525 research outputs found
Eudaimonistic Argumentation
Virtue theories have lately enjoyed a modest vogue in the study of argumentation, echoing the success of more far-reaching programmes in ethics and epistemology. Virtue theories of argumentation (VTA) comprise several conceptually distinct projects, including the provision of normative foundations for argument evaluation and a renewed focus on the character of good arguers. Perhaps the boldest of these is the pursuit of the fully satisfying argument, the argument that contributes to human flourishing. This project has an independently developed epistemic analogue: eudaimonistic virtue epistemology. Both projects stress the importance of widening the range of cognitive goals beyond, respectively, cogency and knowledge; both projects emphasize social factors, the right sort of community being indispensable for the cultivation of the intellectual virtues necessary to each project. This paper proposes a unification of the two projects by arguing that the intellectual good life sought by eudaimonistic virtue epistemologists is best realized through the articulation of an account of argumentation that contributes to human flourishing
Age and helium content of the open cluster NGC 6791 from multiple eclipsing binary members. I. Measurements, methods, and first results
Earlier measurements of the masses and radii of the detached eclipsing binary
V20 in the open cluster NGC 6791 were accurate enough to demonstrate that there
are significant differences between current stellar models. Here we improve on
those results and add measurements of two additional detached eclipsing
binaries, the cluster members V18 and V80. The enlarged sample sets much
tighter constraints on the properties of stellar models than has hitherto been
possible, thereby improving both the accuracy and precision of the cluster age.
We employed (i) high-resolution UVES spectroscopy of V18, V20 and V80 to
determine their spectroscopic effective temperatures, [Fe/H] values, and
spectroscopic orbital elements, and (ii) time-series photometry from the Nordic
Optical Telescope to obtain the photometric elements. The masses and radii of
the V18 and V20 components are found to high accuracy, with errors on the
masses in the range 0.27-0.36% and errors on the radii in the range 0.61-0.92%.
V80 is found to be magnetically active, and more observations are needed to
determine its parameters accurately. The metallicity of NGC 6791 is measured
from disentangled spectra of the binaries and a few single stars to be [Fe/H]=
+0.29 \pm 0.03 (random) \pm 0.07 (systematic). The cluster reddening and
apparent distance modulus are found to be E(B - V) = 0.160 \pm 0.025 and (m -
M)V = 13.51 \pm 0.06 . A first model comparison shows that we can constrain the
helium content of the NGC 6791 stars, and thus reach a more accurate age than
previously possible. It may be possible to constrain additional parameters, in
particular the C, N, and O abundances. This will be investigated in paper II.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Life cycle assessment of waste prevention
Waste prevention is part of the solution towards circular economy and sustainable consumption. Electronic equipment is known for containing scarce resources and the recycling of these is seen as important. Long lifetime of some electronic products leads to energy consumption during use phase being the most important process for the total impacts from the life cycle. By preventing waste and extending the lifetime of electronics, resources are kept in the loop for a longer period saving the extraction and use of virgin resources. It should be considered if, keeping scarce resources in the loop, will lead to keeping products having low energy efficiency in the loop.
A case study was carried out, assessing the environmental impacts from the use and consumption pattern of refrigerators as the electronic product. The study compared two scenarios providing the same functional unit: Cooling of food (5 degrees Celsius) by a 240L refrigerator for 30 years in Denmark during the period 2015-2045. The full lifetime of the refrigerator was assessed including production, use and waste management. The two scenarios assessed were: 1) use of a refrigerator for 10 years and 2) use of a refrigerator with an extended lifetime of 5 years being in total 15 years of use. Both scenarios were assessed for an old refrigerator with a low energy class and a newer refrigerator with a high energy class. Both scenarios were also assessed with substituting the refrigerator in use with one with the same energy class or with one with a more efficient energy class.
The assessment showed that the use phase becomes less important, and the production phase becomes the main contributor to the potential environmental impacts when choosing an electronic product with high energy efficiency. Meaning the extraction and production of materials and the assembling of the refrigerator becomes more important when the energy efficiency during use is high.
During the life time of electronics the sealing of refrigerators gets worn and the compressor becomes less efficient. Thereby increasing energy consumption is seen for all kinds of electronic devices during the lifetime. It is described in literature that refrigerators tends to have larger energy loss over time than other electronic devices. Therefore the change of energy consumption of scenario 2 was assessed for the two scenarios to have equal potential environmental impacts. For an old refrigerator with low energy efficiency the energy consumption should only increase by ~15% over a period of 30 years consumption time. For the newer refrigerator the change should be ~49% for the two scenarios to have equal environmental impacts.
From the assessment it was concluded that it leads to lower potential environmental impacts to replace an old refrigerator with low energy class after 10 years use by a new refrigerator, and again change this to a more energy efficient one after 10 years use (Scenario 1 with substitution to more efficient energy class), than to reuse an old refrigerator with low energy class (Scenario 2 with substitution to same energy class). The study also concludes that it leads to even lower potential environmental impacts to reuse an old refrigerator and replacing it at the end of life with a new one with high energy efficiency, which is also reused to have an extended lifetime (Scenario 2 with substitution to more efficient energy class).
