10,359 research outputs found
Alfv\'en wave-driven wind from RGB and AGB stars
We develop a magnetohydrodynamical model of Alfv\'en wave-driven wind in open
magnetic flux tubes piercing the stellar surface of Red Giant Branch (RGB) and
Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) stars, and investigate the physical properties of
the winds. The model simulations are carried out along the evolutionary tracks
of stars with initial mass in the range of 1.5 to 3.0 and initial
metallicity =0.02. The surface magnetic field strength being set
to be 1G, we find that the wind during the evolution of star can be classified
into the following four types; the first is the wind with the velocity higher
than 80 km s in the RGB and early AGB (E-AGB) phases; the second is the
wind with outflow velocity less than 10 km s seen around the tip of RGB
or in the E-AGB phase; the third is the unstable wind in the E-AGB and
thermally pulsing AGB (TP-AGB) phases; the fourth is the stable massive and
slow wind with the mass-loss rate higher than 10 yr and
the outflow velocity lower than 20 km s in the TP-AGB phase. The
mass-loss rates in the first and second types of wind are two or three orders
of magnitude lower than the values evaluated by an empirical formula. The
presence of massive and slow wind of the fourth type suggests the possibility
that the massive outflow observed in TP-AGB stars could be attributed to the
Alfv\'en wave-driven wind.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
A Study Of Surface Dynamics Of Polymers. II. Investigation By Plasma Surface Implantation Of Fluorineâcontaining Moieties
Macromolecules at the surface of a polymeric solid have considerable mobility, and the specific arrangement of functional groups of macromolecules at the surface is dictated by the environmental conditions in which the surface is placed. Consequently, the change of environmental conditions, such as immersion in water or placement in a biological surrounding, could cause a considerable degree of change in the surface characteristics of a polymer from those evaluated in the laboratory against ambient air. The mobile nature of a polymer surface can be investigated by surfaceâimplanting fluorineâcontaining moieties, mainlyâCF3, by the plasma implantation technique and following the disappearance and reappearance of fluorine atoms on the surface. The disappearance rates (based on the immersion time in water at room temperature) of ESCA F1s signals, the decay rates of (advancing) contact angle of water, and the recovery of these values on heat treatment of waterâimmersed samples were measured as a function of crystallinity of polymer samples (at three levels of crystallinity) for poly (ethylene terephthalate) and nylon 6. Copyright © 1988 John Wiley & Sons, Inc
Large-scale distributions of mid- and far-infrared emission from the center to the halo of M82 revealed with AKARI
The edge-on starburst galaxy M82 exhibits complicated distributions of
gaseous materials in its halo, which include ionized superwinds driven by
nuclear starbursts, neutral materials entrained by the superwinds, and
large-scale neutral streamers probably caused by a past tidal interaction with
M81. We investigate detailed distributions of dust grains and polycyclic
aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) around M82 to understand their interplay with the
gaseous components. We performed mid- (MIR) and far-infrared (FIR) observations
of M82 with the Infrared Camera and Far-Infrared Surveyor on board AKARI. We
obtain new MIR and FIR images of M82, which reveal both faint extended emission
in the halo and very bright emission in the center with signal dynamic ranges
as large as five and three orders of magnitude for the MIR and FIR,
respectively. We detect MIR and FIR emission in the regions far away from the
disk of the galaxy, reflecting the presence of dust and PAHs in the halo of
M82. We find that the dust and PAHs are contained in both ionized and neutral
gas components, implying that they have been expelled into the halo of M82 by
both starbursts and galaxy interaction. In particular, we obtain a tight
correlation between the PAH and H emission, which provides evidence
that the PAHs are well mixed in the ionized superwind gas and outflowing from
the disk.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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