1,612 research outputs found
Probing the Nature of Ultra-Steep Spectrum Radio Sources
Here we present, first results from e-VLBI observations at 18 cm on a small sample of ultra-steep spectrum sources (spectral index between 74 MHz and 325 MH
Evaluation of performance of select fusion experiments and projected reactors
The performance of NASA Lewis fusion experiments (SUMMA and Bumpy Torus) is compared with other experiments and that necessary for a power reactor. Key parameters cited are gain (fusion power/input power) and the time average fusion power, both of which may be more significant for real fusion reactors than the commonly used Lawson parameter. The NASA devices are over 10 orders of magnitude below the required powerplant values in both gain and time average power. The best experiments elsewhere are also as much as 4 to 5 orders of magnitude low. However, the NASA experiments compare favorably with other alternate approaches that have received less funding than the mainline experiments. The steady-state character and efficiency of plasma heating are strong advantages of the NASA approach. The problem, though, is to move ahead to experiments of sufficient size to advance in gain and average power parameters
Extreme laser pulses for possible development of boron fusion power reactors for clean and lasting energy
Extreme laser pulses driving non-equilibrium processes in high density
plasmas permit an increase of the fusion of hydrogen with the boron isotope 11
by nine orders of magnitude of the energy gains above the classical values.
This is the result of initiating the reaction by non-thermal ultrahigh
acceleration of plasma blocks by the nonlinear (ponderomotive) force of the
laser field, in addition to the avalanche reaction that has now been
experimentally and theoretically manifested. The design of a very compact
fusion power reactor is scheduled to produce then environmentally fully clean
and inexhaustible generation of energy at profitably low costs. The reaction
within a volume of cubic millimetres during a nanosecond can only be used for
controlled power generation.Comment: 10 pages, 5 fugure
PKS 1004+13: A High-Inclination, Highly-Absorbed Radio-Loud QSO -- The First Radio-Loud BAL QSO at Low Redshift?
The existence of BAL outflows in only radio-quiet QSOs was thought to be an
important clue to mass ejection and the radio-loud - radio-quiet dichotomy.
Recently a few radio-loud BAL QSOs have been discovered at high redshift. We
present evidence that PKS 1004+13 is a radio-loud BAL QSO. It would be the
first known at low-redshift (z = 0.24), and one of the most radio luminous. For
PKS 1004+13, there appear to be broad absorption troughs of O VI, N V, Si IV,
and C IV, indicating high-ionization outflows up to about 10,000 km/s. There
are also two strong, broad (~500 km/s), high-ionization, associated absorption
systems that show partial covering of the continuum source. The strong UV
absorption we have detected suggests that the extreme soft-X-ray weakness of
PKS 1004+13 is primarily the result of absorption. The large radio-lobe
dominance indicates BAL and associated gas at high inclinations to the central
engine axis, perhaps in a line-of-sight that passes through an accretion disk
wind.Comment: To appear in Ap.J. Letters, 1999 (June or July); 4 pages, 5 figure
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