The lowest environmental impacts were found by extending the lifetime of refrigerators (Scenario 2) with high energy efficiency. In this way as less energy as possible is used during the use phase, and resources are kept in the loop for as long as possible
KIC 8410637: a 408-day period eclipsing binary containing a pulsating red giant
Detached eclipsing binaries (dEBs) are ideal targets for accurate measurement
of masses and radii of ther component stars. If at least one of the stars has
evolved off the main sequence (MS), the masses and radii give a strict
constraint on the age of the stars. Several dEBs containing a bright K giant
and a fainter MS star have been discovered by the Kepler satellite. The mass
and radius of a red giant (RG) star can also be derived from its asteroseismic
signal. The parameters determined in this way depend on stellar models and may
contain systematic errors. It is important to validate the asteroseismically
determined mass and radius with independent methods. This can be done when
stars are members of stellar clusters or members of dEBs. KIC 8410637 consists
of an RG and an MS star. The aim is to derive accurate masses and radii for
both components and provide the foundation for a strong test of the
asteroseismic method and the accuracy of the deduced mass, radius and age. We
analyse high-resolution spectra from three different spectrographs. We also
calculate a fit to the Kepler light curve and use ground-based photometry to
determine the flux ratios between the component stars in the BVRI passbands. We
measured the masses and radii of the stars in the dEB, and the classical
parameters Teff, log g and [Fe/H] from the spectra and ground-based photometry.
The RG component of KIC 8410637 is most likely in the core helium-burning red
clump phase of evolution and has an age and composition very similar to the
stars in the open cluster NGC 6819. The mass of the RG in KIC 8410637 should
therefore be similar to the mass of RGs in NGC 6819, thus lending support to
the most up-to-date version of the asteroseismic scaling relations. This is the
first direct measurement of both mass and radius for an RG to be compared with
values for RGs from asteroseismic scaling relations.Comment: Accepted 20.6.2013 for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
The Invisible Thin Red Line
The aim of this paper is to argue that the adoption of an unrestricted principle of bivalence is compatible with a metaphysics that (i) denies that the future is real, (ii) adopts nomological indeterminism, and (iii) exploits a branching structure to provide a semantics for future contingent claims. To this end, we elaborate what we call Flow Fragmentalism, a view inspired by Kit Fine (2005)’s non-standard tense realism, according to which reality is divided up into maximally coherent collections of tensed facts. In this way, we show how to reconcile a genuinely A-theoretic branching-time model with the idea that there is a branch corresponding to the thin red line, that is, the branch that will turn out to be the actual future history of the world
The mass and age of the first SONG target: the red giant 46 LMi
Context. The Stellar Observation Network Group (SONG) is an initiative to build a worldwide network of 1m telescopes with high-precision radial-velocity spectrographs. Here we analyse the first radial-velocity time series of a red-giant star measured by the SONG
telescope at Tenerife. The asteroseismic results demonstrate a major increase in the achievable precision of the parameters for red-giant
stars obtainable from ground-based observations. Reliable tests of the validity of these results are needed, however, before the accuracy
of the parameters can be trusted.
Aims. We analyse the first SONG time series for the star 46 LMi, which has a precise parallax and an angular diameter measured from interferometry, and therefore a good determination of the stellar radius. We use asteroseismic scaling relations to obtain an accurate mass, and modelling to determine the age.
Methods. A 55-day time series of high-resolution, high S/N spectra were obtained with the first SONG telescope. We derive the asteroseismic parameters by analysing the power spectrum. To give a best guess on the large separation of modes in the power spectrum, we have applied a new method which uses the scaling of Kepler red-giant stars to 46 LMi.
Results. Several methods have been applied: classical estimates, seismic methods using the observed time series, and model calculations to derive the fundamental parameters of 46 LMi. Parameters determined using the different methods are consistent within the uncertainties. We find the following values for the mass M (scaling), radius R (classical), age (modelling), and surface gravity (combining mass and radius): M = 1.09 ± 0.04 M⊙, R = 7.95 ± 0.11 R⊙ age t = 8.2 ± 1.9 Gy, and log g = 2.674 ± 0.013.
Conclusions. The exciting possibilities for ground-based asteroseismology of solar-like oscillations with a fully robotic network have been illustrated with the results obtained from just a single site of the SONG network. The window function is still a severe problem which will be solved when there are more nodes in the network
Solar-like oscillations in cluster stars
We present a brief overview of the history of attempts to obtain a clear
detection of solar-like oscillations in cluster stars, and discuss the results
on the first clear detection, which was made by the Kepler Asteroseismic
Science Consortium (KASC) Working Group 2.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures, accepted by Astronomische Nachrichte
The M4 Core Project with HST --- I. Overview and First-Epoch
We present an overview of the ongoing Hubble Space Telescope large program
GO-12911. The program is focused on the core of M4, the nearest Galactic
globular cluster, and the observations are designed to constrain the number of
binaries with massive companions (black holes, neutron stars, or white dwarfs)
by measuring the ``wobble'' of the luminous (main-sequence) companion around
the center of mass of the pair, with an astrometric precision of ~50
micro-arcseconds. The high spatial resolution and stable medium-band PSFs of
WFC3/UVIS will make these measurements possible. In this work we describe: (i)
the motivation behind this study, (ii) our observing strategy, (iii) the many
other investigations enabled by this unique data set, and which of those our
team is conducting, and (iv) a preliminary reduction of the first-epoch
data-set collected on October 10, 2012.Comment: 25 pages, 14 figures (9 at low resolution), 3 tables. Published in:
Astronomische Nachrichten, Volume 334, Issue 10, pages 1062-1085, December
2013. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/asna.201311911/abstrac
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