513 research outputs found
Orbital debris environment for spacecraft designed to operate in low Earth orbit
The orbital debris environment model is intended to be used by the spacecraft community for the design and operation of spacecraft in low Earth orbit. This environment, when combined with material-dependent impact tests and spacecraft failure analysis, is intended to be used to evaluate spacecraft vulnerability, reliability, and shielding requirements. The environment represents a compromise between existing data to measure the environment, modeling of this data to predict the future environment, the uncertainty in both measurements and modeling, and the need to describe the environment so that various options concerning spacecraft design and operations can be easily evaluated
Radio to Gamma-Ray Emission from Shell-type Supernova Remnants: Predictions from Non-linear Shock Acceleration Models
Supernova remnants (SNRs) are widely believed to be the principal source of
galactic cosmic rays. Such energetic particles can produce gamma-rays and lower
energy photons via interactions with the ambient plasma. In this paper, we
present results from a Monte Carlo simulation of non-linear shock structure and
acceleration coupled with photon emission in shell-like SNRs. These
non-linearities are a by-product of the dynamical influence of the accelerated
cosmic rays on the shocked plasma and result in distributions of cosmic rays
which deviate from pure power-laws. Such deviations are crucial to acceleration
efficiency and spectral considerations, producing GeV/TeV intensity ratios that
are quite different from test particle predictions. The Sedov scaling solution
for SNR expansions is used to estimate important shock parameters for input
into the Monte Carlo simulation. We calculate ion and electron distributions
that spawn neutral pion decay, bremsstrahlung, inverse Compton, and synchrotron
emission, yielding complete photon spectra from radio frequencies to gamma-ray
energies. The cessation of acceleration caused by the spatial and temporal
limitations of the expanding SNR shell in moderately dense interstellar regions
can yield spectral cutoffs in the TeV energy range; these are consistent with
Whipple's TeV upper limits on unidentified EGRET sources. Supernova remnants in
lower density environments generate higher energy cosmic rays that produce
predominantly inverse Compton emission at super-TeV energies; such sources will
generally be gamma-ray dim at GeV energies.Comment: 62 pages, AASTeX format, including 1 table and 11 figures, accepted
for publication in The Astrophysical Journal (Vol 513, March 1, 1999
The Role of Diffusive Shock Acceleration on Nonequilibrium Ionization in Supernova Remnant Shocks II: Emitted Spectra
We present a grid of nonequilibrium ionization models for the X-ray spectra
from supernova remnants undergoing efficient diffusive shock acceleration. The
calculation follows the hydrodynamics of the blast wave as well as the
time-dependent ionization of the plasma behind the shock. The ionization state
is passed to a plasma emissivity code to compute the thermal X-ray emission,
which is combined with the emission from nonthermal synchrotron emission to
produce a self-consistent model for the thermal and nonthermal emission from
cosmic-ray dominated shocks. We show how plasma diagnostics such as the
G'-ratio of He-like ions, defined as the ratio of the sum of the
intercombination, forbidden, and satellite lines to the resonance line, can
vary with acceleration efficiency, and discuss how the thermal X-ray emission,
when the time-dependent ionization is not calculated self-consistently with the
hydrodynamics, can differ from the thermal X-ray emission from models which do
account for the hydrodynamics. Finally we compare the thermal X-ray emission
from models which show moderate acceleration (~ 35%) to the thermal X-ray
emission from test-particle models.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures. accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Sampling a Littoral Fish Assemblage: Comparison of Small-Mesh Fyke Netting and Boat Electrofishing
We compared small-mesh (4-mm) fyke netting and boat electrofishing for sampling a littoral fish assemblage in Muskegon Lake, Michigan. We hypothesized that fyke netting selects for small-bodied fishes and electrofishing selects for large-bodied fishes. Three sites were sampled during May (2004 and 2005), July (2005 only), and September (2004 and 2005). We found that the species composition of captured fish differed considerably between fyke netting and electrofishing based on nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMDS). Species strongly associated with fyke netting (based on NMDS and relative abundance) included the brook silverside Labidesthes sicculus, banded killifish Fundulus diaphanus, round goby Neogobius melanostomus, mimic shiner Notropis volucellus, and bluntnose minnow Pimephales notatus, whereas species associated with electrofishing included the Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha, catostomids (Moxostoma spp. and Catostomus spp.), freshwater drum Aplodinotus grunniens, walleye Sander vitreus, gizzard shad Dorosoma cepedianum, and common carp Cyprinus carpio. The total length of fish captured by electrofishing was 12.8 cm (95% confidence interval ¼ 5.5– 17.2 cm) greater than that of fish captured by fyke netting. Size selectivity of the gears contributed to differences in species composition of the fish captured, supporting our initial hypothesis. Thus, small-mesh fyke nets and boat electrofishers provided complementary information on a littoral fish assemblage. Our results support use of multiple gear types in monitoring and research surveys of fish assemblages.
