3,065 research outputs found
Pan-African alkali granites and syenites of Kerala as imprints of taphrogenic magmatism in the South Indian shield
Granite and syenite plutons with alkaline affinities ranging in age from 550 to 750 Ma sporadically puncture the Precambrian granulites of the Kerala region. All the bodies are small (20 to 60 sq km), E-W to NW-SE elongated elliptical intrusives with sharp contacts and lie on or close to major late Proterozoic lineaments. Geochemical plots of A-F-M and An-Ab-Or relations show an apparent alkali enrichment trend on the former, but the plutons define relatively distinct fields on the latter. Most of the plutons are adamellitic to granitic by chemistry. The variations of SiO2 with log sub 10 K2O/MgO (1) brings out the distinct alkaline nature of the plutons. Some of the granites are extremely potassic, like the Peralimala pluton, which shows up to 11.8 percent K2O. On a SiO2-Al2O3-Na2O+K2O (mol percent) plot, the plutons vary from peraluminous to peralkaline, but none are nepheline normative. Low MgO, low to moderate CaO and high Fe2O3/FeO values are other common characteristics. Among trace elements, depletion of Ba, Sr and Rb with high K/Ba and K/Rb values are typical. Overall, the plutons show a trend of decreasing K/Rb ratio with increasing K content. Individual plutons show more clearly defined trends similar to those from granitic masses characterized by plagioclase fractionation
On the plasma temperature in supernova remnants with cosmic-ray modified shocks
Context: Multiwavelength observations of supernova remnants can be explained
within the framework of the diffusive shock acceleration theory, which allows
effective conversion of the explosion energy into cosmic rays. Although the
models of nonlinear shocks describe reasonably well the nonthermal component of
emission, certain issues, including the heating of the thermal plasma and the
related X-ray emission, remain still open.
Aims: To discuss how the evolution and structure of supernova remnants is
affected by strong particle acceleration at the forward shock.
Methods: Analytical estimates combined with detailed discussion of the
physical processes.
Results: The overall dynamics is shown to be relatively insensitive to the
amount of particle acceleration, but the post-shock gas temperature can be
reduced to a relatively small multiple, even as small as six times, the ambient
temperature with a very weak dependence on the shock speed. This is in marked
contrast to pure gas models where the temperature is insensitive to the ambient
temperature and is determined by the square of the shock speed. It thus appears
to be possible to suppress effectively thermal X-ray emission from remnants by
strong particle acceleration. This might provide a clue for understanding the
lack of thermal X-rays from the TeV bright supernova remnant RX J1713.7-3946.Comment: Appendix A added, minor changes and additional references include
Argument Pedagogy for Everyday Life
This article assists argumentation and debate instructors in developing courses that provide coverage of foundational concepts while reflecting their own interests. Courses in argumentation and debate also offer instructors an opportunity to teach through applied engagement with contemporary events. We encourage instructors to reflect on the various contexts of argumentation and debate as well as challenging questions concerning the role of technology in the classroom, the conflict between normative and descriptive examples of argumentation, how much to emphasize the role of argumentation and debate in societal change, and the connections between argumentation and deliberation
Remote sensing strategies for lithological mapping of pan African assemblages in arid environments: a case study in Eritrea, NE Africa
Over a 30 year period, when major advances were made in understanding the evolution of the Arabian-Nubian Shield, military conflicts prevented the geological mapping and tectonic interpretation of Eritrea, NE Africa. The indication of small occurrences of ultramafic rocks through ancient work in the NW extremity of the country prompted many workers on regional tectonics to propose the line of the Barka river as a Neoproterozoic (Pan African) suture. Several attempts based on remote sensing data have been considered to resolve about the existence of such structure in this region. These previous approaches, based on Landsat TM band ratios, fail comprehensively in Eritrea both to unequivocally map ultramafic occurrences and to serve as a good basis for lithological mapping, producing inconclusive and divergent overall results. In this paper we attempt to verify and amplify the hypothesis of a suture zone in N W Eritrea, employing a novel remote