229 research outputs found
Expected spectral characteristics of (101955) Bennu and (162173) Ryugu, targets of the OSIRIS-REx and Hayabusa2 missions
NASA's OSIRIS-REx and JAXA's Hayabusa2 sample-return missions are currently
on their way to encounter primitive near-Earth asteroids (101955) Bennu and
(162173) Ryugu, respectively. Spectral and dynamical evidence indicates that
these near-Earth asteroids originated in the inner part of the main belt. There
are several primitive collisional families in this region, and both these
asteroids are most likely to have originated in the Polana-Eulalia family
complex. We present the expected spectral characteristics of both targets based
on our studies of our primitive collisional families in the inner belt:
Polana-Eulalia, Erigone, Sulamitis, and Clarissa. Observations were obtained in
the framework of our PRIMitive Asteroids Spectroscopic Survey (PRIMASS). Our
results are especially relevant to the planning and interpretation of in-situ
images and spectra to be obtained by the two spacecraft during the encounters
with their targets.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in Icarus on May 11,
201
Spitzer observations of the asteroid-comet transition object and potential spacecraft target 107P (4015) Wilson-Harrington
Context. Near-Earth asteroid-comet transition object 107P/ (4015)
Wilson-Harrington is a possible target of the joint European Space Agency (ESA)
and Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) Marco Polo sample return
mission. Physical studies of this object are relevant to this mission, and also
to understanding its asteroidal or cometary nature. Aims. Our aim is to obtain
significant new constraints on the surface thermal properties of this object.
Methods. We present mid-infrared photometry in two filters (16 and 22 microns)
obtained with NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope on February 12, 2007, and results
from the application of the Near Earth Asteroid Thermal Model (NEATM).We
obtained high S/N in two mid-IR bands allowing accurate measurements of its
thermal emission. Results. We obtain a well constrained beaming parameter (eta
= 1.39 +/- 0.26) and obtain a diameter and geometric albedo of D = 3.46 +/-
0.32 km, and pV = 0.059 +/- 0.011. We also obtain similar results when we apply
this best-fitting thermal model to single-band mid-IR photometry reported by
Campins et al. (1995), Kraemer et al. (2005) and Reach et al. (2007).
Conclusions. The albedo of 4015 Wilson-Harrington is low, consistent with those
of comet nuclei and primitive C-, P-, D-type asteorids. We establish a rough
lower limit for the thermal inertia of W-H of 60 Jm^-2s^(-0.5)K^-1 when it is
at r=1AU, which is slightly over the limit of 30 Jm^-2s^(-0.5)K-1 derived by
Groussin et al. (2009) for the thermal inertia of the nucleus of comet
22P/Kopff.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure and 3 tables. Paper accepted for publicatio
New silica based adsorbent material from rice straw and its in-flow application to nitrate reduction in waters: Process sustainability and scale-up possibilities
[EN] This paper shows a particular example to move to a sustainable circular economical process from valorization of rice straw ashes by developing a green synthesis for obtaining a useful sub-product. This strategy can palliate negative effects of the agriculture waste practices on the environment and also the obtained silica reduced nitrate content in waters. It is demonstrated that the silica synthesis developed at lab was scalable more than a hundred times with good results. Adsorption studies of nitrate in standards and real well waters at lab scale and scaling-up provided similar results. Adsorption values near to 15 mg/g for nitrate standards and 8.5 mg/g for well water were obtained until achieving the initial nitrate concentration. Experimental breakthrough curves fitted to Thomas model, which gave similar results for adsorption capacities. The adsorption capacity was checked with that obtained by a commercial resin, providing improved results. The method at large scale was compared with industrial traditional methods and green adsorbents.The authors are grateful to EU (EASME LIFE and CIP ECO-Innovation) LIBERNITRATE. LIFE 16 ENV/ES/000419; EU FEDER and the Gobierno de Espana MCIU-AEI (CTQ2017-90082-P) and the Generalitat Valenciana (PROMETEO 2020/078) and EU FEDER-Generalitat Valenciana (ID-FEDER/2018/049) for the financial support received. H. R. Robles-Jimarez expresses his grateful to EU-LIBERNITRATE. L. Sanjuan-Navarro expresses his gratitude for the FPU-grant (MCIU-AEI) .Robles-Jimarez, H.; Sanjuan-Navarro, L.; Jornet-Martínez, N.; Primaz, C.; Teruel-Juanes, R.; Molins-Legua, C.; Ribes-Greus, A.... (2022). New silica based adsorbent material from rice straw and its in-flow application to nitrate reduction in waters: Process sustainability and scale-up possibilities. Science of The Total Environment. 805:1-12. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.15031711280
A Spitzer Study of Comets 2P/Encke, 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, and C/2001 HT50 (LINEAR-NEAT)
We present infrared images and spectra of comets 2P/Encke,
67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, and C/2001 HT50 (LINEAR-NEAT) as part of a larger
program to observe comets inside of 5 AU from the sun with the Spitzer Space
Telescope. The nucleus of comet 2P/Encke was observed at two vastly different
phase angles (20 degrees and 63 degrees). Model fits to the spectral energy
distributions of the nucleus suggest comet Encke's infrared beaming parameter
derived from the near-Earth asteroid thermal model may have a phase angle
dependence. The observed emission from comet Encke's dust coma is best-modeled
using predominately amorphous carbon grains with a grain size distribution that
peaks near 0.4 microns, and the silicate contribution by mass to the sub-micron
dust coma is constrained to 31%. Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko was observed
with distinct coma emission in excess of a model nucleus at a heliocentric
distance of 5.0 AU. The coma detection suggests that sublimation processes are
