1,695 research outputs found
Nucleosynthesis in Type II Supernovae
Presupernova evolution and explosive nucleosynthesis in massive stars for
main-sequence masses from 13 to 70 are calculated. We
examine the dependence of the supernova yields on the stellar mass,
^{12}C(\alpha, \gamma) ^{16}O} rate, and explosion energy. The supernova
yields integrated over the initial mass function are compared with the solar
abundances.Comment: 1 Page Latex source, 10 PostScript figures, to appear in Nuclear
Physics A, Vol. A616 (1997
A New Contributor to Chemical Evolution in High-Redshift Galaxies
The recent discovery of a new population of stars exhibiting unusual
elemental abundance patterns characterized by enhanced Ti to Ga elements and
low alpha and n-capture elements suggests the contribution of a new class of
supernovae, probably a kind of Type Ia supernovae associated with close binary
evolution. The role of these supernovae in chemical evolution is negligible in
normal galaxies that undergo moderate star formation such as our own. Thus,
while the frequency of occurrence would be too low to detect in low-redshift
galaxies, it may represent a prominent population in high-redshift objects such
as early epoch massive elliptical galaxies and QSOs. The chemical contributor
of this proposed type of supernovae in combination with recognized supernovae
is shown to be compatible with the recent observational features in the distant
universe, successfully reproducing the Type II supernovae-like abundance
pattern with enhancement of Ga and Ge in the gas of newborn massive galaxies
and high iron abundances in QSOs even at redshifts of around 6.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, To appear in ApJ Letter
Averaging the Assessments of Multiple Judges: Applications to Clinical Assessment and Research
This is an abstract of a paper that investigates the utility of a simple equation that predicts the expected validity coefficient for any given composite size
Nucleosynthesis in Type Ia Supernovae
Among the major uncertainties involved in the Chandrasekhar mass models for
Type Ia supernovae are the companion star of the accreting white dwarf (or the
accretion rate that determines the carbon ignition density) and the flame speed
after ignition. We present nucleosynthesis results from relatively slow
deflagration (1.5 - 3 % of the sound speed) to constrain the rate of accretion
from the companion star. Because of electron capture, a significant amount of
neutron-rich species such as ^{54}Cr, ^{50}Ti, ^{58}Fe, ^{62}Ni, etc. are
synthesized in the central region. To avoid the too large ratios of
^{54}Cr/^{56}Fe and ^{50}Ti/^{56}Fe, the central density of the white dwarf at
thermonuclear runaway must be as low as \ltsim 2 \e9 \gmc. Such a low central
density can be realized by the accretion as fast as \dot M \gtsim 1 \times
10^{-7} M_\odot yr^{-1}. These rapidly accreting white dwarfs might correspond
to the super-soft X-ray sources.Comment: 10 page LaTeX, 7 PostScript figures, to appear in Nuclear Physics A,
Vol. A621 (1997
Quantifying the GCM-related uncertainty for climate change impact assessment of rainfed rice production in Cambodia by a combined hydrologic - rice growth model
The effects of climate change on agriculture are a major concern for global food security. In this study, the impacts of climate change on rainfed rice production in the granary of Cambodia were examined on a basin scale by developing and applying a combined model consisting of a crop model and a basin-scale distributed hydrological model. The response of rice production to soil-water availability was simulated for past (1981–2000) and future (2041–2060, 2081–2100) periods. From 34 general circulation models (GCMs) that participated in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5), 5 GCMs were selected by evaluating monthly rainfall in the past. Although annual rainfall was projected to increase by all five selected GCMs, notable decreases in rainfed rice production were projected with 3 GCMs, while small changes were projected with the other 2 GCMs. The main factor restricting future rice production was soil water availability, brought by the projected change in the seasonal distribution of rainfall and the projected more severe dry spells in the early monsoon season. The results suggest the importance of the selection and bias correction of GCMs to force rice crop models and of the simulation of soil water flow on a basin scale for the assessment of rain-fed rice production. In particular, improvements in projections of rainfall amounts over shorter periods rather than annual or seasonal periods, which fit within the time scales of rice plant growth, were suggested to be important
An X-ray investigation of the NGC 346 field in the SMC (3): XMM-Newton data
We present new XMM-Newton results on the field around the NGC346 star cluster
in the SMC. This continues and extends previously published work on Chandra
observations of the same field. The two XMM-Newton observations were obtained,
respectively, six months before and six months after the previously published
Chandra data. Of the 51 X-ray sources detected with XMM-Newton, 29 were already
detected with Chandra. Comparing the properties of these X-ray sources in each
of our three datasets has enabled us to investigate their variability on times
scales of a year. Changes in the flux levels and/or spectral properties were
observed for 21 of these sources. In addition, we discovered long-term
variations in the X-ray properties of the peculiar system HD5980, a luminous
blue variable star, that is likely to be a colliding wind binary system, which
displayed the largest luminosity during the first XMM-Newton observation.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures (in gif), accepted by ApJ, also available from
http://vela.astro.ulg.ac.be/Preprints/P89/index.htm
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