6,303 research outputs found
Tracing the atomic nitrogen abundance in star-forming regions with ammonia deuteration
Partitioning of elemental nitrogen in star-forming regions is not well
constrained. Most nitrogen is expected to be partitioned among atomic nitrogen,
molecular nitrogen (N2), and icy N-bearing molecules, such as ammonia (NH3) and
N2. Atomic nitrogen is not directly observable in the cold gas. In this paper,
we propose an indirect way to constrain the amount of atomic nitrogen in the
cold gas of star-forming clouds, via deuteration in ammonia ice, the
[ND2H/NH2D]/[NH2D/NH3] ratio. Using gas-ice astrochemical simulations, we show
that if atomic nitrogen remains as the primary reservoir of nitrogen during
cold ice formation stages, the [ND2H/NH2D]/[NH2D/NH3] ratio is close to the
statistical value of 1/3 and lower than unity, whereas if atomic nitrogen is
largely converted into N-bearing molecules, the ratio should be larger than
unity. Observability of ammonia isotopologues in the inner hot regions around
low-mass protostars, where ammonia ice has sublimated, is also discussed. We
conclude that the [ND2H/NH2D]/[NH2D/NH3] ratio can be quantified using a
combination of VLA and ALMA observations with reasonable integration times, at
least toward IRAS 16293-2422 where high molecular column densities are
expected.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 12 pages, 9 figures, 1 Tabl
Dynamic effects of mandatory activation of welfare participants
Previous literature shows that activation requirements for welfare participants decrease welfare participation. However, the dynamics have not been examined, and often only exit effects are analyzed. In this paper, we look more closely at the transition rates into and out of welfare. Using register data on the entire population of Stockholm, we are able to capture how both entry and exit rates were affected when activation require-ments were introduced at different times in Stockholmâs city districts. The results indi-cate that the main reduction in welfare participation is due to a small increase in exit rates. The part of the population that is at risk of entering into welfare, though, expe-riences a reduction in entry rates due to the reform. There are also heterogeneous efÂŹfects, namely, large effects on entry rates for young individuals. In addition, there are larger effects on exit rates for unmarried individuals without children compared to the population as a whole.Welfare reform; mandatory activation program; welfare entry; welfare exit
Noble gas as a functional dopant in ZnO
Owing to fully occupied orbitals, noble gases are considered to be chemically
inert and to have limited effect on materials properties under standard
conditions. However, using first-principles calculations, we demonstrate herein
that the insertion of noble gas (i.e., He, Ne, or Ar) in ZnO results in local
destabilization of electron density of the material driven by minimization of
an unfavorable overlap of atomic orbitals of the noble gas and its surrounding
atoms. Specifically, the noble gas defect (interstitial or substitutional) in
ZnO pushes the electron density of its surrounding atoms away from the defect.
Simultaneously, the host material confines the electron density of the noble
gas. As a consequence, the interaction of He, Ne, or Ar with O vacancies of ZnO
in different charge states q (ZnO:VOq) affects the vacancy stability and their
electronic structures. Remarkably, we find that the noble gas is a functional
dopant that can delocalize the deep in-gap VOq states and lift electrons
associated with the vacancy to the conduction band.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
Scrum2Kanban: Integrating Kanban and Scrum in a University Software Engineering Capstone Course
Using university capstone courses to teach agile software development
methodologies has become commonplace, as agile methods have gained support in
professional software development. This usually means students are introduced
to and work with the currently most popular agile methodology: Scrum. However,
as the agile methods employed in the industry change and are adapted to
different contexts, university courses must follow suit. A prime example of
this is the Kanban method, which has recently gathered attention in the
industry. In this paper, we describe a capstone course design, which adds the
hands-on learning of the lean principles advocated by Kanban into a capstone
project run with Scrum. This both ensures that students are aware of recent
process frameworks and ideas as well as gain a more thorough overview of how
agile methods can be employed in practice. We describe the details of the
course and analyze the participating students' perceptions as well as our
observations. We analyze the development artifacts, created by students during
the course in respect to the two different development methodologies. We
further present a summary of the lessons learned as well as recommendations for
future similar courses. The survey conducted at the end of the course revealed
