5,898 research outputs found
Radiative Transfer Effects in He I Emission Lines
We consider the effect of optical depth of the 2 ^{3}S level on the nebular
recombination spectrum of He I for a spherically symmetric nebula with no
systematic velocity gradients. These calculations, using many improvements in
atomic data, can be used in place of the earlier calculations of Robbins. We
give representative Case B line fluxes for UV, optical, and IR emission lines
over a range of physical conditions: T=5000-20000 K, n_{e}=1-10^{8} cm^{-3},
and tau_{3889}=0-100. A FORTRAN program for calculating emissivities for all
lines arising from quantum levels with n < 11 is also available from the
authors.
We present a special set of fitting formulae for the physical conditions
relevant to low metallicity extragalactic H II regions: T=12,000-20,000 K,
n_{e}=1-300 cm^{-3}, and tau_{3889} < 2.0. For this range of physical
conditions, the Case B line fluxes of the bright optical lines 4471 A, 5876 A,
and 6678 A, are changed less than 1%, in agreement with previous studies.
However, the 7065 A corrections are much smaller than those calculated by
Izotov & Thuan based on the earlier calculations by Robbins. This means that
the 7065 A line is a better density diagnostic than previously thought. Two
corrections to the fitting functions calculated in our previous work are also
given.Comment: To be published in 10 April 2002 ApJ; relevant code available at
ftp://wisp.physics.wisc.edu/pub/benjamin/Heliu
Longitudinal spin-relaxation in nitrogen-vacancy centers in electron irradiated diamond
We present systematic measurements of longitudinal relaxation rates ()
of spin polarization in the ground state of the nitrogen-vacancy (NV) color
center in synthetic diamond as a function of NV concentration and magnetic
field . NV centers were created by irradiating a Type 1b single-crystal
diamond along the [100] axis with 200 keV electrons from a transmission
electron microscope with varying doses to achieve spots of different NV
center concentrations. Values of () were measured for each spot as a
function of .Comment: 4 pages, 8 figure
The Primordial Abundance of He4: An Update
We include new data in an updated analysis of helium in low metallicity
extragalactic HII regions with the goal of deriving the primordial abundance of
He4 (Y_P). We show that the new observations of Izotov et al (ITL) are
consistent with previous data. However they should not be taken in isolation to
determine (Y_P) due to the lack of sufficiently low metallicity points. We use
the extant data in a semi-empirical approach to bounding the size of possible
systematic uncertainties in the determination of (Y_P). Our best estimate for
the primordial abundance of He4 assuming a linear relation between He4 and O/H
is Y_P = 0.230 \pm 0.003 (stat) based on the subset of HII regions with the
lowest metallicity; for our full data set we find Y_P = 0.234 \pm 0.002 (stat).
Both values are entirely consistent with our previous results. We discuss the
implications of these values for standard big bang nucleosynthesis (SBBN),
particularly in the context of recent measurements of deuterium in high
redshift, low metallicity QSO absorption-line systems.Comment: 26 pages, latex, 6 ps figure
Theoretical He I Emissivities in the Case B Approximation
We calculate the He I case B recombination cascade spectrum using improved
radiative and collisional data. We present new emissivities over a range of
electron temperatures and densities. The differences between our results and
the current standard are large enough to have a significant effect not only on
the interpretation of observed spectra of a wide variety of objects but also on
determinations of the primordial helium abundance.Comment: Accepted to ApJ
The response of hot wires in high Reynolds-number turbulent pipe flow
Issues concerning the accuracy of hot-wire measurements in turbulent pipe flow are addressed for pipe Reynolds numbers up to 6 × 106 and hot-wire Reynolds numbers up to Rew ap 250. These include the optimization of spatial and temporal resolution and the associated feature of signal-to-noise ratio. Very high wire Reynolds numbers enable the use of wires with reduced length-to-diameter ratios compared to those typical of atmospheric conditions owing to increased wire Nusselt numbers. Simulation of the steady-state heat balance for the wire and the unetched portion of wire are used to assess static end-conduction effects: they are used to calculate wire Biot numbers, \sqrt{c_0}l , and fractional end-conduction losses, σ, which confirm the 'conduction-only' theory described by Corrsin. They show that, at Rew ap 250, the wire length-to-diameter ratio can be reduced to about 50, while keeping \sqrt{c_0}l\gt3 and σ < 7% in common with accepted limits at Rew ap 3. It is shown that these limits depend additionally on the choice of wire material and the length of unetched wire. The dynamic effects of end-cooling are also assessed using the conduction-only theory
Open Corpus Adaptation++ in GALE : friend or foe?
