12,066 research outputs found
The casting and powder-metallurgy forming of precipitation-hardenable stainless steels
Casting and powder metallurgy techniques for shaping precipitation hardened stainless steel
Supernova Environments in Hubble Space Telescope Images
The locations of supernovae in the local stellar and gaseous environment in galaxies contain important clues to their progenitor stars. Access to this information, however, has been hampered by the limited resolution achieved by ground-based observations. High spatial resolution Hubble Space Telescope (HST) images of galaxy fields in which supernovae had been observed can improve the situation considerably. We have examined the immediate environments of a few dozen supernovae using archival post-refurbishment HST images. Although our analysis is limited due to signal-to-noise ratio and filter bandpass considerations, the images allow us for the first time to resolve individual stars in, and to derive detailed color-magnitude diagrams for, several environments. We are able to place more rigorous constraints on the masses of these supernovae. A search was made for late-time emission from supernovae in the archival images, and for the progenitor stars in presupernova images of the host galaxies. In particular, we highlight the results for the Type II SN 1979C in M100. In addition, we have identified the progenitor of the Type IIn SN 1997bs in NGC 3627. We also add to the statistical inferences that can be made from studying the association of SNe with recent star-forming regions
Cleaving-temperature dependence of layered-oxide surfaces
The surfaces generated by cleaving non-polar, two-dimensional oxides are
often considered to be perfect or ideal. However, single particle
spectroscopies on Sr2RuO4, an archetypal non-polar two dimensional oxide, show
significant cleavage temperature dependence. We demonstrate that this is not a
consequence of the intrinsic characteristics of the surface: lattice parameters
and symmetries, step heights, atom positions, or density of states. Instead, we
find a marked increase in the density of defects at the mesoscopic scale with
increased cleave temperature. The potential generality of these defects to
oxide surfaces may have broad consequences to interfacial control and the
interpretation of surface sensitive measurements
The String Deviation Equation
The relative motion of many particles can be described by the geodesic
deviation equation. This can be derived from the second covariant variation of
the point particle's action. It is shown that the second covariant variation of
the string action leads to a string deviation equation.Comment: 18 pages, some small changes, no tables or diagrams, LaTex2
Spectropolarimetry and Modeling of the Eclipsing T Tauri Star KH 15D
KH 15D is a strongly variable T Tauri star in the young star cluster NGC 2264
that shows a decrease in flux of 3.5 magnitudes lasting for 18 days and
repeating every 48 days. The eclipsing material is likely due to orbiting dust
or rocky bodies in a partial ring or warped disk that periodically occults the
star. We measured the polarized spectrum in and out of eclipse at the Keck and
Palomar observatories. Outside of the eclipse, the star exhibited low
polarization consistent with zero. During eclipse, the polarization increased
dramatically to ~2% across the optical spectrum, while the spectrum had the
same continuum shape as outside of eclipse and exhibited emission lines of much
larger equivalent width, as previously seen. From the data, we conclude that
(a) the scattering region is uneclipsed; (b) the scattering is nearly
achromatic; (c) the star is likely completely eclipsed so that the flux during
eclipse is entirely due to scattered light, a conclusion also argued for by the
shape of the ingress and egress. We argue that the scattering is not due to
electrons, but may be due to large dust grains of size ~10 micron, similar to
the interplanetary grains which scatter the zodiacal light. We construct a
warped-disk model with an extended dusty atmosphere which reproduces the main
features of the lightcurve, namely (a) a gradual decrease before ingress due to
extinction in the atmosphere (similar for egress); (b) a sharper decrease
within ingress due to the optically-thick base of the atmosphere; (c) a
polarized flux during eclipse which is 0.1% of the total flux outside of
eclipse, which requires no fine-tuning of the model. (abridged)Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, MPEG simulation
available at http://www.astro.washington.edu/agol/scatter2.mp
Dissecting the Power Sources of Low-Luminosity Emission-Line Galaxy Nuclei via Comparison of HST-STIS and Ground-Based Spectra
Using a sample of ~100 nearby line-emitting galaxy nuclei, we have built the
currently definitive atlas of spectroscopic measurements of H_alpha and
neighboring emission lines at subarcsecond scales. We employ these data in a
quantitative comparison of the nebular emission in Hubble Space Telescope (HST)
and ground-based apertures, which offer an order-of-magnitude difference in
contrast, and provide new statistical constraints on the degree to which
Transition Objects and low-ionization nuclear emission-line regions (LINERs)
are powered by an accreting black hole at <10 pc. We show that while the
small-aperture observations clearly resolve the nebular emission, the aperture
dependence in the line ratios is generally weak, and this can be explained by
gradients in the density of the line-emitting gas: the higher densities in the
more nuclear regions potentially flatten the excitation gradients, suppressing
the forbidden emission. The Transition Objects show a threefold increase in the
incidence of broad H_alpha emission in the high-resolution data, as well as the
strongest density gradients, supporting the composite model for these systems
as accreting sources surrounded by star-forming activity. The narrow-line
LINERs appear to be the weaker counterparts of the Type 1 LINERs, where the low
accretion rates cause the disappearance of the broad-line component. The
enhanced sensitivity of the HST observations reveals a 30% increase in the
incidence of accretion-powered systems at z~0. A comparison of the strength of
the broad-line emission detected at different epochs implies potential
broad-line variability on a decade-long timescale, with at least a factor of
three in amplitude.Comment: 27 pages, 13 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in Ap
Polarized Broad H-alpha Emission from the LINER Nucleus of NGC 1052
Optical spectropolarimetry of the nucleus of the LINER NGC 1052, obtained at
the Keck Observatory, reveals a rise in polarization in the wings of the
H-alpha line profile. The polarization vector of H-alpha is offset by 67
degrees from the parsec-scale radio axis and by 83 degrees from the
kiloparsec-scale radio axis, roughly in accord with expectations for scattering
within the opening cone of an obscuring torus. The broad component of H-alpha
has FWHM ~ 2100 km/s in total flux and FWHM ~ 5000 km/s in polarized light.
Scattering by electrons is the mechanism most likely responsible for this
broadening, and we find T_e ~ 10^5 K for the scattering medium, similar to
values observed in Seyfert 2 nuclei. This is the first detection of a polarized
broad emission line in a LINER, demonstrating that unified models of active
galactic nuclei are applicable to at least some LINERs.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, prepared using the emulateapj style file,
accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letter
Addendum to `Fake Projective Planes'
The addendum updates the results presented in the paper `Fake Projective
Plane, Invent Math 168, 321-370 (2007)' and makes some additions and
corrections. The fake projective planes are classified into twenty six classes.
Together with a recent work of Donald Cartwright and Tim Steger, there is now a
complete list of fake projective planes. There are precisely one hundred fake
projective planes as complex surfaces classified up to biholomorphism.Comment: A more refined classification is given in the new versio
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