1,151 research outputs found
Heat transfer studies of solid rocket igniters quarterly progress report no. 3
Heat transfer of solid rocket igniters - flow visualization tests, copper tube firing, and radiant heat transfer analysi
Literacy practices of primary education children in Andalusia (Spain): a family-based perspective
Primary school children develop literacy practices in various domains and situations in everyday life.
This study focused on the analysis of literacy practices of children aged 8â12 years from the perspec-
tive of their families. 1,843 families participated in the non-experimental explanatory study. The
children in these families speak Spanish as a first language and are schooled in this language. The
instrument used was a self-report questionnaire about childrenâs home-literacy practices. The data
obtained were analysed using categorical principal components analysis (CATPCA) and analysis of
variance (ANOVA). The results show the complex relationship between literacy practices developed
by children in the domains of home and school and the limited development of a literacy-promoting
âthird spaceâ. In conclusion, the families in our study had limited awareness of their role as literacy-
promoting agents and thought of literacy learning as restricted to formal or academic spaces
The Boltzmann factor, DNA melting, and Brownian ratchets: Topics in an introductory physics sequence for biology and premedical students
Three, interrelated biologically-relevant examples of biased random walks are
presented: (1) A model for DNA melting, modelled as DNA unzipping, which
provides a way to illustrate the role of the Boltzmann factor in a venue
well-known to biology and pre-medical students; (2) the activity of helicase
motor proteins in unzipping double-stranded DNA, for example, at the
replication fork, which is an example of a Brownian ratchet; (3) force
generation by actin polymerization, which is another Brownian ratchet, and for
which the force and actin-concentration dependence of the velocity of actin
polymerization is determined
Phase field analysis of eutectic breakdown.
In this paper an isotropic multi-phase-field model is extended to include the effects of anisotropy and the spontaneous nucleation of an absent phase. This model is derived and compared against a published single phase model. Results from this model are compared against results from other multi-phase models, additionally this model is used to examine the break down of a regular two dimensional eutectic into a single phase dendritic front
Evidence for Rapid Redshift Evolution of Strong Cluster Cooling Flows
We present equivalent widths of the [OII] and Ha nebular emission lines for
77 brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs) selected from the 160 Square Degree
X-ray survey. We find no [OII] or Ha emission stronger than -15
angstroms or -5 angstroms, respectively, in any BCG. The corresponding emission
line luminosities lie below 6E40 erg/s, which is a factor of 30 below that of
NGC1275 in the Perseus cluster. A comparison to the detection frequency of
nebular emission in BCGs lying at redshifts above z = 0.35 drawn from the
Brightest Cluster Survey (Crawford et al. 1999) indicates that we should have
detected roughly one dozen emission-line galaxies, assuming the two surveys are
selecting similar clusters in the X-ray luminosity range 10E42 erg/s to 10E45
erg/s. The absence of luminous nebular emission (ie., Perseus-like systems) in
our sample is consistent with an increase in the number density of {\it strong}
cooling flow (cooling core) clusters between and today. The decline
in their numbers at higher redshift could be due to cluster mergers and AGN
heating.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Very Low-grade Metamorphic Evolution of Pelitic Rocks under High-pressure/Low-temperature Conditions, NW New Caledonia (SW Pacific)
The P-T gradient in a Late Eocene low-T high-P metamorphic belt in northern New Caledonia increases from SW to NE. Metapelites in the pumpellyite-prehnite and blueschist zones contain lawsonite, Mg-carpholite, Fe-stilpnomelane and Fe-glaucophane. Thermodynamic calculations indicate a progression of metamorphic conditions from less than 0·3âGPa and 250°C in a kaolinite-bearing rock in the SW, up to 1·5âGPa and 410°C in a lawsonite-glaucophane-bearing sample in the NE of the Diahot terrane. Through a multi-method investigation of phyllosilicates, organic matter and fluid inclusions, we demonstrate that the evolution of organic matter and illite crystallinity depends strongly on the evolution of the P-T path with time. In addition, we show that the illite-muscovite b cell dimension provides a robust estimate of maximum pressure reached in low-temperature domains with polyphase metamorphic histories, despite subsequent high-temperature-low-pressure events. Fluid inclusion study reveals an isothermal decompression in the Diahot terran
Evolution of the Cluster X-ray Luminosity Function
We report measurements of the cluster X-ray luminosity function out to z=0.8
