6,254 research outputs found
Numerical simulations of multi-scale astrophysical problems: The example of Type Ia supernovae
Vastly different time and length scales are a common problem in numerical
simulations of astrophysical phenomena. Here, we present an approach to
numerical modeling of such objects on the example of Type Ia supernova
simulations. The evolution towards the explosion proceeds on much longer time
scales than the explosion process itself. The physical length scales relevant
in the explosion process cover 11 orders of magnitude and turbulent effects
dominate the physical mechanism. Despite these challenges, three-dimensional
simulations of Type Ia supernova explosions have recently become possible and
pave the way to a better understanding of these important astrophysical
objects.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure; in "Modelling and Simulation in Science",
Proceedings of the 6th International Workshop on Data Analysis in Astronomy
"Livio Scarsi", Erice, Italy 15 - 22 April 2007 (World Scientific, 2008
Keynes's German Contenders 1932-1944: On the Sociology of Multiple Discoveries in Economics
In a pathbreaking study on some alleged anticipations of Keynes''s General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, Don Patinkin in apparently applying Merton''s sociological approach to the problem of anticipations and multiples in economics, rejects Kalecki and the Stockholm School as anticipators. Patinkin''s contribution has a dual significance in improving our understanding of Keynesian economics, on the one hand, and in suggesting a novel approach to the sociology of economics on the other. This paper is concerned with Patinkin''s sociology. His approach by emphasizing the "central message" of a particular work, neglects the received sociological theory of knowledge in a way that compromises his entire investigation. This contention is illustrated by looking at Keynes''s German contenders. They had anticipated Keynesian theories and applied them in the years before the General Theory was published. Nevertheless, they rejected aspects of Keynesian economics after the appearanced the General Theory. True to his narrowly focussed approach, Patinkin could not analyze this body of work, which both anticipated and extended the General Theory. Keynes''s central message significantly differed from that of his contenders.public economics ;
Comparative in vitro evaluation of contact activity of fluralaner, spinosad, phoxim, propoxur, permethrin and deltamethrin against the northern fowl mite, Ornithonyssus sylviarum.
BackgroundNorthern fowl mites (Ornithonyssus sylviarum) are obligate hematophagous ectoparasites of both feral birds and poultry, particularly chicken layers and breeders. They complete their entire life-cycle on infested birds while feeding on blood. Infestations of O. sylviarum are difficult to control and resistance to some chemical classes of acaricides is a growing concern. The contact susceptibility of O. sylviarum to a new active ingredient, fluralaner, was evaluated, as well as other compounds representative of the main chemical classes commonly used to control poultry mite infestations in Europe and the USA.MethodsSix acaricides (fluralaner, spinosad, phoxim, propoxur, permethrin, deltamethrin) were dissolved and serially diluted in butanol:olive oil (1:1) to obtain test solutions used for impregnation of filter paper packets. A carrier-only control was included. Thirty adult northern fowl mites, freshly collected from untreated host chickens, were inserted into each packet for continuous compound exposure. Mite mortality was assessed after incubation of the test packets for 48 h at 75% relative humidity and a temperature of 22 °C.ResultsAdult mite LC50 /LC99 values were 2.95/8.09 ppm for fluralaner, 1587/3123 ppm for spinosad, 420/750 ppm for phoxim and 86/181 ppm for propoxur. Permethrin and deltamethrin LC values could not be calculated due to lack of mortality observed even at 1000 ppm.ConclusionsNorthern fowl mites were highly sensitive to fluralaner after contact exposure. They were moderately sensitive to phoxim and propoxur, and less sensitive to spinosad. Furthermore, the tested mite population appeared to be resistant to the pyrethroids, permethrin and deltamethrin, despite not being exposed to acaricides for at least 10 years
Experimental system for drilling simulated lunar rock in ultrahigh vacuum
An experimental apparatus designed for studying drillability of hard volcanic rock in a simulated lunar vacuum of 5 x 10 to the minus 10th power torr is described. The engineering techniques used to provide suitable drilling torque inside the ultrahigh vacuum chamber while excluding all hydrocarbon are detailed. Totally unlubricated bearings and gears were used to better approximate the true lunar surface conditions within the ultrahigh vacuum system. The drilling system has a starting torque of 30 in-lb with an unloaded running torque of 4 in-lb. Nominal torque increase during drilling is 4.5 in-lb or a total drilling torque of 8.5 in-lb with a 100-lb load on the drill bit at 210 rpm. The research shows conclusively that it is possible to design operational equipment for moderate loads operating under UHV conditions without the use of sealed bearings or any need of lubricants whatsoever
4f-spin dynamics in La(2-x-y)Sr(x)Nd(y)CuO(4)
We have performed inelastic magnetic neutron scattering experiments on
La(2-x-y)Sr(x)Nd(y)CuO(4) in order to study the Nd 4f-spin dynamics at low
energies. In all samples we find at high temperatures a quasielastic line
(Lorentzian) with a line width which decreases on lowering the temperature. The
temperature dependence of the quasielastic line width Gamma/2(T) can be
explained with an Orbach-process, i.e. a relaxation via the coupling between
crystal field excitations and phonons. At low temperatures the Nd-4f magnetic
response S(Q,omega) correlates with the electronic properties of the
CuO(2)-layers. In the insulator La(2-y)Nd(y)CuO(4) the quasielastic line
vanishes below 80 K and an inelastic excitation occurs. This directly indicates
the splitting of the Nd3+ ground state Kramers doublet due to the static
antiferromagnetic order of the Cu moments. In La(1.7-x)Sr(x)Nd(0.3)CuO(4) with
x = 0.12, 0.15 and La(1.4-x)Sr(x)Nd(0.6)CuO(4) with x = 0.1, 0.12, 0.15, 0.18
superconductivity is strongly suppressed. In these compounds we observe a
temperature independent broad quasielastic line of Gaussian shape below T about
30 K. This suggests a distribution of various internal fields on different Nd
sites and is interpreted in the frame of the stripe model. In
La(1.8-y)Sr(0.2)Nd(y)CuO(4) (y = 0.3, 0.6) such a quasielastic broadening is
not observed even at lowest temperature.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures included, to appear in Phys. Rev.
The Cellular Burning Regime in Type Ia Supernova Explosions - I. Flame Propagation into Quiescent Fuel
We present a numerical investigation of the cellular burning regime in Type
Ia supernova explosions. This regime holds at small scales (i.e. below the
Gibson scale), which are unresolved in large-scale Type Ia supernova
simulations. The fundamental effects that dominate the flame evolution here are
the Landau-Darrieus instability and its nonlinear stabilization, leading to a
stabilization of the flame in a cellular shape. The flame propagation into
quiescent fuel is investigated addressing the dependence of the simulation
results on the specific parameters of the numerical setup. Furthermore, we
investigate the flame stability at a range of fuel densities. This is directly
connected to the questions of active turbulent combustion (a mechanism of flame
destabilization and subsequent self-turbulization) and a
deflagration-to-detonation transition of the flame. In our simulations we find
no substantial destabilization of the flame when propagating into quiescent
fuels of densities down to ~10^7 g/cm^3, corroborating fundamental assumptions
of large-scale SN Ia explosion models. For these models, however, we suggest an
increased lower cutoff for the flame propagation velocity to take the cellular
burning regime into account.Comment: 12 pages, 2 tables, 10 figures, resolution of figures degraded due to
archive file size restrictions, submitted to A&
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