1,936 research outputs found
MECHANISM OF THICK METAL WALLS PENETRATION BY HIGH-SPEED MICROPARTICLES
Purpose. Analysis and estimation of physical parameters which create conditions for microparticles penetration into metal microstructure to abnormally big depth.
Methodology. Quantum mechanical threesite model has been used for studying the regularities of electron motion in the field of two Coulomb centres and numerical solution for the problem of the effect of external electrical charge on stability of the chemical bond. Solution was found for the equation of heat conductivity for estimating the temperature of microparticles heating under compression and acceleration by explosively driven accelerator. Stokes’s law was used for estimating viscosity of hypothetical medium which can be penetrated by microparticle at a great speed and to a great depth. The research was done with the help of Xray microanalysis, Xray crystallography, micrographic investigation, massspectrometry and electronic spectroscopy.
Findings. Solution of the quantum mechanical model testifies that electric charges serve as catalysts responsible for the significant reduction of the energy barrier of chemical reactions. To ensure super deep penetration, it is necessary to achieve acceleration of a great number of microparticles in a special explosively driven accelerator. Heating, intensive stirring and friction result in electrification of the surface of the particles, which is known as triboelectric effect. The hypothesis about physical and chemical mechanism of particles penetration into metals resulting from highspeed impact has been put forward.
Originality. The research has established relationship between the sizes of microparticles accelerated by
explosion and the density of electric charges on their surfaces, as well as the depth of their penetration into the metal barrier. By experimental research, it was proven that maximum depth of microparticles penetration is directly proportional to the maximum density of surface charges for the particles of the 50…80 µm size. It is assumed that particles penetration into metals to greater depths is conditioned by the reduction of the barrier material viscosity in the zone of particlebarrier contact due to quantum mechanical effects in the solidstate plasma.
Practical value. The value of the work includes creating a new generation of metal composites as well as new prospective technologies of reactive materials utilization
New class I methanol masers
We review properties of all known collisionally pumped (class I) methanol
maser series based on observations with the Australia Telescope Compact Array
(ATCA) and the Mopra radio telescope. Masers at 36, 84, 44 and 95 GHz are most
widespread, while 9.9, 25, 23.4 and 104 GHz masers are much rarer, tracing the
most energetic shocks. A survey of many southern masers at 36 and 44 GHz
suggests that these two transitions are highly complementary. The 23.4 GHz
maser is a new type of rare class I methanol maser, detected only in two
high-mass star-forming regions, G357.97-0.16 and G343.12-0.06, and showing a
behaviour similar to 9.9, 25 and 104 GHz masers. Interferometric positions
suggest that shocks responsible for class I masers could arise from a range of
phenomena, not merely an outflow scenario. For example, some masers might be
caused by interaction of an expanding HII region with its surrounding molecular
cloud. This has implications for evolutionary sequences incorporating class I
methanol masers if they appear more than once during the evolution of the
star-forming region. We also make predictions for candidate maser transitions
at the ALMA frequency range.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, to appear in proceedings for IAUS 287: Cosmic
Masers - from OH to H
Methanol in W3(H2O) and Surrounding Regions
We present the results of an interferometric study of 38 millimeter-wave
lines of CH3OH in the region around the water maser source W3(H2O) and a region
extending about 30" to the south and west of the hydroxyl maser source W3(OH).
The methanol emitting region around W3(H2O) has an extent of 2.0" x 1.2"
(4400 x 2600 AU). The density is of order 1.e7 cm-3, sufficient to thermalize
most of the methanol lines. The kinetic temperature is approximately 140 K and
the methanol fractional abundance greater than 1.e-6, indicative of a high
degree of grain mantle evaporation. The W3(H2O) source contains sub-structure,
with peaks corresponding to the TW source and Wyrowski's B/C, separated by 2500
AU in projection. The kinematics are consistent with these being distinct
protostellar cores in a wide binary orbit and a dynamical mass for the region
of a few tens of Mo.
The extended methanol emission to the southwest of W3(OH) is seen strongly
only from the lowest excitation lines and from lines known elsewhere to be
class I methanol masers, namely the 84.5 GHz 5(-1)-4(0)E and 95.2 GHz
8(0)-7(1)A+ lines. Within this region there are two compact clumps, which we
denote as swA and swB, each about 15" (0.16 pc projected distance) away from
W3(OH). Excitation analysis of these clumps indicates the presence of lines
with inverted populations but only weak amplification. The sources swA and swB
appear to have kinetic temperatures of order 50-100 K and densities of order
1.e5 - 1.e6 cm-3. The methanol fractional abundance for the warmer clump is of
order 1.e-7, suggestive of partial grain mantle evaporation. The clumping
occurs on mass scales of order 1 Mo.Comment: 28 pages including 6 figures and 4 tables, accepted by Ap
Methanol masers : Reliable tracers of the early stages of high-mass star formation
The GLIMPSE and MSX surveys have been used to examine the mid-infrared
properties of a statistically complete sample of 6.7 GHz methanol masers. The
GLIMPSE point sources associated with methanol masers are clearly distinguished
from the majority, typically having extremely red mid-infrared colors, similar
to those expected of low-mass class 0 young stellar objects. The intensity of
the GLIMPSE sources associated with methanol masers is typically 4 magnitudes
brighter at 8.0 micron than at 3.6 micron. Targeted searches towards GLIMPSE
point sources with [3.6]-[4.5] > 1.3 and an 8.0 micron magnitude less than 10
will detect more than 80% of class II methanol masers. Many of the methanol
masers are associated with sources within infrared dark clouds (IRDC) which are
believed to mark regions where high-mass star formation is in its very early
stages. The presence of class II methanol masers in a significant fraction of
IRDC suggests that high-mass star formation is common in these regions.
