10,608 research outputs found

    Effect of Grain Size on Differential Desorption of Volatile Species and on Non-ideal MHD Diffusivity

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    We developed a chemical network for modeling the chemistry and non-ideal MHD effects from the collapsing dense molecular clouds to protostellar disks. First, we re-formulated the cosmic-ray desorption rate by considering the variations of desorption rate over the grain size distribution. We find that the differential desorption of volatile species is amplified by the grains larger than 0.1 μ\mum, because larger grains are heated to a lower temperature by cosmic-rays and hence more sensitive to the variations in binding energies. As a result, atomic nitrogen N is ∼\sim2 orders of magnitude more abundant than CO; N2_2H+^+ also becomes a few times more abundant than HCO+^+ due to the increased gas-phase N2_2. However, the changes in ionization fraction due to freeze-out and desorption only have minor effects on the non-ideal MHD diffusivities. Our chemical network confirms that the very small grains (VSGs: below a few 100 A˚\AA) weakens the efficiency of both ambipolar diffusion and Hall effect. In collapsing dense cores, a maximum ambipolar diffusion is achieved when truncating the MRN size distribution at 0.1 μ\mum, and for a maximum Hall effect, the truncation occurs at 0.04 μ\mum. We conclude that the grain size distribution is crucial to the differential depletion between CO and N2_2 related molecules, as well as to the non-ideal MHD diffusivities in dense cores.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures; Submitted to MNRA

    An Exclusive Property Model for the Common Heritage of Mankind: A Multilateral Regime for Natural Resources in Outer Space

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    The concept of the Common Heritage of Mankind (CHM) remains uncertain and controversial. This article starts with an analysis of the legal status of the CHM to identify the legal subjects who can exercise rights to the CHM and what types of rights they have. It is argued that an exclusive property model is the one successfully implemented in the law of sea regime., i.e., the CHM is defined as an exclusive property of mankind. Mankind, as a separate entity, can have ownership over the CHM, while other entities can only exercise usufruct to the CHM. This article moves further to evaluate the feasibility of transplanting this model to other fields, in particular the space field. The legal status and characteristics of the CHM can only be justified by a multilateral approach, which sets up an international regime for exploitation and utilization of natural resources in outer space

    Neutrinos in the holographic dark energy model: constraints from latest measurements of expansion history and growth of structure

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    The model of holographic dark energy (HDE) with massive neutrinos and/or dark radiation is investigated in detail. The background and perturbation evolutions in the HDE model are calculated. We employ the PPF approach to overcome the gravity instability difficulty (perturbation divergence of dark energy) led by the equation-of-state parameter ww evolving across the phantom divide w=−1w=-1 in the HDE model with c<1c<1. We thus derive the evolutions of density perturbations of various components and metric fluctuations in the HDE model. The impacts of massive neutrino and dark radiation on the CMB anisotropy power spectrum and the matter power spectrum in the HDE scenario are discussed. Furthermore, we constrain the models of HDE with massive neutrinos and/or dark radiation by using the latest measurements of expansion history and growth of structure, including the Planck CMB temperature data, the baryon acoustic oscillation data, the JLA supernova data, the Hubble constant direct measurement, the cosmic shear data of weak lensing, the Planck CMB lensing data, and the redshift space distortions data. We find that ∑mν<0.186\sum m_\nu<0.186 eV (95\% CL) and Neff=3.75−0.32+0.28N_{\rm eff}=3.75^{+0.28}_{-0.32} in the HDE model from the constraints of these data.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures; revised version accepted for publication in JCA
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