8,021 research outputs found
Reduced Coulomb interaction in organic solar cells by the introduction of inorganic high-k nanostructured materials
In this article a concept is introduced, which allows for reduced Coulomb
interaction in organic solar cells and as such for enhanced power conversion
efficiencies. The concept is based on the introduction of electrically
insulating, nanostructured high-k materials into the organic matrix, which do
not contribute to the charge transport, however, effectively enhance the
permittivity of the organic active layer and thereby reduce the Coulomb
interaction. Using an analytical model it is demonstrated that even at a
distance of 20 nm to the organic / inorganic interface of the nanostructure,
the Coulomb interaction can be reduced by more than 15 %. The concept is
implemented using P3HT:PCBM solar cells with integrated high-k nanoparticles
(strontium titanate). It could be demonstrated that in comparison to a
reference cell without integrated nanoparticles, the power conversion
efficiencies could be improved by ~20 %.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Redshifts and Luminosities for 112 Gamma Ray Bursts
Two different luminosity indicators have recently been proposed for Gamma Ray
Bursts that use gamma-ray observations alone. They relate the burst luminosity
(L) with the time lag between peaks in hard and soft energies, and the
spikiness or variability of the burst's light curve (V). These relations are
currently justified and calibrated with only 6 or 7 bursts with known red
shifts. We have examined BATSE data for the lag and V for 112 bursts. (1) A
strong correlation between the lag and V exists, and it is exactly as predicted
from the two proposed relations. This is proof that both luminosity indicators
are reliable. (2) GRB830801 is the all-time brightest burst, yet with a small V
and a large lag, and hence is likely the closest known event being perhaps as
close as 3.2 Mpc. (3) We have combined the luminosities as derived from both
indicators as a means to improve the statistical and systematic accuracy when
compared with the accuracy from either method alone. The result is a list of
112 bursts with good luminosities and hence red shifts. (4) The burst averaged
hardness ratio rises strongly with the luminosity of the burst. (5) The burst
luminosity function is a broken power law, with the break at L = 2x10^{52}
erg/s. The luminosity function has power law indices of -2.8+-0.2 above the
break and -1.7+-0.1 below the break. (6) The number density of GRBs varies with
red shift roughly as (1+z)^(2.5+-0.3) between 0.2<z<5. Excitingly, this result
also provides a measure of the star formation rate out to z~5 with no effects
from reddening, and the rate is rising uniformly for red shifts above 2.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, submitted to ApJLet
A Statistical Treatment of the Gamma-Ray Burst "No Host Galaxy" Problem: II. Energies of Standard Candle Bursts
With the discovery that the afterglows after some bursts are coincident with
faint galaxies, the search for host galaxies is no longer a test of whether
bursts are cosmological, but rather a test of particular cosmological models.
The methodology we developed to investigate the original "no host galaxy"
problem is equally valid for testing different cosmological models, and is
applicable to the galaxies coincident with optical transients. We apply this
methodology to a family of models where we vary the total energy of standard
candle bursts. We find that total isotropic energies of E<2e52~erg are ruled
out while log(E)~53 erg is favored.Comment: To appear in Ap.J., 514, 15 pages + 7 figures, AASTeX 4.0. Revisions
are: additional author, updated data, and minor textual change
Assessing the Value of Coordinated Sire Genetics in a Synchronized AI Program
Synchronized artificial insemination was used to inseminate cows using different types of sire genetics, including low-accuracy, calving-ease, and high-accuracy. These three calf sire groups were compared to calves born to cows bred using natural service. We found substantial production efficiency grains, carcass merit improvement, and economic value to calves born to cows following a synchronized artificial insemination program with high-accuracy semen included. The economic advantage to the high-accuracy calf sire group was computed to be in the neighborhood of 80/head, relative to the natural service calf sire group.artificial insemination, beef, cow, carcass, feed-out, genetics, pre-conditioning, sire synchronization., Agricultural Finance,
The Youthful Appearance of the 2003 EL61 Collisional Family
We present new solar phase curve observations of the 2003 EL61 collisional
family showing that all the members have light-scattering properties similar to
the bright icy satellites and dwarf planets. Compared to other Kuiper Belt
objects, the five family members we observe (2003 EL61, 2002 TX300, 2003 OP32,
2005 RR43, and 1995 SM55) have conspicuously neutral color (V-I = 0.6-0.8 mag)
and flat phase curves at small phase angles (phase coefficients of 0.0 - 0.1
mag deg-1). Comparing the phase curves we observe for other icy Kuiper Belt
objects to the phase curves of icy satellites, we find that the flat phase
curves of the 2003 EL61 family are an indication they have high albedo surfaces
coated with fresh ice in the last ~100 Myr. We examine possible resurfacing
processes and find none that are plausible. To avoid the influence of cosmic
radiation that darkens and reddens most icy surfaces on times scales > ~100
Myr, the family members must be unusually depleted in carbon, or else the
collision that created the family occurred so recently that the parent body and
fragments have not had time to darken. We also find a rotation period of 4.845
(+/- 0.003) h with amplitude 0.26 (+/- 0.04) mags for 2003 OP32.Comment: 12 pages, 3 tables, 4 figure
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