7,478 research outputs found
Transport and photochemical modeling. Studies of atmospheric species
A program of research studies related to the photochemistry, radiative transfer, and dynamics of the stratosphere is described. Investigations were conducted in two broad areas: (1) studies of the stratospheric processes and their response to external perturbations, and (2) analysis of satellite measurements in conjunction with theoretical models. Contemporary one dimensional photochemical, radiative-convective model was used to assess the impact of perturbations such as solar flux variability, increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide, chlorofluoromethanes and other greenhouse gases. Data from satellite experiments such as LIMS and SBUV, were used along with theoretical models to develop a climatology of trace species in the stratosphere. The consistency of contemporary ozone photochemistry was examined in the light of LIMS data. Research work also includes analysis of stratospheric nitrogen dioxide distributions from different satellite experiments, investigation of the wintertime latitudinal gradients in NO2, estimation of the stratospheric odd nitrogen level and its variability, and studies related to the changes in ozone in the Antarctic, and mid latitude Southern Hemisphere
A parametric study on the buckling of functionally graded material plates with internal discontinuities using the partition of unity method
In this paper, the effect of local defects, viz., cracks and cutouts on the
buckling behaviour of functionally graded material plates subjected to
mechanical and thermal load is numerically studied. The internal
discontinuities, viz., cracks and cutouts are represented independent of the
mesh within the framework of the extended finite element method and an enriched
shear flexible 4-noded quadrilateral element is used for the spatial
discretization. The properties are assumed to vary only in the thickness
direction and the effective properties are estimated using the Mori-Tanaka
homogenization scheme. The plate kinematics is based on the first order shear
deformation theory. The influence of various parameters, viz., the crack length
and its location, the cutout radius and its position, the plate aspect ratio
and the plate thickness on the critical buckling load is studied. The effect of
various boundary conditions is also studied. The numerical results obtained
reveal that the critical buckling load decreases with increase in the crack
length, the cutout radius and the material gradient index. This is attributed
to the degradation in the stiffness either due to the presence of local defects
or due to the change in the material composition.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1301.2003, arXiv:1107.390
Galaxy Galaxy Lensing as a Probe of Galaxy Dark Matter Halos
Gravitational lensing has now become a popular tool to measure the mass
distribution of structures in the Universe on various scales. Here we focus on
the study of galaxy's scale dark matter halos with galaxy-galaxy lensing
techniques: observing the shapes of distant background galaxies which have been
lensed by foreground galaxies allows us to map the mass distribution of the
foreground galaxies. The lensing effect is small compared to the intrinsic
ellipticity distribution of galaxies, thus a statistical approach is needed to
derive some constraints on an average lens population. An advantage of this
method is that it provides a probe of the gravitational potential of the halos
of galaxies out to very large radii, where few classical methods are viable,
since dynamical and hydrodynamical tracers of the potential cannot be found at
this radii. We will begin by reviewing the detections of galaxy-galaxy lensing
obtained so far. Next we will present a maximum likelihood analysis of
simulated data we performed to evaluate the accuracy and robustness of
constraints that can be obtained on galaxy halo properties. Then we will apply
this method to study the properties of galaxies which stand in massive cluster
lenses at z~0.2. The main result of this work is to find dark matter halos of
cluster galaxies to be significantly more compact compared to dark matter halos
around field galaxies of equivalent luminosity, in agreement with early
galaxy-galaxy lensing studies and with theoretical expectations, in particular
with the tidal stripping scenario. We thus provide a strong confirmation of
tidal truncation from a homogeneous sample of galaxy clusters. Moreover, it is
the first time that cluster galaxies are probed successfully using
galaxy-galaxy lensing techniques from ground based data.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Moriond Proceedings, From Dark Halos
to Ligh
New observational Constraints on the Growth of the First Supermassive Black Holes
We constrain the total accreted mass density in supermassive black holes at
z>6, inferred via the upper limit derived from the integrated X-ray emission
from a sample of photometrically selected galaxy candidates. Studying galaxies
obtained from the deepest Hubble Space Telescope images combined with the
Chandra 4 Msec observations of the Chandra Deep Field South, we achieve the
most restrictive constraints on total black hole growth in the early Universe.
We estimate an accreted mass density <1000Mo Mpc^-3 at z~6, significantly lower
than the previous predictions from some existing models of early black hole
growth and earlier prior observations. These results place interesting
constraints on early black growth and mass assembly by accretion and imply one
or more of the following: (1) only a fraction of the luminous galaxies at this
epoch contain active black holes; (2) most black hole growth at early epochs
happens in dusty and/or less massive - as yet undetected - host galaxies; (3)
there is a significant fraction of low-z interlopers in the galaxy sample; (4)
early black hole growth is radiatively inefficient, heavily obscured and/or is
due to black hole mergers as opposed to accretion or (5) the bulk of the black
hole growth occurs at late times. All of these possibilities have important
implications for our understanding of high redshift seed formation models.Comment: ApJ Accepted, 10 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, in emulateapj forma
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Innovative Teaching Techniques for Distance Education
Distance education is responsible for promoting quality information, resources and expertise. There are three reasons for disseminating education to all societies due to geographical isolation, social isolation and disadvantaged groups. Distance teaching techniques enable people to undertake a course of study in privacy. The advent of the Internet and the growth of Web have now transformed distance teaching from a broadcast mode to an interactive mode. The Web, when combined with other network tools such as listservs, Usenet newsgroups and video teleconferencing acts a virtual classroom to bring together a community of learners for interactive education. The growth of television, telecommunication, videotape, audio tele-conferencing, audio graphics conferencing and video conferencing allowed linking the learners and instructors who are geographically separated. The use of innovative teaching methods helps to sustain student\u27s interest and make the learning process more productive and interesting. The techniques that can be adopted are: computer-assisted learning (CD-ROMs), web-based learning, virtual laboratories, case studies, group discussion, brainstorming, audiovisual presentation, assignments, seminars, quiz and assigning project works. The faculty also prepares worksheets, manuals and audiovisual aids to supplement these novel teaching strategies. Students should be given two types of learning materials before their actual course material, viz. one on computer literacy class and other one focusing on Internet and the Web skills for searching, retrieving, locating and downloading the information. For better understanding by the students, the mixed-model approach of combining satellite teleconferencing with hands-on activity sessions can also be conducted. It is suggested that innovative assessment approaches like presentation, posters about learned material, dioramas; student displays and project fairs with test papers are to be used to know the progress of the students. The author concluded that problem-based learning would place students in the active role of problem solvers and confronts them with a real-world situation. He also concluded that DE librarians have much more critical roles to play in the new environment
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