1,983 research outputs found
The Quiet-Sun Photosphere and Chromosphere
The overall structure and the fine structure of the solar photosphere outside
active regions are largely understood, except possibly important roles of a
turbulent near-surface dynamo at its bottom, internal gravity waves at its top,
and small-scale vorticity. Classical 1D static radiation-escape modelling has
been replaced by 3D time-dependent MHD simulations that come closer to reality.
The solar chromosphere, in contrast, remains ill-understood although its
pivotal role in coronal mass and energy loading makes it a principal research
area. Its fine structure defines its overall structure, so that hard-to-observe
and hard-to-model small-scale dynamical processes are the key to understanding.
However, both chromospheric observation and chromospheric simulation presently
mature towards the required sophistication. The open-field features seem of
greater interest than the easier-to-see closed-field features.Comment: Accepted for special issue "Astrophysical Processes on the Sun" of
Phil. Trans. Royal Soc. A, ed. C. Parnell. Note: clicking on the year in a
citation opens the corresponding ADS abstract page in the browse
Welfarism vs. extra-welfarism
'Extra-welfarism' has received some attention in health economics, yet there is little consensus on what distinguishes it from more conventional 'welfarist economics'. In this paper, we seek to identify the characteristics of each in order to make a systematic comparison of the ways in which they evaluate alternative social states. The focus, though this is not intended to be exclusive, is on health. Specifically, we highlight four areas in which the two schools differ: (i) the outcomes considered relevant in an evaluation; (ii) the sources of valuation of the relevant outcomes; (iii) the basis of weighting of relevant outcomes and (iv) interpersonal comparisons. We conclude that these differences are substantive. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
A spiral structure in the disk of EX Draconis on the rise to outburst maximum
We report on the R-band eclipse mapping analysis of high-speed photometry of
the dwarf nova EX Dra on the rise to the maximum of the November 1995 outburst.
The eclipse map shows a one-armed spiral structure of ~180 degrees in azimuth,
extending in radius from R ~0.2 to 0.43 R_{L1} (where R_{L1} is the distance
from the disk center to the inner Lagrangian point), that contributes about 22
per cent of the total flux of the eclipse map. The spiral structure is
stationary in a reference frame co-rotating with the binary and is stable for a
timescale of at least 5 binary orbits. The comparison of the eclipse maps on
the rise and in quiescence suggests that the outbursts of EX Dra may be driven
by episodes of enhanced mass-transfer from the secondary star. Possible
explanations for the nature of the spiral structure are discussed.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journal Letters; 8 pages, 2 figures;
coded with AAS latex styl
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
Explanation of the activity sensitivity of Mn I 5394.7 \AA
There is a long-standing controversy concerning the reason why the Mn I
5394.7 A line in the solar irradiance spectrum brightens more at larger
activity than most other photospheric lines. The claim that this activity
sensitivity is caused by spectral interlocking to chromospheric emission in Mg
II h & k is disputed.
Classical one-dimensional modeling is used for demonstration; modern
three-dimensional MHD simulation for verification and analysis.
The Mn I 5394.7 A line thanks its unusual sensitivity to solar activity to
its hyperfine structure. This overrides the thermal and granular Doppler
smearing through which the other, narrower, photospheric lines lose such
sensitivity. We take the nearby Fe I 5395.2 A line as example of the latter and
analyze the formation of both lines in detail to demonstrate and explain
granular Doppler brightening. We show that this affects all narrow lines.
Neither the chromosphere nor Mg II h & k play a role, nor is it correct to
describe the activity sensitivity of Mn I 5394.7 A through plage models with
outward increasing temperature contrast.
The Mn I 5394.7 A line represents a proxy diagnostic of strong-field magnetic
concentrations in the deep solar photosphere comparable to the G band and the
blue wing of H-alpha, but not a better one than these. The Mn I lines are more
promising as diagnostic of weak fields in high-resolution Stokes polarimetry.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted by A&
56Ni dredge-up in the type IIp Supernova 1995V
We present contemporary infrared and optical spectra of the plateau type II
SN 1995V in NGC 1087 covering four epochs, approximately 22 to 84 days after
shock breakout. The data show, for the first time, the infrared spectroscopic
evolution during the plateau phase of a typical type II event. In the optical
region P Cygni lines of the Balmer series and of metals lines were identified.