"Open" has quickly become the hottest topic in any field related to information, including open government data, open learning resources, open user models, … Open Corpus Adaptation has been defined as the ability to perform adaptation to resources located anywhere on the Web. This leaves the definition of and control over the adaptation in a central place. GALE adds the ability to have the adaptation (definition) distributed over the Web. In this paper we describe how GALE achieves this functionality and we raise the question whether this is actually a desired feature or potentially a dangerous addition with unintended consequences
The Development of an IT Governance Maturity Model for Hard and Soft Governance
To be able to advance in maturity, organizations should pay attention to both the hard and soft aspects of governance. Current literature on IT governance (ITG) is mostly directed at the hard part of governance, focusing on structures and processes. The soft part of governance is related to social aspects like human behavior and organizational culture. This part of governance receives much less attention in the literature. The goal of the study is to design a model which covers hard and soft governance and can be used as a basis for a maturity model (MM). We adopted a research method based on a combination of design science and a Delphi study using the Spilter Group Decision Support System. In this paper we build upon a systematic literature study we conducted. In this study we did not find a MM for ITG that covers the hard and soft part of governance. We thus designed
a new maturity ITG (MIG) model using knowledge from literature and experts. As the first step we designed an initial model using literature. This initial model was discussed and improved with experts from practice during a Delphi study with four rounds. The result was a MM with four domains and a context of the organization. The four domains are ‘Collaboration’, ‘Structure’, ‘Process’ and ‘Behavior’. Within each domain focus areas were defined based on knowledge from literature and experts. The focus areas ‘Culture’ and ‘Internal organization’ from the initial model were moved to the context component because they could be seen as value free. They belong in the situational part of the MM and not in the maturity grid. The contributions of this paper are twofold: n1) a description of the focus areas of the MIG model, i.e. an ITG MM which covers both hard and soft governance: this is of value because such a model for ITG does not exist and is needed in practice; 2) a description of the design process of the MM: this is of value because the procedures and methods that led to current MMs have only been documented very sketchily or implicitl
New limits on the population of normal and millisecond pulsars in the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds
We model the potentially observable populations of normal and millisecond
radio pulsars in the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds (LMC and SMC) where the
known population currently stands at 19 normal radio pulsars. Taking into
account the detection thresholds of previous surveys, and assuming optimal
period and luminosity distributions based on studies of Galactic pulsars, we
estimate there are (1.79 +/- 0.20) x 10^4 and (1.09 +/- 0.16) x 10^4 normal
pulsars in the LMC and SMC respectively. When we attempt to correct for beaming
effects, and the fraction of high-velocity pulsars which escape the clouds, we
estimate birth rates in both the LMC and SMC to be comparable and in the range
0.5--1 pulsar per century. Although higher than estimates for the rate of
core-collapse supernovae in the clouds, these pulsar birth rates are consistent
with historical supernova observations in the past 300 yr. A substantial
population of active radio pulsars (of order a few hundred thousand) have
escaped the LMC and SMC and populate the local intergalactic medium. For the
millisecond pulsar (MSP) population, the lack of any detections from current
surveys leads to respective upper limits (at the 95% confidence level) of
15,000 for the LMC and 23,000 for the SMC. Several MSPs could be detected by a
currently ongoing survey of the SMC with improved time and frequency resolution
using the Parkes multibeam system. Giant-pulse emitting neutron stars could
also be seen by this survey.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
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