4,170 research outputs found
Extreme ultraviolet and X-ray spectroheliograph for OSO-H
A complex scientific instrument was designed, fabricated, tested, and calibrated for launch onboard OSO-H. This instrument consisted of four spectroheliographs and an X-ray polarimeter. The instrument is designed to study solar radiation at selected wavelengths in the X-ray and the extreme ultraviolet ranges, make observations at the H-alpha wavelength, and measure the degree of polarization of X-ray emissions
A Flaring Megamaser in Mrk 348
We report new observations of the H2O megamaser in the Seyfert 2 galaxy Mrk
348. Following our initial detection in 2000 March using the Effelsberg 100 m
telescope, re-analysis of previous data on this source indicates that the maser
was present but only marginally detectable in late 1997. Monitoring through
late 2000 shows that the maser has again decreased to its original level. The
H2O line is redshifted by ~130 km/s with respect to the systemic velocity, is
extremely broad, with a FWHM of 130 km/s, and has no detectable high velocity
components within 1500 km/s on either side of the strong line. Followup VLBA
observations show that the maser emission emanates entirely from a region >0.25
pc in extent, toward the base of the radio jet.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Cosmic Masers: from Protostars to
Black Holes, IAU 206, Eds. V. Migenes et al., ASP Conference Serie
Nitrogen fertiliser may pay on tropical grass pastures
Low productivity in sown grass pastures due to a lack of available soil nitrogen can reduce beef production by up to 50% across Queensland. The feasibility of strategic nitrogen (N) fertiliser applications to address these losses was assessed by desktop analyses using data from published studies, local fertiliser trials and expert opinion. These analyses suggest that applying nitrogen to rundown sown grass pastures can produce dramatic increases in dry matter yield and animal production. However, high and consistent response rates in pasture productivity, stocking rates and growth rate of cattle were required for the application of nitrogen fertiliser to be profitable. For the suggested 100 kg N/ha fertiliser rate: average gross margins in the year of application were calculated to increase by 121-217% when dry matter yield responses of 40 kg DM/kg N (i.e. an additional 4000 kg/ha) and an additional liveweight gain of 0.2 kg per adult equivalent (AE)/day can be achieved (i.e. an extra 70 kg AE/year). These economics were very sensitive to the assumed response rates in pasture growth, stocking rate and liveweight gain and did not account for uncertainty in climate and beef
prices. New research is proposed to re-assess the responses used in this analysis that are largely based on research 25-40 years ago when soils were generally more fertile and pastures less rundown
Geological Surprises at Itezhitezhi Dam, Zambia
An outburst of warm springs together with the development of an extensive area of high pore-water pressures occurred during the first filling of the 50m high earth and rock fill Itezhitezhi Dam on the Kafue River in Zambia. These and other unanticipated events led to extensive geological and hydrogeological investigations that resulted in the implementation of unusual remedial measures. The remedial work was completed before the reservoir reached its full supply level. The dam has since performed successfully. The problems are reviewed in terms of the significance of the site geology. The hydrogeologic problems were found to be caused by the presence of a modified karstic terrane developed on a mineralized, faulted and deeply weathered bedrock of granite and associated rocks. Small differences between the river levels and the piezometric levels in deep porings contributed to a delay in problem identification. The problems encountered and their causes are thought to be without precedent
Disentangling the Circumnuclear Environs of Centaurus A: III. An Inner Molecular Ring, Nuclear Shocks and the CO to warm H2 interface
We present the distribution and kinematics of the molecular gas in the
circumnuclear disk (CND, 400 pc x 200 pc) of Centaurus A with resolutions of ~5
pc (0.3 arcsec) and shed light onto the mechanism feeding the Active Galactic
Nucleus (AGN) using CO(3-2), HCO+(4-3), HCN(4-3), and CO(6-5) observations
obtained with ALMA. Multiple filaments or streamers of tens to a hundred parsec
scale exist within the CND, which form a ring-like structure with an
unprojected diameter of 9 x 6 arcsec (162pc x 108pc) and a position angle PA =
155deg. Inside the nuclear ring, there are two leading and straight filamentary
structures with lengths of about 30-60pc at PA = 120deg on opposite sides of
the AGN, with a rotational symmetry of 180deg and steeper position-velocity
diagrams, which are interpreted as nuclear shocks due to non-circular motions.
