81,316 research outputs found
Electromagnetic simulation of microwave backscatter from the ocean surface - A feasibility study
Photochemical etching is most successful method for obtaining simulated microwave backscatter pattern from ocean surface. Process is adaptable to integrated circuit and thin film semiconductor fabrications. The attained horizontal resolution of 10 should improve with equipment refinement
Under-reporting of roadcasualties ? phase 1
Although this report was commissioned by the Department for Transport, the findings and recommendations are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the DfT
SCUBA polarisation observations of the magnetic fields in the prestellar cores L1498 and L1517B
We have mapped linearly polarized dust emission from the prestellar cores
L1498 and L1517B with the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) using the
Submillimetre Common User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) and its polarimeter SCUBAPOL
at a wavelength of 850um. We use these measurements to determine the
plane-of-sky magnetic field orientation in the cores. In L1498 we see a
magnetic field across the peak of the core that lies at an offset of 19 degrees
to the short axis of the core. This is similar to the offsets seen in previous
observations of prestellar cores. To the southeast of the peak, in the
filamentary tail of the core, we see that the magnetic field has rotated to lie
almost parallel to the long axis of the filament. We hypothesise that the field
in the core may have decoupled from the field in the filament that connects the
core to the rest of the cloud. We use the Chandrasekhar-Fermi (CF) method to
measure the plane-of-sky field strength in the core of L1498 to be 10 +/- 7 uG.
In L1517B we see a more gradual turn in the field direction from the northern
part of the core to the south. This appears to follow a twist in the filament
in which the core is buried, with the field staying at a roughly constant 25
degree offset to the short axis of the filament, also consistent with previous
observations of prestellar cores. We again use the CF method and calculate the
magnetic field strength in L1517B also to be 30 +/- 10 uG. Both cores appear to
be roughly virialised. Comparison with our previous work on somewhat denser
cores shows that, for the denser cores, thermal and non-thermal (including
magnetic) support are approximately equal, while for the lower density cores
studied here, thermal support dominates.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures; accepted for publication by MNRA
SCUBA observations of the Horsehead Nebula - what did the horse swallow?
We present observations taken with SCUBA on the JCMT of the Horsehead Nebula
in Orion (B33), at wavelengths of 450 and 850 \mum. We see bright emission from
that part of the cloud associated with the photon-dominated region (PDR) at the
`top' of the horse's head, which we label B33-SMM1. We characterise the
physical parameters of the extended dust responsible for this emission, and
find that B33-SMM1 contains a more dense core than was previously suspected. We
compare the SCUBA data with data from the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) and
find that the emission at 6.75-\mum is offset towards the west, indicating that
the mid-infrared emission is tracing the PDR while the submillimetre emission
comes from the molecular cloud core behind the PDR. We calculate the virial
balance of this core and find that it is not gravitationally bound but is being
confined by the external pressure from the HII region IC434, and that it will
either be destroyed by the ionising radiation, or else may undergo triggered
star formation. Furthermore we find evidence for a lozenge-shaped clump in the
`throat' of the horse, which is not seen in emission at shorter wavelengths. We
label this source B33-SMM2 and find that it is brighter at submillimetre
wavelengths than B33-SMM1. SMM2 is seen in absorption in the 6.75-\mum ISO
data, from which we obtain an independent estimate of the column density in
excellent agreement with that calculated from the submillimetre emission. We
calculate the stability of this core against collapse and find that it is in
approximate gravitational virial equilibrium. This is consistent with it being
a pre-existing core in B33, possibly pre-stellar in nature, but that it may
also eventually undergo collapse under the effects of the HII region.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted by MNRA
Acquisition of pseudonoise signals by sequential estimation
Rapid Acquisition by Sequential Estimation /RASE/ system is used in the receivers of tracking and communications systems to bring identical locally generated pseudonoise digital modulation signal into time synchronization with the incoming pseudonoise signal. This acquisition system is particularly suited for medium input signal-to-noise ratios
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