13,412 research outputs found
Failure rate analysis of Goddard Space Flight Center spacecraft performance during orbital life
Space life performance data on 57 Goddard Space Flight Center spacecraft are analyzed from the standpoint of determining an appropriate reliability model and the associated reliability parameters. Data from published NASA reports, which cover the space performance of GSFC spacecraft launched in the 1960-1970 decade, form the basis of the analyses. The results of the analyses show that the time distribution of 449 malfunctions, of which 248 were classified as failures (not necessarily catastrophic), follow a reliability growth pattern that can be described with either the Duane model or a Weibull distribution. The advantages of both mathematical models are used in order to: identify space failure rates, observe chronological trends, and compare failure rates with those experienced during the prelaunch environmental tests of the flight model spacecraft
Radio Observations of Super Star Clusters in Dwarf Starburst Galaxies
We present new radio continuum observations of two dwarf starburst galaxies,
NGC3125 and NGC5408, with observations at 4.80GHz (6cm) and 8.64GHz (3cm),
taken with the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA). Both galaxies show a
complex radio morphology with several emission regions, mostly coincident with
massive young star clusters. The radio spectral indices of these regions are
negative (with alpha ~ -0.5 - -0.7), indicating that the radio emission is
dominated by synchrotron emission associated with supernova activity from the
starburst. One emission region in NGC5408 has a flatter index (alpha ~ -0.1)
indicative of optically thin free-free emission, which could indicate it is a
younger cluster. Consequently, in these galaxies we do not see regions with the
characteristic positive spectral index indicative of optically obscured
star-formation regions, as seen in other dwarf starbursts such as Hen 2-10.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Language-universal constraints on the segmentation of English
Two word-spotting experiments are reported that examine whether the Possible-Word Constraint (PWC) [1] is a language-specific or language-universal strategy for the segmentation of continuous speech. The PWC disfavours parses which leave an impossible residue between the end of a candidate word and a known boundary. The experiments examined cases where the residue was either a CV syllable with a lax vowel, or a CVC syllable with a schwa. Although neither syllable context is a possible word in English, word-spotting in both contexts was easier than with a context consisting of a single consonant. The PWC appears to be language-universal rather than language-specific
Identification and control of structures in space
The derivation of the equations of motion for the Spacecraft Control Laboratory Experiment (SCOLE) is reported and the equations of motion of a similar structure orbiting the earth are also derived. The structure is assumed to undergo large rigid-body maneuvers and small elastic deformations. A perturbation approach is proposed whereby the quantities defining the rigid-body maneuver are assumed to be relatively large, with the elastic deformations and deviations from the rigid-body maneuver being relatively small. The perturbation equations have the form of linear equations with time-dependent coefficients. An active control technique can then be formulated to permit maneuvering of the spacecraft and simultaneously suppressing the elastic vibration
Are the hosts of VLBI selected radio-AGN different to those of radio-loud AGN?
Recent studies have found that radio-AGN selected by radio-loudness show
little difference in terms of their host galaxy properties when compared to
non-AGN galaxies of similar stellar mass and redshift. Using new 1.4~GHz VLBI
observations of the COSMOS field we find that approximately 49\% of
high-mass (M 10 M), high luminosity (L
10 W~Hz) radio-AGN possess a VLBI detected counterpart. These
objects show no discernible bias towards specific stellar masses, redshifts or
host properties other than what is shown by the radio-AGN population in
general. Radio-AGN that are detected in VLBI observations are not special, but
form a representative sample of the radio-loud AGN population.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, lette
Compact Radio Cores in Seyfert Galaxies
We have observed a sample of 157 Seyfert galaxies with a 275 km baseline
radio interferometer to search for compact, high brightness temperature radio
emission from the active nucleus. We obtain the surprising result that compact
radio cores are much more common in Seyfert 2 than in Seyfert 1 galaxies, which
at first seems to be inconsistent with orientation unification schemes. We
propose a model, involving optical depth effects in the narrow-line region,
which can reconcile our result with the standard unified scheme. (Accepted for
publication in ApJ 1994 Sep 10)Comment: 21 pages and 7 figures, uuencoded tar-compressed postscript files,
ATP18
The ATLAS-SPT Radio Survey of Cluster Galaxies
Using a high-performance computing cluster to mosaic 4,787 pointings, we have
imaged the 100 sq. deg. South Pole Telescope (SPT) deep-field at 2.1 GHz using
the Australian Telescope Compact Array to an rms of 80 Jy and a resolution
of 8". Our goal is to generate an independent sample of radio-selected galaxy
clusters to study how the radio properties compare with cluster properties at
other wavelengths, over a wide range of redshifts in order to construct a
timeline of their evolution out to . A preliminary analysis of the
source catalogue suggests there is no spatial correlation between the clusters
identified in the SPT-SZ catalogue and our wide-angle tail galaxies.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to Proceedings of Science for "The many
facets of extragalactic radio surveys: towards new scientific challenges",
Bologna, Italy 20-23 October 2015 (EXTRA-RADSUR2015
The Stability of Polar Oxide Surfaces
The structures of the polar surfaces of ZnO are studied using ab initio calculations and surface x-ray diffraction. The experimental and theoretical relaxations are in good agreement. The polar surfaces are shown to be very stable; the cleavage energy for the (0001)-Zn and (0001̅ )-O surfaces is 4.0J/m2 comparable to 2.32J/m2 for the most stable nonpolar (1010) surface. The surfaces are stabilized by an electronic mechanism involving the transfer of 0.17 electrons between them. This leads to 2D metallic surface states, which has implications for the use of the material in gas sensing and catalytic applications
A wider audience: Turning VLBI into a survey instrument
Radio observations using the Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI)
technique typically have fields of view of only a few arcseconds, due to the
computational problems inherent in imaging larger fields. Furthermore,
sensitivity limitations restrict observations to very compact and bright
objects, which are few and far between on the sky. Thus, while most branches of
observational astronomy can carry out sensitive, wide-field surveys, VLBI
observations are limited to targeted observations of carefully selected
objects. However, recent advances in technology have made it possible to carry
out the computations required to target hundreds of sources simultaneously.
Furthermore, sensitivity upgrades have dramatically increased the number of
objects accessible to VLBI observations. The combination of these two
developments have enhanced the survey capabilities of VLBI observations such
that it is now possible to observe (almost) any point in the sky with
milli-arcsecond resolution. In this talk I review the development of wide-field
VLBI, which has made significant progress over the last three years.Comment: Invited review at the General Assembly of the Astronomische
Gesellschaf
- …