145 research outputs found
The Origin of Soft X-rays in DQ Herculis
DQ Herculis (Nova Herculis 1934) is a deeply eclipsing cataclysmic variable
containing a magnetic white dwarf primary. The accretion disk is thought to
block our line of sight to the white dwarf at all orbital phases due to its
extreme inclination angle. Nevertheless, soft X-rays were detected from DQ Her
with ROSAT PSPC. To probe the origin of these soft X-rays, we have performed
Chandra ACIS observations. We confirm that DQ Her is an X-ray source. The bulk
of the X-rays are from a point-like source and exhibit a shallow partial
eclipse. We interpret this as due to scattering of the unseen central X-ray
source, probably in an accretion disk wind. At the same time, we observe what
appear to be weak extended X-ray features around DQ Her, which we interpret as
an X-ray emitting knot in the nova shell.Comment: 18 pages including 4 figures, accepted for publication in
Astrphyisical Journa
Carbon isotope discrimination of arctic and boreal biomes inferred from remote atmospheric measurements and a biosphere-atmosphere model
Estimating discrimination against ^(13)C during photosynthesis at landscape, regional, and biome scales is difficult because of large-scale variability in plant stress, vegetation composition, and photosynthetic pathway. Here we present estimates of ^(13)C discrimination for northern biomes based on a biosphere-atmosphere model and on National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory and Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research remote flask measurements. With our inversion approach, we solved for three ecophysiological parameters of the northern biosphere (^(13)C discrimination, a net primary production light use efficiency, and a temperature sensitivity of heterotrophic respiration (a Q10 factor)) that provided a best fit between modeled and observed δ^(13)C and CO_2. In our analysis we attempted to explicitly correct for fossil fuel emissions, remote C4 ecosystem fluxes, ocean exchange, and isotopic disequilibria of terrestrial heterotrophic respiration caused by the Suess effect. We obtained a photosynthetic discrimination for arctic and boreal biomes between 19.0 and 19.6‰. Our inversion analysis suggests that Q10 and light use efficiency values that minimize the cost function covary. The optimal light use efficiency was 0.47 gC MJ^(−1) photosynthetically active radiation, and the optimal Q10 value was 1.52. Fossil fuel and ocean exchange contributed proportionally more to month-to-month changes in the atmospheric growth rate of δ^(13)C and CO_2 during winter months, suggesting that remote atmospheric observations during the summer may yield more precise estimates of the isotopic composition of the biosphere
Fire emissions from C-3 and C-4 vegetation and their influence on interannual variability of atmospheric CO2 and delta (CO2) - C- 13
Measurements of atmospheric trace gases provide evidence that fire emissions increased during the 1997/1998 El Niño event and these emissions contributed substantially to global C
Low-Luminosity Gamma-Ray Bursts as a Distinct GRB Population:A Firmer Case from Multiple Criteria Constraints
The intriguing observations of Swift/BAT X-ray flash XRF 060218 and the
BATSE-BeppoSAX gamma-ray burst GRB 980425, both with much lower luminosity and
redshift compared to other observed bursts, naturally lead to the question of
how these low-luminosity (LL) bursts are related to high-luminosity (HL)
bursts. Incorporating the constraints from both the flux-limited samples
observed with CGRO/BATSE and Swift/BAT and the redshift-known GRB sample, we
investigate the luminosity function for both LL- and HL-GRBs through
simulations. Our multiple criteria, including the log N - log P distributions
from the flux-limited GRB sample, the redshift and luminosity distributions of
the redshift-known sample, and the detection ratio of HL- and LL- GRBs with
Swift/BAT, provide a set of stringent constraints to the luminosity function.
