617 research outputs found
¿Puede considerarse diferente la calidad de la proteína y grasa de la leche de Cabra y vaca?
Peer reviewe
Possible ring material around centaur (2060) Chiron
We propose that several short duration events observed in past stellar
occultations by Chiron were produced by rings material. From a reanalysis of
the stellar occultation data in the literature we determined two possible
orientations of the pole of Chiron's rings, with ecliptic coordinates
l=(352+/-10) deg, b=(37+/-10) deg or l=(144+/-10) deg, b=(24+/-10) deg . The
mean radius of the rings is (324 +/- 10) km. One can use the rotational
lightcurve amplitude of Chiron at different epochs to distinguish between the
two solutions for the pole. Both imply lower lightcurve amplitude in 2013 than
in 1988, when the rotational lightcurve was first determined. We derived
Chiron's rotational lightcurve in 2013 from observations at the 1.23-m CAHA
telescope and indeed its amplitude is smaller than in 1988. We also present a
rotational lightcurve in 2000 from images taken at CASLEO 2.15-m telescope that
is consistent with our predictions. Out of the two poles the l=(144+/-10) deg,
b=(24+/-10) deg solution provides a better match to a compilation of rotational
lightcurve amplitudes from the literature and those presented here. We also
show that using this preferred pole, Chiron's long term brightness variations
are compatible with a simple model that incorporates the changing brightness of
the rings as the tilt angle with respect to the Earth changes with time. Also,
the variability of the water ice band in Chiron's spectra in the literature can
be explained to a large degree by an icy ring system whose tilt angle changes
with time and whose composition includes water ice, analogously to the case of
Chariklo. We present several possible formation scenarios for the rings from
qualitative points of view and speculate on the reasons why rings might be
common in centaurs. We speculate on whether the known bimodal color
distribution of centaurs could be due to presence of rings and lack of them
Probing H2 autoionizing states with femto and attosecond laser pulses.
ABSTRACT: We show the relevance that molecular autoionizing states display in some recent experiments related to the symmetry-breaking in molecular-frame photoelectron angular distributions in H2 when exposed to intense xuv femtosecond laser pulses, and others related to the electron (proton) localization when subject to attosecond pump-probe laser schemes. Our theoretical method solves the time-dependent Schr¨odinger equation with an spectral method that expands the wave function in terms of H2 correlated stationary vibronic states including all electronic and vibrational degrees of motion. Time-resolved asymmetric electron angular distributions are
obtained at specific proton kinetic energies due to the delayed autoionization from H2 doubly excited states, which induces interferences between gerade (1s(sigma)g) and ungerade (2p(sigma)u) ionization channels. We also study photoionization of H2 exposed to a xuv attosecond pump pulse plus a time-delayed IR femtosecond probe pulse. Fast alternating asymmetries in the proton ejection (electron localization) are obtained as a function of the time delay between the pump and the probe pulses. Finally, we deal with the process of (xuv) two-photon double ionization of H2 under the assumption of having both sequential and non-sequential absorption processes
Design of an electronic voting system using A blockchain network
Design of a scalable electronic voting system, which, based on a
generic model designed for this application called voting cell, guarantees the
integrity of the information through the use of a private network Blockchain.
For the validation of the system, the implementation of a cell was carried out,
for which fifty voters and three voting options were enabled. The stored data
was intentionally modified to corroborate the error correction method used by
the block chain networks and thus ensure the integrity of the voting system
results
HST PanCET program: A Cloudy Atmosphere for the promising JWST target WASP-101b
We present results from the first observations of the Hubble Space Telescope
(HST) Panchromatic Comparative Exoplanet Treasury (PanCET) program for
WASP-101b, a highly inflated hot Jupiter and one of the community targets
proposed for the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Early Release Science (ERS)
program. From a single HST Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) observation, we find that
the near-infrared transmission spectrum of WASP-101b contains no significant
HO absorption features and we rule out a clear atmosphere at 13{\sigma}.
Therefore, WASP-101b is not an optimum target for a JWST ERS program aimed at
observing strong molecular transmission features. We compare WASP-101b to the
well studied and nearly identical hot Jupiter WASP-31b. These twin planets show
similar temperature-pressure profiles and atmospheric features in the
near-infrared. We suggest exoplanets in the same parameter space as WASP-101b
and WASP-31b will also exhibit cloudy transmission spectral features. For
future HST exoplanet studies, our analysis also suggests that a lower count
limit needs to be exceeded per pixel on the detector in order to avoid unwanted
instrumental systematics.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, Accepted to ApJ
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