sensing strategy and detailed field work. Using statistically-selected Landsat TM enhanced false colour composites together with renditions from residual information of favored Principal Components (pseudo-ratios), we demonstrate that many important components of the Pan African Terranes of Eritrea - i.e. ophiolitic assemblages - can be mapped with a high degree of confidence. This remote sensing strategy transcends the problems encountered in previous approaches in Eritrea and can potentially serve as a powerful tool for geological mapping of similar arid terrains elsewhere.Durante um período de cerca de 30 anos, enquanto grandes avanços eram alcançados no entendimento da evolução do Escudo Arábico-Nubiano, conflitos militares impediram que qualquer tipo de mapeamento geológico e interpretação tectónica fossem realizados na Eritrea, região do NE da Africa. A indicação, a partir de trabalhos da década de 50, da ocorrência de rochas ultramáficas na extremidade noroeste do país, levou diversos autores a propor a existência de uma zona de sutura Neoproterozóica (Pan Africana) ao longo do rio Barka. Diversas tentativas no sentido de demonstrar a existência desta zona de sutura na região vêm sendo feitas desde então, todas baseadas exclusivamente em dados de sensoriamento remoto. Entre estes trabalhos prévios, destacam-se aqueles que utilizam-se de variações da técnica de razões de bandas do satélite Landsat TM. Essas técnicas, entretanto, são incapazes de mapear inequivocamente a ocorrência de rochas ultramáficas e de gerar produtos que possam servir como uma boa base para o mapeamento litológico. A comparação entre os resultados obtidos nesses trabalhos mostram incertezas e divergências marcantes. Neste artigo, pretende-se verificar e expandir a hipótese da existência de uma zona de sutura no NW da Eritrea, utilizando uma estratégia de sensoriamento remoto inédita e dados de trabalhos de campo de detalhe. Esta estratégia emprega composições coloridas de bandas do sensor Landsat TM, selecionadas por métodos estatísticos e realçadas espectralmente, em conjunto com composições coloridas geradas a partir da informação residual de Componentes Principais (pseudo-razões), para o mapeamento das principais feições dos terrenos Pan Africanos da Eritrea (i.e. sequências ofiolíticas). A estratégia proposta transcende os problemas encontrados em outras tentativas de mapeamento destas feições e potencialmente pode ser adotada como uma poderosa ferramenta na caracterização de áreas geologicamente similares, em regiões de clima árido
Kinetic approaches to particle acceleration at cosmic ray modified shocks
Kinetic approaches provide an effective description of the process of
particle acceleration at shock fronts and allow to take into account the
dynamical reaction of the accelerated particles as well as the amplification of
the turbulent magnetic field as due to streaming instability. The latter does
in turn affect the maximum achievable momentum and thereby the acceleration
process itself, in a chain of causality which is typical of non-linear systems.
Here we provide a technical description of two of these kinetic approaches and
show that they basically lead to the same conclusions. In particular we discuss
the effects of shock modification on the spectral shape of the accelerated
particles, on the maximum momentum, on the thermodynamic properties of the
background fluid and on the escaping and advected fluxes of accelerated
particles.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
In which shell-type SNRs should we look for gamma-rays and neutrinos from p-p collisions?
We present a simple analytic model for the various contributions to the
non-thermal emission from shell type SNRs, and show that this model's results
reproduce well the results of previous detailed calculations. We show that the
\geq 1 TeV gamma ray emission from the shell type SNRs RX J1713.7-3946 and RX
J0852.0-4622 is dominated by inverse-Compton scattering of CMB photons (and
possibly infra-red ambient photons) by accelerated electrons. Pion decay (due
to proton-proton collisions) is shown to account for only a small fraction,
\lesssim10^-2, of the observed flux, as assuming a larger fractional
contribution would imply nonthermal radio and X-ray synchrotron emission and
thermal X-ray Bremsstrahlung emission that far exceed the observed radio and
X-ray fluxes. Models where pion decay dominates the \geq 1 TeV flux avoid the
implied excessive synchrotron emission (but not the implied excessive thermal
X-ray Bremsstrahlung emission) by assuming an extremely low efficiency of
electron acceleration, K_ep \lesssim 10^-4 (K_ep is the ratio of the number of
accelerated electrons and the number of accelerated protons at a given energy).
