2,336 research outputs found
Chemical Abundance Constraints on White Dwarfs as Halo Dark Matter
We examine the chemical abundance constraints on a population of white dwarfs
in the Halo of our Galaxy. We are motivated by microlensing evidence for
massive compact halo objects (Machos) in the Galactic Halo, but our work
constrains white dwarfs in the Halo regardless of what the Machos are. We focus
on the composition of the material that would be ejected as the white dwarfs
are formed; abundance patterns in the ejecta strongly constrain white dwarf
production scenarios. Using both analytical and numerical chemical evolution
models, we confirm that very strong constraints come from Galactic Pop II and
extragalactic carbon abundances. We also point out that depending on the
stellar model, significant nitrogen is produced rather than carbon. The
combined constraints from C and N give from
comparison with the low C and N abundances in the Ly forest. We note,
however, that these results are subject to uncertainties regarding the
nucleosynthesis of low-metallicity stars. We thus investigate additional
constraints from D and He, finding that these light elements can be kept
within observational limits only for \Omega_{WD} \la 0.003 and for a white
dwarf progenitor initial mass function sharply peaked at low mass (2).
Finally, we consider a Galactic wind, which is required to remove the ejecta
accompanying white dwarf production from the galaxy. We show that such a wind
can be driven by Type Ia supernovae arising from the white dwarfs themselves,
but these supernovae also lead to unacceptably large abundances of iron. We
conclude that abundance constraints exclude white dwarfs as Machos. (abridged)Comment: Written in AASTeX, 26 pages plus 4 ps figure
Design and optimization of electrochemical microreactors for continuous electrosynthesis
The study focuses on the design and construction, as well as the theoretical and experimental optimization of electrochemical filter press microreactors for the electrosynthesis of molecules with a high added value. The main characteristics of these devices are firstly a high-specific electrochemical area to increase conversion and selectivity, and secondly the shape and size of themicrochannels designed for a uniform residence time distribution of the fluid. A heat exchanger is integrated into the microstructured electrode to rapidly remove (or supply) the heat required in exo- or endothermic reactions. The microreactors designed are used to perform-specific electrosynthesis reactions such as thermodynamically unfavorable reactions (continuous NADH regeneration), or reactions with high enthalpy changes
Asymfast, a method for convolving maps with asymmetric main beams
We describe a fast and accurate method to perform the convolution of a sky
map with a general asymmetric main beam along any given scanning strategy. The
method is based on the decomposition of the beam as a sum of circular
functions, here Gaussians. It can be easily implemented and is much faster than
pixel-by-pixel convolution. In addition, Asymfast can be used to estimate the
effective circularized beam transfer functions of CMB instruments with
non-symmetric main beam. This is shown using realistic simulations and by
comparison to analytical approximations which are available for Gaussian
elliptical beams. Finally, the application of this technique to Archeops data
is also described. Although developped within the framework of Cosmic Microwave
Background observations, our method can be applied to other areas of
astrophysics.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, Phys. Rev. D, in pres
Microscopic correlation between chemical and electronic states in epitaxial graphene on SiC(000-1)
We present energy filtered electron emission spectromicroscopy with spatial
and wave-vector resolution on few layer epitaxial graphene on SiC$(000-1) grown
by furnace annealing. Low energy electron microscopy shows that more than 80%
of the sample is covered by 2-3 graphene layers. C1s spectromicroscopy provides
an independent measurement of the graphene thickness distribution map. The work
function, measured by photoelectron emission microscopy (PEEM), varies across
the surface from 4.34 to 4.50eV according to both the graphene thickness and
the graphene-SiC interface chemical state. At least two SiC surface chemical
states (i.e., two different SiC surface structures) are present at the
graphene/SiC interface. Charge transfer occurs at each graphene/SiC interface.
K-space PEEM gives 3D maps of the k_|| pi - pi* band dispersion in micron scale
regions show that the Dirac point shifts as a function of graphene thickness.
Novel Bragg diffraction of the Dirac cones via the superlattice formed by the
commensurately rotated graphene sheets is observed. The experiments underline
the importance of lateral and spectroscopic resolution on the scale of future
electronic devices in order to precisely characterize the transport properties
and band alignments
A New Channel for the Detection of Planetary Systems Through Microlensing: I. Isolated Events Due to Planet Lenses
We propose and evaluate the feasibility of a new strategy to search for
planets via microlensing. This new strategy is designed to detect planets in
"wide" orbits, i.e., with orbital separation, greater than .
Planets in wide orbits may provide the dominant channel for the microlensing
discovery of planets, particularly low-mass (e.g., Earth-mass) planets. This
paper concentrates on events in which a single planet serves as a lens, leading
to an isolated event of short duration. We point out that a distribution of
events due to lensing by stars with wide-orbit planets is necessarily
accompanied by a distribution of shorter- duration events. The fraction of
events in the latter distribution is proportional to the average value of
, where is the ratio between \pl and stellar masses. The position
of the peak or peaks also provides a measure of the mass ratios typical of
planetary systems. We study detection strategies that can optimize our ability
to discover isolated short-duration events due to lensing by planets, and find
that monitoring employing sensitive photometry is particularly useful. If
planetary systems similar to our own are common, even modest changes in
detection strategy should lead to the discovery of a few isolated events of
short duration every year. We therefore also address the issue of the
contamination due to stellar populations of any microlensing signal due to
low-mass MACHOs. We describe how, even for isolated events of short duration,
it will be possible to test the hypothesis that the lens was a planet instead
of a low-mass MACHO, if the central star of the planetary system contributes a
measurable fraction of the baseline flux.Comment: 37 pages, 6 figure. To be published in the Astrophysical Journal.
