9,975 research outputs found
Free radical formation during machining and fracture of polymers
Electron paramagnetic resonance measurements of free radical formation during cutting and grinding of polymer
A new limit on the Ultra-High-Energy Cosmic-Ray flux with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope
A particle cascade (shower) in a dielectric, for example as initiated by an
ultra-high energy cosmic ray, will have an excess of electrons which will emit
coherent \v{C}erenkov radiation, known as the Askaryan effect. In this work we
study the case in which such a particle shower occurs in a medium just below
its surface. We show, for the first time, that the radiation transmitted
through the surface is independent of the depth of the shower below the surface
when observed from far away, apart from trivial absorption effects. As a direct
application we use the recent results of the NuMoon project, where a limit on
the neutrino flux for energies above \,eV was set using the Westerbork
Synthesis Radio Telescope by measuring pulsed radio emission from the Moon, to
set a limit on the flux of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Micron-sized forsterite grains in the pre-planetary nebula of IRAS 17150-3224 - Searching for clues on the mysterious evolution of massive AGB stars
We study the grain properties and location of the forsterite crystals in the
circumstellar environment of the pre-planetary nebula (PPN) IRAS 17150-3224 in
order to learn more about the as yet poorly understood evolutionary phase prior
to the PPN. We use the best-fit model for IRAS 17150-3224 of Meixner et al.
(2002) and add forsterite to this model. We investigate different spatial
distributions and grain sizes of the forsterite crystals in the circumstellar
environment. We compare the spectral bands of forsterite in the mid-infrared
and at 69 micrometre in radiative transport models to those in ISO-SWS and
Herschel/PACS observations. We can reproduce the non-detection of the
mid-infrared bands and the detection of the 69 micrometre feature with models
where the forsterite is distributed in the whole outflow, in the superwind
region, or in the AGB-wind region emitted previous to the superwind, but we
cannot discriminate between these three models. To reproduce the observed
spectral bands with these three models, the forsterite crystals need to be
dominated by a grain size population of 2 micrometre up to 6 micrometre. We
hypothesise that the large forsterite crystals were formed after the superwind
phase of IRAS 17150-3224, where the star developed an as yet unknown hyperwind
with an extremely high mass-loss rate (10^-3 Msol/yr). The high densities of
such a hyperwind could be responsible for the efficient grain growth of both
amorphous and crystalline dust in the outflow. Several mechanisms are discussed
that might explain the lower-limit of 2 micrometre found for the forsterite
grains, but none are satisfactory. Among the mechanisms explored is a possible
selection effect due to radiation pressure based on photon scattering on
micron-sized grains.Comment: Accepted by A&
Analytic calculation of radio emission from parametrized extensive air showers:A tool to extract shower parameters
The radio intensity and polarization footprint of a cosmic-ray induced extensive air shower is determined by the time-dependent structure of the current distribution residing in the plasma cloud at the shower front. In turn, the time dependence of the integrated charge-current distribution in the plasma cloud, the longitudinal shower structure, is determined by interesting physics which one would like to extract, such as the location and multiplicity of the primary cosmic-ray collision or the values of electric fields in the atmosphere during thunderstorms. To extract the structure of a shower from its footprint requires solving a complicated inverse problem. For this purposewe have developed a code that semianalytically calculates the radio footprint of an extensive air shower given an arbitrary longitudinal structure. This code can be used in an optimization procedure to extract the optimal longitudinal shower structure given a radio footprint. On the basis of air-shower universality we propose a simple parametrization of the structure of the plasma cloud. This parametrization is based on the results of Monte Carlo shower simulations. Deriving the parametrization also teaches which aspects of the plasma cloud are important for understanding the features seen in the radio-emission footprint. The calculated radio footprints are compared with microscopic CoREAS simulations
Scaling of spontaneous rotation with temperature and plasma current in tokamaks
Using theoretical arguments, a simple scaling law for the size of the
intrinsic rotation observed in tokamaks in the absence of momentum injection is
found: the velocity generated in the core of a tokamak must be proportional to
the ion temperature difference in the core divided by the plasma current,
independent of the size of the device. The constant of proportionality is of
the order of . When the
intrinsic rotation profile is hollow, i.e. it is counter-current in the core of
the tokamak and co-current in the edge, the scaling law presented in this
Letter fits the data remarkably well for several tokamaks of vastly different
size and heated by different mechanisms.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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