477 research outputs found
Dynamic ordering of driven vortex matter in the peak effect regime of amorphous MoGe films and 2H-NbSe2 crystals
Dynamic ordering of driven vortex matter has been investigated in the peak
effect regime of both amorphous MoGe films and 2H-NbSe2 crystals by mode
locking (ML) and dc transport measurements. ML features allow us to trace how
the shear rigidity of driven vortices evolves with the average velocity.
Determining the onset of ML resonance in different magnetic fields and/or
temperatures, we find that the dynamic ordering frequency (velocity) exhibits a
striking divergence in the higher part of the peak effect regime.
Interestingly, this phenomenon is accompanied by a pronounced peak of dynamic
critical current. Mapping out field-temperature phase diagrams, we find that
divergent points follow well the thermodynamic melting curve of the ideal
vortex lattice over wide field and/or temperature ranges. These findings
provide a link between the dynamic and static melting phenomena which can be
distinguished from the disorder induced peak effect.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Multiwavelength study of the high-latitude cloud L1642: chain of star formation
L1642 is one of the two high galactic latitude (|b| > 30deg) clouds confirmed
to have active star formation. We examine the properties of this cloud,
especially the large-scale structure, dust properties, and compact sources in
different stages of star formation. We present high-resolution far-infrared and
submm observations with the Herschel and AKARI satellites and mm observations
with the AzTEC/ASTE telescope, which we combined with archive data from near-
and mid-infrared (2MASS, WISE) to mm observations (Planck). The Herschel
observations, combined with other data, show a sequence of objects from a cold
clump to young stellar objects at different evolutionary stages. Source B-3
(2MASS J04351455-1414468) appears to be a YSO forming inside the L1642 cloud,
instead of a foreground brown dwarf, as previously classified. Herschel data
reveal striation in the diffuse dust emission around L1642. The western region
shows striation towards NE and has a steeper column density gradient on its
southern side. The densest central region has a bow-shock like structure
showing compression from the west and a filamentary tail extending towards
east. The differences suggest that these may be spatially distinct structures,
aligned only in projection. We derive values of the dust emission cross-section
per H nucleon for different regions of the cloud. Modified black-body fits to
the spectral energy distribution of Herschel and Planck data give emissivity
spectral index beta values 1.8-2.0 for the different regions. The compact
sources have lower beta values and show an anticorrelation between T and beta.
Markov chain Monte Carlo calculations demonstrate the strong anticorrelation
between beta and T errors and the importance of mm Planck data in constraining
the estimates. L1642 reveals a more complex structure and sequence of star
formation than previously known.Comment: 22 pages, 18 figures, accepted to Astronomy & Astrophysics; abstract
shortened and figures reduced for astrop
AKARI-CAS --- Online Service for AKARI All-Sky Catalogues
The AKARI All-Sky Catalogues are an important infrared astronomical database
for next-generation astronomy that take over the IRAS catalog. We have
developed an online service, AKARI Catalogue Archive Server (AKARI-CAS), for
astronomers. The service includes useful and attractive search tools and visual
tools.
One of the new features of AKARI-CAS is cached SIMBAD/NED entries, which can
match AKARI catalogs with other catalogs stored in SIMBAD or NED. To allow
advanced queries to the databases, direct input of SQL is also supported. In
those queries, fast dynamic cross-identification between registered catalogs is
a remarkable feature. In addition, multiwavelength quick-look images are
displayed in the visualization tools, which will increase the value of the
service.
In the construction of our service, we considered a wide variety of
astronomers' requirements. As a result of our discussion, we concluded that
supporting users' SQL submissions is the best solution for the requirements.
Therefore, we implemented an RDBMS layer so that it covered important
facilities including the whole processing of tables. We found that PostgreSQL
is the best open-source RDBMS products for such purpose, and we wrote codes for
both simple and advanced searches into the SQL stored functions. To implement
such stored functions for fast radial search and cross-identification with
minimum cost, we applied a simple technique that is not based on dividing
celestial sphere such as HTM or HEALPix. In contrast, the Web application layer
became compact, and was written in simple procedural PHP codes. In total, our
system realizes cost-effective maintenance and enhancements.Comment: Yamauchi, C. et al. 2011, PASP..123..852
The AKARI/IRC Mid-Infrared All-Sky Survey
Context : AKARI is the first Japanese astronomical satellite dedicated to
infrar ed astronomy. One of the main purposes of AKARI is the all-sky survey
performed with six infrared bands between 9 and 200um during the period from
2006 May 6 to
2007 August 28. In this paper, we present the mid-infrared part (9um and 18um
b ands) of the survey carried out with one of the on-board instruments, the
Infrar ed Camera (IRC). Aims : We present unprecedented observational results
of the 9 and 18um AKARI al l-sky survey and detail the operation and data
processing leading to the point s ource detection and measurements. Methods :
The raw data are processed to produce small images for every scan and point
sources candidates, above the 5-sigma noise level per single scan, are der
ived. The celestial coordinates and fluxes of the events are determined
statisti cally and the reliability of their detections is secured through
multiple detect ions of the same source within milli-seconds, hours, and months
from each other. Results : The sky coverage is more than 90% for both bands. A
total of 877,091 s ources (851,189 for 9um, 195,893 for 18um) are confirmed and
included in the cur rent release of the point source catalogue. The detection
limit for point source s is 50mJy and 90mJy for the 9um and 18um bands,
respectively. The position accu racy is estimated to be better than 2".