This is part one of a series of papers on microlensing by planetary systems
containing wide-orbit planets; the series represents a reorganization and
extension of astro-ph/971101
A New Channel for the Detection of Planetary Systems Through Microlensing: II. Repeating Events
In the companion paper we began the task of systematically studying the
detection of planets in wide orbits () via microlensing surveys.
In this paper we continue, focusing on repeating events. We find that, if all
planetary systems are similar to our own Solar System, reasonable extensions of
the present observing strategies would allow us to detect 3-6 repeating events
per year along the direction to the Bulge. Indeed, if planetary systems with
multiple planets are common, then future monitoring programs which lead to the
discovery of thousands of stellar-lens events will likely discover events in
which several different planets within a single system serve as lenses, with
light curves exhibiting multiple repetitions. In this paper we discuss
observing strategies to maximize the discovery of all wide-orbit planet-lens
events. We also compare the likely detection rates of planets in wide orbits to
those of planets located in the zone for resonant lensing. We find that,
depending on the values of the planet masses and stellar radii of the lensed
sources (which determine whether or not finite source size is important), and
also on the sensitivity of the photometry used by observers, the detection of
planets in wide orbits may be the primary route to the discovery of planets via
microlensing. We also discuss how the combination of resonant and wide-orbit
events can help us to learn about the distribution of planetary system
properties (S 6.1). In addition, by determining the fraction of short-duration
events due to planets, we indirectly derive information about the fraction of
all short-duration events that may be due to low-mass MACHOs (S 6.2).Comment: 51 pages, 7 figures. To be published in the Astrophysical Journal, 20
February 1999. This completes the introduction to the discovery of planets in
wide orbits begun in astro-ph/9808075, also to appear in ApJ on 20 February
199
Constraints on the Cosmic Infra-Red Background based on BeppoSAX and CAT spectra of Mkn 501
The TeV and X-ray data obtained by the imaging Cherenkov telescope CAT and X-ray satellite BeppoSAX during the remarkable flare of Mkn 501 in April 16, 1997 are used to constrain the flux of the Cosmic Infrared Background (CIB) using different CIB models. We show that a non-negligible absorption of gamma-rays due to the CIB could take place already in the low-energy (sub-TeV) domain of the spectrum of Mkn 501. This implies that the data of the low-energy threshold CAT telescope contain very important information about the CIB at short wavelengths, 0.4 mum <= lambda <= 3. mum. The analysis of almost simultaneous spectroscopic measurements of Mkn 501 in a high state by CAT and BeppoSAX in the framework of the standard homogeneous Synchrotron-Self-Compton (SSC) framework model leads to the conclusion that the density of the near-infrared background with typical ``starlight spectrum'' around 1 mum should be between 5 and 35 nW m^-2 sr^-1 (99 % CL), with most likely value around 20 nW m^-2 sr^-1. Also we argue that the CAT gamma-ray data alone allow rather robust upper limits on the CIB, lambda F_lambda <= 60 nW m^-2 sr^-1 at 1 mum, taking into account that for any reasonable scenario of gamma-ray production the differential intrinsic spectrum of gamma-ray hardly could be flatter than dN/dE == E^-1. This estimate agrees, within statistical and systematic uncertainties, with recent reports about tentative detections of the CIB at 2.2 and 3.5 mum by the Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment (DIRBE), as well as with the measurements of the background radiation at optical wavelengths from absolute photometry. We also discuss the impact of the intergalactic absorption effect in derivation of the SSC parameters for the jet in Mkn 501
First Astronomical Use of Multiplexed Transition Edge Bolometers
We present performance results based on the first astronomical use of multiplexed superconducting bolometers. The Fabry-Perot Interferometer Bolometer Research Experiment
(FIBRE) is a broadband submillimeter spectrometer that achieved first light in June 2001 at the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory (CSO). FIBRE'S detectors are superconducting transition edge sensor (TES) bolometers read out by a SQUID multiplexer. The Fabry-Perot uses a low
resolution grating to order sort the incoming light. A linear bolometer array consisting of 16 elements detects this dispersed light, capturing 5 orders simultaneously from one position on the sky. With tuning of the Fabry-Perot over one free spectral range, a spectrum covering Δλ/λ= 1/7 at a resolution of δλ/λ ≈ 1/1200 can be acquired. This spectral resolution is sufficient to resolve
Doppler-broadened line emission from external galaxies. FIBRE operates in the 350 µm and 450 µm bands. These bands cover line emission from the important star formation tracers neutral
carbon [Cl] and carbon monoxide (CO). We have verified that the multiplexed bolometers are
photon noise limited even with the low power present in moderate resolution spectrometry
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