based on the final sample of 201 galaxy systems from the 160 Square Degree
ROSAT Cluster Survey. There is little evidence for any measurable change in
cluster abundance out to z~0.6 at luminosities less than a few times 10^44
ergs/s (0.5-2.0 keV). However, between 0.6 < z < 0.8 and at luminosities above
10^44 ergs/s, the observed volume densities are significantly lower than those
of the present-day population. We quantify this cluster deficit using
integrated number counts and a maximum-likelihood analysis of the observed
luminosity-redshift distribution fit with a model luminosity function. The
negative evolution signal is >3 sigma regardless of the adopted local
luminosity function or cosmological framework. Our results and those from
several other surveys independently confirm the presence of evolution. Whereas
the bulk of the cluster population does not evolve, the most luminous and
presumably most massive structures evolve appreciably between z=0.8 and the
present. Interpreted in the context of hierarchical structure formation, we are
probing sufficiently large mass aggregations at sufficiently early times in
cosmological history where the Universe has yet to assemble these clusters to
present-day volume densities.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
The WARPS survey: III. The discovery of an X-ray luminous galaxy cluster at z=0.833 and the impact of X-ray substructure on cluster abundance measurements
The WARPS team reviews the properties and history of discovery of
ClJ0152.7-1357, an X-ray luminous, rich cluster of galaxies at z=0.833. At L_X
= 8 x 10^44 h^(-2) erg/s (0.5-2.0 keV) ClJ0152.7-1357 is the most X-ray
luminous cluster known at redshifts z>0.55. The high X-ray luminosity of the
system suggests that massive clusters may begin to form at redshifts
considerably greater than unity. This scenario is supported by the high degree
of optical and X-ray substructure in ClJ0152.7-1357, which is similarly complex
as that of other X-ray selected distant clusters and consistent with the
picture of cluster formation by mass infall along large-scale filaments. X-ray
emission from ClJ0152.7-1357 was detected already in 1980 with the EINSTEIN
IPC. However, because the complex morphology of the emission caused its
significance to be underestimated, the corresponding source was not included in
the EMSS cluster sample and hence not previously identified. Simulations of the
EMSS source detection and selection procedure suggest a general bias of the
EMSS against X-ray luminous clusters with pronounced substructure. If highly
unrelaxed, merging clusters are common at high redshift, they could create a
bias in some samples as the morphological complexity of mergers may cause them
to fall below the flux limit of surveys that assume a unimodal spatial source
geometry. Conversely, the enhanced X-ray luminosity of mergers might cause them
to, temporarily, rise above the flux limit. Either effect could lead to
erroneous conclusions about the evolution of the comoving cluster space
density. A high fraction of morphologically complex clusters at high redshift
would also call into question the validity of cosmological studies that assume
that the systems under investigation are virialized.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures; revised to focus on possible detection biases
caused by substructure in clusters; accepted for publication in ApJ; uses
emulateapj.sty; eps files of figures 1 and 2 can be obtained from
ftp://hubble.ifa.hawaii.edu/pub/ebeling/warp
The 160 Square Degree ROSAT Survey: the Revised Catalog of 201 Clusters with Spectroscopic Redshifts
We present the revised catalog of galaxy clusters detected as extended X-ray
sources in the 160 Square Degree ROSAT Survey, including spectroscopic
redshifts and X-ray luminosities for 200 of the 201 members. The median
redshift is z~0.25 and the median X-ray luminosity is 4.2e+43 erg/s/h50^2
(0.5-2.0 keV). This is the largest high-redshift sample of X-ray selected
clusters published to date. There are 73 objects at z>0.3 and 22 objects at
z>0.5 drawn from a statistically complete flux-limited survey with a median
object flux of 1.4d-13 erg/cm^2/s. We describe the optical follow-up of these
clusters with an emphasis on our spectroscopy which has yielded 155 cluster
redshifts, 110 of which are presented here for the first time. These
measurements combined with 45 from the literature and other sources provide
near-complete spectroscopic coverage for our survey. We discuss the final
optical identifications for the extended X-ray sources in the survey region and
compare our results to similar X-ray cluster searches.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figs, accepted for publication in ApJ, a version with
full resolution images is available at
http://www.eso.org/~cmullis/papers/160sd-catalog.ps.gz, machine-readable
versions of the catalog are available at
http://www.eso.org/~cmullis/research/160sd-catalog.htm
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