Along the filaments, and unlike other nearby AGNs, several dense molecular
clumps present low HCN/HCO+(4-3) ratios (~0.5). The filaments abruptly end in
the probed transitions at r = 20pc from the AGN, but previous near-IR H2
(J=1-0) S(1) maps show that they continue in an even ~1000 K), winding up in
the form of nuclear spirals, and forming an inner ring structure with another
set of symmetric filaments along the N-S direction and within r = 10pc. The
molecular gas is governed primarily by non-circular motions, being the
successive shock fronts at different scales where loss of angular momentum
occurs, a mechanism which may feed efficiently powerful radio galaxies down to
parsec scales.Comment: 46 pages. Accepted for publication in Ap
Disentangling the circumnuclear environs of Centaurus A: Gaseous Spiral Arms in a Giant Elliptical Galaxy
We report the existence of spiral arms in the recently formed gaseous and
dusty disk of the closest giant elliptical, NGC 5128 (Centaurus A), using high
resolution 12CO(2-1) observations of the central 3 arcmin (3 kpc) obtained with
the Submillimeter Array (SMA). This provides evidence that spiral-like features
can develop within ellipticals if enough cold gas exists. We elucidate the
distribution and kinematics of the molecular gas in this region with a
resolution of 4.4 x 1.9 (80 pc x 40 pc). The spiral arms extend from the
circumnuclear gas at a radius of 200 pc to at least 1 kiloparsec. The general
properties of the arms are similar to those in spiral galaxies: they are
trailing, the width is \sim 500 \pm 200 pc, and the pitch angle is 20 degrees.
From independent estimates of the time when the HI-rich galaxy merger occurred,
we infer that the formation of spiral arms happened on a time scale of less
than \sim10^8 yr. The formation of spiral arms increases the gas density and
thus the star formation efficiency in the early stages of the formation of a
disk.Comment: 13 pages, 4 Figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
X-ray emission from massive stars in Cyg OB2
We report on the analysis of the Chandra-ACIS data of O, B and WR stars in
the young association Cyg OB2. X-ray spectra of 49 O-stars, 54 B-stars and 3
WR-stars are analyzed and for the brighter sources, the epoch dependence of the
X-ray fluxes is investigated. The O-stars in Cyg\,OB2 follow a well-defined
scaling relation between their X-ray and bolometric luminosities: log(Lx/Lbol)
= -7.2 +/- 0.2. This relation is in excellent agreement with the one previously
derived for the Carina OB1 association. Except for the brightest O-star
binaries, there is no general X-ray overluminosity due to colliding winds in
O-star binaries. Roughly half of the known B-stars in the surveyed field are
detected, but they fail to display a clear relationship between Lx and Lbol.
Out of the three WR stars in Cyg OB2, probably only WR144 is itself responsible
for the observed level of X-ray emission, at a very low log(Lx/Lbol) = -8.8 +/-
0.2. The X-ray emission of the other two WR-stars (WR145 and 146) is most
probably due to their O-type companion along with a moderate contribution from
a wind-wind interaction zone.Comment: Accepted for an ApJS Special Issue devoted to the Chandra Cygnus OB2
Legacy Surve
J16021+3326: New Multi-Frequency Observations of a Complex Source
We present multifrequency Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) observations of
J16021+3326. These observations, along with variability data obtained from the
Owens Valley Radio Observatory (OVRO) candidate gamma-ray blazar monitoring
program, clearly indicate this source is a blazar. The peculiar characteristic
of this blazar, which daunted previous classification attempts, is that we
appear to be observing down a precessing jet, the mean orientation of which is
aligned with us almost exactly.Comment: 16 pages, 7 Figures, 2 Tables, accepted to Ap
Refractive Index of Humid Air in the Infrared: Model Fits
The theory of summation of electromagnetic line transitions is used to
tabulate the Taylor expansion of the refractive index of humid air over the
basic independent parameters (temperature, pressure, humidity, wavelength) in
five separate infrared regions from the H to the Q band at a fixed percentage
of Carbon Dioxide. These are least-squares fits to raw, highly resolved spectra
for a set of temperatures from 10 to 25 C, a set of pressures from 500 to 1023
hPa, and a set of relative humidities from 5 to 60%. These choices reflect the
prospective application to characterize ambient air at mountain altitudes of
astronomical telescopes.Comment: Corrected exponents of c0ref, c1ref and c1p in Table
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