15,721 research outputs found
Detailed gravimetric geoid confirmation of short wavelength features of sea surface topography detected by the Skylab S-193 altimeter in the Atlantic Ocean
A detailed gravimetric geoid was computed for the Northwest Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea area in support of the calibration and evaluation of the GEOS-C altimeter. This geoid, computed on a 15 ft. x 15 ft. grid was based upon a combination of surface gravity data with the GSFC GEM-6 satellite derived gravity data. A comparison of this gravimetric geoid with 10 passes of SKYLAB altimeter data is presented. The agreement of the two data types is quite good with the differences generally less than 2 meters. Sea surface manifestations of numerous short wavelength (approximately 100 km) oceanographic features are now indicated in the gravimetric geoid and are also confirmed by the altimetry data
A comparison and evaluation of satellite derived positions of tracking stations
A comparison is presented of sets of satellite tracking station coordinate values published in the past few years by a number of investigators, i.e. Goddard Space Flight Center, Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Ohio State University, The Naval Weapons Laboratory, Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories, and Wallops Island. The comparisons have been made in terms of latitude, longitude and height. The results of the various solutions have been compared directly and also with external standards such as local survey data and gravimetrically derived geoid heights. After taking into account systematic rotations, latitude and longitude agreement on a global basis is generally 15 meters or better, on the North American Datum agreement is generally better than 10 meters. Allowing for scale differences (of the order of 2 ppm) radial agreement is generally of the order of 10 meters
Geologic applications of thermal inertia image using HCMM data
The author has identified the following significant results. Comparison of a simulated HCMM image of the Pisgah Crater, California test site obtained from aircraft data with an image generated from the preliminary satellite data tape of the area indicates that the HCMM satellite data appears much as predicted by the simulation
Macroscopic and microscopic studies of electrical properties of very thin silicon dioxide subject to electrical stress
The electrical characteristics of various size tunnel switch diode devices, composed of Al/SiO2/n-Si/p+-Si layers, which operate with a range of parameters (such as current densities in excess of 104 A/cm2) that stress the oxide layer far beyond the levels used in typical thin oxide metal-oxide semiconductor research have been examined. It is found that the first time a large current and electric field are applied to the device, a "forming" process enhances transport through the oxide in the vicinity of the edges of the gate electrode, but the oxide still retains its integrity as a tunnel barrier. The device operation is relatively stable to stresses of greater than 107 C/cm2 areally averaged, time-integrated charge injection. Duplication and characterization of these modified oxide tunneling properties was attempted using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) to stress and probe the oxide. Electrical stressing with the STM tip creates regions of reduced conductivity, possibly resulting from trapped charge in the oxide. Lateral variations in the conductivity of the unstressed oxide over regions roughly 20–50 nm across were also found
Evidence that widespread star formation may be underway in G0.253+016, "The Brick"
Image cubes of differential column density as a function of dust temperature
are constructed for Galactic Centre molecular cloud G0.253+0.016 ("The Brick")
using the recently described PPMAP procedure. The input data consist of
continuum images from the Herschel Space Telescope in the wavelength range
70-500 m, supplemented by previously published interferometric data at 1.3
mm wavelength. While the bulk of the dust in the molecular cloud is consistent
with being heated externally by the local interstellar radiation field, our
image cube shows the presence, near one edge of the cloud, of a filamentary
structure whose temperature profile suggests internal heating. The structure
appears as a cool ( K) tadpole-like feature, pc in length, in
which is embedded a thin spine of much hotter ( 40-50 K) material. We
interpret these findings in terms of a cool filament whose hot central region
is undergoing gravitational collapse and fragmentation to form a line of
protostars. If confirmed, this would represent the first evidence of widespread
star formation having started within this cloud.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
The Axiverse Extended: Vacuum Destabilisation, Early Dark Energy and Cosmological Collapse
A model is presented in the philosophy of the "String Axiverse" of Arvanitaki
