13,887 research outputs found

    Effect of 1.5 MeV electron irradiation on the transmission of optical materials

    Get PDF
    Comparison of 1.5 MeV electron irradiation induced optical absorption of fused commercial silicas and optical transmission of Al2O3, MgF2, BaF2, LiF, and Be

    Spectroscopy of Giant Stars in the Pyxis Globular Cluster

    Get PDF
    The Pyxis globular cluster is a recently discovered globular cluster that lies in the outer halo (R_{gc} ~ 40 kpc) of the Milky Way. Pyxis lies along one of the proposed orbital planes of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), and it has been proposed to be a detached LMC globular cluster captured by the Milky Way. We present the first measurement of the radial velocity of the Pyxis globular cluster based on spectra of six Pyxis giant stars. The mean heliocentric radial velocity is ~ 36 km/sec, and the corresponding velocity of Pyxis with respect to a stationary observer at the position of the Sun is ~ -191 km/sec. This radial velocity is a large enough fraction of the cluster's expected total space velocity, assuming that it is bound to the Milky Way, that it allows strict limits to be placed on the range of permissible transverse velocities that Pyxis could have in the case that it still shares or nearly shares an orbital pole with the LMC. We can rule out that Pyxis is on a near circular orbit if it is Magellanic debris, but we cannot rule out an eccentric orbit associated with the LMC. We have calculated the range of allowed proper motions for the Pyxis globular cluster that result in the cluster having an orbital pole within 15 degrees of the present orbital pole of the LMC and that are consistent with our measured radial velocity, but verification of the tidal capture hypothesis must await proper motion measurement from the Space Interferometry Mission or HST. A spectroscopic metallicity estimate of [Fe/H] = -1.4 +/- 0.1 is determined for Pyxis from several spectra of its brightest giant; this is consistent with photometric determinations of the cluster metallicity from isochrone fitting.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, aaspp4 style, accepted for publication in October, 2000 issue of the PAS

    Acute Malnutrition and Under-5 Mortality, Northeastern Part of India.

    Get PDF
    We assessed the prevalence of childhood acute malnutrition and under-five mortality rate (U5MR) in Darbhanga district, India, using a two-stage 49-cluster household survey. A total of 1379 households comprising 8473 people were interviewed. During a 90-day recall period, U5MR was 0.5 [95% confidence interval (CI), 0.2-1.4] per 10 000 per day. The prevalence of global acute malnutrition among 1405 children aged 6-59 months was 15.4% (NCHS) and 19.4% (2006 WHO references). This survey suggests that in Darbhanga district, the population is in a borderline food crisis with few food resources. Appropriate strategies should be developed to improve the overall nutritional and health status of children

    The Extended Shapes of Galactic Satellites

    Full text link
    We are exploring the extended stellar distributions of Galactic satellite galaxies and globular clusters. For seven objects studied thus far, the observed profile departs from a King function at large r, revealing a ``break population'' of stars. In our sample, the relative density of the ``break'' correlates to the inferred M/L of these objects. We discuss opposing hypotheses for this trend: (1) Higher M/L objects harbor more extended dark matter halos that support secondary, bound, stellar ``halos''. (2) The extended populations around dwarf spheroidals (and some clusters) consist of unbound, extratidal debris from their parent objects, which are undergoing various degrees of tidal disruption. In this scenario, higher M/L ratios reflect higher degrees of virial non-equilibrium in the parent objects, thus invalidating a precept underlying the use of core radial velocities to obtain masses.Comment: 8 pages, including 2 figures Yale Cosmology Workshop: The Shapes of Galaxies and Their Halo

    Moduli-Space Approximation for BPS Brane-Worlds

    Full text link
    We develop the moduli-space approximation for the low energy regime of BPS-branes with a bulk scalar field to obtain an effective four-dimensional action describing the system. An arbitrary BPS potential is used and account is taken of the presence of matter in the branes and small supersymmetry breaking terms. The resulting effective theory is a bi-scalar tensor theory of gravity. In this theory, the scalar degrees of freedom can be stabilized naturally without the introduction of additional mechanisms other than the appropriate BPS potential. We place observational constraints on the shape of the potential and the global configuration of branes.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur

    design of a novel open space test rig for small scale wind turbine

    Get PDF
    Abstract In the present paper, an innovative and cost-effective open test rig for small and medium wind turbines is proposed. The main aim is to develop a valid alternative to wind tunnels, which present unresolved problems such as the unmatched Reynolds numbers for downscaled wind turbine tests. The proposed test bench concept is an open field, subsonic facility for horizontal and vertical axis wind turbines. The core of the test bench is a cluster of axial fans, positioned at a given height from the ground, which generate an air flow suitable for testing a wind turbine placed in front of the fans. The present work aims at investigating the feasibility of this novel concept of test rig for small wind turbines having a rotor diameter smaller than 5 m. A thorough CFD analysis is performed in this paper in order to assess the characteristics of the wind generated by the fans in terms of uniformity and intensity, even in case of atmospheric disturbances. The developed CFD modelling is also instrumental in both determining the maximum rotor diameter that can be tested and selecting the correct position for a wind turbine in the proposed open test rig

    Experimental prototype development and performance analysis of a small-scale combined cycle for energy generation from biomass

    Get PDF
    Abstract This paper presents a research activity aimed at exploiting combined cycles (gas turbine plants coupled with steam cycles) for small-scale energy generation from carbon-neutral biomass. Such a goal has never been achieved before, since combined cycles are generally suited only for large-scale applications and for clean fuels. In order to adapt combined cycles to small-scale energy generation using dirty fuels, the implementation of cost-effective and commercially available components is studied, such as the use of a turbocharger and a power turbine taken from the automotive industry. The ongoing realization of the first prototype of small-scale combined cycle is presented in this paper, providing a detailed description of both the plant architecture and the main components chosen. In addition, a commercially available tool (Cycle Tempo) is used to demonstrate the high feasibility and potential of the plant in terms of efficiency. To that end, different plant configurations are studied and the effects of losses on the plant performance are investigated in detail

    Parental evaluation of a telemonitoring service for children with Type 1 Diabetes

    Get PDF
    Introduction In the past years, we developed a telemonitoring service for young patients affected by Type 1 Diabetes. That service provides data to the clinical staff and offers an important tool to the parents, that are able to oversee in real time their children. The aim of this work was to analyze the parents' perceived usefulness of the service. Methods The service was tested by the parents of 31 children enrolled in a seven-day clinical trial during a summer camp. To study the parents' perception we proposed and analyzed two questionnaires. A baseline questionnaire focused on the daily management and implications of their children's diabetes, while a post-study one measured the perceived benefits of telemonitoring. Questionnaires also included free text comment spaces. Results Analysis of the baseline questionnaires underlined the parents' suffering and fatigue: 51% of total responses showed a negative tendency and the mean value of the perceived quality of life was 64.13 in a 0-100 scale. In the post-study questionnaires about half of the parents believed in a possible improvement adopting telemonitoring. Moreover, the foreseen improvement in quality of life was significant, increasing from 64.13 to 78.39 ( p-value\u2009=\u20090.0001). The analysis of free text comments highlighted an improvement in mood, and parents' commitment was also proved by their willingness to pay for the service (median\u2009=\u2009200\u2009euro/year). Discussion A high number of parents appreciated the telemonitoring service and were confident that it could improve communication with physicians as well as the family's own peace of mind
    • …
    corecore