21,986 research outputs found
Spatial Distributions of Multiple Dust Components in the PPN/PN Dust Shells
We investigate spatial distributions of specific dust components in the
circumstellar shells of a proto-planetary nebula candidate, HD 179821, and a
planetary nebula, BD3639, by means of spectral imaging. With
high-resolution ground-based images and ISO spectra in the mid-infrared, we can
derive ``dust feature only'' maps by subtracting synthesized continuum maps
from the observed images at the feature wavelength. Such spatially detailed
information will help to develop models for the evolution of dust grains around
evolved stars.Comment: 4 pages + 7 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the conference,
"Post-AGB Objects (proto-planetary nebulae) as a Phase of Stellar Evolution",
Torun, Poland, July 5-7, 2000, eds. R. Szczerba, R. Tylenda, and S.K. Gorny.
Figures have been degraded to minimize the total file siz
The Hamburg Tornado (7 June 2016) from the perspective of low-cost high-resolution radar data and weather forecast model
A tornado hit the northeastern suburbs of Hamburg, Germany, on 7 June 2016. It had an estimated strength of upper end F1 on the Fujita scale and was short-lived with an approximate duration of only 13 min and a path length of just about 1.3 km. We demonstrate that such a small-scale, extreme event can be observed and forecasted accurately by a low-cost radar and by an atmospheric model with low computational costs, respectively. Observations from a low-cost single polarized X-band radar covering the urban area of Hamburg with 60 m spatial and 30 s temporal resolution are analyzed with respect to their ability to capture the development as well as the track of the tornado. In contrast to the national C-band radar network, the X-band radar is capable of capturing the hook echo of the tornado as well as the circular pattern in rain rates, because of its higher resolution in space and time. High-resolution forecasts of the tornado event are conducted with the computational efficient Conformal Cubic Atmosphere Model (CCAM) in order to test the capability of predicting the tornado with a lead time of a few hours. A three step downscaling method is used to obtain a spatial resolution of 1 km with initial conditions taken from the NCEP analysis. Calculated severe weather indices clearly indicate a potential for a tornado. CCAM cannot explicitly resolve small scale tornadic features but the model simulates a strong convective cell only a few kilometers apart from the tornadic thunderstorm observed by the radar
A new doubly discrete analogue of smoke ring flow and the real time simulation of fluid flow
Modelling incompressible ideal fluids as a finite collection of vortex
filaments is important in physics (super-fluidity, models for the onset of
turbulence) as well as for numerical algorithms used in computer graphics for
the real time simulation of smoke. Here we introduce a time-discrete evolution
equation for arbitrary closed polygons in 3-space that is a discretisation of
the localised induction approximation of filament motion. This discretisation
shares with its continuum limit the property that it is a completely integrable
system. We apply this polygon evolution to a significant improvement of the
numerical algorithms used in Computer Graphics.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figure
Reduction of heat sink common-mode currents in switching mode power supply circuits
In this paper, a new filter design for a heat sink is presented. The
parasitic couplings between electric power devices and the heat sink are
responsible for common-mode currents. The main focus is on the reduction of
these currents to reduce the heat sink radiation. For this purpose a new
filter design is proposed. In addition, experimental results are shown to
validate the proposed filter
Fluorescent Silicon Clusters and Nanoparticles
The fluorescence of silicon clusters is reviewed. Atomic clusters of silicon
have been at the focus of research for several decades because of the relevance
of size effects for material properties, the importance of silicon in
electronics and the potential applications in bio-medicine. To date numerous
examples of nanostructured forms of fluorescent silicon have been reported.
This article introduces the principles and underlying concepts relevant for
fluorescence of nanostructured silicon such as excitation, energy relaxation,
radiative and non-radiative decay pathways and surface passivation.
Experimental methods for the production of silicon clusters are presented. The
geometric and electronic properties are reviewed and the implications for the
ability to emit fluorescence are discussed. Free and pure silicon clusters
produced in molecular beams appear to have properties that are unfavourable for
light emission. However, when passivated or embedded in a suitable host, they
may emit fluorescence. The current available data show that both quantum
confinement and localised transitions, often at the surface, are responsible
for fluorescence. By building silicon clusters atom by atom, and by embedding
them in shells atom by atom, new insights into the microscopic origins of
fluorescence from nanoscale silicon can be expected.Comment: 5 figures, chapter in "Silicon Nanomaterials Sourcebook", editor
Klaus D. Sattler, CRC Press, August 201
A disrupted circumstellar torus inside eta Carinae's Homunculus Nebula
We present thermal infrared images of the bipolar nebula surrounding eta
Carinae at six wavelengths from 4.8 to 24.5 microns. These were obtained with
the MIRAC3 camera system at the Magellan Observatory. Our images reveal new
intricate structure in the bright core of the nebula, allowing us to
re-evaluate interpretations of morphology seen in images with lower resolution.
Complex structures in the core might not arise from a pair of overlapping rings
or a cool (110 K) and very massive dust torus, as has been suggested recently.
Instead, it seems more likely that the arcs and compact knots comprise a warm
(350 K) disrupted torus at the intersection of the larger polar lobes. Some of
the arcs appear to break out of the inner core region, and may be associated
with equatorial features seen in optical images. The torus could have been
disrupted by a post-eruption stellar wind, or by ejecta from the Great Eruption
itself if the torus existed before that event. Kinematic data are required to
rule out either possibility.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures (Fig. 1 in color); to appear in ApJ Letter
Substrate effects on the surface topography of evaporated gold films: a scanning tunnelling microscopy investigation
Vancea J, Reiss G, Schneider F, Bauer K, Hoffmann H. Substrate effects on the surface topography of evaporated gold films: a scanning tunnelling microscopy investigation. Surface science. 1989;218(1):108-126.Direct observation of surface roughness on metal films is a longstanding problem in thin film characterization. In this work the high quality of scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) was used for investigation of evaporated gold films. A scanning tunnelling microscope able to scan areas up to 0.8 × 0.8 micro m with high reproducibility is presented. The topography of 80 nm thick gold films grown under identical evaporation conditions was investigated as a function of the selected substrate material (Corning glass, silicon, NaCl, mica and highly oriented pyrolitic graphite (HOPG)). The incipient growth mechanism on the substrate is the primary reason for the surface roughness. The real space images of the surface topography correlate very well with knowledge achieved from former growth experiments given in the literature. Moreover, very flat gold surfaces on HOPG allowed the observation of atomic corrugations in air environments
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