8,243 research outputs found
On the nature of kink MHD waves in magnetic flux tubes
Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) waves are often reported in the solar atmosphere
and usually classified as slow, fast, or Alfv\'en. The possibility that these
waves have mixed properties is often ignored. The goal of this work is to study
and determine the nature of MHD kink waves. This is done by calculating the
frequency, the damping rate and the eigenfunctions of MHD kink waves for three
widely different MHD waves cases: a compressible pressure-less plasma, an
incompressible plasma and a compressible plasma with non-zero plasma pressure
which allows for MHD radiation. In all three cases the frequency and the
damping rate are for practical purposes the same as they differ at most by
terms proportional to . In the magnetic flux tube the kink waves are
in all three cases, to a high degree of accuracy incompressible waves with
negligible pressure perturbations and with mainly horizontal motions. The main
restoring force of kink waves in the magnetised flux tube is the magnetic
tension force. The total pressure gradient force cannot be neglected except
when the frequency of the kink wave is equal or slightly differs from the local
Alfv\'{e}n frequency, i.e. in the resonant layer. Kink waves are very robust
and do not care about the details of the MHD wave environment. The adjective
fast is not the correct adjective to characterise kink waves. If an adjective
is to be used it should be Alfv\'{e}nic. However, it is better to realize that
kink waves have mixed properties and cannot be put in one single box
Effect of partial ionization on wave propagation in solar magnetic flux tubes
Observations show that waves are ubiquitous in the solar atmosphere and may
play an important role for plasma heating. The study of waves in the solar
corona is usually based on linear ideal magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) for a fully
ionized plasma. However, the plasma in the photosphere and the chromosphere is
only partially ionized. Here we investigate theoretically the impact of partial
ionization on MHD wave propagation in cylindrical flux tubes in the two-fluid
model. We derive the general dispersion relation that takes into account the
effects of neutral-ion collisions and the neutral gas pressure. We take the
neutral-ion collision frequency as an arbitrary parameter. Particular results
for transverse kink modes and slow magnetoacoustic modes are shown. We find
that the wave frequencies only depend on the properties of the ionized fluid
when the neutral-ion collision frequency is much lower that the wave frequency.
For high collision frequencies realistic of the solar atmosphere ions and
neutrals behave as a single fluid with an effective density corresponding to
the sum of densities of both fluids and an effective sound velocity computed as
the average of the sound velocities of ions and neutrals. The MHD wave
frequencies are modified accordingly. The neutral gas pressure can be neglected
when studying transverse kink waves but it has to be taken into account for a
consistent description of slow magnetoacoustic waves. The MHD waves are damped
due to neutral-ion collisions. The damping is most efficient when the wave
frequency and the collision frequency are of the same order of magnitude. For
high collision frequencies slow magnetoacoustic waves are more efficiently
damped than transverse kink waves. In addition, we find the presence of
cut-offs for certain combinations of parameters that cause the waves to become
non-propagating.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Prominence seismology using the period ratio of transverse thread oscillations
The ratio of the period of the fundamental mode to that of the first overtone
of kink oscillations, from here on the "period ratio", is a seismology tool
that can be used to infer information about the spatial variation of density
along solar magnetic flux tubes. The period ratio is 2 in longitudinally
homogeneous thin tubes, but it differs from 2 due to longitudinal
inhomogeneity. In this paper we investigate the period ratio in longitudinally
inhomogeneous prominence threads and explore its implications for prominence
seismology. We numerically solve the two-dimensional eigenvalue problem of kink
oscillations in a model of a prominence thread. We take into account three
nonuniform density profiles along the thread. In agreement with previous works
that used simple piecewise constant density profiles, we find that the period
ratio is larger than 2 in prominence threads. When the ratio of the central
density to that at the footpoints is fixed, the period ratio depends strongly
on the form of the density profile along the thread. The more concentrated the
dense prominence plasma near the center of the tube, the larger the period
ratio. However, the period ratio is found to be independent of the specific
density profile when the spatially averaged density in the thread is the same
for all the profiles. An empirical fit of the dependence of the period ratio on
