23,237 research outputs found
Radio-wave propagation in the non-Gaussian interstellar medium
Radio waves propagating from distant pulsars in the interstellar medium
(ISM), are refracted by electron density inhomogeneities, so that the intensity
of observed pulses fluctuates with time. The theory relating the observed pulse
time-shapes to the electron-density correlation function has developed for 30
years, however, two puzzles have remained. First, observational scaling of
pulse broadening with the pulsar distance is anomalously strong; it is
consistent with the standard model only when non-uniform statistics of electron
fluctuations along the line of sight are assumed. Second, the observed pulse
shapes are consistent with the standard model only when the scattering material
is concentrated in a narrow slab between the pulsar and the Earth.
We propose that both paradoxes are resolved at once if one assumes stationary
and uniform, but non-Gaussian statistics of the electron-density distribution.
Such statistics must be of Levy type, and the propagating ray should exhibit a
Levy flight. We propose that a natural realization of such statistics may be
provided by the interstellar medium with random electron-density
discontinuities. We develop a theory of wave propagation in such a non-Gaussian
random medium, and demonstrate its good agreement with observations. The
qualitative introduction of the approach and the resolution of the
anomalous-scaling paradox was presented earlier in [PRL 91, 131101 (2003); ApJ
584, 791 (2003)].Comment: 27 pages, changes to match published versio
The motion of ascending and descending spheres
Measurements of self-induced motions of spheres ascending and descending in deep water tan
On gravity from SST, geoid from Seasat, and plate age and fracture zones in the Pacific
A composite map produced by combining 90 passes of SST data show good agreement with conventional GEM models. The SEASAT altimeter data were deduced and found to agree with both the SST and GEM fields. The maps are dominated (especially in the east) by a pattern of roughly east-west anomalies with a transverse wavelength of about 2000 km. Comparison with regional bathymetric data shows a remarkedly close correlation with plate age. Most anomalies in the east half of the Pacific could be partly caused by regional differences in plate age. The amplitude of these geoid or gravity anomalies caused by age differences should decrease with absolute plate age, and large anomalies (approximately 3 m) over old, smooth sea floor may indicate a further deeper source within or perhaps below the lithosphere. The possible plume size and ascent velocity necessary to supply deep mantle material to the upper mantle without complete thermal equilibration was considered. A plume emanating from a buoyant layer 100 km thick and 10,000 times less viscous than the surrounding mantle should have a diameter of about 400 km and must ascend at about 10 cm/yr to arrive still anomalously hot in the uppermost mantle
Recommended from our members
Texas Business Review, August 1967
The Business Situation in Texas; Climatology at Work in Texas; Texas Building Construction, January-June 1967; Texas Retail Sales, January-June 1967Bureau of Business Researc
What can we learn from decays?
We investigate the decays under the
factorization scheme and find many discrepancies between theoretical
predictions and the experimental data. In the tree dominated processes, large
contributions from color-suppressed tree diagrams are required in order to
accommodate with the large decay rates of and . For decays which are both induced
by transition, theoretical predictions on their decay rates are larger
than the data by a factor of 2.8 and 5.5, respectively. Large electro-weak
penguins or some new mechanism are expected to explain the branching ratios of
and . The
soft-collinear-effective-theory has the potential to explain large decay rates
of and via a large hard-scattering form
factor . We will also show that, with proper charming
penguins, predictions on the branching ratios of can also be consistent with the data.Comment: 16 pages, no figur
Non-Gaussian Radio-Wave Scattering in the Interstellar Medium
It was recently suggested by Boldyrev & Gwinn that the characteristics of
radio scintillations from distant pulsars are best understood if the
interstellar electron-density fluctuations that cause the time broadening of
the radio pulses obey non-Gaussian statistics. In this picture the density
fluctuations are inferred to be strong on very small scales (). We argue that such density structures could correspond to the ionized
boundaries of molecular regions (clouds) and demonstrate that the power-law
distribution of scattering angles that is required to match the observations
arises naturally from the expected intersections of our line of sight with
randomly distributed, thin, approximately spherical ionized shells of this
type. We show that the observed change in the time-broadening behavior for
pulsar dispersion measures is consistent
with the expected effect of the general ISM turbulence, which should dominate
the scattering for nearby pulsars. We also point out that if the clouds are
ionized by nearby stars, then their boundaries may become turbulent on account
of an ionization front instability. This turbulence could be an alternative
cause of the inferred density structures. An additional effect that might
contribute to the strength of the small-scale fluctuations in this case is the
expected flattening of the turbulent density spectrum when the eddy sizes
approach the proton gyroscale.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, accepted to Ap
Engineering model 8-cm thruster subsystem
An Engineering Model (EM) 8 cm Ion Thruster Propulsion Subsystem was developed for operation at a thrust level 5 mN (1.1 mlb) at a specific impulse 1 sub sp = 2667 sec with a total system input power P sub in = 165 W. The system dry mass is 15 kg with a mercury-propellant-reservoir capacity of 8.75 kg permitting uninterrupted operation for about 12,500 hr. The subsystem can be started from a dormant condition in a time less than or equal to 15 min. The thruster has a design lifetime of 20,000 hr with 10,000 startup cycles. A gimbal unit is included to provide a thrust vector deflection capability of + or - 10 degrees in any direction from the zero position. The EM subsystem development program included thruster optimization, power-supply circuit optimization and flight packaging, subsystem integration, and subsystem acceptance testing including a cyclic test of the total propulsion package
The silence of self-knowledge
Gareth Evans famously affirmed an explanatory connection between answering the question whether p and knowing whether one believes that p. This is commonly interpreted in terms of the idea that judging that p constitutes an adequate basis for the belief that one believes that p. This paper formulates and defends an alternative, more modest interpretation, which develops from the suggestion that one can know that one believes that p in judging that p
Planetary systems around close binary stars: the case of the very dusty, Sun-like, spectroscopic binary BD+20 307
Field star BD+20 307 is the dustiest known main sequence star, based on the
fraction of its bolometric luminosity, 4%, that is emitted at infrared
wavelengths. The particles that carry this large IR luminosity are unusually
warm, comparable to the temperature of the zodiacal dust in the solar system,
and their existence is likely to be a consequence of a fairly recent collision
of large objects such as planets or planetary embryos. Thus, the age of BD+20
307 is potentially of interest in constraining the era of terrestrial planet
formation. The present project was initiated with an attempt to derive this age
using the Chandra X-ray Observatory to measure the X-ray flux of BD+20 307 in
conjunction with extensive photometric and spectroscopic monitoring
observations from Fairborn Observatory. However, the recent realization that
BD+20 307 is a short period, double-line, spectroscopic binary whose components
have very different lithium abundances, vitiates standard methods of age
determination. We find the system to be metal-poor; this, combined with its
measured lithium abundances, indicates that BD+20 307 may be several to many
Gyr old. BD+20 307 affords astronomy a rare peek into a mature planetary system
in orbit around a close binary star (because such systems are not amenable to
study by the precision radial velocity technique).Comment: accepted for ApJ, December 10, 200
Operational application of a universal turbulence measuring system Final report
Aeronautical turbulence measuring apparatus - gust loadin
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