3,360 research outputs found
Majorite-Garnet Partitioning of the Highly Siderophile Elements: New Results and Application to Mars
HSE and Os isotopes are used to constrain processes such as accretion, mantle evolution, crustal recycling, and core-mantle mixing, and to constrain the timing and depth of differentiation of Mars. Although showed that the HSE contents of the martian mantle could have been established by metal-silicate equilibrium in early Mars, the role of a cooling magma ocean and associated crystallization in further fractionating the HSEs is unclear. Garnet is thought to have played an important role in controlling trace element concentrations in the martian mantle reservoirs. However, testing these models, including Os isotopes, has been hindered by a dearth of partitioning data for the HSE in deep mantle phases - majorite, wadsleyite, ringwoodite, akimotoite - that may be present in the martian mantle. We examine the partitioning behavior of HSEs between majorite garnet (gt), olivine (oliv), and silicate liquid (melt)
On carbon and oxygen isotope ratios in starburst galaxies: New data from NGC253 and Mrk231 and their implications
Using the IRAM 30-m telescope, CN and CO isotopologues have been measured
toward the central regions of the nearby starburst galaxy NGC253 and the
prototypical ultraluminous infrared galaxy Mrk231. In NGC253, the 12C/13C ratio
is 40+-10. Assuming that the ratio also holds for the CO emitting gas, this
yields 16O/18O = 145+-36 and 16O/17O = 1290+-365 and a 32S/34S ratio close to
that measured for the local interstellar medium (20-25). No indication for
vibrationally excited CN is found. Peak line intensity ratios between NGC253
and Mrk231 are ~100 for 12C16O and 12C18O J=1-0, while the ratio for 13C16O
J=1-0 is ~250. This and similar 13CO and C18O line intensities in the J=1-0 and
2-1 transitions of Mrk231 suggest 12C/13C ~ 100 and 16O/18O ~ 100, in agreement
with values obtained for the less evolved ultraluminous merger Arp220. Also
accounting for other extragalactic data, 12C/13C ratios appear to vary over a
full order of magnitude, from >100 in ultraluminous high redshift galaxies to
~100 in more local such galaxies to ~40 in weaker starbursts not undergoing a
large scale merger to 25 in the Central Molecular Zone of the Milky Way. With
12C being predominantly synthesized in massive stars, while 13C is mostly
ejected by longer lived lower mass stars at later times, this is qualitatively
consistent with our results of decreasing carbon isotope ratios with time and
rising metallicity. It is emphasized, however, that both infall of poorly
processed material, initiating a nuclear starburst, as well as the ejecta from
newly formed massive stars (in particular in case of a top-heavy stellar
initial mass function) can raise the carbon isotope ratio for a limited amount
of time.Comment: Accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics, 6 figures, 4 table
Barium Ions for Quantum Computation
Individually trapped 137Ba+ in an RF Paul trap is proposed as a qubit ca
ndidate, and its various benefits are compared to other ionic qubits. We report
the current experimental status of using this ion for quantum computation. Fut
ure plans and prospects are discussed
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Generation of arbitrary terahertz wave forms in fanned-out periodically poled lithium niobate
The authors demonstrate a flexible terahertz pulse-shaping technique, manipulating spatially dispersed multifrequency components generated by optical rectification in a fanned-out periodically poled lithium niobate crystal. Spatial masks of low pass, high pass, and double slit in front of the crystal manipulate the spatial pattern of the optical excitation beam on the crystal, which is mapped onto the intensity profile of the terahertz spectrum. The spatial dispersion of the terahertz spectrum is removed by the line-to-point imaging of a spherical mirror.Article appears in Applied Physics Letters (http://apl.aip.org/) and is copyrighted by American Institute of Physics (http://www.aip.org/).Keywords: Lithium niobate, Terahertz wave form
Survey of Canadian Animal-Based Researchers' Views on the Three Rs: Replacement, Reduction and Refinement
The ‘Three Rs’ tenet (replacement, reduction, refinement) is a widely accepted cornerstone of Canadian and international policies on animal-based science. The Canadian Council on Animal Care (CCAC) initiated this web-based survey to obtain greater understanding of ‘principal investigators’ and ‘other researchers’ (i.e. graduate students, post-doctoral researchers etc.) views on the Three Rs, and to identify obstacles and opportunities for continued implementation of the Three Rs in Canada. Responses from 414 participants indicate that researchers currently do not view the goal of replacement as achievable. Researchers prefer to use enough animals to ensure quality data is obtained rather than using the minimum and potentially waste those animals if a problem occurs during the study. Many feel that they already reduce animal numbers as much as possible and have concerns that further reduction may compromise research. Most participants were ambivalent about re-use, but expressed concern that the practice could compromise experimental outcomes. In considering refinement, many researchers feel there are situations where animals should not receive pain relieving drugs because it may compromise scientific outcomes, although there was strong support for the Three Rs strategy of conducting animal welfare-related pilot studies, which were viewed as useful for both animal welfare and experimental design. Participants were not opposed to being offered “assistance” to implement the Three Rs, so long as the input is provided in a collegial manner, and from individuals who are perceived as experts. It may be useful for animal use policymakers to consider what steps are needed to make replacement a more feasible goal. In addition, initiatives that offer researchers greater practical and logistical support with Three Rs implementation may be useful. Encouragement and financial support for Three Rs initiatives may result in valuable contributions to Three Rs knowledge and improve welfare for animals used in science
