16,781 research outputs found
Hypervelocity impact microfoil perforations in the LEO space environment (LDEF, MAP AO-023 experiment)
The Microabrasion Foil Experiment comprises arrays of frames, each supporting two layers of closely spaced metallic foils and a back-stop plate. The arrays, deploying aluminum and brass foil ranging from 1.5 to some 30 microns were exposed for 5.78 years on NASA's LDEF at a mean altitude of 458 km. They were deployed on the North, South, East, West, and Space pointing faces; results presented comprise the perforation rates for each location as a function of foil thickness. Initial results refer primarily to aluminum of 5 microns thickness or greater. This penetration distribution, comprising 2,342 perforations in total, shows significantly differing characteristics for each detector face. The anisotropy confirms, incorporating the dynamics of particulate orbital mechanics, the dominance of incorporating extraterrestrial particulates penetrating thicknesses greater than 20 microns in Al foil, yielding fluxes compatible with hyperbolic geocentric velocities. For thinner foils, a disproportionate increase in flux of particles on the East, North, and South faces shows the presence of orbital particulates which exceed the extraterrestrial component perforation rate at 5 micron foil thickness by a factor of approx. 4
Recurrence rates for SIDS - the importance of risk stratification
Objective:
To investigate the importance of stratification by risk factors in computing the probability of a second SIDS in a family.
Design: Simulation Study
Background:
The fact that a baby dies suddenly and unexpectedly means that there is a raised probability that the baby’s family have risk factors associated with Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). Thus one cannot consider the risk of a subsequent death to be that of the general population. The Confidential Enquiry into Stillbirths and Deaths in Infancy (CESDI)6 identified three major social risk factors: smoking, age1, and unemployed/unwaged as major risk factors. It gave estimates of risk for families with different numbers of these risk factors. We investigate whether it is reasonable to assume that, conditional on these risk factors, the risk of a second event is independent of the risk of the first and as a consequence one can square the risks to get the risk of two SIDS in a family. We have used CESDI data to estimate the probability of a second SID in a family under different plausible scenarios of the prevalence of the risk factors. We have applied the model to make predictions in the Care of Next Infant (CONI) study7.
Results:
The model gave plausible predictions. The CONI study observed 18 second SIDS. Our model predicted 14 (95% prediction interval 7 to 21).
Conclusion:
When considering the risk of a subsequent SIDS in a family one should always take into account the known risk factors. If all risks have been identified, then conditional on these risks, the risk of two events is the product of the individual risks However for a given family we cannot quantify the magnitude of the increased risk because of other possible risk factors not accounted for in the model
Density distributions of superheavy nuclei
We employed the Skyrme-Hartree-Fock model to investigate the density
distributions and their dependence on nuclear shapes and isospins in the
superheavy mass region. Different Skyrme forces were used for the calculations
with a special comparison to the experimental data in Pb. The
ground-state deformations, nuclear radii, neutron skin thicknesses and
-decay energies were also calculated. Density distributions were
discussed with the calculations of single-particle wavefunctions and shell
fillings. Calculations show that deformations have considerable effects on the
density distributions, with a detailed discussion on the 120 nucleus.
Earlier predictions of remarkably low central density are not supported when
deformation is allowed for.Comment: 7 pages, 10 figure
Lingering grains of truth around comet 17P/Holmes
Comet 17P/Holmes underwent a massive outburst in 2007 Oct., brightening by a
factor of almost a million in under 48 hours. We used infrared images taken by
the Wide-Field Survey Explorer mission to characterize the comet as it appeared
at a heliocentric distance of 5.1 AU almost 3 years after the outburst. The
comet appeared to be active with a coma and dust trail along the orbital plane.
