175 research outputs found
Investigation of Vacuum Arc Anode Temperatures of Cu-Cr and Pure Cu Contacts
The present contribution reports on investigations of electrode temperatures for pure Cu electrodes and Cu–Cr electrodes of different diameters exposed to vacuum arcs with sinusoidal currents of 5-15 kA and an axial magnetic field up to 180 mT. It is found that surface temperatures of pure Cu electrodes are significantly lower than for Cu–Cr electrodes of the same diameter. This must be explained by different thermal properties of both materials. Reducing the diameter of Cu–Cr electrodes it is found that surface temperatures increase, but moreover it is shown that the enthalpy stored in the electrode bulk material may effect electrode temperatures on timescales much longer than the current pulse width, particularly if there is no effective heat dissipation after current zero
Magnetic properties of G-band bright points in a sunspot moat
We present simultaneous spectropolarimetric observations of four visible and
three infrared spectral lines from the VTT (Tenerife), together with
speckle-reconstructed filtergrams in the G band and the CaII H line core from
the DOT (La Palma). After alignment of the data sets, we used the G-band
intensity to locate bright points (BPs) in the moat of a regular sunspot. With
the cospatial and cotemporal information provided by the polarimetric data, we
characterize the magnetic, kinematic, and thermal properties of the BPs. We
find that (a) 94 % of the BPs are associated with magnetic fields; (b) their
field strengths range between 500 and 1400 G, with a rather flat distribution;
(c) the contrast of BPs in the G band depends on the angle between the vector
magnetic field and the line of sight; (d) the BPs harbor downflows of
magnetized plasma and exhibit Stokes V profiles with large area and amplitude
asymmetries; (e) the magnetic interior of BPs is hotter than the immediate
field-free surroundings by about 1000 K at equal optical depth; and (f) the
mean effective diameter of BPs in our data set is 150 km, with very few BPs
larger than 300 km. Most of these properties can be explained by the classical
magnetic flux tube model. However, the wide range of BP parameters found in
this study indicates that not all G-band BPs are identical to stable long-lived
flux tubes or sheets of kG strength.Comment: Accepted in A&A, 20 pages, 21 figures in main text, 6 fig. in the
Appendices, 3 figures as jpg (fig. 5, C1, C2
Nonlinear vertical oscillations of a particle in a sheath of a rf discharge
A new simple method to measure the spatial distribution of the electric field
in the plasma sheath is proposed. The method is based on the experimental
investigation of vertical oscillations of a single particle in the sheath of a
low-pressure radio-frequency discharge. It is shown that the oscillations
become strongly nonlinear and secondary harmonics are generated as the
amplitude increases. The theory of anharmonic oscillations provides a good
qualitative description of the data and gives estimates for the first two
anharmonic terms in an expansion of the sheath potential around the particle
equilibrium.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Dynamics of lane formation in driven binary complex plasmas
The dynamical onset of lane formation is studied in experiments with binary
complex plasmas under microgravity conditions. Small microparticles are driven
and penetrate into a cloud of big particles, revealing a strong tendency
towards lane formation. The observed time-resolved lane formation process is in
good agreement with computer simulations of a binary Yukawa model with Langevin
dynamics. The laning is quantified in terms of the anisotropic scaling index,
leading to a universal order parameter for driven systems.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, movies available at
http://www.mpe.mpg.de/pke/lane-formation
Vertical pairing of identical particles suspended in the plasma sheath
It is shown experimentally that vertical pairing of two identical
microspheres suspended in the sheath of a radio-frequency (rf) discharge at low
gas pressures (a few Pa), appears at a well defined instability threshold of
the rf power. The transition is reversible, but with significant hysteresis on
the second stage. A simple model, which uses measured microsphere resonance
frequencies and takes into account besides Coulomb interaction between
negatively charged microspheres also their interaction with positive ion wake
charges, seems to explain the instability threshold quite well.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures. to appear in Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, May 14th (2001
Buildings behaving badly:A behavioral experiment on how different motivational frames influence residential energy label adoption in the Netherlands
