392 research outputs found
Testing Spallation Processes With Beryllium and Boron
The nucleosynthesis of Be and B by spallation processes provides unique
insight into the origin of cosmic rays. Namely, different spallation schemes
predict sharply different trends for the growth of LiBeB abundances with
respect to oxygen. ``Primary'' mechanisms predict BeB O, and are well
motivated by the data if O/Fe is constant at low metallicity. In contrast,
``secondary'' mechanisms predict BeB O and are consistent with
the data if O/Fe increases towards low metallicity as some recent data suggest.
Clearly, any primary mechanism, if operative, will dominate early in the
history of the Galaxy. In this paper, we fit the BeB data to a two-component
scheme which includes both primary and secondary trends. In this way, the data
can be used to probe the period in which primary mechanisms are effective. We
analyze the data using consistent stellar atmospheric parameters based on
Balmer line data and the continuum infrared flux. Results depend sensitively on
Pop II O abundances and, unfortunately, on the choice of stellar parameters.
When using recent results which show O/Fe increasing toward lower metallicity,
a two-component Be-O fits indicates that primary and secondary components
contribute equally at [O/H] = -1.8 for Balmer line data; and
[O/H] = -1.4 to -1.8 for IRFM. We apply these constraints to recent
models for LiBeB origin. The Balmer line data does not show any evidence for
primary production. On the other hand, the IRFM data does indicate a preference
for a two-component model, such as a combination of standard GCR and
metal-enriched particles accelerated in superbubbles. These conclusions rely on
a detailed understanding of the abundance data including systematic effects
which may alter the derived O-Fe and BeB-Fe relations.Comment: 40 pages including 11 ps figures. Written in AASTe
The effects of discreteness of galactic cosmic rays sources
Most studies of GeV Galactic Cosmic Rays (GCR) nuclei assume a steady
state/continuous distribution for the sources of cosmic rays, but this
distribution is actually discrete in time and in space. The current progress in
our understanding of cosmic ray physics (acceleration, propagation), the
required consistency in explaining several GCRs manifestation (nuclei,
,...) as well as the precision of present and future space missions
(e.g. INTEGRAL, AMS, AGILE, GLAST) point towards the necessity to go beyond
this approximation. A steady state semi-analytical model that describes well
many nuclei data has been developed in the past years based on this
approximation, as well as others. We wish to extend it to a time dependent
version, including discrete sources. As a first step, the validity of several
approximations of the model we use are checked to validate the approach: i) the
effect of the radial variation of the interstellar gas density is inspected and
ii) the effect of a specific modeling for the galactic wind (linear vs
constant) is discussed. In a second step, the approximation of using continuous
sources in space is considered. This is completed by a study of time
discreteness through the time-dependent version of the propagation equation. A
new analytical solution of this equation for instantaneous point-like sources,
including the effect of escape, galactic wind and spallation, is presented.
Application of time and space discretness to definite propagation conditions
and realistic distributions of sources will be presented in a future paper.Comment: final version, 8 figures, accepted in ApJ. A misprint in fig 8 labels
has been correcte
The deuterium-to-oxygen ratio in the interstellar medium
Because the ionization balances for HI, OI, and DI are locked together by
charge exchange, D/O is an important tracer for the value of the D/H ratio and
for potential spatial variations in the ratio. As the DI and OI column
densities are of similar orders of magnitude for a given sight line,
comparisons of the two values will generally be less subject to systematic
errors than comparisons of DI and HI, which differ by about five orders of
magnitude. Moreover, D/O is additionally sensitive to astration, because as
stars destroy deuterium, they should produce oxygen. We report here the results
of a survey of D/O in the interstellar medium performed with FUSE. We also
compare these results with those for D/N. Together with a few results from
previous missions, the sample totals 24 lines of sight. The distances range
from a few pc to ~2000 pc and log N(DI) from ~13 to ~16 (cm-2). The D/O ratio
is constant in the local interstellar medium out to distances of ~150 pc and
N(DI) ~ 1x10^15 cm-2, i.e. within the Local Bubble. In this region of the
interstellar space, we find D/O = (3.84+/-0.16)x10^-2 (1 sigma in the mean).
