1,428 research outputs found
A line-binned treatment of opacities for the spectra and light curves from neutron star mergers
The electromagnetic observations of GW170817 were able to dramatically
increase our understanding of neutron star mergers beyond what we learned from
gravitational waves alone. These observations provided insight on all aspects
of the merger from the nature of the gamma-ray burst to the characteristics of
the ejected material. The ejecta of neutron star mergers are expected to
produce such electromagnetic transients, called kilonovae or macronovae.
Characteristics of the ejecta include large velocity gradients, relative to
supernovae, and the presence of heavy -process elements, which pose
significant challenges to the accurate calculation of radiative opacities and
radiation transport. For example, these opacities include a dense forest of
bound-bound features arising from near-neutral lanthanide and actinide
elements. Here we investigate the use of fine-structure, line-binned opacities
that preserve the integral of the opacity over frequency. Advantages of this
area-preserving approach over the traditional expansion-opacity formalism
include the ability to pre-calculate opacity tables that are independent of the
type of hydrodynamic expansion and that eliminate the computational expense of
calculating opacities within radiation-transport simulations. Tabular opacities
are generated for all 14 lanthanides as well as a representative actinide
element, uranium. We demonstrate that spectral simulations produced with the
line-binned opacities agree well with results produced with the more accurate
continuous Monte Carlo Sobolev approach, as well as with the commonly used
expansion-opacity formalism. Additional investigations illustrate the
convergence of opacity with respect to the number of included lines, and
elucidate sensitivities to different atomic physics approximations, such as
fully and semi-relativistic approaches.Comment: 27 pages, 22 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1702.0299
The Breakfast Food Challenge: Helping to Meet Personal Needs in the Science Classroom
One of the four Project Synthesis goal clusters for science education focuses on meeting the personal needs of students who are maturing in a scientific/technological society. Many existing science programs fall short in this regard, particularly if teachers are seriously interested in changing learner behavior for the better. One component of learner behavior that is highly consistent with the personal needs goal cluster of Project Synthesis is helping students become more intelligent consumers in a scientific society
Team Synergy in Software Inspections: A Group Behavior Analysis
Inspections provide many benefits in the software development process. However, the cost effectiveness of inspections has been criticized. Also, many organizations simply do not have the time to perform complete inspections of all software artifacts within the development schedule. Due to its pragmatic and domain-specific nature, little formal research has been performed on inspections. We propose to begin a study of software development inspections by surveying several relevant research papers on group behavior theory. We applythis research to inspections and outline a laboratory experiment for future researc
Composition Effects on Kilonova Spectra and Light Curves: I
The merger of neutron star binaries is believed to eject a wide range of
heavy elements into the universe. By observing the emission from this ejecta,
scientists can probe the ejecta properties (mass, velocity and composition
distributions). The emission (a.k.a. kilonova) is powered by the radioactive
decay of the heavy isotopes produced in the merger and this emission is
reprocessed by atomic opacities to optical and infra-red wavelengths.
Understanding the ejecta properties requires calculating the dependence of this
emission on these opacities. The strong lines in the optical and infra-red in
lanthanide opacities have been shown to significantly alter the light-curves
and spectra in these wavelength bands, arguing that the emission in these
wavelengths can probe the composition of this ejecta. Here we study variations
in the kilonova emission by varying individual lanthanide (and the actinide
uranium) concentrations in the ejecta. The broad forest of lanthanide lines
makes it difficult to determine the exact fraction of individual lanthanides.
Nd is an exception. Its opacities above 1 micron are higher than other
lanthanides and observations of kilonovae can potentially probe increased
abundances of Nd. Similarly, at early times when the ejecta is still hot (first
day), the U opacity is strong in the 0.2-1 micron wavelength range and kilonova
observations may also be able to constrain these abundances
Synthesis and characterization of a sol-gel derived ureasilicate hybrid organic-inorganic matrix containing CdS colloidal particles
A hybrid organic-inorganic material filled with in situ generated inorganic particles has been synthesised by the homogeneous precipitation of CdS from aqueous solutions of Cd(NO3)2 and CH3CSNH2 . These highly transparent, homogeneous and flexible CdS doped xerogels were prepared by the sol-gel technique using, as precursors, organically modified silicon alkoxide (3-isocyanatepropyltriethoxysilane) and a di-amine functionalized oligopolyoxyethylene (Jeffamine ED-600), which by subsequent hydrolysis and condensation processes formed a solid 3-D network. TEM studies indicate the presence of round nanoparticles around 20 nm in diameter dispersed in a homogeneous amorphous matrix. The samples were also characterized by spectroscopic (UV-visible and photoluminescence) and XRD techniques.Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia - PRAXIS/P/FIS/10128/98, SFRH / BD / 3188 / 2000
A is for Anthropocene:An A–Z of Design Ecology
This paper lists in A to Z format the changing ecology of design in the Anthropocene. From twenty-six points of view the paper contrasts design’s search for a coherent ecology – how it looks like it looks – with its search for a familiar ecology – how it is understood today. Taking each letter of the alphabet to create individual reviews of the vicissitudes of design, the paper critiques how design has historically explained to itself, and anyone who has been listening, what it has been doing, and contrasts that with what needs to be done
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