2,125 research outputs found
NSTA-NASA Shuttle Student Involvement Project. Experiment Results: Insect Flight Observation at Zero Gravity
The flight responses of common houseflies, velvetbean caterpillar moths, and worker honeybees were observed and filmed for a period of about 25 minutes in a zero-g environment during the third flight of the Space Shuttle Vehicle (flight number STS-3; March 22-30, 1982). Twelve fly puparia, 24 adult moths, 24 moth pupae, and 14 adult bees were loaded into an insect flight box, which was then stowed aboard the Shuttle Orbiter, the night before the STS-3 launch at NASA's Kennedy Space Center (KSC). The main purpose of the experiment was to observe and compare the flight responses of the three species of insects, which have somewhat different flight control mechanisms, under zero-g conditions
Dip coating process: Silicon sheet growth development for the large-area silicon sheet task of the low-cost silicon solar array project
The technical and economic feasibility of producing solar cell quality sheet silicon by dip-coating one surface of carbonized ceramic substrates with a thin layer of large grain polycrystalline silicon was investigated. The dip-coating methods studied were directed toward a minimum cost process with the ultimate objective of producing solar cells with a conversion efficiency of 10% or greater. The technique shows excellent promise for low cost, labor-saving, scale-up potentialities and would provide an end product of sheet silicon with a rigid and strong supportive backing. An experimental dip-coating facility was designed and constructed, several substrates were successfully dip-coated with areas as large as 25 sq cm and thicknesses of 12 micron to 250 micron. There appears to be no serious limitation on the area of a substrate that could be coated. Of the various substrate materials dip-coated, mullite appears to best satisfy the requirement of the program. An inexpensive process was developed for producing mullite in the desired geometry
Characterizing Young Brown Dwarfs using Low Resolution Near-IR Spectra
We present near-infrared (1.0-2.4 micron) spectra confirming the youth and
cool effective temperatures of 6 brown dwarfs and low mass stars with
circumstellar disks toward the Chamaeleon II and Ophiuchus star forming
regions. The spectrum of one of our objects indicates that it has a spectral
type of ~L1, making it one of the latest spectral type young brown dwarfs
identified to date. Comparing spectra of young brown dwarfs, field dwarfs, and
giant stars, we define a 1.49-1.56 micron H2O index capable of determining
spectral type to within 1 sub-type, independent of gravity. We have also
defined an index based on the 1.14 micron sodium feature that is sensitive to
gravity, but only weakly dependent on spectral type for field dwarfs. Our 1.14
micron Na index can be used to distinguish young cluster members (t <~ 5 Myr)
from young field dwarfs, both of which may have the triangular H-band continuum
shape which persists for at least tens of Myr. Using effective temperatures
determined from the spectral types of our objects along with luminosities
derived from near and mid-infrared photometry, we place our objects on the H-R
diagram and overlay evolutionary models to estimate the masses and ages of our
young sources. Three of our sources have inferred ages (t ~= 10-30 Myr)
significantly older than the median stellar age of their parent clouds (1-3
Myr). For these three objects, we derive masses ~3 times greater than expected
for 1-3 Myr old brown dwarfs with the bolometric luminosities of our sources.
