the regression to control for the symmetric effect. The evidence here provides economic rationales for Hamilton's (2003) nonlinear oil shock measure: It captures overall effects, both symmetric and asymmetric, of oil price shocks on output.Petroleum products - Prices ; Macroeconomics
A radiative transfer scheme for cosmological reionization based on a local Eddington tensor
A radiative transfer scheme is presented, based on a moment description of
the equation of radiative transfer and the so-called ``M1 closure model'' for
the Eddington tensor. This model features a strictly hyperbolic transport step
for radiation: it has been implemented using standard Godunov--like techniques
in a new code called ATON. Coupled to simple models of ionization chemistry and
photo-heating, ATON is able to reproduce the results of other schemes on a
various set of standard tests such as the expansion of a HII region, the
shielding of the radiation by dense clumps and cosmological ionization by
multiple sources. Being simple yet robust, such a scheme is intended to be
naturally and easily included in grid--based cosmological fluid solvers.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures, submitted to MNRA
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