20,915 research outputs found
Mechanics of liquid helium in a partially filled rotating dewar in low gravity with application to Gravity Probe-B
The Gravity Probe-B spacecraft is composed largely of a liquid helium dewar containing an experiment package. It is shown that an unsymmetric liquid helium distribution in the dewar can cause unacceptably high forces, gravitational and gravity gradient forces, at the experiment location. It is further shown that for the planned spacecraft configuration and operational parameters, it is very likely that the liquid helium distribution in the dewar will be unsymmetric. The required symmetry can be attained by using higher operational spacecraft rotation rates
Optical observations of 23 distant Jupiter Family Comets, including 36P/Whipple at multiple phase angles
We present photometry on 23 Jupiter Family Comets (JFCs) observed at large
heliocentric distance, primarily using the 2.5m Isaac Newton Telescope (INT).
Snap-shot images were taken of 17 comets, of which 5 were not detected, 3 were
active and 9 were unresolved and apparently inactive. These include
103P/Hartley 2, the target of the NASA Deep Impact extended mission, EPOXI. For
6 comets we obtained time-series photometry and use this to constrain the shape
and rotation period of these nuclei. The data are not of sufficient quantity or
quality to measure precise rotation periods, but the time-series do allow us to
measure accurate effective radii and surface colours. Of the comets observed
over an extended period, 40P/Vaisala 1, 47P/Ashbrook-Jackson and P/2004 H2
(Larsen) showed faint activity which limited the study of the nucleus.
Light-curves for 94P/Russell 4 and 121P/Shoemaker-Holt 2 reveal rotation
periods of around 33 and 10 hours respectively, although in both cases these
are not unique solutions. 94P was observed to have a large range in magnitudes
implying that it is one of the most elongated nuclei known, with an axial ratio
a/b \ge 3. 36P/Whipple was observed at 5 different epochs, with the INT and
ESO's 3.6m NTT, primarily in an attempt to confirm the preliminary short
rotation period apparent in the first data set. The combined data set shows
that the rotation period is actually longer than 24 hours. A measurement of the
phase function of 36P's nucleus gives a relatively steep \beta = 0.060 \pm
0.019. Finally, we discuss the distribution of surface colours observed in JFC
nuclei, and show that it is possible to trace the evolution of colours from the
Kuiper Belt Object (KBO) population to the JFC population by applying a
'de-reddening' function to the KBO colour distribution.Comment: 21 pages, 29 figures (1 colour), accepted for publication in MNRA
Photometry of cometary nuclei: Rotation rates, colours and a comparison with Kuiper Belt Objects
We present time-series data on Jupiter Family Comets (JFCs) 17P/Holmes,
47P/Ashbrook-Jackson and 137P/Shoemaker-Levy 2. In addition we also present
results from `snap-shot' observations of comets 43P/Wolf-Harrington,
44P/Reinmuth 2, 103P/Hartley 2 and 104P/Kowal 2 taken during the same run. The
comets were at heliocentric distances of between 3 and 7 AU at this time. We
present measurements of size and activity levels for the snap-shot targets. The
time-series data allow us to constrain rotation periods and shapes, and thus
bulk densities. We also measure colour indices (V-R) and (R-I) and reliable
radii for these comets. We compare all of our findings to date with similar
results for other comets and Kuiper Belt Objects (KBOs). We find that the
rotational properties of nuclei and KBOs are very similar, that there is
evidence for a cut-off in bulk densities at ~ 0.6 g cm^{-3} in both
populations, and the colours of the two populations show similar correlations.
For JFCs there is no observational evidence for the optical colours being
dependant on either position in the orbit or on orbital parameters.Comment: 15 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Rotation and Color Properties of the Nucleus of Comet 2P/Encke
We present results from CCD observations of comet 2P/Encke acquired at
Steward Observatory's 2.3m Bok Telescope on Kitt Peak obtained in Oct. 2002,
when the comet was near aphelion. Rotational lightcurves in B, V and R-filters
were acquired over two nights of observations, and analysed to study the
physical and color properties of the nucleus. The average apparent R-filter
magnitude across both nights corresponds to a mean effective radius of 3.95 +/-
0.06 km. The rotational lightcurve results in a nucleus axial ratio a/b >= 1.44
+/- 0.06 and semi-axes lengths of [3.60 +/- 0.09] x [5.20 +/- 0.13] km. Our
data includes the first detailed time series multi-color measurements of a
cometary nucleus, and significant color variations were seen. The average color
indices across both nights are: (V-R) = 0.39 +/- 0.06 and (B-V) = 0.73 +/- 0.06
(R_mean = 19.76 +/- 0.03). We linked our data with the September 2002 data from
Fernandez et al. (2005) - taken just 2-3 weeks before the current data set -
and we show that a rotation period of 11.083 +/- 0.003hours works extrememly
well for the combined data set.Comment: Accepted for publication in Icarus (Dec 2006). 27 page
A new approach to modelling impacts on rubble pile asteroid simulants
