495 research outputs found
Coronal Mass Ejections Associated with Slow Long Duration Flares
It is well known that there is temporal relationship between coronal mass
ejections (CMEs) and associated flares. The duration of the acceleration phase
is related to the duration of the rise phase of a flare. We investigate CMEs
associated with slow long duration events (LDEs), i.e. flares with the long
rising phase. We determined the relationships between flares and CMEs and
analyzed the CME kinematics in detail. The parameters of the flares (GOES flux,
duration of the rising phase) show strong correlations with the CME parameters
(velocity, acceleration during main acceleration phase and duration of the CME
acceleration phase). These correlations confirm the strong relation between
slow LDEs and CMEs. We also analyzed the relation between the parameters of the
CMEs, i.e. a velocity, an acceleration during the main acceleration phase, a
duration of the acceleration phase, and a height of a CME at the end of the
acceleration phase. The CMEs associated with the slow LDEs are characterized by
high velocity during the propagation phase, with the median equal 1423 km/s. In
half of the analyzed cases, the main acceleration was low (a<300 m/s^2), which
suggests that the high velocity is caused by the prolongated acceleration phase
(the median for the duration of the acceleration phase is equal 90 minutes).
The CMEs were accelerated up to several solar radii (with the median 7 Rsun),
which is much higher than in typical impulsive CMEs. Therefore, slow LDEs may
potentially precede extremely strong geomagnetic storms. The analysis of slow
LDEs and associated CMEs may give important information for developing more
accurate space weather forecasts, especially for extreme events.Comment: Solar Physics, accepte
EUV and HXR Signatures of Electron Acceleration During the Failed Eruption of a Filament
We search for EUV brightenings in TRACE 171 {\AA} images and HXR bursts
observed during failed eruptions. We expect that if an eruption is confined due
to interaction with overlying magnetic structures then we should observe
effects connected with reconnection between magnetic structures and
acceleration of particles. We utilized TRACE observations of three well
observed failed eruptions. EUV images were compared to HXR spatial distribution
reconstructed from Yohkoh/HXT and RHESSI data. The EUV light curves of a
selected area were compared to height profiles of eruption, HXR emission and
HXR photon spectral index of power-law fit to HXR data. We have found that EUV
brightenings are closely related to the eruption velocity decrease, to HXR
bursts and to episodes of hardening of HXR spectra. The EUV brightened areas
are observed far from the flaring structure, in footpoints of large systems of
loops observed 30-60 minutes after the maximum of a flare. These are not
`post-flare' loops that are also observed but at significantly lower heights.
The high lying systems of loops are observed at heights equal to height, at
which eruption was observed to stop. We observed HXR source spatially
correlated with EUV brightening only once. For other EUV brightened areas we
estimated the expected brightness of HXR sources. We find that EUV brightenings
are produced due to interaction between the erupting structure with overlying
loops. The interaction is strong enough to heat the system of high loops. These
loops cool down and are visible in EUV range about 30-60 minutes later. The
estimated brightness of HXR sources associated with EUV brightenings shows that
they are too weak to be detected with present instruments. However, next
generation instruments will have enough dynamic range and sensitivity to enable
such observations.Comment: A&A accepte
Continuous-flow IRMS technique for determining the 17O excess of CO2 using complete oxygen isotope exchange with cerium oxide
This paper presents an analytical system for analysis of all single
substituted isotopologues (<sup>12</sup>C<sup>16</sup>O<sup>17</sup>O,
<sup>12</sup>C<sup>16</sup>O<sup>18</sup>O, <sup>13</sup>C<sup>16</sup>O<sup>16</sup>O) in nanomolar quantities
of CO<sub>2</sub> extracted from stratospheric air samples. CO<sub>2</sub> is
separated from bulk air by gas chromatography and CO<sub>2</sub> isotope ratio
measurements (ion masses 45 / 44 and 46 / 44) are performed using isotope ratio
mass spectrometry (IRMS). The <sup>17</sup>O excess (Δ<sup>17</sup>O) is
derived from isotope measurements on two different CO<sub>2</sub> aliquots:
unmodified CO<sub>2</sub> and CO<sub>2</sub> after complete oxygen isotope exchange with
cerium oxide (CeO<sub>2</sub>) at 700 °C. Thus, a single measurement of
Δ<sup>17</sup>O requires two injections of 1 mL of air with a CO<sub>2</sub>