The homogeneity of the local D/O measurements shows that the spatial variations
in the local D/H and O/H must be extremely small, if any. A comparison of the
Local Bubble mean value with the few D/O measurements available for low
metallicity quasar sight lines shows that the D/O ratio decreases with cosmic
evolution, as expected. Beyond the Local Bubble we detected significant spatial
variations in the value of D/O. This likely implies a variation in D/H, as O/H
is known to not vary significantly over the distances covered in this study.
Our dataset suggests a present-epoch deuterium abundance below 1x10^-5, i.e.
lower than the value usually assumed, around 1.5x10^-5.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
Implications of a new temperature scale for halo dwarfs on LiBeB and chemical evolution
Big bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) and the cosmic baryon density from cosmic
microwave background anisotropies together predict a primordial Li7 abundance a
factor of 2--3 higher than that observed in galactic halo dwarf stars. A recent
analysis of Li7 observations in halo stars, using significantly higher surface
temperature for these stars, found a higher Li plateau abundance. These results
go a long way towards resolving the discrepancy with BBN. Here, we examine the
implications of the higher surface temperatures on the abundances of Be and B
which are thought to have been produced in galactic cosmic-ray nucleosynthesis
by spallation of CNO together with Li (produced in alpha + alpha collisions).
While the Be abundance is not overly sensitive to the surface temperature, the
derived B abundances and more importantly the derived oxygen abundances are
very temperature dependent. If the new temperature scale is correct, the
implied increased abundances of these elements poses a serious challenge to
models of galactic cosmic ray nucleosynthesis and galactic chemical evolution.Comment: 23 pages, 10 eps figure
Spallation dominated propagation of Heavy Cosmic Rays and the Local Interstellar Medium (LISM)
Measurements of ultra heavy nuclei at GeV/n energies in the galactic cosmic
radiation address the question of the sources (nucleosynthetic s- and
r-processes). As such, the determination of CR source abundances is a promising
way to discriminate between existing nucleosynthesis models. For primary
species (nuclei present and accelerated at sources), it is generally assumed
that the relative propagated abundances, if they are close in mass, are not too
different from their relative source abundances. Besides, the range of the
correction factor associated to propagation has been estimated in weighted slab
models only. Heavy CRs that are detected near Earth were accelerated from
regions that are closer to us than were the light nuclei. Hence, the geometry
of sources in the Solar neighbourhood, and as equally important, the geometry
of gas in the same region, must be taken into account. In this paper, a two
zone diffusion model is used, and as was previously investigated for
radioactive species, we report here on the impact of the local interstellar
medium (LISM) feature (under-dense medium over a scale ~100 pc) on primary and
secondary stable nuclei propagated abundances. Going down to Fe nuclei, the
connection between heavy and light abundances is also inspected. A general
trend is found that decreases the UHCR source abundances relative to the HCR
ones. This could have an impact on the level of r-process required to reproduce
the data.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, accepted by A&A. Comparison with truncated
weighted slab and discussion added. Figure 8 modified. New appendix on
truncated weighted slab techniqu
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The role of the subtropical jet in deficient winter precipitation across the mid-Holocene Indus basin
The mid-Holocene (7-5 ka) was a period with an increased seasonal insolation cycle, resulting from decreased insolation during northern hemisphere winter. Here, a set of six CMIP5 models is used to show that the decreased insolation reduced the upper-tropospheric meridional temperature gradient, producing a weaker subtropical jet with less horizontal shear.
These effects work to reduce the baroclinic and barotropic instability available for perturbations to grow, and in consequence, storm-tracking results show that there are fewer winter storms over India and Pakistan (known as western disturbances). These western disturbances are weaker, resulting in a reduction in winter precipitation of around 15% in the north Indus Basin.
