2,563 research outputs found
Impact of photometric variability on age and mass determination of Young Stellar Objects: A case study on Orion Nebula Cluster
In case of pre-main sequence objects, the only way to determine age and mass
is by fitting theoretical isochrones on color-magnitude (alternatively
luminosity-temperature) diagrams. Since young stellar objects exhibit
photometric variability over wide range in magnitude and colors, the age and
mass determined by fitting isochrones is expected to be inaccurate, if not
erroneous. These in turn will badly affect any study carried out on age spread
and process of star formation. Since we have carried out very extensive
photometric observations of the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC), we decided to use
our multi-band data to explore the influence of variability in determining mass
and age of cluster members. In this study, we get the amplitudes of the
photometric variability in V, R, and I optical bands of a sample of 346 ONC
members and use it to investigate how the variability affects the inferred
masses and ages and if it alone can take account for the age spread among the
ONC members reported by earlier studies. We find that members that show
periodic and smooth photometric rotational modulation have their masses and
ages unaffected by variability. On other hand, we found that members with
periodic but very scattered photometric rotational modulation and members with
irregular variability have their masses and ages significantly affected.
Moreover, using Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) diagrams we find that the observed I
band photometric variability can take account of only a fraction (about 50%) of
the inferred age spread, whereas the V band photometric variability is large
enough to mask any age spread.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS; 17 pages, 4 Tables, 15 Figure
A compositional method for reliability analysis of workflows affected by multiple failure modes
We focus on reliability analysis for systems designed as workflow based compositions of components. Components are characterized by their failure profiles, which take into account possible multiple failure modes. A compositional calculus is provided to evaluate the failure profile of a composite system, given failure profiles of the components. The calculus is described as a syntax-driven procedure that synthesizes a workflows failure profile. The method is viewed as a design-time aid that can help software engineers reason about systems reliability in the early stage of development. A simple case study is presented to illustrate the proposed approach
ECUT: Energy Conversion and utilization Technologies program biocatalysis research activity. Generation of chemical intermediates by catalytic oxidative decarboxylation of dilute organic acids
A rhodium-based catalyst was prepared and preliminary experiments were completed where the catalyst appeared to decarboxylate dilute acids at concentrations of 1 to 10 vol%. Electron spin resonance spectroscoy was used to characterize the catalyst as a first step leading toward modeling and optimization of rhodium catalysts. Also, a hybrid chemical/biological process for the production of hydrocarbons has been assessed. These types of catalysts could greatly increase energy efficiency of this process
Photothermal characterization of encapsulant materials for photovoltaic modules
A photothermal test matrix and a low cost testing apparatus for encapsulant materials of photovoltaic modules were defined. Photothermal studies were conducted to screen and rank existing as well as future encapsulant candidate materials and/or material formulations in terms of their long term physiochemical stability under accelerated photothermal aging conditions. Photothermal characterization of six candidate pottant materials and six candidate outer cover materials were carried out. Principal products of photothermal degradation are identified. Certain critical properties are also monitored as a function of photothermal aging
HIV in Japan: Epidemiologic puzzles and ethnographic explanations
AbstractJapan is widely perceived to have a low level of HIV occurrence; however, its HIV epidemics also have been the subject of considerable misunderstanding globally. I used a ground truthing conceptual framework to meet two aims: first, to determine how accurately official surveillance data represented Japan's two largest epidemics (urban Kansai and Tokyo) as understood and experienced on the ground; and second, to identify explanations for why the HIV epidemics were unfolding as officially reported. I used primarily ethnographic methods while drawing upon epidemiology, and compared government surveillance data to observations at community and institutional sites (459 pages of field notes; 175 persons observed), qualitative interviews with stakeholders in local HIV epidemics (n = 32), and document research (n = 116). This revealed seven epidemiologic puzzles involving officially reported trends and conspicuously missing information. Ethnographically grounded explanations are presented for each. These included factors driving the epidemics, which ranged from waning government and public attention to HIV, to gaps in sex education and disruptive leadership changes in public institutions approximately every two years. Factors constraining the epidemics also contributed to explanations. These ranged from subsidized medical treatment for most people living with HIV, to strong partnerships between government and a well-developed, non-governmental sector of HIV interventionists, and protective norms and built environments in the sex industry. Local and regional HIV epidemics were experienced and understood as worse than government reports indicated, and ground-level data often contradicted official knowledge. Results thus call into question epidemiologic trends, including recent stabilization of the national epidemic, and suggest the need for revisions to the surveillance system and strategies that address factors driving and constraining the epidemics. Based upon its utility in the current study, ground truthing has value as a conceptual framework for research and shows promise for future theoretical development
Advanced rechargeable sodium batteries with novel cathodes
Various high energy density rechargeable batteries are being considered for future space applications. Of these, the sodium sulfur battery is one of the leading candidates. The primary advantage is the high energy density (760 Wh/kg theoretical). Energy densities in excess of 180 Wh/kg have been realized in practical batteries. More recently, cathodes other than sulfur are being evaluated. Researchers at JPL are evaluating various new cathode materials for use in high energy density sodium batteries for advanced space applications. The approach is to carry out basic electrochemical studies of these materials in a sodium cell configuration in order to understand their fundamental behaviors. Thus far studies have focused on alternate metal chlorides such as CuCl2 and organic cathode materials such as tetracyanoethylene (TCNE)
Activity cycles in members of young loose stellar associations
Magnetic cycles have been detected in tens of solar-like stars. The
relationship between the cycle properties and global stellar parameters is not
fully understood yet.