The infrared (IR) spectra were largely dominated by the continuum, but P Cygni
Paschen lines and Brackett gamma lines were also clearly seen. The other
prominent IR features are confined to wavelengths blueward of 11000 \AA and
include Sr II 10327, Fe II 10547, C I 10695 and He I 10830 \AA. We demonstrate
the presence of He I 10830 \AA on days 69 and 85. The presence of this line at
such late times implies re-ionisation. A likely re-ionising mechanism is
gamma-ray deposition following the radioactive decay of 56Ni. We examine this
mechanism by constructing a spectral model for the He I 10830 \AA line based on
explosion model s15s7b2f of Weaver & Woosley (1993). We find that this does not
generate the observed line owing to the confinement of the 56Ni to the central
zones of the ejecta. In order to reproduce the He I line, it was necessary to
introduce additional upward mixing of the 56Ni, with 10^{-5} of the total
nickel mass reaching above the helium photosphere. In addition, we argue that
the He I line-formation region is likely to have been in the form of pure
helium clumps in the hydrogen envelope.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 32 pages including 11 figures
(uses psfig.sty - included
Addendum: "The Dynamics of M15: Observations of the Velocity Dispersion Profile and Fokker-Planck Models" (ApJ, 481, 267 [1997])
It has recently come to our attention that there are axis scale errors in
three of the figures of Dull et al. (1997, hereafter D97). D97 presented
Fokker-Planck models for the collapsed-core globular cluster M15 that include a
dense, centrally concentrated population of neutron stars and massive white
dwarfs, but do not include a central black hole. In this Addendum, we present
corrected versions of Figures 9, 10, and 12, and an expanded version of Figure
6. This latter figure, which shows the full run of the velocity dispersion
profile, indicates that the D97 model predictions are in good agreement with
the moderately rising HST-STIS velocity dispersion profile for M15 reported by
Gerssen et al. (2002, astro-ph/0209315). Thus, a central black hole is not
required to fit the new STIS velocity measurements, provided that there is a
sufficient population of neutron stars and massive white dwarfs. This
conclusion is consistent with the findings of Gerssen et al. (2002,
astro-ph/0210158), based on a reapplication of their Jeans equation analysis
using the corrected mass-to-light profile (Figure 12) for the D97 models.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Ap
Vitamin D: beyond bone.
In recent years, vitamin D has been received increased attention due to the resurgence of vitamin D deficiency and rickets in developed countries and the identification of extraskeletal effects of vitamin D, suggesting unexpected benefits of vitamin D in health and disease, beyond bone health. The possibility of extraskeletal effects of vitamin D was first noted with the discovery of the vitamin D receptor (VDR) in tissues and cells that are not involved in maintaining mineral homeostasis and bone health, including skin, placenta, pancreas, breast, prostate and colon cancer cells, and activated T cells. However, the biological significance of the expression of the VDR in different tissues is not fully understood, and the role of vitamin D in extraskeletal health has been a matter of debate. This report summarizes recent research on the roles for vitamin D in cancer, immunity and autoimmune diseases, cardiovascular and respiratory health, pregnancy, obesity, erythropoiesis, diabetes, muscle function, and aging
The effect of floating houses on water quality
The need of an adaptive sustainable solution for the increased land scarcity, growing urbanization, climate change and flood risks resulted in the concept of the floating urbanization. In The Netherlands this new type of housing attracted the interest of local authorities, municipalities and water boards. Moreover, plans to incorporate floating houses in the urban planning have already been developed. However, the knowledge gap regarding the potential effect on the water quality halts the further development of the floating houses. This paper shows the results of a water quality measurement campaign, as part of the national program “Knowledge for climate”, at a small floating houses project in Delft and serves as a case study for addressing the environmental-ecological knowledge gap on this topic
On coalgebras with internal moves
In the first part of the paper we recall the coalgebraic approach to handling
the so-called invisible transitions that appear in different state-based
systems semantics. We claim that these transitions are always part of the unit
of a certain monad. Hence, coalgebras with internal moves are exactly
coalgebras over a monadic type. The rest of the paper is devoted to supporting
our claim by studying two important behavioural equivalences for state-based
systems with internal moves, namely: weak bisimulation and trace semantics.
We continue our research on weak bisimulations for coalgebras over order
enriched monads. The key notions used in this paper and proposed by us in our
previous work are the notions of an order saturation monad and a saturator. A
saturator operator can be intuitively understood as a reflexive, transitive
closure operator. There are two approaches towards defining saturators for
coalgebras with internal moves. Here, we give necessary conditions for them to
yield the same notion of weak bisimulation.
Finally, we propose a definition of trace semantics for coalgebras with
silent moves via a uniform fixed point operator. We compare strong and weak
bisimilation together with trace semantics for coalgebras with internal steps.Comment: Article: 23 pages, Appendix: 3 page
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