Heating buildings contributes to approximately 36% of Europe’s energy demand and several EU member states have adopted mandatory energy labels to improve energy efficiency by promoting home weatherization investments. This paper focuses on the perception of the energy label for residential buildings in the Netherlands and the role of different frames (egoistic, biospheric and social norms and neutral frames) in motivating adoption of energy labels for housing. We used a behavioral email experiment and an online survey to investigate these motivational factors. We find that biospheric frames are weaker than the other three motivational frames in terms of engaging interest in the energy label, but that the biospheric frame results in higher willingness to pay (WTP) for the energy label. We also find that age (rather than income) correlates with higher willingness to pay for home energy labels
Stray-light contamination and spatial deconvolution of slit-spectrograph observations
Stray light caused by scattering on optical surfaces and in the Earth's
atmosphere degrades the spatial resolution of observations. We study the
contribution of stray light to the two channels of POLIS. We test the
performance of different methods of stray-light correction and spatial
deconvolution to improve the spatial resolution post-facto. We model the stray
light as having two components: a spectrally dispersed component and a
component of parasitic light caused by scattering inside the spectrograph. We
use several measurements to estimate the two contributions: observations with a
(partly) blocked FOV, a convolution of the FTS spectral atlas, imaging in the
pupil plane, umbral profiles, and spurious polarization signal in telluric
lines. The measurements allow us to estimate the spatial PSF of POLIS and the
main spectrograph of the German VTT. We use the PSF for a deconvolution of both
spectropolarimetric data and investigate the effect on the spectra. The
parasitic contribution can be directly and accurately determined for POLIS,
amounting to about 5%. We estimate a lower limit of about 10% across the full
FOV for the dispersed stray light. In quiet Sun regions, the stray-light level
from the close surroundings (d< 2") of a given spatial point is about 20%. The
stray light reduces to below 2% at a distance of 20" from a lit area for both
POLIS and the main spectrograph. A two-component model of the stray-light
contributions seems to be sufficient for a basic correction of observed
spectra. The instrumental PSF obtained can be used to model the off-limb stray
light, to determine the stray-light contamination accurately for observation
targets with large spatial intensity gradients such as sunspots, and also
allows one to improve the spatial resolution of observations post-facto.Comment: 14 pages, 16 figures, accepted by A&A. Version V2 revised for
language editin
Solar granulation from photosphere to low chromosphere observed in BaII 4554 A line
The purpose of this paper is to characterize the statistical properties of
solar granulation in the photosphere and low chromosphere up to 650 km. We use
velocity and intensity variations obtained at different atmospheric heights
from observations in BaII 4554 A. The observations were done during good seeing
conditions at the VTT at the Observatorio del Teide on Tenerife. The line core
forms rather high in the atmosphere and allows granulation properties to be
studied at heights that have been not accessed before in similar studies. In
addition, we analyze the synthetic profiles of the BaII 4554 A line by the same
method computed taking NLTE effects into account in the 3D hydrodynamical model
atmosphere. We suggest a 16-column model of solar granulation depending on the
direction of motion and on the intensity contrast measured in the continuum and
in the uppermost layer. We calculate the heights of intensity contrast sign
reversal and velocity sign reversal. We show that both parameters depend
strongly on the granulation velocity and intensity at the bottom photosphere.
The larger the two parameters, the higher the reversal takes place in the
atmosphere. On average, this happens at about 200-300 km. We suggest that this
number also depends on the line depth of the spectral line used in
observations. Despite the intensity and velocity reversal, about 40% of the
column structure of granulation is preserved up to heights around 650 km.Comment: accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysic
Search for photospheric footpoints of quiet Sun transition region loops
CONTEXT:The footpoints of quiet Sun Transition Region (TR) loops do not seem
to coincide with the photospheric magnetic structures appearing in traditional
low-sensitivity magnetograms.
AIMS: To look for the so-far unidentified photospheric footpoints of TR loops
using G-band bright points (BPs) as proxies for photospheric magnetic field
concentrations.
METHODS: Comparison of TR measurements with SoHO/SUMER and photospheric
magnetic field observations obtained with the Dutch Open Telescope.
RESULTS: Photospheric BPs are associated with bright TR structures, but they
seem to avoid the brightest parts of the structure. BPs appear in regions that
are globally redshifted, but they avoid extreme velocities. TR explosive events
are not clearly associated with BPs.
CONCLUSIONS: The observations are not inconsistent with the BPs being
footpoints of TR loops, although we have not succeeded to uniquely identify
particular BPs with specific TR loops.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 10 pages, 10 figures. Due to size
limitations, the quality of fig3 is not goo
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