The large discrepancies in the inferred masses and ages determined using two
separate, yet reasonable methods, emphasize the need for caution when deriving
or exploiting brown dwarf mass and age estimates.Comment: 11 pages, Accepted to Ap
Chiral and herringbone symmetry breaking in water-surface monolayers
We report the observation from monolayers of eicosanoic acid in the LâČ2 phase of three distinct out-of-plane first-order diffraction peaks, indicating molecular tilt in a nonsymmetry direction and hence the absence of mirror symmetry. At lower pressures the molecules tilt in the direction of their nearest neighbors. In this region we find a structural transition, which we tentatively identify as the rotator-herringbone transition L2dâL2h
A Revised Broad-Line Region Radius and Black Hole Mass for the Narrow-Line Seyfert 1 NGC 4051
We present the first results from a high sampling rate, multi-month
reverberation mapping campaign undertaken primarily at MDM Observatory with
supporting observations from telescopes around the world. The primary goal of
this campaign was to obtain either new or improved Hbeta reverberation lag
measurements for several relatively low luminosity AGNs. We feature results for
NGC 4051 here because, until now, this object has been a significant outlier
from AGN scaling relationships, e.g., it was previously a ~2-3sigma outlier on
the relationship between the broad-line region (BLR) radius and the optical
continuum luminosity - the R_BLR-L relationship. Our new measurements of the
lag time between variations in the continuum and Hbeta emission line made from
spectroscopic monitoring of NGC 4051 lead to a measured BLR radius of R_BLR =
1.87 (+0.54 -0.50) light days and black hole mass of M_BH = 1.73 (+0.55 -0.52)
x 10^6 M_sun. This radius is consistent with that expected from the R_BLR-L
relationship, based on the present luminosity of NGC 4051 and the most current
calibration of the relation by Bentz et al. (2009a). We also present a
preliminary look at velocity-resolved Hbeta light curves and time delay
measurements, although we are unable to reconstruct an unambiguous
velocity-resolved reverberation signal.Comment: 38 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, changes from v1
reflect suggestions from anonymous refere
From toothpick legs to dropping vaginas: Gender and sexuality in Joan Rivers' stand-up comedy performance
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final published article is available from the link below. Copyright @ 2011 Intellect.This article employs sociocultural analysis to examine Joan Riversâ stand-up comedy performances in order to reveal how she successfully operates in a sphere of artistic expression that has been, and continues to be, male-dominated. The analysis uncovers how Riversâ stand-up comedy performance involves a complex combination of elements and how it fuses features that are regarded as âtraditionally masculineâ, such as aggression, with features frequently used by other female stand-up comedians, such as self-deprecating comedy and confessional comedy. Furthermore, the analysis exposes the complex ways in which constructions of gender and sexuality are negotiated and re-negotiated in Riversâ stand-up comedy performance, and illustrates how dominant ideological identity constructions can be simultaneously reinforced and subverted within the same comic moment
Searching for periodicities in the MACHO light curve of LMC X-2
Using the exceptional long-term monitoring capabilities of the MACHO project,
we present here the optical history of LMC X-2 for a continuous 6-yr period.
These data were used to investigate the previously claimed periodicities for
this source of 8.15 h and 12.54 d : we find upper amplitude limits of 0.10 mag
and 0.09 mag, respectively.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Minor changes, including title. MNRAS, in pres
The MACHO Project Hubble Space Telescope Follow-Up: Preliminary Results on the Location of the Large Magellanic Cloud Microlensing Source Stars
We attempt to determine whether the MACHO microlensing source stars are drawn
from the average population of the LMC or from a population behind the LMC by
examining the HST color-magnitude diagram (CMD) of microlensing source stars.
We present WFPC2 HST photometry of eight MACHO microlensing source stars and
the surrounding fields in the LMC. The microlensing source stars are identified
by deriving accurate centroids in the ground-based MACHO images using
difference image analysis (DIA) and then transforming the DIA coordinates to
the HST frame. We consider in detail a model for the background population of
source stars based on that presented by Zhao, Graff & Guhathakurta. In this
model, the source stars have an additional reddening = 0.13 mag and a
slightly larger distance modulus ~ 0.3 mag than the average LMC
population. We also investigate a series of source star models, varying the
relative fraction of source stars drawn from the average and background
populations and the displacement of the background population from the LMC. Due
to the small number of analyzed events the distribution of probabilities of
different models is rather flat. A shallow maximum occurs at a fraction s_LMC ~
0.8 of the source stars in the LMC. This is consistent with the interpretation
that a significant fraction of observed microlensing events are due to lenses
in the Milky Way halo, but does not definitively exclude other models.Comment: revised version, results slightly changed, accepted by Ap
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