We constrained the diameter, albedo, and beaming parameter of the nucleus to
4.135 0.610 km, 0.03 0.01 and 1.03 0.21, respectively. The
properties of the nucleus are consistent with those of other Jupiter Family
comets. The best-fit temperature of the coma was 134 11 K, slightly
higher than the blackbody temperature at that heliocentric distance. Using
Finson-Probstein modeling we found that the morphology of the trail was
consistent with ejection during the 2007 outburst and was made up of dust
grains between 250 m and a few cm in radius. The trail mass was 1.2
- 5.3 10 kg.Comment: Accepted to ApJ. 2 tables, 4 figure
The unrestricted Skyrme-tensor time-dependent Hartree-Fock and its application to the nuclear response from spherical to triaxial nuclei
The nuclear time-dependent Hartree-Fock model formulated in the
three-dimensional space,based on the full Skyrme energy density functional and
complemented with the tensor force,is presented for the first time. Full
self-consistency is achieved by the model. The application to the isovector
giant dipole resonance is discussed in the linear limit, ranging from spherical
nuclei (16O, 120Sn) to systems displaying axial or triaxial deformation (24Mg,
28Si, 178Os, 190W, 238U).
Particular attention is paid to the spin-dependent terms from the central
sector of the functional, recently included together with the tensor. They turn
out to be capable of producing a qualitative change on the strength
distribution in this channel. The effect on the deformation properties is also
discussed. The quantitative effects on the linear response are small and,
overall, the giant dipole energy remains unaffected.
Calculations are compared to predictions from the (quasi)-particle random
phase approximation and experimental data where available, finding good
agreement
ULTRACAM photometry of the eclipsing cataclysmic variable OU Vir
We present high-speed, three-colour photometry of the faint eclipsing
cataclysmic variable OU Vir. For the first time in OU Vir, separate eclipses of
the white dwarf and bright spot have been observed. We use timings of these
eclipses to derive a purely photometric model of the system, obtaining a mass
ratio of q = 0.175 +/- 0.025, an inclination of i = 79.2 +/- 0.7 degrees and a
disc radius of Rd/a = 0.2315 +/- 0.0150. We separate the white dwarf eclipse
from the lightcurve and, by fitting a blackbody spectrum to its flux in each
passband, obtain a white dwarf temperature of T = 21700 +/- 1200 K and a
distance of D = 650 +/- 210 pc. Assuming that the primary obeys the Nauenberg
(1972) mass-radius relation for white dwarfs and allowing for temperature
effects, we also find a primary mass Mw/Msun = 0.90 +/- 0.19, primary radius
Rw/Rsun = 0.0097 +/- 0.0031 and orbital separation a/Rsun = 0.75 +/- 0.05.Comment: 8 pages LaTeX, 6 figures. Accepted by MNRAS; erratum added at end.
Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc. 347 (2004) 1173, erratum in pres
Asteroid family identification using the Hierarchical Clustering Method and WISE/NEOWISE physical properties
Using albedos from WISE/NEOWISE to separate distinct albedo groups within the
Main Belt asteroids, we apply the Hierarchical Clustering Method to these
subpopulations and identify dynamically associated clusters of asteroids. While
this survey is limited to the ~35% of known Main Belt asteroids that were
detected by NEOWISE, we present the families linked from these objects as
higher confidence associations than can be obtained from dynamical linking
alone. We find that over one-third of the observed population of the Main Belt
is represented in the high-confidence cores of dynamical families. The albedo
distribution of family members differs significantly from the albedo
distribution of background objects in the same region of the Main Belt, however
interpretation of this effect is complicated by the incomplete identification
of lower-confidence family members. In total we link 38,298 asteroids into 76
distinct families. This work represents a critical step necessary to debias the
albedo and size distributions of asteroids in the Main Belt and understand the
formation and history of small bodies in our Solar system.Comment: Accepted to ApJ. Full version of Table 3 to be published
electronically in Ap
Spin-Excitation Mechanisms in Skyrme-Force Time-Dependent Hartree-Fock
We investigate the role of odd-odd (with respect to time inversion) couplings
in the Skyrme force on collisions of light nuclei, employing a fully
three-dimensional numerical treatment without any symmetry restrictions and
with modern Skyrme functionals. We demonstrate the necessity of these couplings
to suppress spurious spin excitations owing to the spin-orbit force in free
translational motion of a nucleus but show that in a collision situation there
is a strong spin excitation even in spin-saturated systems which persists in
the departing fragments. The energy loss is considerably increased by the
odd-odd terms
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