mole fraction of 390 μmol mol<sup>−1</sup> at 293 K and 1 bar pressure
(corresponding to 16 nmol CO<sub>2</sub> each). The required sample size
(including flushing) is 2.7 mL of air. A single analysis (one pair of
injections) takes 15 minutes. The analytical system is fully automated for
unattended measurements over several days. The standard deviation of the
<sup>17</sup>O excess analysis is 1.7‰. Multiple
measurements on an air sample reduce the measurement uncertainty, as
expected for the statistical standard error. Thus, the uncertainty for a
group of 10 measurements is 0.58‰ for Δ
<sup>17</sup>O in 2.5 h of analysis. 100 repeat analyses of one air sample
decrease the standard error to 0.20‰. The instrument
performance was demonstrated by measuring CO<sub>2</sub> on stratospheric air
samples obtained during the EU project RECONCILE with the high-altitude
aircraft Geophysica. The precision for RECONCILE data is 0.03‰ (1σ) for δ<sup>13</sup>C, 0.07‰ (1σ) for δ<sup>18</sup>O and 0.55‰ (1σ) for δ<sup>17</sup>O for a sample of 10
measurements. This is sufficient to examine stratospheric enrichments, which
at altitude 33 km go up to 12‰ for δ<sup>17</sup>O
and up to 8‰ for δ<sup>18</sup>O with respect to
tropospheric CO<sub>2</sub> : δ<sup>17</sup>O ~
21‰ Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water (VSMOW), δ<sup>18</sup>O ~
41‰ VSMOW (Lämmerzahl et al., 2002). The samples
measured with our analytical technique agree with available data for
stratospheric CO<sub>2</sub>
Structure of the Afferent Terminals in Terminal Ganglion of a Cricket and Persistent Homology
We use topological data analysis to investigate the three dimensional spatial structure of the locus of afferent neuron terminals in crickets Acheta domesticus. Each afferent neuron innervates a filiform hair positioned on a cercus: a protruding appendage at the rear of the animal. The hairs transduce air motion to the neuron signal that is used by a cricket to respond to the environment. We stratify the hairs (and the corresponding afferent terminals) into classes depending on hair length, along with position. Our analysis uncovers significant structure in the relative position of these terminal classes and suggests the functional relevance of this structure. Our method is very robust to the presence of significant experimental and developmental noise. It can be used to analyze a wide range of other point cloud data sets
On the full, strongly exceptional collections on toric varieties with Picard number three
We investigate full strongly exceptional collections on smooth, com- plete
toric varieties. We obtain explicit results for a large family of varieties
with Picard number three, containing many of the families already known. We
also describe the relations between the collections and the split of the push
forward of the trivial line bundle by the toric Frobenius morphism
Neonatal imitation predicts how infants engage with faces
In human infants, neonatal imitation and preferences for eyes are both associated with later social and communicative skills, yet the relationship between these abilities remains unexplored. Here we investigated whether neonatal imitation predicts facial viewing patterns in infant rhesus macaques. We first assessed infant macaques for lipsmacking (a core affiliative gesture) and tongue protrusion imitation in the first week of life. When infants were 10–28 days old, we presented them with an animated macaque avatar displaying a still face followed by lipsmacking or tongue protrusion movements. Using eye tracking technology, we found that macaque infants generally looked equally at the eyes and mouth during gesture presentation, but only lipsmacking-imitators showed significantly more looking at the eyes of the neutral still face. These results suggest that neonatal imitation performance may be an early measure of social attention biases and might potentially facilitate the identification of infants at risk for atypical social development
Energy Release During Slow Long Duration Flares Observed by RHESSI
Slow Long Duration Events (SLDEs) are flares characterized by long duration
of rising phase. In many such cases impulsive phase is weak with lack of
typical short-lasting pulses. Instead of that smooth, long-lasting Hard X-ray
(HXR) emission is observed. We analysed hard X-ray emission and morphology of
six selected SLDEs. In our analysis we utilized data from RHESSI and GOES
satellites. Physical parameters of HXR sources were obtained from imaging
spectroscopy and were used for the energy balance analysis. Characteristic time
of heating rate decrease, after reaching its maximum value, is very long, which
explains long rising phase of these flares.Comment: Accepted for publication in Solar Physic
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