still active or grains from recent activity remain near the nucleus. Comet
C/2001 HT50 (LINEAR-NEAT) showed evidence for crystalline silicates in the
spectrum obtained at 3.2 AU and we derive a silicate-to-carbon dust ratio of
0.6. The ratio is an order of magnitude lower than that derived for comets
9P/Tempel 1 during the Deep Impact encounter and C/1995 O1 (Hale-Bopp).Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal 48 pages, 15
figures, 10 table
Clinical characteristics of COVID-19 in older adults. A retrospective study in long-term nursing homes in Catalonia
Coronavirus SARS-CoV-2; COVID-19; 2019-nCoV; Residències d'avis; Taxes de mortalitatCoronavirus SARS-CoV-2; COVID-19; 2019-nCoV; Hogares de ancianos; Tasas de mortalidadCoronavirus SARS-CoV-2; COVID-19; 2019-nCoV; Nursing homes; Death ratesThe natural history of COVID-19 and predictors of mortality in older adults need to be investigated to inform clinical operations and healthcare policy planning. A retrospective study took place in 80 long-term nursing homes in Catalonia, Spain collecting data from March 1st to May 31st, 2020. Demographic and clinical data from 2,092 RT-PCR confirmed cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection were registered, including structural characteristics of the facilities. Descriptive statistics to describe the demographic, clinical, and molecular characteristics of our sample were prepared, both overall and by their symptomatology was performed and an analysis of statistically significant bivariate differences and constructions of a logistic regression model were carried out to assess the relationship between variables. The incidence of the infection was 28%. 71% of the residents showed symptoms. Five major symptoms included: fever, dyspnea, dry cough, asthenia and diarrhea. Fever and dyspnea were by far the most frequent (50% and 28%, respectively). The presentation was predominantly acute and symptomatology persisted from days to weeks (mean 9.1 days, SD = 10,9). 16% of residents had confirmed pneumonia and 22% required hospitalization. The accumulated mortality rate was 21.75% (86% concentrated during the first 28 days at onset). A multivariate logistic regression analysis showed a positive predictive value for mortality for some variables such as age, pneumonia, fever, dyspnea, stupor refusal to oral intake and dementia (p<0.01 for all variables). Results suggest that density in the nursing homes did not account for differences in the incidence of the infection within the facilities. This study provides insights into the natural history of the disease in older adults with high dependency living in long-term nursing homes during the first pandemic wave of March-May 2020 in the region of Catalonia, and suggests that some comorbidities and symptoms have a strong predictive value for mortality.The authors(s) received to specific funding for this work
Dust in Comet C/2007 N3 (Lulin)
We report optical imaging, optical and near-infrared polarimetry, and Spitzer
mid-infrared spectroscopy of comet C/2007 N3 (Lulin). Polarimetric observations
were obtained in R (0.676 micron) at phase angles from 0.44 degrees to 21
degrees with simultaneous observations in H (1.65 micron) at 4.0 degrees,
exploring the negative branch in polarization. Comet C/2007 N3 (Lulin) shows
typical negative polarization in the optical as well as a similar negative
branch near-infrared wavelengths. The 10 micron silicate feature is only weakly
in emission and according to our thermal models, is consistent with emission
from a mixture of silicate and carbon material. We argue that large,
low-porosity (akin to Ballistic Particle Cluster Aggregates) rather absorbing
aggregate dust particles best explain both the polarimetric and the
mid-infrared spectral energy distribution.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures, 3 table
The radial distribution of dust species in young brown dwarf disks
We present a study of the radial distribution of dust species in young brown
dwarf disks. Our work is based on a compositional analysis of the 10 and 20
micron silicate emission features for brown dwarfs in the Taurus-Auriga
star-forming region. A fundamental finding of our work is that brown dwarfs
exhibit stronger signs of dust processing in the cold component of the disk,
compared to the higher mass T Tauri stars in Taurus. For nearly all of our
targets, we find a flat disk structure, which is consistent with the stronger
signs of dust processing observed in these disks. For the case of one brown
dwarf, 2M04230607, we find the forsterite mass fraction to be a factor of ~3
higher in the outer disk compared to the inner disk region. Simple large-scale
radial mixing cannot account for this gradient in the dust chemical
composition, and some local crystalline formation mechanism may be effective in
this disk. The relatively high abundance of crystalline silicates in the outer
cold regions of brown dwarf disks provides an interesting analogy to comets. In
this context, we have discussed the applicability of the various mechanisms
that have been proposed for comets on the formation and the outward transport
of high-temperature material. We also present Chandra X-ray observations for
two Taurus brown dwarfs, 2M04414825 and CFHT-BD-Tau 9. We find 2M04414825,
which has a ~12% crystalline mass fraction, to be more than an order of
magnitude brighter in X-ray than CFHT-BD-Tau 9, which has a ~35% crystalline
mass fraction. Combining with previous X-ray data, we find the inner disk
crystalline mass fractions to be anti-correlated with the X-ray strength.Comment: Accepted in MNRA
Comet 162P/Siding Spring: A Surprisingly Large Nucleus
We present an analysis of thermal emission from comet 162P/Siding Spring
(P/2004 TU12) measured during its discovery apparition in 2004 December. The
comet showed no dust coma at this time, so we have sampled emission from the
comet's nucleus. Observations using the Mid-Infrared Spectrometer and Imager
(MIRSI) were performed at NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility, where the peak of
the comet's spectral energy distribution was observed between 8 and 25 microns.