et al (arXiv:0905.4720v2 [hep-th]) that incorporates a coupling of ultralight
axions to their corresponding moduli through the mass term. The light fields
roll in their potentials at late times and contribute to the dark sector energy
densities in the cosmological expansion. The addition of a coupling and extra
field greatly enrich the possible phenomenology of the axiverse. There are a
number of interesting phases where the axion and modulus components behave as
Dark Matter or Dark Energy and can have considerable and distinct effects on
the expansion history of the universe by modifying the equation of state in the
past or causing possible future collapse of the universe. In future such a
coupling may help to alleviate fine tuning problems for cosmological axions. We
motivate and present the model, and briefly explore its cosmological
consequences numerically.Comment: 13 pages, 17 figures, published in PRD. v3: corrected SUSY
interpretation of axion potential scal
Close Binary White Dwarf Systems: Numerous New Detections and Their Interpretation
We describe radial velocity observations of a large sample of apparently
single white dwarfs (WDs), obtained in a long-term effort to discover close,
double-degenerate (DD) pairs which might comprise viable Type Ia Supernova (SN
Ia) progenitors. We augment the WD sample with a previously observed sample of
apparently single subdwarf B (sdB) stars, which are believed to evolve directly
to the WD cooling sequence after the cessation of core helium burning. We have
identified 18 new radial velocity variables, including five confirmed sdB+WD
short-period pairs. Our observations are in general agreement with the
predictions of the theory of binary star evolution. We describe a numerical
method to evaluate the detection efficiency of the survey and estimate the
number of binary systems not detected due to the effects of varying orbital
inclination, orbital phase at the epoch of the first observation, and the
actual temporal sampling of each object in the sample. Follow-up observations
are in progress to solve for the orbital parameters of the candidate velocity
variables.Comment: 30 pages (LaTeX) + 6 figures (Postscript), aaspp4 styl
A J-band detection of the donor star in the dwarf nova OY Carinae, and an optical detection of its `iron curtain'
Purely photometric models can be used to determine the binary parameters of
eclipsing cataclysmic variables with a high degree of precision. However, the
photometric method relies on a number of assumptions, and to date there have
been very few independent checks of this method in the literature. We present
time-resolved spectroscopy of the P=90.9 min eclipsing cataclysmic variable OY
Carinae obtained with X-shooter on the VLT, in which we detect the donor star
from K I lines in the J-band. We measure the radial velocity amplitude of the
donor star K2 = 470.0 +/- 2.7 km/s, consistent with predictions based upon the
photometric method (470 +/- 7 km/s). Additionally, the spectra obtained in the
UVB arm of X-shooter show a series of Fe I and Fe II lines with a phase and
velocity consistent with an origin in the accretion disc. This is the first
unambiguous detection at optical wavelengths of the `iron curtain' of disc
material which has been previously reported to veil the white dwarf in this
system. The velocities of these lines do not track the white dwarf, reflecting
a distortion of the outer disc that we see also in Doppler images. This is
evidence for considerable radial motion in the outer disk, at up to 90 km/s
towards and away from the white dwarf.Comment: MNRAS accepted. 11 pages with 10 figures and 2 table
Ultrafast harmonic mode-locking of monolithic compound-cavity laser diodes incorporating photonic-bandgap reflectors
We present the first demonstration of reproducible harmonic mode-locked operation from a novel design of monolithic semiconductor laser comprising a compound cavity formed by a 1-D photonic-bandgap (PBG) mirror. Mode-locking (ML) is achieved at a harmonic of the fundamental round-trip frequency with pulse repetition rates from 131 GHz up to a record high frequency of 2.1 THz. The devices are fabricated from GaAs-Al-GaAs material emitting at a wavelength of 860 nm and incorporate two gain sections with an etched PBG reflector between them, and a saturable absorber section. Autocorrelation studies are reported which allow the device behavior for different ML frequencies, compound cavity ratios, and type and number of intra-cavity reflectors to be analyzed. The highly reflective PBG microstructures are shown to be essential for subharmonic-free ML operation of the high-frequency devices. We have also demonstrated that the single PBG reflector can be replaced by two separate features with lower optical loss. These lasers may find applications in terahertz; imaging, medicine, ultrafast optical links, and atmospheric sensing
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