15,615 research outputs found
Investigation of dual polarization laser modulation
Dual polarization lasers for wideband optical communication
Jets or high velocity flows revealed in high-cadence spectrometer and imager co-observations?
We report on active region EUV dynamic events observed simultaneously at
high-cadence with SUMER/SoHO and TRACE. Although the features appear in the
TRACE Fe ix/x 171A images as jets seen in projection on the solar disk, the
SUMER spectral line profiles suggest that the plasma has been driven along a
curved large scale magnetic structure, a pre-existing loop. The SUMER
observations were carried out in spectral lines covering a large temperature
range from 10^4 K to 10^6 K. The spectral analysis revealed that a sudden
heating from an energy deposition is followed by a high velocity plasma flow.
The Doppler velocities were found to be in the range from 90 to 160 km/s. The
heating process has a duration which is below the SUMER exposure time of 25 s
while the lifetime of the events is from 5 to 15 min. The additional check on
soft X-ray Yohkoh images shows that the features most probably reach 3 MK
(X-ray) temperatures. The spectroscopic analysis showed no existence of cold
material during the events
Community experiences of organised crime in Scotland
The research explored community experiences of serious organised crime in Scotland (SOC). The report provides information on the nature and extent of the impact of SOC on everyday life in the community, as well as offering suggestions for policy development. The study sought to answer the following questions: 1)What are the relationships that exist between SOC and communities in Scotland? 2)What are the experiences and perceptions of residents, stakeholders and organisations of the scope and nature of SOC within their local area? and 3)How does SOC impact on community wellbeing, and to what extent can the harms associated with SOC be mitigated
Predicting wildlife reservoirs and global vulnerability to zoonotic Flaviviruses.
Flaviviruses continue to cause globally relevant epidemics and have emerged or re-emerged in regions that were previously unaffected. Factors determining emergence of flaviviruses and continuing circulation in sylvatic cycles are incompletely understood. Here we identify potential sylvatic reservoirs of flaviviruses and characterize the macro-ecological traits common to known wildlife hosts to predict the risk of sylvatic flavivirus transmission among wildlife and identify regions that could be vulnerable to outbreaks. We evaluate variability in wildlife hosts for zoonotic flaviviruses and find that flaviviruses group together in distinct clusters with similar hosts. Models incorporating ecological and climatic variables as well as life history traits shared by flaviviruses predict new host species with similar host characteristics. The combination of vector distribution data with models for flavivirus hosts allows for prediction of global vulnerability to flaviviruses and provides potential targets for disease surveillance in animals and humans
Exact solution for random walks on the triangular lattice with absorbing boundaries
The problem of a random walk on a finite triangular lattice with a single
interior source point and zig-zag absorbing boundaries is solved exactly. This
problem has been previously considered intractable.Comment: 10 pages, Latex, IOP macro
-Enhanced Imaging of Molecules in an Optical Trap
We report non-destructive imaging of optically trapped calcium monofluoride
(CaF) molecules using in-situ -enhanced gray molasses cooling.
times more fluorescence is obtained compared to destructive on-resonance
imaging, and the trapped molecules remain at a temperature of
. The achieved number of scattered photons makes possible
non-destructive single-shot detection of single molecules with high fidelity.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
An Optical Tweezer Array of Ultracold Molecules
Arrays of single ultracold molecules promise to be a powerful platform for
many applications ranging from quantum simulation to precision measurement.
Here we report on the creation of an optical tweezer array of single ultracold
CaF molecules. By utilizing light-induced collisions during the laser cooling
process, we trap single molecules. The high densities attained inside the
tweezer traps have also enabled us to observe in the absence of light
molecule-molecule collisions of laser cooled molecules for the first time
Ca II H and K Chromospheric Emission Lines in Late K and M Dwarfs
We have measured the profiles of the Ca II H and K chromospheric emission
lines in 147 main sequence stars of spectral type M5-K7 (0.30-0.55 solar
masses) using multiple high resolution spectra obtained during six years with
the HIRES spectrometer on the Keck 1 telescope. Remarkably, the average FWHM,
equivalent widths, and line luminosities of Ca II H and K increase by a factor
of 3 with increasing stellar mass over this small range of stellar masses. We
fit the H and K lines with a double Gaussian model to represent both the
chromospheric emission and the non-LTE central absorption. Most of the sample
stars display a central absorption that is typically redshifted by ~0.1 km/s
relative to the emission, but the nature of this velocity gradient remains
unknown. The FWHM of the H and K lines increase with stellar luminosity,
reminiscent of the Wilson-Bappu effect in FGK-type stars. Both the equivalent
widths and FWHM exhibit modest temporal variability in individual stars. At a
given value of M_v, stars exhibit a spread in both the equivalent width and
FWHM of Ca II H and K, due both to a spread in fundamental stellar parameters
including rotation rate, age, and possibly metallicity, and to the spread in
stellar mass at a given M_v. The K line is consistently wider than the H line,
as expected, and its central absorption is more redshifted, indicating that the
H and K lines form at slightly different heights in the chromosphere where the
velocities are slightly different. The equivalent width of H-alpha correlates
with Ca II H and K only for stars having Ca II equivalent widths above ~2
angstroms, suggesting the existence of a magnetic threshold above which the
lower and upper chromospheres become thermally coupled.Comment: 40 pages including 12 figures and 17 pages of tables, accepted for
publication in PAS
Eigenvalues of the 2p3pP3 and 2p3dD1,3 bound states of the helium isoelectronic sequence
The 1Z expansion method is used to calculate the eigenvalues of the 2p3pP3 and 2p3dD1,3 states of the helium isoelectronic sequence. The results are compared to variational calculations for neutral helium. Wavelengths are predicted for a number of transitions originating in doubly excited states of the heliumlike ions up to Fe xxv. The results for neutral helium are compared to recent beam-foil experiments and alternative line identifications are made. The predicted wavelength for the 2p3dD3-2p2P3 transition is 3014, in close agreement with the line observed by Berry et al. at 3012 ± 2. © 1972 The American Physical Society
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