Assuming that the GRB rate follows the star formation rate, our simulations
show that a simple power law or a broken power law model of luminosity function
fail to reproduce the observations, and a new component is required. This
component can be modeled with a broken power, which is characterized by a sharp
increase of the burst number at around L < 10^47 erg s^-1}. The lack of
detection of moderate-luminosity GRBs at redshift ~0.3 indicates that this
feature is not due to observational biases. The inferred local rate, rho_0, of
LL-GRBs from our model is ~ 200 Gpc^-3 yr^-1 at ~ 10^47 erg s^-1, much larger
than that of HL-GRBs. These results imply that LL-GRBs could be a separate GRB
population from HL-GRBs. The recent discovery of a local X-ray transient
080109/SN 2008D would strengthen our conclusion, if the observed non-thermal
emission has a similar origin as the prompt emission of most GRBs and XRFs.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables; MNRAS, in press; Updated analysis and
figure
Математична залежність точності верстатних пристроїв від їх ступеня гнучкості
Підвищення конкурентоспроможності продукції, що виробляється
невеликими підприємствами, забезпечується шляхом скорочення витрат на
проектування та виготовлення технологічної оснастки для свердлильно-
фрезерно-розточувальних операцій. Це стає можливим за рахунок
використання гнучких верстатних пристроїв (ВП), що мають можливість
переналагодження у заданому діапазоні розмірів заготовки шляхом
регулювання установлювально-затискних елементів
Second law, entropy production, and reversibility in thermodynamics of information
We present a pedagogical review of the fundamental concepts in thermodynamics
of information, by focusing on the second law of thermodynamics and the entropy
production. Especially, we discuss the relationship among thermodynamic
reversibility, logical reversibility, and heat emission in the context of the
Landauer principle and clarify that these three concepts are fundamentally
distinct to each other. We also discuss thermodynamics of measurement and
feedback control by Maxwell's demon. We clarify that the demon and the second
law are indeed consistent in the measurement and the feedback processes
individually, by including the mutual information to the entropy production.Comment: 43 pages, 10 figures. As a chapter of: G. Snider et al. (eds.),
"Energy Limits in Computation: A Review of Landauer's Principle, Theory and
Experiments
Rubisco evolution in C₄ eudicots: an analysis of Amaranthaceae sensu lato.
BACKGROUND: Rubisco (ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase) catalyses the key reaction in the photosynthetic assimilation of CO₂. In C₄ plants CO₂ is supplied to Rubisco by an auxiliary CO₂-concentrating pathway that helps to maximize the carboxylase activity of the enzyme while suppressing its oxygenase activity. As a consequence, C₄ Rubisco exhibits a higher maximum velocity but lower substrate specificity compared with the C₃ enzyme. Specific amino-acids in Rubisco are associated with C₄ photosynthesis in monocots, but it is not known whether selection has acted on Rubisco in a similar way in eudicots. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We investigated Rubisco evolution in Amaranthaceae sensu lato (including Chenopodiaceae), the third-largest family of C₄ plants, using phylogeny-based maximum likelihood and Bayesian methods to detect Darwinian selection on the chloroplast rbcL gene in a sample of 179 species. Two Rubisco residues, 281 and 309, were found to be under positive selection in C₄ Amaranthaceae with multiple parallel replacements of alanine by serine at position 281 and methionine by isoleucine at position 309. Remarkably, both amino-acids have been detected in other C₄ plant groups, such as C₄ monocots, illustrating a striking parallelism in molecular evolution. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our findings illustrate how simple genetic changes can contribute to the evolution of photosynthesis and strengthen the hypothesis that parallel amino-acid replacements are associated with adaptive changes in Rubisco
Neuropsychological Correlates of Cystic Fibrosis in Patients 5 to 8 Years Old
Intellectual, academic, and neuropsychological tests were administered to 20 children with cystic fibrosis (CF). Results were compared to test results from 20 controls matched for gender, age, and socioeconomic status. No differences between the groups were found. For children with CF, Verbal IQ, sensory-perceptual skills, and incidental learning correlated (rs = .39-.67) with Shwachman criteria of disease severity, with significant positive relations with the Growth and Nutrition measure, an index of the severity of the disease. Processing of tactile-perceptual information may be particularly vulnerable to disease severity. This study provides more information than previously available on the neuropsychological status of young children with CF, and it offers some hypotheses regarding the relation between disease severity and neuropsychological function.published_or_final_versio
Satellite-based terrestrial production efficiency modeling
Production efficiency models (PEMs) are based on the theory of light use efficiency (LUE) which states that a relatively constant relationship exists between photosynthetic carbon uptake and radiation receipt at the canopy level. Challenges remain however in the application of the PEM methodology to global net primary productivity (NPP) monitoring. The objectives of this review are as follows: 1) to describe the general functioning of six PEMs (CASA; GLO-PEM; TURC; C-Fix; MOD17; and BEAMS) identified in the literature; 2) to review each model to determine potential improvements to the general PEM methodology; 3) to review the related literature on satellite-based gross primary productivity (GPP) and NPP modeling for additional possibilities for improvement; and 4) based on this review, propose items for coordinated research
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