14,926 research outputs found
Plume radiation program
Computer program determines the radiant flux to the base region of a real gas system with an axisymmetric geometry and any axisymmetric property distribution
SPECIES I: Spectroscopic Parameters and atmosphEric ChemIstriEs of Stars
The detection and subsequent characterisation of exoplanets are intimately
linked to the characteristics of their host star. Therefore, it is necessary to
study the star in detail in order to understand the formation history and
characteristics of their companion(s). Our aims were to develop a community
tool that allows the automated calculation of stellar parameters for a large
number of stars, using high resolution echelle spectra and minimal photometric
magnitudes, and introduce the first results in this work. We measured the
equivalent widths of several iron lines and used them to solve the radiative
transfer equation assuming local thermodynamic equilibrium to obtain the
atmospheric parameters (, [Fe/H], logg and ). We used
these values to derive the abundance of 11 chemical elements in the stellar
photosphere (Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Ti, Cr, Mn, Ni, Cu and Zn). Rotation and
macroturbulent velocity were obtained using temperature calibrators and
synthetic line profiles to match the observed spectra of five absorption lines.
Finally, by interpolating in a grid of MIST isochrones, we derived the mass,
radius and age using a Bayesian approach. SPECIES obtains bulk parameters that
are in good agreement with measured values from different existing catalogues,
including when different methods are used to derive them. We find excellent
agreement with previous works that used similar methodologies. We find
discrepancies in the chemical abundances for some elements with respect to
other works, which could be produced by differences in , or in
the line list or the atomic line data used to derive them. We also obtained
analytic relations to describe the correlations between different parameters,
and we implemented new methods to better handle these correlations, which
provides a better description of the uncertainties associated with the
measurements.Comment: 28 pages, 26 figures, resubmitted to A&
Comment on "Lattice Gluon and Ghost Propagators, and the Strong Coupling in Pure Yang-Mills Theory: Finite Lattice Spacing and Volume Effects"
The authors of ref. Phys.Rev. D94 (2016) no.1, 014502 reported about a
careful analysis of the impact of lattice artifacts on the gauge-field
propagators. In particular, they found that the low-momentum behavior of the
renormalized propagators depends on the lattice bare coupling and interpreted
this fact as the result of it being affected by finite lattice spacing
artifacts. We do not share this interpretation and present here a different and
more suitable explanation for these results
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Two-fluid temperature-dependent relativistic waves in magnetized streaming pair plasmas
A relativistic two-fluid temperature-dependent approach for a streaming magnetized pair plasma is considered. Such a scenario corresponds to secondary plasmas created at the polar caps of pulsar magnetospheres. In the model the generalized vorticity rather than the magnetic field is frozen into the fluid. For parallel propagation four transverse modes are found. Two are electromagnetic plasma modes which at high temperature become light waves. The remaining two are Alfveacutenic modes split into a fast and slow mode. The slow mode is cyclotron two-stream unstable at large wavelengths and is always subluminous. We find that the instability cannot be suppressed by temperature effects in the limit of large (finite) magnetic field. The fast Alfveacuten mode can be superluminous only at large wavelengths, however it is always subluminous at high temperatures. In this incompressible approximation only the ordinary mode is present for perpendicular propagation. For oblique propagation the dispersion relation is studied for finite and large strong magnetic fields and the results are qualitatively described.Institute for Fusion Studie
A theoretical structure-affinity relationship study of some cannabinoid derivatives
Indexación: ScieloA ZINDO/1 quantum-chemical structure-affinity relationship study with the KPG model is presented for the in vitro interaction of a group of classical, indole-derived and aminoalkylindole-derived cannabinoids with CB and CB2 receptors. From this work the following conclusions are obtained. CB and CB2 CB2 receptor affinities are regulated by different mechanisms involving orbital and charge control. Nevertheless CB and CB2 classical ligands share three common features: a hydrogen bond to a lysine (for CB ) or serine (for CB), a fully aromatic ring and a branched carbon side chain. In the case of indole-derived and aminoalkylindole-derived cannabinoids orientation and alignment rules have been defined as a basis for the comparison of noncongeneric molecules. In this way it was possible to associate the location of molecular fragments of these systems with known molecular systems such as classical cannabinoids. For aminoalkyhndoles we have proposed the locus with which they bind to a second receptor site that is available to WIN-55212-2 but not to classical cannabinoids. On the basis of our results we propose a new molecule that should help to discriminate between the above two receptor sites.http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-97072008000100013&nrm=is
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