21,227 research outputs found

    Dust-to-gas ratio, XCOX_{\rm CO} factor and CO-dark gas in the Galactic anticentre: an observational study

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    We investigate the correlation between extinction and H~{\sc i} and CO emission at intermediate and high Galactic latitudes (|b|>10\degr) within the footprint of the Xuyi Schmidt Telescope Photometric Survey of the Galactic anticentre (XSTPS-GAC) on small and large scales. In Paper I (Chen et al. 2014), we present a three-dimensional dust extinction map within the footprint of XSTPS-GAC, covering a sky area of over 6,000\,deg2^2 at a spatial angular resolution of 6\,arcmin. In the current work, the map is combined with data from gas tracers, including H~{\sc i} data from the Galactic Arecibo L-band Feed Array H~{\sc i} survey and CO data from the Planck mission, to constrain the values of dust-to-gas ratio DGR=AV/N(H)DGR=A_V/N({\rm H}) and CO-to-H2\rm H_2 conversion factor XCO=N(H2)/WCOX_{\rm CO}=N({\rm H_2})/W_{\rm CO} for the entire GAC footprint excluding the Galactic plane, as well as for selected star-forming regions (such as the Orion, Taurus and Perseus clouds) and a region of diffuse gas in the northern Galactic hemisphere. For the whole GAC footprint, we find DGR=(4.15±0.01)×1022DGR=(4.15\pm0.01) \times 10^{-22}\,magcm2\rm mag\,cm^{2} and XCO=(1.72±0.03)×1020X_{\rm CO}=(1.72 \pm 0.03) \times 10^{20}\,cm2(Kkms1)1\rm cm^{-2}\,(K\,km\,s^{-1})^{-1}. We have also investigated the distribution of "CO-dark" gas (DG) within the footprint of GAC and found a linear correlation between the DG column density and the VV-band extinction: N(DG)2.2×1021(AVAVc)cm2N({\rm DG}) \simeq 2.2 \times 10^{21} (A_V - A^{c}_{V})\,\rm cm^{-2}. The mass fraction of DG is found to be fDG0.55f_{\rm DG}\sim 0.55 toward the Galactic anticentre, which is respectively about 23 and 124 per cent of the atomic and CO-traced molecular gas in the same region. This result is consistent with the theoretical work of Papadopoulos et al. but much larger than that expected in the H2\rm H_2 cloud models by Wolfire et al.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    A Penetration Depth Study on Li2Pd3B and Li2Pt3B

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    In this paper we present a penetration depth study on the newly discovered superconductors Li2_2Pd3_3B and Li2_2Pt3_3B. Surprisingly, the low-temperature penetration depth f(T)f(T) demonstrates distinct behavior in these two isostructural compounds. In Li2_2Pd3_3B, f(T)f(T) follows an exponential decay and can be nicely fitted by a two-gap BCS superconducting model with a small gap δ1=3.2\delta_1=3.2K and a large gap δ2=11.5\delta_2=11.5K. However, linear temperature dependence of f(T)f(T) is observed in Li2_2Pt3_3B below 0.3TcT_c, giving evidence of line nodes in the energy gap.Comment: 2 pages, submitted to LT2

    On cost-effective communication network designing

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    How to efficiently design a communication network is a paramount task for network designing and engineering. It is, however, not a single objective optimization process as perceived by most previous researches, i.e., to maximize its transmission capacity, but a multi-objective optimization process, with lowering its cost to be another important objective. These two objectives are often contradictive in that optimizing one objective may deteriorate the other. After a deep investigation of the impact that network topology, node capability scheme and routing algorithm as well as their interplays have on the two objectives, this letter presents a systematic approach to achieve a cost-effective design by carefully choosing the three designing aspects. Only when routing algorithm and node capability scheme are elegantly chosen can BA-like scale-free networks have the potential of achieving good tradeoff between the two objectives. Random networks, on the other hand, have the built-in character for a cost-effective design, especially when other aspects cannot be determined beforehand.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure

    An Imaging and Spectral Study of Ten X-Ray Filaments around the Galactic Center

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    We report the detection of 10 new X-ray filaments using the data from the {\sl Chandra} X-ray satellite for the inner 66^{\prime} (15\sim 15 parsec) around the Galactic center (GC). All these X-ray filaments are characterized by non-thermal energy spectra, and most of them have point-like features at their heads that point inward. Fitted with the simple absorbed power-law model, the measured X-ray flux from an individual filament in the 2-10 keV band is 2.8×1014\sim 2.8\times10^{-14} to 101310^{-13} ergs cm2^{-2} s1^{-1} and the absorption-corrected X-ray luminosity is 10321033\sim 10^{32}-10^{33} ergs s1^{-1} at a presumed distance of 8 kpc to the GC. We speculate the origin(s) of these filaments by morphologies and by comparing their X-ray images with the corresponding radio and infrared images. On the basis of combined information available, we suspect that these X-ray filaments might be pulsar wind nebulae (PWNe) associated with pulsars of age 1033×10510^3 \sim 3\times 10^5 yr. The fact that most of the filament tails point outward may further suggest a high velocity wind blowing away form the GC.Comment: 29 pages with 7 figures and 3 pages included. Accepted to Ap
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