Probing Slepton Mass Non-Universality at e^+e^- Linear Colliders
There are many models with non-universal soft SUSY breaking sfermion mass
parameters at the grand unification scale. Even in the mSUGRA model scalar mass
unification might occur at a scale closer to M_Planck, and renormalization
effects would cause a mass splitting at M_GUT. We identify an experimentally
measurable quantity Delta that correlates strongly with delta m^2 =
m^2_{selectron_R}(M_GUT) - m^2_{selectron_L}(M_GUT), and which can be measured
at electron-positron colliders provided both selectrons and the chargino are
kinematically accessible. We show that if these sparticle masses can be
measured with a precision of 1% at a 500 GeV linear collider, the resulting
precision in the determination of Delta may allow experiments to distinguish
between scalar mass unification at the GUT scale from the corresponding
unification at Q ~ M_Planck. Experimental determination of Delta would also
provide a distinction between the mSUGRA model and the recently proposed
gaugino-mediation model. Moreover, a measurement of Delta (or a related
quantity Delta') would allow for a direct determination of delta m^2.Comment: 15 pages, RevTeX, 4 postscript figure
Annual sea-air CO2fluxes in the Bering Sea: insights from new autumn and winter observations of a seasonally ice-covered continental shelf
High-resolution data collected from several programs have greatly increased the spatiotemporal resolution of pCO2(sw) data in the Bering Sea, and provided the first autumn and winter observations. Using data from 2008 to 2012, monthly climatologies of sea-air CO2 fluxes for the Bering Sea shelf area from April to December were calculated, and contributions of physical and biological processes to observed monthly sea-air pCO2 gradients (?pCO2) were investigated. Net efflux of CO2 was observed during November, December, and April, despite the impact of sea surface cooling on ?pCO2. Although the Bering Sea was believed to be a moderate to strong atmospheric CO2 sink, we found that autumn and winter CO2 effluxes balanced 65% of spring and summer CO2 uptake. Ice cover reduced sea-air CO2 fluxes in December, April, and May. Our estimate for ice-cover corrected fluxes suggests the mechanical inhibition of CO2 flux by sea-ice cover has only a small impact on the annual scale (<2%). An important data gap still exists for January to March, the period of peak ice cover and the highest expected retardation of the fluxes. By interpolating between December and April using assumptions of the described autumn and winter conditions, we estimate the Bering Sea shelf area is an annual CO2 sink of ?6.8 Tg C yr?1. With changing climate, we expect warming sea surface temperatures, reduced ice cover, and greater wind speeds with enhanced gas exchange to decrease the size of this CO2 sink by augmenting conditions favorable for greater wintertime outgassing
Sport in the city: measuring economic significance at the local level
In many cities throughout Europe, sport is increasingly being used as a tool for economic revitalisation. While there has been a growth in literature relating to the specific economic impacts of sports-led development, including professional sport facilities, teams, and sport events, limited research has been undertaken on the contribution of the whole sport sector to output and employment. In the United Kingdom (UK), studies have focused on evaluating sport-related economic activity at the national level, yet despite the increasing use of sport for local economic development little research has been undertaken at the city level. To address this situation, this article uses the National Income Accounting framework to measure the economic importance of sport in Sheffield, UK. It shows that the value-added in 1996/97 was 165.61m or 4.11% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), approximately twice the amount predicted from current national estimates. It is argued that this can primarily be explained by previous studies under-estimating the economic importance of sport, largely due to methodological differences. It goes on to suggest that future research on the significance of sport should be undertaken at the local level to provide policymakers with information at the spatial level where regeneration programmes are being implemented.</p
Density of Superfluid Helium Droplets
The classical integral cross sections of large superfluid 4He_N droplets and
the number of atoms in the droplets (N=10^3-10^4) have been measured in
molecular beam scattering experiments. These measurements are found to be in
good agreement with the cross sections predicted from density functional
calculations of the radial density distributions with a 10-90 % surface
thickness of 5.7\AA. By using a simple model for the density profile of the
droplets a thickness of about 6-8\AA is extracted directly from the data.Comment: 27 pages, REVTeX, 5 postscript figure
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