11,293 research outputs found
Are extremely luminous far-infrared galaxies the result of merging quasar cores
Extremely Luminous far-infrared galaxies (ELFs) are a class of galaxy discovered independently by several groups. The class is characterized by a quasar-like total luminosity (10(exp 11) to 10(exp 13) solar luminosity) which is radiated almost entirely in the far-infrared. It has been suggested that obscured quasar cores may be responsible for generating this luminosity. Here the author demonstrates that ELFs appear in several guises which can be characterized by the number of quasar cores they contain (zero, one or two). The author develops a unified model to account for these differences
A thermal vacuum test optimization procedure
An analytical model was developed that can be used to establish certain parameters of a thermal vacuum environmental test program based on an optimization of program costs. This model is in the form of a computer program that interacts with a user insofar as the input of certain parameters. The program provides the user a list of pertinent information regarding an optimized test program and graphs of some of the parameters. The model is a first attempt in this area and includes numerous simplifications. The model appears useful as a general guide and provides a way for extrapolating past performance to future missions
Failure rate analysis of Goddard Space Flight Center spacecraft performance during orbital life
Space life performance data on 57 Goddard Space Flight Center spacecraft are analyzed from the standpoint of determining an appropriate reliability model and the associated reliability parameters. Data from published NASA reports, which cover the space performance of GSFC spacecraft launched in the 1960-1970 decade, form the basis of the analyses. The results of the analyses show that the time distribution of 449 malfunctions, of which 248 were classified as failures (not necessarily catastrophic), follow a reliability growth pattern that can be described with either the Duane model or a Weibull distribution. The advantages of both mathematical models are used in order to: identify space failure rates, observe chronological trends, and compare failure rates with those experienced during the prelaunch environmental tests of the flight model spacecraft
A high pressure, high temperature combustor and turbine-cooling test facility
A new test facility is being constructed for developing turbine-cooling and combustor technology for future generation aircraft gas turbine engines. Prototype engine hardware will be investigated in this new facility at gas stream conditions up to 2480 K average turbine inlet temperature and 4.14 x 10 to the 6th power n sq m turbine inlet pressure. The facility will have the unique feature of fully automated control and data acquisition through the use of an integrated system of mini-computers and programmable controllers which will result in more effective use of operating time, will limit the number of operators required, and will provide built in self protection safety systems. The facility and the planning and design considerations are described
Radio Observations of Super Star Clusters in Dwarf Starburst Galaxies
We present new radio continuum observations of two dwarf starburst galaxies,
NGC3125 and NGC5408, with observations at 4.80GHz (6cm) and 8.64GHz (3cm),
taken with the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA). Both galaxies show a
complex radio morphology with several emission regions, mostly coincident with
massive young star clusters. The radio spectral indices of these regions are
negative (with alpha ~ -0.5 - -0.7), indicating that the radio emission is
dominated by synchrotron emission associated with supernova activity from the
starburst. One emission region in NGC5408 has a flatter index (alpha ~ -0.1)
indicative of optically thin free-free emission, which could indicate it is a
younger cluster. Consequently, in these galaxies we do not see regions with the
characteristic positive spectral index indicative of optically obscured
star-formation regions, as seen in other dwarf starbursts such as Hen 2-10.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
A Model for Short Gamma-Ray Bursts: Heated Neutron Stars in Close Binary Systems
In this paper we present a model for the short (< second) population of
gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). In this model heated neutron stars in a close binary
system near their last stable orbit emit neutrinos at large luminosities (~
10^53 ergs/sec). A fraction of these neutrinos will annihilate to form an
electron-positron pair plasma wind which will, in turn, expand and recombine to
photons which make the gamma-ray burst. We study neutrino annihilation and show
that a substantial fraction (~ 50%) of energy deposited comes from inter-star
neutrinos, where each member of the neutrino pair originates from each neutron
star. Thus, in addition to the annihilation of neutrinos blowing off of a
single star, we have a new source of baryon free energy that is deposited
between the stars. To model the pair plasma wind between stars, we do
three-dimensional relativistic numerical hydrodynamic calculations.
Preliminary results are also presented of new, fully general relativistic
calculations of gravitationally attracting stars falling from infinity with no
angular momentum. These simulations exhibit a compression effect.Comment: 3 pages, 3 postscript figs (2 color), to appear in "Gamma-Ray Burst
and Afterglow Astronomy 2001", Woods Hole; 5-9 Nov, 200
Are the hosts of VLBI selected radio-AGN different to those of radio-loud AGN?
Recent studies have found that radio-AGN selected by radio-loudness show
little difference in terms of their host galaxy properties when compared to
non-AGN galaxies of similar stellar mass and redshift. Using new 1.4~GHz VLBI
observations of the COSMOS field we find that approximately 49\% of
high-mass (M 10 M), high luminosity (L
10 W~Hz) radio-AGN possess a VLBI detected counterpart. These
objects show no discernible bias towards specific stellar masses, redshifts or
host properties other than what is shown by the radio-AGN population in
general. Radio-AGN that are detected in VLBI observations are not special, but
form a representative sample of the radio-loud AGN population.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, lette
Calibration of Tests for Time Dilation in GRB Pulse Structures
Two tests for cosmological time dilation in -ray bursts -- the peak
alignment and auto-correlation statistics -- involve averaging information near
the times of peak intensity. Both tests require width corrections, assuming
cosmological origin for bursts, since narrower temporal structure from higher
energy would be redshifted into the band of observation, and since intervals
between pulse structures are included in the averaging procedures. We analyze
long ( 2 s) BATSE bursts and estimate total width corrections for trial
time-dilation factors (TDF = [1+]/[1+]) by
time-dilating and redshifting bright bursts. Both tests reveal significant
trends of increasing TDF with decreasing peak flux, but neither provides
sufficient discriminatory power to distinguish between actual TDFs in the range
2--3.Comment: 5 pages in LATeX, REVTEX style, 2 embedded figures. To appear in
Third Huntsville GRB Workshop Proceeding
Test for Time Dilation of Intervals Between Pulse Structures in GRBs
If -ray bursts are at cosmological distances, then not only their
constituent pulses but also the intervals between pulses should be
time-dilated. Unlike time-dilation measures of pulse emission, intervals would
appear to require negligible correction for redshift of narrower temporal
structure from higher energy into the band of observation. However, stretching
of pulse intervals is inherently difficult to measure without incurring a
timescale-dependent bias since, as time profiles are stretched, more structure
can appear near the limit of resolution. This problem is compounded in dimmer
bursts because identification of significant structures becomes more
problematic. We attempt to minimize brightness bias by equalizing
signal-to-noise (s/n) level of all bursts. We analyze wavelet-denoised burst
profiles binned to several resolutions, identifying significant fluctuations
between pulse structures and interjacent valleys. When bursts are ranked by
peak flux, an interval time-dilation signature is evident, but its magnitude
and significance are dependent upon temporal resolution and s/n level.Comment: 5 pages in LATeX, REVTEX style, 2 embedded figures. To appear in
Third Huntsville GRB Workshop Proceeding
- …