We searched for activity cycles in 90 solar-like stars with ages between 4
and 95 Myr aiming to investigate the properties of activity cycles in this age
range.
We measured the length of a given cycle by analyzing the long-term
time-series of three activity indexes. For each star, we computed also the
global magnetic activity index that is proportional to the amplitude of
the rotational modulation and is a proxy of the mean level of the surface
magnetic activity. We detected activity cycles in 67 stars. Secondary cycles
were also detected in 32 stars. The lack of correlation between and
suggest that these stars belong to the Transitional Branch and that
the dynamo acting in these stars is different from the solar one. This
statement is also supported by the analysis of the butterfly diagrams.
We computed the Spearman correlation coefficient between ,
and different stellar parameters. We found that is
uncorrelated with all the investigated parameters. The index is
positively correlated with the convective turn-over time-scale, the magnetic
diffusivity time-scale , and the dynamo number , whereas
it is anti-correlated with the effective temperature , the
photometric shear and the radius at which
the convective zone is located.
We found that is about constant and that decreases with the
stellare age in the range 4-95 Myr. We investigated the magnetic activity of AB
Dor A by merging ASAS time-series with previous long-term photometric data. We
estimated the length of the AB Dor A primary cycle as .Comment: 19 pages , 15 figures, accepte
Lower limit for differential rotation in members of young loose stellar associations
Surface differential rotation (SDR) plays a key role in dynamo models. SDR
estimates are therefore essential for constraining theoretical models. We
measure a lower limit to SDR in a sample of solar-like stars belonging to young
associations with the aim of investigating how SDR depends on global stellar
parameters in the age range (4-95 Myr). The rotation period of a solar-like
star can be recovered by analyzing the flux modulation caused by dark spots and
stellar rotation. The SDR and the latitude migration of dark-spots induce a
modulation of the detected rotation period. We employ long-term photometry to
measure the amplitude of such a modulation and to compute the quantity
DeltaOmega_phot =2p/P_min -2pi/P_max that is a lower limit to SDR. We find that
DeltaOmega_phot increases with the stellar effective temperature and with the
global convective turn-over time-scale tau_c. We find that DeltaOmega_phot is
proportional to Teff^2.18pm 0.65 in stars recently settled on the ZAMS. This
power law is less steep than those found by previous authors, but closest to
recent theoretical models. We find that DeltaOmega_phot steeply increases
between 4 and 30 Myr and that itis almost constant between 30 and 95 Myr in a 1
M_sun star. We find also that the relative shear increases with the Rossby
number Ro. Although our results are qualitatively in agreement with
hydrodynamical mean-field models, our measurements are systematically higher
than the values predicted by these models. The discrepancy between
DeltaOmega_phot measurements and theoretical models is particularly large in
stars with periods between 0.7 and 2 d. Such a discrepancy, together with the
anomalous SDR measured by other authors for HD 171488 (rotating in 1.31 d),
suggests that the rotation period could influence SDR more than predicted by
the models.Comment: 23 pages, 15 figures, 5 tables,accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysic
Neutrino flux predictions for known Galactic microquasars
It has been proposed recently that Galactic microquasars may be prodigious
emitters of TeV neutrinos that can be detected by upcoming km^2 neutrino
telescopes. In this paper we consider a sample of identified microquasars and
microquasar candiates, for which available data enables rough determination of
the jet parameters. By employing the parameters inferred from radio
observations of various jet ejection events, we determine the neutrino fluxes
that should have been produced during these events by photopion production in
the jet. Despite the large uncertainties in our analysis, we demonstrate that
in several of the sources considered, the neutrino flux at Earth, produced in
events similar to those observed, would exceed the detection threshold of a
km^2 neutrino detector. The class of microquasars may contain also sources with
bulk Lorentz factors larger than those characteristic of the sample considered
here, directed along our line of sight. Such sources, which may be very
difficult to resolve at radio wavelengths and hence may be difficult to
identify as microqusar candidates, may emit neutrinos with fluxes significantly
larger than typically obtained in the present analysis. These sources may
eventually be identified through their neutrino and gamma-ray emission.Comment: 17 pages. Submitted to Ap
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