the average density is given and its use for prominence seismology is
discussed.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Mechanical cleaning of graphene
Contamination of graphene due to residues from nanofabrication often
introduces background doping and reduces charge carrier mobility. For samples
of high electronic quality, post-lithography cleaning treatments are therefore
needed. We report that mechanical cleaning based on contact mode AFM removes
residues and significantly improves the electronic properties. A mechanically
cleaned dual-gated bilayer graphene transistor with hBN dielectrics exhibited a
mobility of ~36,000 cm2/Vs at low temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
New insights on accretion in Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients from XMM-Newton and INTEGRAL observations of IGR J175442619
XMM-Newton observations of the supergiant fast X-ray transient
IGRJ175442619 are reported and placed in the context of an analysis of
archival INTEGRAL/IBIS data that provides a refined estimate of the orbital
period at 4.92720.0004 days. A complete outburst history across the
INTEGRAL mission is reported. Although the new XMM-Newton observations (each
lasting 15 ks) targeted the peak flux in the phase-folded hard X-ray
light curve of IGRJ175442619, no bright outbursts were observed, the
source spending the majority of the exposure at intermediate luminosities of
the order of several 10ergs (0.510keV) and
displaying only low level flickering activity. For the final portion of the
exposure, the luminosity of IGRJ175442619 dropped to
410ergs (0.5 - 10 keV), comparable with the
lowest luminosities ever detected from this source, despite the observations
being taken near to periastron. We consider the possible orbital geometry of
IGRJ175442619 and the implications for the nature of the mass transfer
and accretion mechanisms for both IGRJ175442619 and the SFXT population.
We conclude that accretion under the `quasi-spherical accretion' model provides
a good description of the behaviour of IGRJ175442619, and suggest an
additional mechanism for generating outbursts based upon the mass accumulation
rate in the hot shell (atmosphere) that forms around the NS under the
quasi-spherical formulation. Hence we hope to aid in explaining the varied
outburst behaviours observed across the SFXT population with a consistent
underlying physical model.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Using a gamified monitoring app to change adolescents' snack intake : the development of the REWARD app and evaluation design
Background: As the snacking pattern of European adolescents is of great concern, effective interventions are necessary. Till now health promotion efforts in children and adolescents have had only limited success in changing adolescents' eating patterns and anthropometrics. Therefore, the present study proposes an innovative approach to influence dietary behaviors in youth based on new insights on effective behavior change strategies and attractive intervention channels to engage adolescents. This article describes the rationale, the development, and evaluation design of the 'Snack Track School' app. The aim of the app is to improve the snacking patterns of Flemish 14- to 16-year olds.
Methods: The development of the app was informed by the systematic, stepwise, iterative, and collaborative principles of the Intervention Mapping protocol. A four week mHealth intervention was developed based on the dual-system model with behavioral change strategies targeting both the reflective (i.e., active learning, advance organizers, mere exposure, goal-setting, monitoring, and feedback) and automatic processes (i.e., rewards and positive reinforcement). This intervention will be evaluated via a controlled pre-post design in Flemish schools among 1400 adolescents.
Discussion: When this intervention including strategies focused on both the reflective and automatic pathway proves to be effective, it will offer a new scientifically-based vision, guidelines and practical tools for public health and health promotion (i.e., incorporation of learning theories in intervention programs)
Impaired Postural Control Reduces Sit-to-Stand-to-Sit Performance in Individuals with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Abstract
Background: Functional activities, such as the sit-to-stand-to-sit (STSTS) task, are often impaired in individuals with chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The STSTS task places a high demand on the postural control system, which has
been shown to be impaired in individuals with COPD. It remains unknown whether postural control deficits contribute to
the decreased STSTS performance in individuals with COPD.
Methods: Center of pressure displacement was determined in 18 individuals with COPD and 18 age/gender-matched
controls during five consecutive STSTS movements with vision occluded. The total duration, as well as the duration of each
sit, sit-to-stand, stand and stand-to-sit phase was recorded.