Combined with previous work showing greater northwestward extent of the Indian monsoon during the mid-Holocene, our GCM-derived results are consistent with the Indus Basin changing from a summer-growing season in the mid-Holocene to a winter-growing season in the present day
Evolution of Li, Be and B in the Galaxy
In this paper we study the production of Li, Be and B nuclei by Galactic
cosmic ray spallation processes. We include three kinds of processes: (i)
spallation by light cosmic rays impinging on interstellar CNO nuclei (direct
processes); (ii) spallation by CNO cosmic ray nuclei impinging on interstellar
p and 4He (inverse processes); and (iii) alpha-alpha fusion reactions. The
latter dominate the production of 6Li and 7Li. We calculate production rates
for a closed-box Galactic model, verifying the quadratic dependence of the Be
and B abundances for low values of Z. These are quite general results and are
known to disagree with observations. We then show that the multi-zone
multi-population model we used previously for other aspects of Galactic
evolution produces quite good agreement with the linear trend observed at low
metallicities without fine tuning. We argue that reported discrepancies between
theory and observations do not represent a nucleosynthetic problem, but instead
are the consequences of inaccurate treatments of Galactic evolution.Comment: 26 pages, 5 figures, LaTeX. The Astrophysical Journal, in pres
Multi-wavelength analysis of the dust emission in the Small Magellanic Cloud
We present an analysis of dust grain emission in the diffuse interstellar
medium of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). This study is motivated by the
availability of 170 microns ISOPHOT data covering a large part of the SMC, with
a resolution enabling to disentangle the diffuse medium from the star forming
regions. After data reduction and subtraction of Galactic foreground emission,
we used the ISOPHOT data together with HiRes IRAS data and ATCA/Parkes combined
HI column density maps to determine dust properties for the diffuse medium. We
found a far infrared emissivity per hydrogen atom 30 times lower than the Solar
Neighborhood value. The modeling of the spectral energy distribution of the
dust, taking into account the enhanced interstellar radiation field, gives a
similar conclusion for the smallest grains (PAHs and very small grains)
emitting at shorter wavelength. Assuming Galactic dust composition in the SMC,
this result implies a difference in the gas-to-dust ratio (GDR) 3 times larger
than the difference in metallicity. This low depletion of heavy elements in
dust could be specific of the diffuse ISM and not apply for the whole SMC dust
if it results from efficient destruction of dust by supernovae explosions.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Firms' Main Market, Human Capital and Wages
Recent international trade literature emphasizes two features in characterizing the current patterns of trade: efficiency heterogeneity at the firm level and quality differentiation. This paper explores human capital and wage differences across firms in that context. We build a partial equilibrium model predicting that firms selling in more-remote markets employ higher human capital and pay higher wages to employees within each education group. The channel linking these variables is firmsâ endogenous choice of quality. Predictions are tested using Spanish employer-employee matched data that classify firms according to four main destination markets: local, national, European Union, and rest of the World. Employeesâ average education is increasing in the remoteness of firmâs main output market. Marketâdestination wage premia are large, increasing in the remoteness of the market, and increasing in individual education. These results suggest that increasing globalization may play a significant role in raising wage inequality within and across education groups
Effective treatment of anal cancer in the elderly with low-dose chemoradiotherapy
Chemoradiotherapy (CRT) is accepted as the standard initial treatment for squamous cell anal cancer. However, frail elderly patients cannot always tolerate full-dose CRT. This paper reports the results of a modified regimen for this group of patients. In all, 16 patients with biopsy-proven squamous cell carcinoma of the anal canal or margin and performance status or co-morbidity precluding the use of full-dose CRT were included in this protocol. The median age was 81 (range 77â91). Patients received a dose of 30âGy to the gross tumour volume plus 3âcm margin in all directions. Concurrent chemotherapy comprised 5-fluorouracil 600âmgâmâ2 given over 24âh on days 1â4 of radiotherapy. The treatment was well tolerated. All 16 patients completed treatment as planned. Only one patient experienced any grade 3 toxicity (skin). The local control at a median follow-up of 16 months was 73% (13 out of 16). The overall survival was 69% and disease-specific survival 86%. This is a well-tolerated regimen for elderly/poor performance patients with anal cancer, which can achieve high rates of local control and survival. Longer follow-up will determine whether these encouraging results are maintained
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