6,640 research outputs found
Swift observations of the dwarf nova ASASSN-18fs
The All Sky Automated Survey for SuperNovae (ASAS-SN) reported a possible
Galactic dwarf nova ASASSN-18fs on 2018 March 19 at 13.2 mag in the V
band, with a quiescent magnitude of V17.6. Here we report on the follow-up
photometry using the {\it Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory}.Comment: Published by AAS Research Note
Antimisting fuel breakup and flammability
The breakup behavior and flammability of antimisting turbine fuels subjected to aerodynamic shear are investigated. Fuels tested were Jet A containing 0.3% FM-9 polymer at various levels of degradation ranging from virgin AMK to neat Jet A. The misting behavior of the fuels was quantified by droplet size distribution measurements. A technique based on high resolution laser photography and digital image processing of photographic records for rapid determination of droplet size distribution was developed. The flammability of flowing droplet-air mixtures was quantified by direct measurements of temperature rise in a flame established in the wake of a continuous ignition source. The temperature rise measurements were correlated with droplet size measurements. The flame anchoring phenomenon associated with the breakup of a liquid fuel in the wake of bluff body was shown to be important in the context of a survivable crash scenario. A pass/fail criterion for flammability testing of antimisting fuels, based on this flame-anchoring phenomenon, was proposed. The role of various ignition sources and their intensity in ignition and post-ignition behavior of antimisting fuels was also investigated
The Effects of Variations in Nuclear Interactions on Nucleosynthesis in Thermonuclear Supernovae
The impact of nuclear physics uncertainties on nucleosynthesis in
thermonuclear supernovae has not been fully explored using comprehensive and
systematic studies with multiple models. To better constrain predictions of
yields from these phenomena, we have performed a sensitivity study by
post-processing thermodynamic histories from two different hydrodynamic,
Chandrasekhar-mass explosion models. We have individually varied all input
reaction and, for the first time, weak interaction rates by a factor of ten and
compared the yields in each case to yields using standard rates. Of the 2305
nuclear reactions in our network, we find that the rates of only 53 reactions
affect the yield of any species with an abundance of at least 10^-8 M_sun by at
least a factor of two, in either model. The rates of the 12C(a,g), 12C+12C,
20Ne(a,p), 20Ne(a,g) and 30Si(p,g) reactions are among those that modify the
most yields when varied by a factor of ten. From the individual variation of
658 weak interaction rates in our network by a factor of ten, only the stellar
28Si(b+)28Al, 32S(b+)32P and 36Ar(b+)36Cl rates significantly affect the yields
of species in a model. Additional tests reveal that reaction rate changes over
temperatures T > 1.5 GK have the greatest impact, and that ratios of
radionuclides that may be used as explosion diagnostics change by a factor of
less than two from the variation of individual rates by a factor of 10.
Nucleosynthesis in the two adopted models is relatively robust to variations in
individual nuclear reaction and weak interaction rates. Laboratory measurements
of a limited number of reactions would help to further constrain predictions.
As well, we confirm the need for a consistent treatment for relevant stellar
weak interaction rates since simultaneous variation of these rates (as opposed
to individual variation) has a significant effect on yields in our models.Comment: accepted by A&A, 14 pages, 5 figures, 2 table
Further constraints on neutron star crustal properties in the low-mass X-ray binary 1RXS J180408.9342058
We report on two new quiescent {\it XMM-Newton} observations (in addition to
the earlier {\it Swift}/XRT and {\it XMM-Newton} coverage) of the cooling
neutron star crust in the low-mass X-ray binary 1RXS J180408.9342058. Its
crust was heated during the 4.5 month accretion outburst of the source.
From our quiescent observations, fitting the spectra with a neutron star
atmosphere model, we found that the crust had cooled from 100 eV to
73 eV from 8 days to 479 days after the end of its outburst.
However, during the most recent observation, taken 860 days after the end
of the outburst, we found that the crust appeared not to have cooled further.
This suggested that the crust had returned to thermal equilibrium with the
neutron star core. We model the quiescent thermal evolution with the
theoretical crustal cooling code NSCool and find that the source requires a
shallow heat source, in addition to the standard deep crustal heating
processes, contributing 0.9 MeV per accreted nucleon during outburst to
explain its observed temperature decay. Our high quality {\it XMM-Newton} data
required an additional hard component to adequately fit the spectra. This
slightly complicates our interpretation of the quiescent data of 1RXS
J180408.9342058. The origin of this component is not fully understood.Comment: Accepted for publication by MNRA
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