41,027 research outputs found
Integrated use of LANDSAT data for state resource management
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
The challenging scales of the bird: Shuttle tile structural integrity
The principal design issues, tests, and analyses required to solve the tile integrity problem on the space shuttle orbiters are addressed. Proof testing of installed tiles is discussed along with an airflow test of special tiles. Orbiter windshield tiles are considered in terms of changes necessary to ensure acceptable margins of safety for flight
Pressure and isotope effect on the anisotropy of MgB
We analyze the data for the pressure and boron isotope effect on the
temperature dependence of the magnetization near . Invoking the
universal scaling relation for the magnetization at fixed magnetic field it is
shown that the relative shift of , induced by pressure or boron isotope
exchange, mirrors essentially that of the anisotropy. This uncovers a novel
generic property of anisotropic type II superconductors, inexistent in the
isotropic case. For MgB it implies that the renormalization of the Fermi
surface topology due to pressure or isotope exchange is dominated by a
mechanism controlling the anisotropy.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
The X-ray Properties of the Most-Luminous Quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Utilizing 21 new Chandra observations as well as archival Chandra, ROSAT, and
XMM-Newton data, we study the X-ray properties of a representative sample of 59
of the most optically luminous quasars in the Universe (M_i~~-29.3 to -30.2)
spanning a redshift range of z~~1.5-4.5. Our full sample consists of 32 quasars
from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 3 (DR3) quasar catalog,
two additional objects in the DR3 area that were missed by the SDSS selection
criteria, and 25 comparably luminous quasars at z>~4. This is the largest X-ray
study of such luminous quasars to date. By jointly fitting the X-ray spectra of
our sample quasars, excluding radio-loud and broad absorption line (BAL)
objects, we find a mean X-ray power-law photon index of
Gamma=1.92^{+0.09}_{-0.08} and constrain any neutral intrinsic absorbing
material to have a mean column density of N_H<~2x10^{21} cm^{-2}. We find,
consistent with other studies, that Gamma does not change with redshift, and we
constrain the amount of allowed Gamma evolution for the most-luminous quasars.
Our sample, excluding radio-loud and BAL quasars, has a mean X-ray-to-optical
spectral slope of a_ox=-1.80+/-0.02, as well as no significant evolution of
a_ox with redshift. We also comment upon the X-ray properties of a number of
notable quasars, including an X-ray weak quasar with several strong narrow
absorption-line systems, a mildly radio-loud BAL quasar, and a well-studied
gravitationally lensed quasar.Comment: 18 pages (emulateapj), 11 figures. Accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journa
Hall effect in laser ablated Co_2(Mn,Fe)Si thin films
Pulsed laser deposition was employed to grow thin films of the Heusler
compounds Co_2MnSi and Co_2FeSi. Epitaxial growth was realized both directly on
MgO (100) and on a Cr or Fe buffer layer. Structural analysis by x-ray and
electron diffraction shows for both materials the ordered L2_1 structure. Bulk
magnetization was determined with a SQUID magnetometer. The values agree with
the Slater-Pauling rule for half-metallic Heusler compounds. On the films grown
directly on the substrate measurements of the Hall effect have been performed.
The normal Hall effect is nearly temperature independent and points towards a
compensated Fermi surface. The anomalous contribution is found to be dominated
by skew scattering. A remarkable sign change of both normal and anomalous Hall
coefficients is observed on changing the valence electron count from 29 (Mn) to
30 (Fe).Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures submitted to J Phys
Applications of the Gauss-Bonnet theorem to gravitational lensing
In this geometrical approach to gravitational lensing theory, we apply the
Gauss-Bonnet theorem to the optical metric of a lens, modelled as a static,
spherically symmetric, perfect non-relativistic fluid, in the weak deflection
limit. We find that the focusing of the light rays emerges here as a
topological effect, and we introduce a new method to calculate the deflection
angle from the Gaussian curvature of the optical metric. As examples, the
Schwarzschild lens, the Plummer sphere and the singular isothermal sphere are
discussed within this framework.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, IoP styl
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