9,507 research outputs found
Two-finger selection theory in the Saffman-Taylor problem
We find that solvability theory selects a set of stationary solutions of the
Saffman-Taylor problem with coexistence of two \it unequal \rm fingers
advancing with the same velocity but with different relative widths
and and different tip positions. For vanishingly small
dimensionless surface tension , an infinite discrete set of values of the
total filling fraction and of the relative
individual finger width are selected out of a
two-parameter continuous degeneracy. They scale as
and . The selected values of differ from
those of the single finger case. Explicit approximate expressions for both
spectra are given.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
A mid-IR survey of the L 1641-N region with ISOCAM
We present an analysis of the L 1641 outflow region using broad-band and
narrow-band imaging data at mid-infrared wavelengths from ISOCAM. We detect a
total of 34 sources in the x region covered by
the broad-band filters. Four of these sources have no reported detection in
previous studies of the region. We find that the source previously identified
as the near-IR counter-part to the IRAS detected point-source (IRAS 05338-0624)
is not the brightest source in the wavelength region of the IRAS 12 \micron\
filter. We find instead that a nearby object (within the beam of IRAS and not
detected at near-IR wavelengths) outshines all others sources in the area by a
factor of 2. We submit that this source is likely to be the IRAS detected
point source. A comparison of the near-IR (J-H vs H-K) and mid-IR (J-K vs [6.7
um]-[14 um]) color-color plots shows only four sources with excess emission at
near-IR wavelengths, but atleast 85% of all sources show excess emission at
mid-IR wavelengths. The CVF spectra suggest a range of evolutionary status in
the program stars ranging from embedded YSOs to the young disks. When combined
with optical and near-IR age estimates, these results show active current
star-formation in the region that has been on-going for at least 2 Myr.Comment: Submitted to ApJ. Abstracted edited for arXiv submission Replaced by
version accepted by Ap
Monte Carlo direct simulation technique user's manual
User manual for Monte Carlo direct simulation techniqu
Probing protoplanetary disks with silicate emission: Where is the silicate emission zone?
Recent results indicate that the grain size and crystallinity inferred from observations of silicate features may be correlated with the spectral type of the central star and/or disk geometry. In this paper, we show that grain size, as probed by the 10 ÎŒm silicate feature peak-to-continuum and 11.3 to 9.8 ÎŒm flux ratios, is inversely proportional to log Lsstarf. These trends can be understood using a simple two-layer disk model for passive irradiated flaring disks, CGPLUS. We find that the radius, R10, of the 10 ÎŒm silicate emission zone in the disk goes as (L*/Lâ)^0.56, with slight variations depending on disk geometry (flaring angle and inner disk radius). The observed correlations, combined with simulated emission spectra of olivine and pyroxene mixtures, imply a dependence of grain size on luminosity. Combined with the fact that R10 is smaller for less luminous stars, this implies that the apparent grain size of the emitting dust is larger for low-luminosity sources. In contrast, our models suggest that the crystallinity is only marginally affected, because for increasing luminosity, the zone for thermal annealing (assumed to be at T > 800 K) is enlarged by roughly the same factor as the silicate emission zone. The observed crystallinity is affected by disk geometry, however, with increased crystallinity in flat disks. The apparent crystallinity may also increase with grain growth due to a corresponding increase in contrast between crystalline and amorphous silicate emission bands
Trame Ă©cologique agropastorale du Massif central : de lâapproche cartographique globale par grands types de milieux Ă une approche cartographique affinĂ©e des vĂ©gĂ©tations agropastorales.
Les milieux ouverts herbacĂ©s reprĂ©sentent sur lâensemble du Massif central une composante majeure et une richesse en terme de biodiversitĂ©. Ces milieux sont hĂ©ritĂ©s dâune longue pratique agropastorale Ă laquelle ils doivent leur maintien. LâĂ©volution rĂ©cente et rapide de cette pratique, se traduit par une perte massive de diversitĂ© vĂ©gĂ©tale. Lâobjet de cette Ă©tude est de mettre au point une mĂ©thode dâinventaire et de suivi de ces milieux Ă lâaide dâimages optiques THR et de donnĂ©es Lidar, applicable Ă de larges superficies. Cette recherche est portĂ©e par la fĂ©dĂ©ration des parcs naturels du Massif central (IPAMAC). Trois territoires expĂ©rimentaux (zones de 3000 ha) et reprĂ©sentatifs de la diversitĂ© du Massif central ont Ă©tĂ© dĂ©finis : les Monts du Forez (secteur cristallin), le Massif du Sancy et du CĂ©zallier (secteur volcanique) et le Causse noir (secteur calcaire). Dans chacun de ces territoires, une cartographie de terrain des vĂ©gĂ©tations a Ă©tĂ© menĂ©e par les conservatoires botaniques sur des zones-tests de 300 ha environ. Cette cartographie rassemble des informations phytosociologiques, physionomiques, environnementales et sur les pratiques agropastorales, afin de prendre en compte les nombreux facteurs impactant lâinformation spectrale. Le choix des donnĂ©es image rĂ©pond aux objectifs suivants : explorer les potentialitĂ©s de la trĂšs haute rĂ©solution pour restituer le plus finement possible la diversitĂ© du tapis vĂ©gĂ©tal et, suivre le dĂ©veloppement phĂ©nologique des vĂ©gĂ©tations Ă des dates diffĂ©rentes de la saison vĂ©gĂ©tative. Trois types dâimages aĂ©riennes et satellites (visible et proche infrarouge) ont Ă©tĂ© acquises sur chaque territoire sur la pĂ©riode vĂ©gĂ©tative entre 2010 et 2013
Hot Organic Molecules Toward a Young Low-Mass Star: A Look at Inner Disk Chemistry
Spitzer Space Telescope spectra of the low mass young stellar object (YSO)
IRS 46 (L_bol ~ 0.6 L_sun) in Ophiuchus reveal strong vibration-rotation
absorption bands of gaseous C2H2, HCN, and CO2. This is the only source out of
a sample of ~100 YSO's that shows these features and the first time they are
seen in the spectrum of a solar-mass YSO. Analysis of the Spitzer data combined
with Keck L- and M-band spectra gives excitation temperatures of > 350 K and
abundances of 10(-6)-10(-5) with respect to H2, orders of magnitude higher than
those found in cold clouds. In spite of this high abundance, the HCN J=4-3 line
is barely detected with the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, indicating a source
diameter less than 13 AU. The (sub)millimeter continuum emission and the
absence of scattered light in near-infrared images limits the mass and
temperature of any remnant collapse envelope to less than 0.01 M_sun and 100 K,
respectively. This excludes a hot-core type region as found in high-mass YSO's.
The most plausible origin of this hot gas rich in organic molecules is in the
inner (<6 AU radius) region of the disk around IRS 46, either the disk itself
or a disk wind. A nearly edge-on 2-D disk model fits the spectral energy
distribution (SED) and gives a column of dense warm gas along the line of sight
that is consistent with the absorption data. These data illustrate the unique
potential of high-resolution infrared spectroscopy to probe organic chemistry,
gas temperatures and kinematics in the planet-forming zones close to a young
star.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; To appear in Astrophysical Journal Letter
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