16,969 research outputs found
Cryogenic Hydrogen/helium Storage and Supply System, Phase 1
An existing cryogenic tank was refurbished, microspheres were installed in the tank annulus, and the thermal performance of the unit was tested. The performance data was compared with NRC-2 multilayer insulation and low emittance aluminized surfaces installed in tanks of the same basic design. The cryogenic tank modified during the program was originally designed for the Manned Orbiting Laboratory (MOL) Program, and subsequently modified by vacuum-depositing aluminum on all annulus surfaces and leaving out the NRC-2 multilayer insulation. It is concluded that the application of aluminized-microsphere insulation is not yet very predictable for tank design purposes, especially at LH2 temperature and in the presence of a vapor-cooled shield
Population III star formation in a Lambda CDM universe, II: Effects of a photodissociating background
We examine aspects of primordial star formation in the presence of a
molecular hydrogen-dissociating ultraviolet background. We compare a set of AMR
hydrodynamic cosmological simulations using a single cosmological realization
but with a range of ultraviolet background strengths in the Lyman-Werner band.
This allows us to study the effects of Lyman-Werner radiation on suppressing H2
cooling at low densities as well as the high-density evolution of the
collapsing core in a self-consistent cosmological framework. We find that the
addition of a photodissociating background results in a delay of the collapse
of high density gas at the center of the most massive halo in the simulation
and, as a result, an increase in the virial mass of this halo at the onset of
baryon collapse. We find that, contrary to previous results, Population III
star formation is not suppressed for J, but occurs even with
backgrounds as high as J. We find that H2 cooling leads to collapse
despite the depressed core molecular hydrogen fractions due to the elevated H2
cooling rates at K. We observe a relationship between the
strength of the photodissociating background and the rate of accretion onto the
evolving protostellar cloud core, with higher LW background fluxes resulting in
higher accretion rates. Finally, we find that the collapsing halo cores in our
simulations do not fragment at densities below cm
regardless of the strength of the LW background, suggesting that Population III
stars forming in halos with T K may still form in isolation.Comment: 46 pages, 14 figures (9 color). Accepted by the Astrophysical
Journal, some minor revision
Photon Conserving Radiative Transfer around Point Sources in multi-dimensional Numerical Cosmology
Many questions in physical cosmology regarding the thermal and ionization
history of the intergalactic medium are now successfully studied with the help
of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations. Here we present a numerical method
that solves the radiative transfer around point sources within a three
dimensional cartesian grid. The method is energy conserving independently of
resolution: this ensures the correct propagation speeds of ionization fronts.
We describe the details of the algorithm, and compute as first numerical
application the ionized region surrounding a mini-quasar in a cosmological
density field at z=7.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to ApJ
Sustainable development of smallholder crop-livestock farming in developing countries
Meeting the growing demand for animal-sourced food, prompted by population growth and increases in average per-capita income in low-income countries, is a major challenge. Yet, it also presents significant potential for agricultural growth, economic development, and reduction of poverty in rural areas. The main constraints to livestock producers taking advantage of growing markets include; lack of forage and feed gaps, communal land tenure, limited access to land and water resources, weak institutions, poor infrastructure and environmental degradation. To improve rural livelihood and food security in smallholder crop-livestock farming systems, concurrent work is required to address issues regarding efficiency of production, risk within systems and development of whole value chain systems. This paper provides a review of several forage basedstudies in tropical and non-tropical dry areas of the developing countries. A central tenet of this paper is that forages have an essential role in agricultural productivity, environmental sustainability and livestock nutrition in smallholder mixed farming systems
Evaluation of the utility of sediment data in NASQAN (National Stream Quality Accounting Network)
Monthly suspended sediment discharge measurements, made by the USGS as part of the National Stream Quality Accounting Network (NASQAN), are analysed to assess the adequacy in terms of spatial coverage, temporal sampling frequency, accuracy of measurements, as well as in determining the sediment yield in the nation's rivers.
It is concluded that the spatial distribution of NASQAN stations is reasonable but necessarily judgemental. The temporal variations of sediment data contain much higher frequencies than monthly. Sampling error is found to be minor when compared with other causes of data scatter which can be substantial. The usefulness of the monthly measurements of sediment transport is enhanced when combined with the daily measurements of water discharge. Increasing the sampling frequency moderately would not materially improve the accuracy of sediment yield determinations
Extraction of the Electron Self-Energy from Angle Resolved Photoemission Data: Application to Bi2212
The self-energy , the fundamental function which
describes the effects of many-body interactions on an electron in a solid, is
usually difficult to obtain directly from experimental data. In this paper, we
show that by making certain reasonable assumptions, the self-energy can be
directly determined from angle resolved photoemission data. We demonstrate this
method on data for the high temperature superconductor
(Bi2212) in the normal, superconducting, and pseudogap phases.Comment: expanded version (6 pages), to be published, Phys Rev B (1 Sept 99
Phenomenology of Photoemission Lineshapes of High Tc Superconductors
We introduce a simple phenomenological form for the self-energy which allows
us to extract important information from angle resolved photoemission data on
the high Tc superconductor Bi2212. First, we find a rapid suppression of the
single particle scattering rate below Tc for all doping levels. Second, we find
that in the overdoped materials the gap Delta at all k-points on the Fermi
surface has significant temperature dependence and vanishes near Tc. In
contrast, in the underdoped samples such behavior is found only at k-points
close to the diagonal. Near (pi,0), Delta is essentially T-independent in the
underdoped samples. The filling-in of the pseudogap with increasing T is
described by a broadening proportional to T-Tc, which is naturally explained by
pairing correlations above Tc.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 3 encapsulated postscript figure
Isospin asymmetric nuclear matter and properties of axisymmetric neutron stars
Pure hadronic compact stars, above a limiting value (1.6 M)
of their gravitational masses, to which predictions of most of other equations
of state (EoSs) are restricted, can be reached from the equation of state (EoS)
obtained using DDM3Y effective interaction. This effective interaction is found
to be quite successful in providing unified description of elastic and
inelastic scattering, various radioactivities and nuclear matter properties. We
present a systematic study of the properties of pure hadronic compact stars.
The -equilibrated neutron star matter using this EoS with a thin crust
is able to describe highly-massive compact stars, such as PSR B1516+02B with a
mass M=1.94 M and PSR J0751+1807 with a mass
M=2.10.2 M to a 1 confidence level.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Magnetic resonance at 41 meV and charge dynamics in YBa_2Cu_3O_6.95
We report an Eliashberg analysis of the electron dynamics in YBa_2Cu_3O_6.95.
The magnetic resonance at 41 meV couples to charge carriers and defines the
characteristic shape in energy of the scattering rate \tau^{-1}(T,\omega) which
allows us to construct the charge-spin spectral density I^2\chi(\omega,T) at
temperature T. The T dependence of the weight under the resonance peak in
I^2\chi(\omega,T) agrees with experiment as does that of the London penetration
depth and of the microwave conductivity. Als, at T=0 condensation energy, the
fractional oscillator strength in the condensate, and the ratio of gap to
critical temperature agree well with the data.Comment: 7 Pages, 3 Figures, accepted for publication in Europhysics Letter
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