243,803 research outputs found
Circuit switches latching relay in response to signals of different polarity
A circuit using one power supply and two storage capacitors, which may be separately discharged in opposite directions through a relay in response to change in polarity of a signal, is described
Polarity sensitive circuit Patent
Electric circuit for reversing direction of current flo
Efficacy of laser preionization with a semiconductor source and propene addition
It is established that propene is an effective additive instabilising uv preionised CO2 TEA laser discharges: its effect being particularly pronounced with semiconductor-edge preionised lasers where the preionisation levels are shown to be low
Temperature perturbation model of the opto-galvanic effect in CO2-laser discharges
A detailed discharge model of the opto-galvanic effect in molecular laser gas mixtures is developed based on the temperature perturbation or discharge cooling mechanism of Smith and Brooks (1979). Excellent agreement between the model and experimental results in CO2 laser gas mixtures is obtained. The model should be applicable to other molecular systems where the OGE is being used for laser stabilisation and as a spectroscopic tool
Intrinsic Differences in the Inner Jets of High- and Low-Optically Polarized Radio Quasars
A significant fraction of compact radio-loud quasars display most of the
characteristics of relativistically beamed, high-optical polarization blazars,
yet are weakly polarized in the optical regime. We have used the VLBA at 22 and
43 GHz to look for differences in the parsec-scale magnetic field structures of
18 high- and low-optically polarized, compact radio-loud quasars (HPQs and
LPRQs, respectively). We find a strong correlation between the polarization
level of the unresolved parsec-scale radio core at 43 GHz and overall optical
polarization of the source, which suggests a common (possibly co-spatial)
origin for the emission at these two wavelengths. The magnetic fields of the
polarized 43 GHz radio cores are aligned roughly transverse to the jet axis.
Similar orientations are seen in the optical, suggesting that the polarized
flux at both wavelengths is due to one or more strong transverse shocks located
very close to the base of the jet. In LPRQs, these shocks appear to be weak
near the core, and gradually increase in strength down the jet. The LPRQs in
our sample tend to have less luminous radio cores than the HPQs, and jet
components with magnetic fields predominantly parallel to the flow. The
components in HPQ jets, on the other hand, tend to have transverse alignments.
These differences cannot be accounted for by a simple model in which HPQs and
LPRQs are the same type of object, seen at different angles to the line of
sight. A more likely scenario is that LPRQs represent a quiescent phase of
blazar activity, in which the inner jet flow does not undergo strong shocks.Comment: 29 pages, includes 25 figures and 6 tables. Uses emulateapj5.sty.
Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. A version with better
quality figures (785Kb, gzipped) can be found at
http://sgra.jpl.nasa.gov/html_lister/LPQ
Dynamics and star formation activity of CG J1720-67.8 unveiled through integral field spectroscopy and radio observations
CG J1720-67.8 is an ultra compact group of several galaxies with a low
velocity dispersion, and displaying the hallmarks of mutual interaction and
possible tidal dwarf galaxy formation. In hierarchical models, the system is a
possible precursor to a massive elliptical galaxy. In this paper, we use new
optical integral field spectroscopic and radio observations to investigate the
evolutionary status of the group in more detail: global star-formation rates
are estimated using H and 1.4 GHz radio continuum measurements; H {\sc
i} observations provide an upper limit to the global neutral gas content;
optical broadband colours and spectra provide ages and stellar mass estimates
for the tidal dwarf candidates; the bidimensional H velocity field is
used to trace the kinematics of the group and its members, which are compared
with numerical simulations of galaxy encounters. The observations suggest a
model in which multiple interactions have occurred, with the latest strong
encounter involving at least two major components within the last 200 Myr.
Debris from the encounter fuels ongoing star formation at the global level of
M yr, with self-gravity within the tidal tail
possibly providing a mechanism to enhance the star formation rate of the tidal
dwarf candidates, with bursts of star-formation in clumps of mass M appearing within the last 10 Myr. The amount of time required
for final merging of all group components remains uncertain.Comment: 22 pages, 16 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
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