In combination with the three near-IR spectra presented by Campins et al.
(2006, Astron. J. 132, 1346) that show the Wien-law tail of the thermal
emission, the data provide powerful constraints on surface properties of the
nucleus. We find that the nucleus's effective radius is 6.0+/-0.8 km. This is
one of the largest radii known among Jupiter-family comets, which is unusual
considering that the comet was discovered only recently. Its geometric albedo
is 0.059+/-0.023 in the H band, 0.037+/-0.014 in the R band, and 0.034+/-0.013
in the V band. We also find that the nucleus of 162P has little IR beaming, and
this implies that the nucleus has low thermal inertia. Including all near-IR
spectra yields a beaming parameter of 1.01+/-0.20. This result is in agreement
with others showing that cometary nuclei have low thermal inertia and little IR
beaming. If confirmed for many nuclei, the interpretation of radiometry may not
be as problematic as feared.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, appearing in The Astronomical Journal, September
2006 issu
Spatially resolved H2 emission from the disk around T Tau N
We report the detection of quiescent H2 emission in a spatially resolved
ring-like structure within 100 AU of T Tau N. We present evidence to show that
the emission most likely arises from shocks in the atmosphere of a nearly
face-on disk around T Tau N. Using high spatial resolution 3D spectroscopic
K-band data, we trace the spatial distribution of several H2 NIR rovibrational
lines in the vicinity of T Tau N. We detect weak H2 emission from the v=1-0
S(0), S(1), Q(1) lines and the v=2-1 S(1) line in a ring-like structure around
T Tau N between 0.1'' (~15 AU) and 0.7'' (~100AU) from the star. The v=1-0 S(0)
and v=2-1 S(1) lines are detected only in the outer parts of the ring
structure. Closer to the star, the strong continuum limits our sensitivity to
these lines. The total flux of the v=1-0 S(1) line is 1.8 *10^{-14} ergs
s^{-1}cm^{-2}, similar to previous measurements of H2 in circumstellar disks.
The velocity of the H2 emitting gas around T Tau N is consistent with the rest
velocity of the star, and the H2 does not seem to be part of a collimated
outflow. Both shocks impinging on the surface of a disk and irradiation of a
disk by UV-photons and X-rays from the central star are plausible candidates
for the H2 excitation mechanism. However, irradiation should not create a large
degree of excitation at radii larger than 20 AU. Most likely the H2 emission
arises in the atmosphere of a flared disk with radius 85-100 AU and mass
0.005-0.5Msun, where the gas is excited by shocks created when a wide-angle
wind impinges on the disk. The H2 emission could also originate from shock
excitation in the cavity walls of an envelope, but this requires an unusually
high velocity of the wide-angle wind from T Tau N.Comment: Accepted by A&
An upper limit for the water outgassing rate of the main-belt comet 176P/LINEAR observed with Herschel/HIFI
176P/LINEAR is a member of the new cometary class known as main-belt comets
(MBCs). It displayed cometary activity shortly during its 2005 perihelion
passage that may be driven by the sublimation of sub-surface ices. We have
therefore searched for emission of the H2O 110-101 ground state rotational line
at 557 GHz toward 176P/LINEAR with the Heterodyne Instrument for the Far
Infrared (HIFI) on board the Herschel Space Observatory on UT 8.78 August 2011,
about 40 days after its most recent perihelion passage, when the object was at
a heliocentric distance of 2.58 AU. No H2O line emission was detected in our
observations, from which we derive sensitive 3-sigma upper limits for the water
production rate and column density of < 4e25 molec/s and of < 3e10 cm^{-2},
respectively. From the peak brightness measured during the object's active
period in 2005, this upper limit is lower than predicted by the relation
between production rates and visual magnitudes observed for a sample of comets
by Jorda et al. (2008) at this heliocentric distance. Thus, 176P/LINEAR was
likely less active at the time of our observation than during its previous
perihelion passage. The retrieved upper limit is lower than most values derived
for the H2O production rate from the spectroscopic search for CN emission in
MBCs.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Minor changes to match published versio
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