Uncertainties in the in-flight absolute flux calibration are estimated to be 3%
for the 9um band and 4% for the 18um ban d. The coordinates and fluxes of
detected sources in this survey are also compar ed with those of the IRAS
survey and found to be statistically consistent.Comment: Accepted for publication in AandA AKARI special issu
Nobeyama Cygnus-X Survey: Physical Properties of CO clumps in DR-6(W), DR-9 and DR-13S regions
Cygnus-X is considered a region of interest for high-energy astrophysics,
since the Cygnus OB2 association has been confirmed as a PeVatron in the Cygnus
cocoon. In this research note, we present new high-resolution (16'')
CO(J=10) and CO (J=10) observations
obtained with the Nobeyama 45-m radiotelescope, to complement the Nobeyama
Cygnus-X Survey. We discovered 19 new CO clumps associated with the
star-forming regions DR-6W, DR-9, and DR13S. We present the physical parameters
of these clumps, which are consistent with the neighboring covered regions. We
confirm the clumpy nature of these regions and of a filament located between
DR6 and DR6W. These results strongly suggest that star formation occurs in
these regions with clumps of sizes 10 pc, masses 10
M, and H densities of 10 cm.Comment: 8 pages, 3 Figures, 1 Table. https://pos.sissa.it/444/631/pd
Observation of thundercloud-related gamma rays and neutrons in Tibet
During the 2010 rainy season in Yangbajing (4300 m above sea level) in Tibet, China, a long-duration count enhancement associated with thunderclouds was detected by a solar-neutron telescope and neutron monitors installed at the Yangbajing Comic Ray Observatory. The event, lasting for âŒ40ââmin, was observed on July 22, 2010. The solar-neutron telescope detected significant Îł-ray signals with energies >40ââMeV in the event. Such a prolonged high-energy event has never been observed in association with thunderclouds, clearly suggesting that electron acceleration lasts for 40 min in thunderclouds. In addition, Monte Carlo simulations showed that >10ââMeV Îł rays largely contribute to the neutron monitor signals, while >1ââkeV neutrons produced via a photonuclear reaction contribute relatively less to the signals. This result suggests that enhancements of neutron monitors during thunderstorms are not necessarily clear evidence for neutron production, as previously thought
Muon-Spin Rotation Measurements of the Magnetic Field Dependence of the Vortex-Core Radius and Magnetic Penetration Depth in NbSe2
Muon-spin rotation spectroscopy has been used to measure the internal
magnetic field distribution in NbSe2 for Hc1 << H < 0.25 Hc2. The deduced
profiles of the supercurrent density indicate that the vortex-core radius in
the bulk decreases sharply with increasing magnetic field. This effect, which
is attributed to increased vortex-vortex interactions, does not agree with the
dirty-limit microscopic theory. A simple phenomenological equation in which the
core radius depends on the intervortex spacing is used to model this behaviour.
In addition, we find for the first time that the in-plane magnetic penetration
depth increases linearly with H in the vortex state of a conventional
superconductor.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, 4 encapsulated postscript figures, (to appear in
Phys. Rev. Lett. 25Aug97 issue
Search for astro-gravity correlations
A new approach in the gravitational wave experiment is considered. In
addition to the old method of searching for coincident reactions of two
separated gravitational antennae it was proposed to seek perturbations of the
gravitational detector noise background correlated with astrophysical events
such as neutrino and gamma ray bursts which can be relaibly registered by
correspondent sensors. A general algorithm for this approach is developed. Its
efficiency is demonstrated in reanalysis of the old data concerning the
phenomenon of neutrino-gravity correlation registered during of SN1987A
explosion.Comment: 29 pages (LaTeX), 4 figures (EPS
Limits on \boldmath n {\bar n} oscillations from nuclear stability
The relationship between the lower limit on the nuclear stability lifetime as
derived from the non disappearance of `stable` nuclei
( yr), and the lower limit thus implied on
the oscillation time of a possibly underlying
neutron-antineutron oscillation process, is clarified by studying the time
evolution of the nuclear decay within a simple model which respects unitarity.
The order-of-magnitude result sec, where is a typical
nuclear annihilation width, agrees as expected with the limit on established by several detailed nuclear physics calculations, but sharply
disagreeing by 15 orders of magnitude with a claim published recently in Phys.
Rev. CRAP.Comment: 8 pages; this PRC version (accepted for publication, November 4 1999)
differs from the original version only by a few minor editorial change
Search for Anisotropy of Ultra-High Energy Cosmic Rays with the Telescope Array Experiment
We study the anisotropy of Ultra-High Energy Cosmic Ray (UHECR) events
collected by the Telescope Array (TA) detector in the first 40 months of
operation. Following earlier studies, we examine event sets with energy
thresholds of 10 EeV, 40 EeV, and 57 EeV. We find that the distributions of the
events in right ascension and declination are compatible with an isotropic
distribution in all three sets. We then compare with previously reported
clustering of the UHECR events at small angular scales. No significant
clustering is found in the TA data. We then check the events with E>57 EeV for
correlations with nearby active galactic nuclei. No significant correlation is
found. Finally, we examine all three sets for correlations with the large-scale
structure of the Universe. We find that the two higher-energy sets are
compatible with both an isotropic distribution and the hypothesis that UHECR
sources follow the matter distribution of the Universe (the LSS hypothesis),
while the event set with E>10 EeV is compatible with isotropy and is not
compatible with the LSS hypothesis at 95% CL unless large deflection angles are
also assumed. We show that accounting for UHECR deflections in a realistic
model of the Galactic magnetic field can make this set compatible with the LSS
hypothesis.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
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