Results: Individuals with COPD needed significantly more time to perform five consecutive STSTS movements compared to healthy controls (1966 vs. 1364 seconds, respectively; p = 0.001). The COPD group exhibited a significantly longer stand phase (p = 0.028) and stand-to-sit phase (p = 0.001) compared to the control group. In contrast, the duration of the sit phase (p = 0.766) and sit-to-stand phase (p = 0.999) was not different between groups.
Conclusions: Compared to healthy individuals, individuals with COPD needed significantly more time to complete those phases of the STSTS task that require the greatest postural control. These findings support the proposition that suboptimal postural control is an important contributor to the decreased STSTS performance in individuals with COPD
From research to farm : ex ante evaluation of strategic deworming in pig finishing
This paper upgrades generic and partial information from parasitological research for farm-specific decision support, using two methods from managerial sciences: partial budgeting and frontier analysis. The analysis focuses on strategic deworming in pig finishing and assesses both effects on economic performance and nutrient efficiency. The application of partial budgeting and frontier analysis is based on a production-theoretical system analysis which is necessary to integrate parasitological research results to assess aggregate economic and environmental impacts. Results show that both statistically significant and insignificant parasitological research results have to be taken into account. Partial budgeting and frontier analysis appear to be complementary methods: partial budgeting yields more discriminatory and communicative results, while frontier methods provide additional diagnostics through exploring optimization possibilities and economic-environmental trade-offs. Strategic deworming results in a win-win effect on economic and environmental performances. Gross margin increases with 3 to 12 € per average present finisher per year, depending on the cyclic pig price conditions. The impact on the nutrient balance ranges from +0.2 to –0.5 kg nitrogen per average present finisher per year. The observed efficiency improvements are mainly technical and further economic and environmental optimizations can be achieved through input re-allocation. A user-friendly spreadsheet is provided to translate the generic experimental information to farm-specific conditions
Alfven node-free vibrations of white dwarf in the model of solid star with toroidal magnetic field
In the context of the white dwarf asteroseismology, we investigate
vibrational properties of a non-convective solid star with an axisymmetric
purely toroidal intrinsic magnetic field of two different shapes. Focus is laid
on regime of node-free global Lorentz-force-driven vibrations about symmetry
axis at which material displacements have one and the same form as those for
nodeless spheroidal and torsional vibrations restored by Hooke's force of
elastic shear stresses. Particular attention is given to the even-parity
poloidal Alfven modes whose frequency spectra are computed in analytic form
showing how the purely toroidal magnetic fields completely buried beneath the
star surface can manifest itself in seismic vibrations of non-magnetic white
dwarfs. The obtained spectral formulae are discussed in juxtaposition with
those for Alfven modes in the solid star model with the poloidal, homogeneous
internal and dipolar external, magnetic field whose inferences are relevant to
Alfven vibrations in magnetic white dwarfs.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysics & Space Scienc
Fine and ultrafine particle number and size measurements from industrial combustion processes : primary emissions field data
This study is to our knowledge the first to present the results of on-line measurements of residual nanoparticle numbers downstream of the flue gas treatment systems of a wide variety of medium- and large-scale industrial installations. Where available, a semi-quantitative elemental composition of the sampled particles is carried out using a Scanning Electron Microscope coupled with an Energy Dispersive Spectrometer (SEM-EDS). The semi-quantitative elemental composition as a function of the particle size is presented. EU's Best Available Technology documents (BAT) show removal efficiencies of Electrostatic Precipitator (ESP) and bag filter dedusting systems exceeding 99% when expressed in terms of weight. Their efficiency decreases slightly for particles smaller than 1 mu m but when expressed in terms of weight, still exceeds 99% for bag filters and 96% for ESP. This study reveals that in terms of particle numbers, residual nanoparticles (NP) leaving the dedusting systems dominate by several orders of magnitude. In terms of weight, all installations respect their emission limit values and the contribution of NP to weight concentrations is negligible, despite their dominance in terms of numbers. Current World Health Organisation regulations are expressed in terms of PM2.5 wt concentrations and therefore do not reflect the presence or absence of a high number of NP. This study suggests that research is needed on possible additional guidelines related to NP given their possible toxicity and high potential to easily enter the blood stream when inhaled by humans
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