Different maser species are thought to trace different evolutionary phases of
the high-mass star formation process. Comparison of the properties of the
GLIMPSE sources associated with class II methanol masers and other maser
species shows interesting trends, consistent with class I methanol masers
tracing a generally earlier evolutionary phase and OH masers tracing a later
evolutionary phase.Comment: 45 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
High-velocity feature of the class I methanol maser in G309.38-0.13
The Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) has been used to map class I
methanol masers at 36 and 44 GHz in G309.38-0.13. Maser spots are found at nine
locations in an area of 50''x30'', with both transitions reliably detected at
only two locations. The brightest spot is associated with shocked gas traced by
4.5 micron emission. The data allowed us to make a serendipitous discovery of a
high-velocity 36-GHz spectral feature, which is blue-shifted by about 30 km/s
from the peak velocity at this frequency, but spatially located close to
(within a few arcseconds of) the brightest maser spot. We interpret this as
indicating an outflow parallel to the line of sight. Such a high velocity
spread of maser features, which has not been previously reported in the class I
methanol masers associated with a single molecular cloud, suggests that the
outflow most likely interacts with a moving parcel of gas.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted by MNRAS Letter
Sources of Radiation in the Early Universe: The Equation of Radiative Transfer and Optical Distances
We have derived the radiative-transfer equation for a point source with a
specified intensity and spectrum, originating in the early Universe between the
epochs of annihilation and recombination, at redshifts z_\s =10^8\div 10^4.
The direct radiation of the source is separated from the diffuse radiation it
produces. Optical distances from the source for Thomson scattering and
bremsstrahlung absorption at the maximum of the thermal background radiation
are calculated as a function of the redshift z.The distances grow sharply with
decreasing z, approaching asymptotic values, the absorption distance increasing
more slowly and reaching their limiting values at lower z. For the adopted z
values, the optical parameters of the Universe can be described in a flat model
with dusty material and radiation, and radiative transfer can be treated in a
grey approximation.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figure
Multi-transition study and new detections of class II methanol masers
We have used the ATNF Mopra antenna and the SEST antenna to search in the
directions of several class II methanol maser sources for emission from six
methanol transitions in the frequency range 85-115 GHz. The transitions were
selected from excitation studies as potential maser candidates. Methanol
emission at one or more frequencies was detected from five of the maser
sources, as well as from Orion KL. Although the lines are weak, we find
evidence of maser origin for three new lines in G345.01+1.79, and possibly one
new line in G9.62+0.20.
The observations, together with published maser observations at other
frequencies, are compared with methanol maser modelling for G345.01+1.79 and
NGC6334F. We find that the majority of observations in both sources are
consistent with a warm dust (175 K) pumping model at hydrogen density ~10^6
cm^-3 and methanol column density ~5 x 10^17 cm^-2. The substantial differences
between the maser spectra in the two sources can be attributed to the geometry
of the maser region.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
The Australia Telescope campaign to study southern class I methanol masers
The Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) and the Mopra facility have been
used to search for new southern class I methanol masers at 9.9, 25 (J=5) and
104 GHz, which are thought to trace more energetic conditions in the interface
regions of molecular outflows, than the widespread class I masers at 44 and 95
GHz. One source shows a clear outflow association.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure (composed from 3 files), to appear in proceedings
of IAU Symposium 242 "Astrophysical masers and their environment" (eds. J.
Chapman and W. Baan
Incommensurate antiferromagnetic fluctuations in single-crystalline LiFeAs studied by inelastic neutron scattering
We present an inelastic neutron scattering study on single-crystalline LiFeAs
devoted to the characterization of the incommensurate antiferromagnetic
fluctuations at . Time-of-flight
measurements show the presence of these magnetic fluctuations up to an energy
transfer of 60 meV, while polarized neutrons in combination with longitudinal
polarization analysis on a triple-axis spectrometer prove the pure magnetic
origin of this signal. The normalization of the magnetic scattering to an
absolute scale yields that magnetic fluctuations in LiFeAs are by a factor
eight weaker than the resonance signal in nearly optimally Co-doped
BaFeAs, although a factor two is recovered due to the split peaks owing
to the incommensurability. The longitudinal polarization analysis indicates
weak spin space anisotropy with slightly stronger out-of-plane component
between 6 and 12 meV. Furthermore, our data suggest a fine structure of the
magnetic signal most likely arising from superposing nesting vectors.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
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