an overwhelmingly positive attitude of students towards the integration of
Kanban into the course
Warm water deuterium fractionation in IRAS 16293-2422 - The high-resolution ALMA and SMA view
Measuring the water deuterium fractionation in the inner warm regions of
low-mass protostars has so far been hampered by poor angular resolution
obtainable with single-dish ground- and space-based telescopes. Observations of
water isotopologues using (sub)millimeter wavelength interferometers have the
potential to shed light on this matter. Observations toward IRAS 16293-2422 of
the 5(3,2)-4(4,1) transition of H2-18O at 692.07914 GHz from Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) as well as the 3(1,3)-2(2,0) of H2-18O at
203.40752 GHz and the 3(1,2)-2(2,1) transition of HDO at 225.89672 GHz from the
Submillimeter Array (SMA) are presented. The 692 GHz H2-18O line is seen toward
both components of the binary protostar. Toward one of the components, "source
B", the line is seen in absorption toward the continuum, slightly red-shifted
from the systemic velocity, whereas emission is seen off-source at the systemic
velocity. Toward the other component, "source A", the two HDO and H2-18O lines
are detected as well with the SMA. From the H2-18O transitions the excitation
temperature is estimated at 124 +/- 12 K. The calculated HDO/H2O ratio is (9.2
+/- 2.6)*10^(-4) - significantly lower than previous estimates in the warm gas
close to the source. It is also lower by a factor of ~5 than the ratio deduced
in the outer envelope. Our observations reveal the physical and chemical
structure of water vapor close to the protostars on solar-system scales. The
red-shifted absorption detected toward source B is indicative of infall. The
excitation temperature is consistent with the picture of water ice evaporation
close to the protostar. The low HDO/H2O ratio deduced here suggests that the
differences between the inner regions of the protostars and the Earth's oceans
and comets are smaller than previously thought.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Velocity dependence of friction of confined polymers
We present molecular dynamics friction calculations for confined hydrocarbon
solids with molecular lengths from 20 to 1400 carbon atoms. Two cases are
considered: (a) polymer sliding against a hard substrate, and (b) polymer
sliding on polymer. We discuss the velocity dependence of the frictional shear
stress for both cases. In our simulations, the polymer films are very thin
(approx. 3 nm), and the solid walls are connected to a thermostat at a short
distance from the polymer slab. Under these circumstances we find that
frictional heating effects are not important, and the effective temperature in
the polymer film is always close to the thermostat temperature. In the first
setup (a), for hydrocarbons with molecular lengths from 60 to 1400 carbon
atoms, the shear stresses are nearly independent of molecular length, but for
the shortest hydrocarbon C20H42 the frictional shear stress is lower. In all
cases the frictional shear stress increases monotonically with the sliding
velocity. For polymer sliding on polymer [case (b)] the friction is much
larger, and the velocity dependence is more complex. For hydrocarbons with
molecular lengths from 60 to 140 C-atoms, the number of monolayers of lubricant
increases (abruptly) with increasing sliding velocity (from 6 to 7 layers),
leading to a decrease of the friction. Before and after the layering
transition, the frictional shear stresses are nearly proportional to the
logarithm of sliding velocity. For the longest hydrocarbon (1400 C-atoms) the
friction shows no dependence on the sliding velocity, and for the shortest
hydrocarbon (20 C-atoms) the frictional shear stress increases nearly linearly
with the sliding velocity.Comment: 10 pages, 14 figure
The deuterium fractionation of water on solar-system scales in deeply-embedded low-mass protostars
(Abridged) The water deuterium fractionation (HDO/HO abundance ratio) has
traditionally been used to infer the amount of water brought to Earth by
comets. Measuring this ratio in deeply-embedded low-mass protostars makes it
possible to probe the critical stage when water is transported from clouds to
disks in which icy bodies are formed. We present sub-arcsecond resolution
observations of HDO in combination with HO from the PdBI toward the
three low-mass protostars NGC 1333-IRAS 2A, IRAS 4A-NW, and IRAS 4B. The
resulting HDO/HO ratio is for IRAS 2A,
for IRAS 4A-NW, and for IRAS
4B. Derived ratios agree with radiative transfer models within a factor of 2-4
depending on the source. Our HDO/HO ratios for the inner regions (where
K) of four young protostars are only a factor of 2 higher than those
found for pristine, solar system comets. These small differences suggest that
little processing of water occurs between the deeply embedded stage and the
formation of planetesimals and comets.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
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