Copyright by the American Fisheries Society 2007, Originally published in the North American Journal of Fisheries Management 27: 825-831, 2007
The Roles of Extrinsic and Intrinsic Factors in the Freshwater Life-History Dynamics of a Migratory Salmonid
Key life-cycle transitions, such as metamorphosis or migration, can be altered by a variety of external factors, such as climate variation, strong species interactions, and management intervention, or modulated by density dependence. Given that these life-history transitions can influence population dynamics, understanding the simultaneous effects of intrinsic and extrinsic controls on life-history expression is particularly relevant for species of management or conservation importance. Here, we examined how life histories of steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) are affected by weather, pink salmon abundance (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha), experimental nutrient addition, and density-dependent processes. We tested for impacts on the size of steelhead smolts (juveniles migrating to the sea), as well as their age and abundance across four decades in the Keogh River, British Columbia, Canada. Larger steelhead smolts were associated with warmer years and artificial nutrient addition. In addition, higher pink salmon abundance and artificial nutrient addition correlated with juvenile steelhead migrating at younger ages. While density dependence appeared to be the primary factor regulating the abundance of steelhead smolts, nutrient addition and temperature were positively and negatively associated with smolt production, respectively, prior to 1991, and pink salmon spawning abundance was positively associated with smolt production after 1990. Thus, this study provides evidence that the temporal dynamics of one species of salmon is linked to the juvenile life history of co-occurring steelhead. A complex interplay of species interactions, nutrient subsidies, density dependence, and climatic variation can control the life-history expression of species with complex life cycles
Proteomic Approach to Evaluate Mechanisms That Contribute to Food Allergenicity: Comparative 2D-DIGE Analysis of Radioallergosorbent Test Positive and Negative Patients
Proteomic profiles of RAST+ subjects with severe food allergies and RAST− subjects were compared using 2D-DIGE analysis to obtain candidate biomarkers specific to food allergies. Our analysis highlighted 52 proteins that were differentially expressed between the RAST+ and RAST− groups of which 37 were successfully identified that include chondroitin sulfates, zinc finger proteins, C-type lectins, retinoic acid binding proteins, heat shock proteins, myosin, cytokines, mast cell expressed proteins, and MAP kinases. Biological network analysis tool Metacore
revealed that most of these regulated proteins play a role in immune tolerance, hypersensitivity and modulate cytokine patterns inducing a Th2 response that typically results in IgE-mediated allergic response which has a direct or indirect biological link to food allergy. Identifying unique biomarkers associated with certain allergic phenotypes and potentially cross-reactive proteins through bioinformatics analyses will provide enormous insight into the mechanisms that underlie allergic response in patients with food allergies
(3R,4S,5S,8S,10R,13R)-3-Hydroxykaura-9(11),16-dien-18-oic acid
The title compound, C20H28O3, was isolated during our investigation into the chemical composition and pharmacological activity of Centipeda cunninghamii (DC.) A. Braun & Asch. (Asteraceae). The enantiopure compound, a diterpene with a carbon skeleton, is composed of three six- and one five-membered rings in chair, twist-boat, half-chair and envelope conformations, respectively. Each molecule makes one intra- and one intermolecular O—H⋯O hydrogen bond in the crystal lattice, forming hydrogen-bonded chains along [010]. The absolute configuration of the compound was assigned on the basis of optical rotation measurements
A Generalized Model of Nonlinear Diffusive Shock Acceleration Coupled to an Evolving Supernova Remnant
To better model the efficient production of cosmic rays (CRs) in supernova
remnants (SNRs) with the associated coupling between CR production and SNR
dynamics, we have generalized an existing cr-hydro-NEI code (i.e., Ellison et
al. 2012) to include the following processes: (1) an explicit calculation of
the upstream precursor structure including the position dependent flow speed,
density, temperature, and magnetic field strength; (2) a momentum and space
dependent CR diffusion coefficient; (3) an explicit calculation of magnetic
field amplification (MFA); (4) calculation of the maximum CR momentum using the
amplified magnetic field; (5) a finite Alfven speed for the particle scattering
centers; and (6) the ability to accelerate a superthermal seed population of
CRs as well as the ambient thermal plasma. While a great deal of work has been
done modeling SNRs, most work has concentrated on either the continuum emission
from relativistic electrons or ions, or the thermal emission from the shock
heated plasma. Our generalized code combines these elements and describes the
interplay between CR production and SNR evolution, including the nonlinear
coupling of efficient diffusive shock acceleration (DSA), based mainly on the
work of P. Blasi and co-workers, and a non-equilibrium ionization (NEI)
calculation of thermal X-ray line emission. We believe our generalized model
will provide a consistent modeling platform for SNRs, including those
interacting with molecular clouds, and improve the interpretation of current
and future observations, including the high-quality spectra expected from
Astro-H. SNR RX J1713.7-3946 is modeled as an example.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, accepted by the Astrophysical Journa
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