Many asteroids with low bulk densities must have a rubble pile structure and internal voids. Although little is known about their internal structure, numerical simulations of impact events on these asteroids rely on assumptions on how the voids are distributed. We present a new approach to model impacts on rubble pile asteroids that explicitly takes into account their internal structure. The formation of the asteroid is modelled as a rubble pile aggregate of spherical pebbles of different sizes. This aggregate is then converted into a high-resolution smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) model, accounting for macroporosity inside the pebbles. We compare impact-event outcomes for a large set of internal configurations to explore the parameter space of our model-building process. The analysis of the fragment size distribution and the disruption threshold quantifies the specific influence of each input parameter. The size distribution of the pebbles used in our model is a simple power law, containing three free parameters: the slope α, the lower cut-off radius rmin and the upper cut-off radius rmax. The influence of all three parameters on the outcome is assessed in this paper. The existence of void space in our model increases the resistance against collisional disruption, a behaviour previously reported based on numerical simulations using a continuum description of porous material (Holsapple 2009). We show, for a set of asteroid collisions typical for small asteroids in the main belt, that no a priori knowledge of the exact size distribution of the pebbles inside the asteroid is needed, as the choice of the corresponding parameters does not directly correlate with the impact outcome
The nuclei of comets 7P/Pons-Winnecke, 14P/Wolf and 92P/Sanguin
Jupiter Family comets (JFCs) are short period comets which have recently
entered the inner solar system, having previously orbited in the Kuiper Belt
since the formation of the planets. We used two nights on the 3.6m New
Technology Telescope (NTT) at the European Southern Observatory, to obtain VRI
photometry of three JFCs; 7P/Pons-Winnecke, 14P/Wolf and 92P/Sanguin. These
were observed to be stellar in appearance. We find mean effective radii of 2.24
\pm 0.02 km for 7P, 3.16 \pm 0.01 km for 14P and 2.08 \pm 0.01 km for 92P,
assuming a geometric albedo of 0.04. From light-curves for each comet we find
rotation periods of 7.53 \pm 0.10 and 6.22 \pm 0.05 hours for 14P and 92P
respectively. 7P exhibits brightness variations which imply a rotation period
of 6.8 \le P_rot \le 9.5 hours. Assuming the nuclei to be ellipsoidal the
measured brightness variations imply minimum axial ratios a/b of 1.3 \pm 0.1
for 7P and 1.7 \pm 0.1 for both 14P and 92P. This in turn implies minimum
densities of 0.23 \pm 0.08 g cm^{-3} for 7P, 0.32 \pm 0.02 g cm^{-3} for 14P
and 0.49 \pm 0.06 g cm^{-3} for 92P. Finally, we measure colour indices of
(V-R) = 0.40 \pm 0.05 and (R-I) = 0.41 \pm 0.06 for 7P/Pons-Winnecke, (V-R) =
0.57 \pm 0.07 and (R-I) = 0.51 \pm 0.06 for 14P/Wolf, and (V-R) = 0.54 \pm 0.04
and (R-I) = 0.54 \pm 0.04 for 92P/Sanguin.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in A&
You Are Here:Geolocation by Embedding Maps and Images
We present a novel approach to geolocalising panoramic images on a 2-D
cartographic map based on learning a low dimensional embedded space, which
allows a comparison between an image captured at a location and local
neighbourhoods of the map. The representation is not sufficiently
discriminatory to allow localisation from a single image, but when concatenated
along a route, localisation converges quickly, with over 90% accuracy being
achieved for routes of around 200m in length when using Google Street View and
Open Street Map data. The method generalises a previous fixed semantic feature
based approach and achieves significantly higher localisation accuracy and
faster convergence.Comment: 18 pages, new version accepted for ECCV 2020 (poster), with new
results on publicly available dataset and comparison with implementation of
previously published alternative approac
Monoamine oxidase-A modulates apoptotic cell death induced by staurosporine in human neuroblastoma cells
Monoamine oxidases (MAOs) are mitochondrial enzymes which control the levels of neurotransmitters in the brain and dietary amines in peripheral tissues via oxidative deamination. MAO has also been implicated in cell signalling. In this study, we describe the MAO-A isoform as functional in apoptosis induced by staurosporine (STS) in human dopaminergic neuroblastoma cells (SH-SY5Y). Increased levels of MAO-A activity were induced by STS, accompanied by increased MAO-A protein and activation of the initiator of the intrinsic pathway, caspase 9, and the executioner caspase 3. MAO-A mRNA levels were unaffected by STS, suggesting that changes in MAO-A protein are due to post-transcriptional events. Two unrelated MAO-A inhibitors reduced caspase activation. STS treatment resulted in sustained activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway enzymes extracellular regulated kinase, c-jun terminal kinase and p38, and depletion of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2. These changes were significantly reversed by MAO inhibition. Production of reactive oxygen species was increased following STS exposure, which was blocked by both MAO inhibition and the antioxidant N-acetylcysteine. Therefore our data provide evidence that MAO-A, through its production of reactive oxygen species as a by-product of its catalytic activity on the mitochondrial surface, is recruited by the cell to enhance apoptotic signalling
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