We argue that observations of SNRs in nearby galaxies imply a lower limit of
K_ep \gtrsim 10^-3, and thus rule out K_ep values \lesssim 10^-4 (assuming that
SNRs share a common typical value of K_ep). It is suggested that SNRs with
strong thermal X-ray emission, rather than strong non-thermal X-ray emission,
are more suitable candidates for searches of gamma rays and neutrinos resulting
from proton-proton collisions. In particular, it is shown that the neutrino
flux from the SNRs above is probably too low to be detected by current and
planned neutrino observatories (Abridged).Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in JCAP, minor revision
The X-ray Emissions from the M87 Jet: Diagnostics and Physical Interpretation
We reanalyze the deep Chandra observations of the M87 jet, first examined by
Wilson & Yang (2002). By employing an analysis chain that includes image
deconvolution, knots HST-1 and I are fully separated from adjacent emission. We
find slight but significant variations in the spectral shape, with values of
ranging from . We use VLA radio observations, as well
as HST imaging and polarimetry data, to examine the jet's broad-band spectrum
and inquire as to the nature of particle acceleration in the jet. As shown in
previous papers, a simple continuous injection model for synchrotron-emitting
knots, in which both the filling factor, , of regions within which
particles are accelerated and the energy spectrum of the injected particles are
constant, cannot account for the X-ray flux or spectrum. Instead, we propose
that is a function of position and energy and find that in the inner
jet, , and
in knots A and B, , where is the emitted photon energy and and is the
emitting electron energy. In this model, the index of the injected electron
energy spectrum () is at all locations in
the jet, as predicted by models of cosmic ray acceleration by ultrarelativistic
shocks. There is a strong correlation between the peaks of X-ray emission and
minima of optical percentage polarization, i.e., regions where the jet magnetic
field is not ordered. We suggest that the X-ray peaks coincide with shock waves
which accelerate the X-ray emitting electrons and cause changes in the
direction of the magnetic field; the polarization is thus small because of beam
averaging.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 21 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables;
abstract shortened for astro-ph; Figures 1, 7 and 8 at reduced resolutio
On the nonthermal X-ray emission in blazar jets
We consider particle acceleration to high energy via diffusive shock
acceleration in a simple, self-consistent shock in jet model for blazars.
Electrons are assumed to be accelerated at a shock front in relativistic jets
and radiate synchrotron emission in a post-shock region. The full time, space
and momentum dependence of the electron distribution function is used for a
calculation of the nonthermal synchrotron spectra. We discuss the evolution of
the spectral index by varying the rate at which particles enter the
acceleration process. The results indicate that the synchrotron spectral index
displays a characteristic looplike behaviour with intensity (as has been
observed in several blazars), where the orientation of the loop depends on
whether the acceleration time scale is comparable to the synchrotron cooling
time scale or not. We show that our model provides a good fit to the observed
evolution of the spectral index of Mkn 421 during a flare in 1994.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, conference proceedin
A simple model for electron plasma heating in supernova remnants
Context: Multiwavelength observations of supernova remnants can be explained
within the framework of diffusive shock acceleration theory, which allows
effective conversion of the explosion energy into cosmic rays. Although the
models of nonlinear shocks describe reasonably well the nonthermal component of
emission, certain issues, including the heating of the thermal electron plasma
and the related X-ray emission, still remain open.
Methods: Numerical solution of the equations of the Chevalier model for
supernova remnant evolution, coupled with Coulomb scattering heating of the
electrons.
Results: The electron temperature and the X-ray thermal Bremsstrahlung
emission from supernova remnants have been calculated as functions of the
relevant parameters. Since only the Coulomb mechanism was considered for
electron heating, the values obtained for the electron temperatures should be
treated as lower limits. Results from this work can be useful to constrain
model parameters for observed SNRs.Comment: Accepted to A&A as a research not
Gender, Physical Education and Active Lifestyles: New Directions and Challenges - Introduction to Special Issue
The idea for this Special Issue, ‘Gender, Physical Education and Active Lifestyles: Contemporary Challenges and New Directions’ developed from the interest generated by a one day conference held at Leeds Beckett University in September 2017. The conference marked 25 years since the publication of Sheila Scraton’s ground breaking, feminist analysis of Physical Education. As a pivotal text that has contributed to the growth of gender research within the UK and more broadly, it seemed fitting to mark this occasion. The reach of Sheila’s work was perhaps realised through the delegate body. Early career researchers mingled with established scholars from America, Australia, New Zealand, Europe and the UK. Building on this conference and a wider call for papers, we are delighted to offer two Special Issues of Sport, Education and Society. The first issue engages explicitly with the challenge of theorising and understanding gendered subjectivities and embodiment across a range of contexts. These papers reflect the diversity of theoretical approaches being employed with some drawing on feminist perspectives, and others using Bourdieu, intersectionality, critical whiteness studies, and masculinity studies. The collection of papers in the second issue seek to examine the different ways in which gender becomes implicated in pedagogical relations and practice. These range from accounts of teachers’ struggles to use critical pedagogies to address gender inequities in PE classes, to analyses of the wider pedagogical ‘work’ of the media in constructing understandings about gender, with several papers exploring these two aspects in combination. We hope you enjoy reading the papers across these two Special Issues as much as we have enjoyed the journey as the editorial team. Collectively the papers raise alternative questions and provide new insights into gender and active lifestyles, and importantly, all seek to make a difference in moving towards more equitable physical activity experiences
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