50,847 research outputs found
Coordinates of features on the Galilean satellites
The coordinate systems of each of the Galilean satellites are defined and coordinates of features seen in the Voyager pictures of these satellites are presented. The control nets of the satellites were computed by means of single block analytical triangulations. The normal equations were solved by the conjugate iterative method which is convenient and which converges rapidly as the initial estimates of the parameters are very good
An investigation of irregular crack path effects on fracture mechanics parameters using a grain microstructure meshing technique
Electronic version of an article published as Journal of Multiscale Modeling, Vol. 4, Iss. 1, atricle 1250001, 2012, http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/S1756973712500011 © World Scientific Publishing Company, http://www.worldscientific.com/worldscinet/jmmA sub-grain size finite element modelling approach is presented in this paper to investigate variations in fracture mechanics parameters for irregular crack paths. The results can be used when modelling intergranular and transgranular crack growth where creep and fatigue are the dominant failure mechanisms and their crack paths are irregular. A novel method for sub-grain scale finite element mesh consisting of multiple elements encased in ~50–150 μm-sized grains has been developed and implemented in a compact tension, C(T), mesh structure. The replicated shapes and dimensions were derived from an isotropic metallic grain structure using representative random sized grain shapes repeated in sequence ahead of the crack tip. In this way the effects of crack tip angle ahead of the main crack path can be considered in a more realistic manner. A comprehensive sensitivity analysis has been performed for elastic and elastic-plastic materials using ABAQUS and the stress distributions, the stress intensity factor and the J-integral have been evaluated for irregular crack paths and compared to those of obtained from analytical solutions. To examine the local and macroscopic graph path effects on fracture mechanics parameters, a few extreme cases with various crack-tip angles have been modelled by keeping the macroscopic crack path parallel to the axis of symmetry. The numerical solutions from these granular mesh structures have been found in relatively good agreement with analytical solutions
The effect of stellar-mass black holes on the structural evolution of massive star clusters
We present the results of realistic N-body modelling of massive star clusters
in the Magellanic Clouds, aimed at investigating a dynamical origin for the
radius-age trend observed in these systems. We find that stellar-mass black
holes, formed in the supernova explosions of the most massive cluster stars,
can constitute a dynamically important population. If a significant number of
black holes are retained (here we assume complete retention), these objects
rapidly form a dense core where interactions are common, resulting in the
scattering of black holes into the cluster halo, and the ejection of black
holes from the cluster. These two processes heat the stellar component,
resulting in prolonged core expansion of a magnitude matching the observations.
Significant core evolution is also observed in Magellanic Cloud clusters at
early times. We find that this does not result from the action of black holes,
but can be reproduced by the effects of mass-loss due to rapid stellar
evolution in a primordially mass segregated cluster.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters; 2 figures, 1 tabl
The central molecular gas structure in LINERs with low luminosity AGN: evidence for gradual disappearance of the torus
We present observations of the molecular gas in the nuclear environment of
three prototypical low luminosity AGN (LLAGN), based on VLT/SINFONI AO-assisted
integral-field spectroscopy of H2 1-0 S(1) emission at angular resolutions of
~0.17". On scales of 50-150 pc the spatial distribution and kinematics of the
molecular gas are consistent with a rotating thin disk, where the ratio of
rotation (V) to dispersion (sigma) exceeds unity. However, in the central 50
pc, the observations reveal a geometrically and optically thick structure of
molecular gas (V/sigma10^{23} cm^{-2}) that is likely to be
associated with the outer extent of any smaller scale obscuring structure. In
contrast to Seyfert galaxies, the molecular gas in LLAGN has a V/sigma<1 over
an area that is ~9 times smaller and column densities that are in average ~3
times smaller. We interpret these results as evidence for a gradual
disappearance of the nuclear obscuring structure. While a disk wind may not be
able to maintain a thick rotating structure at these luminosities, inflow of
material into the nuclear region could provide sufficient energy to sustain it.
In this context, LLAGN may represent the final phase of accretion in current
theories of torus evolution. While the inflow rate is considerable during the
Seyfert phase, it is slowly decreasing, and the collisional disk is gradually
transitioning to become geometrically thin. Furthermore, the nuclear region of
these LLAGN is dominated by intermediate-age/old stellar populations (with
little or no on-going star formation), consistent with a late stage of
evolution.Comment: 15 pages, including 4 figures and 1 table, Accepted for publication
in ApJ Letter
Propagation of the First Flames in Type Ia Supernovae
We consider the competition of the different physical processes that can
affect the evolution of a flame bubble in a Type Ia supernovae -- burning,
turbulence and buoyancy. Even in the vigorously turbulent conditions of a
convecting white dwarf, thermonuclear burning that begins at a point near the
center (within 100 km) of the star is dominated by the spherical laminar
expansion of the flame, until the burning region reaches kilometers in size.
Consequently flames that ignite in the inner ~20 km promptly burn through the
center, and flame bubbles anywhere must grow quite large--indeed, resolvable by
large-scale simulations of the global system--for significant motion or
deformation occur. As a result, any hot-spot that successfully ignites into a
flame can burn a significant amount of white dwarf material. This potentially
increases the stochastic nature of the explosion compared to a scenario where a
simmering progenitor can have small early hot-spots float harmlessly away.
Further, the size where the laminar flame speed dominates other relevant
velocities sets a characteristic scale for fragmentation of larger flame
structures, as nothing--by definition--can easily break the burning region into
smaller volumes. This makes possible the development of semi-analytic
descriptions of the earliest phase of the propagation of burning in a Type Ia
supernovae, which we present here. Our analysis is supported by fully resolved
numerical simulations of flame bubbles.Comment: 33 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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