4,807 research outputs found

    Pumping seawater from coastal aquifers for supplying desalination plants

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    The lack of water in the coastal areas demands an onerous search for an appropriate solution. One solution is that of water transfer from areas of surplus, but this is itself problematical. Technological developments have introduced the possibility of utilizing desalinated seawater as a drinking water source at a competitive price. Abstraction from coastal aquifers that are connected to the sea appears to be the cheapest means of supply. However, pumping poses some problems due to the corrosiveness of seawater. These problems include the difficulties of choosing suitable sites for the abstractions, drilling method, casing, filter pack, as well as the design of a monitoring system to assess aquifer behaviour as a result of the generally high exploitation rate. The 31 boreholes that have been drilled in the Andarax Delta near the city of Almeria are cited as an example of a real application

    Low optical polarisation at the core of the optically-thin jet of M87

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    We study the optical linear and circular polarisation in the optically-thin regime of the core and jet of M87. Observations were acquired two days before the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) campaign in early April 2017. A high degree (∼20\sim 20 per cent) of linear polarisation (Plin_{\rm lin}) is detected in the bright jet knots resolved at ∼10 arcsec\sim 10\, \rm{arcsec} to 23 arcsec23\, \rm{arcsec} (0.80.8-1.8 kpc1.8\, \rm{kpc}) from the centre, whereas the nucleus and inner jet show Plin≲5_{\rm lin} \lesssim 5 per cent. The position angle of the linear polarisation shifts by ∼90\sim 90 degrees from each knot to the adjacent ones, with the core angle perpendicular to the first knot. The nucleus was in a low level of activity (Plin∼2_{\rm lin} \sim 2-33 per cent), and no emission was detected from HST-1. No circular polarisation was detected either in the nucleus or the jet above a 3σ3\sigma level of Pcirc≤1.5_{\rm circ} \leq 1.5 per cent, discarding the conversion of Plin_{\rm lin} into Pcirc_{\rm circ}. A disordered magnetic field configuration or a mix of unresolved knots polarised along axes with different orientations could explain the low Plin_{\rm lin}. The latter implies a smaller size of the core knots, in line with current interferometric observations. Polarimetry with EHT can probe this scenario in the future. A steep increase of both Plin_{\rm lin} and Pcirc_{\rm circ} with increasing frequency is expected for the optically-thin domain, above the turnover point. This work describes the methodology to recover the four Stokes parameters using a λ/4\lambda/4 wave-plate polarimeter.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 10 pages, 8 figure

    The redshift and broad band spectral energy distribution of NRAO 150

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    Context. NRAO 150 is one of the brightest radio and mm AGN sources on the northern sky. It has been revealed as an interesting source where to study extreme relativistic jet phenomena. However, its cosmological distance has not been reported so far, because of its optical faintness produced by strong Galactic extinction. Aims. Aiming at measuring the redshift of NRAO 150, and hence to start making possible quantitative studies from the source. Methods. We have conducted spectroscopic and photometric observations of the source in the near-IR, as well as in the optical. Results. All such observations have been successful in detecting the source. The near-IR spectroscopic observations reveal strong Hα\alpha and Hβ\beta emission lines from which the cosmological redshift of NRAO 150 (z=1.517±0.002z=1.517\pm0.002) has been determined for the first time. We classify the source as a flat-spectrum radio-loud quasar, for which we estimate a large super-massive black-hole mass ∼5×109M⊙\sim5\times 10^{9} \mathrm{M_\odot}. After extinction correction, the new near-IR and optical data have revealed a high-luminosity continuum-emission excess in the optical (peaking at ∼2000\sim2000\,\AA, rest frame) that we attribute to thermal emission from the accretion disk for which we estimate a high accretion rate, ∼30\sim30\,% of the Eddington limit. Conclusions. Comparison of these source properties, and its broad-band spectral-energy distribution, with those of Fermi blazars allow us to predict that NRAO 150 is among the most powerful blazars, and hence a high luminosity -although not detected yet- γ\gamma-ray emitter.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure

    Polarization of the changing-look quasar J1011+5442

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    If the disappearance of the broad emission lines observed in changing-look quasars were caused by the obscuration of the quasar core through moving dust clouds in the torus, high linear polarization typical of type 2 quasars would be expected. We measured the polarization of the changing-look quasar J1011+5442 in which the broad emission lines have disappeared between 2003 and 2015. We found a polarization degree compatible with null polarization. This measurement suggests that the observed change of look is not due to a change of obscuration hiding the continuum source and the broad line region, and that the quasar is seen close to the system axis. Our results thus support the idea that the vanishing of the broad emission lines in J1011+5442 is due to an intrinsic dimming of the ionizing continuum source that is most likely caused by a rapid decrease in the rate of accretion onto the supermassive black hole.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics Letter
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