558 research outputs found
On the Temperature Distribution Inside a Tree Under Fire Conditions
A simple and efficient numerical scheme is presented for the prediction of temperature field distribution inside a tree trunk subjected to ground fire conditions. The trunk is modeled by a cylinder of circular cross section and unit length, through which the time-dependent heat conduction equation is numerically integrated. The model is partly validated in laboratory and then applied to the case of a prescribed ground fire inside a Pinus pinmter stand
Temperature Fluctuations and Abundances in HII Galaxies
There is evidence for temperature fluctuations in Planetary Nebulae and in
Galactic HII regions. If such fluctuations occur in the low-metallicity,
extragalactic HII regions used to probe the primordial helium abundance, the
derived 4He mass fraction, Y_P, could be systematically different from the true
primordial value. For cooler, mainly high-metallicity HII regions the derived
helium abundance may be nearly unchanged but the oxygen abundance could have
been seriously underestimated. For hotter, mainly low-metallicity HII regions
the oxygen abundance is likely accurate but the helium abundance could be
underestimated. The net effect is to tilt the Y vs. Z relation, making it
flatter and resulting in a higher inferred Y_P. Although this effect could be
large, there are no data which allow us to estimate the size of the temperature
fluctuations for the extragalactic HII regions. Therefore, we have explored
this effect via Monte Carlos in which the abundances derived from a fiducial
data set are modified by \Delta-T chosen from a distribution with 0 < \Delta-T
< \Delta-T_max where \Delta-T_max is varied from 500K to 4000K. It is
interesting that although this effect shifts the locations of the HII regions
in Y vs. O/H plane, it does not introduce any significant additional
dispersion.Comment: 11 pages, 9 postscript figures; submitted to the Ap
Thermal behaviour simulation of the passenger compartment of vehicles
In this work a calculus program developed with the objective of simulating the thermal behaviour in the passenger compartment of vehicles is presented. The model is based on the space-integral energy balance equations for the inside air and for the main vehicle body and surfaces. It can solve two kinds of problems. In the first one, it calculates the heat stress that the air conditioning system must equilibrate in order to satisfy predefined permanent regimen project specifications. In the second one, once imposed a particular air conditioning system and given the ambient conditions, it computes the different temperatures and heat fluxes, either in transient or steady regimens. The validation of this model was done with a railway car, in a summer situation, when it was immobilized and running. The model reproduced well the experimentally determined temperature and heat flux evolutions. However, the numeric simulation showed best agreement with the experimental results when used with the convection heat transfer coefficients, determined experimentally in this work
Ucma/GRP inhibits phosphate-induced vascular smooth muscle cell calcification via SMAD-dependent BMP signalling
Vascular calcification (VC) is the process of deposition of calcium phosphate crystals in the blood vessel wall, with a central role for vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs). VC is highly prevalent in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients and thought, in part, to be induced by phosphate imbalance. The molecular mechanisms that regulate VC are not fully known. Here we propose a novel role for the mineralisation regulator Ucma/GRP (Upper zone of growth plate and Cartilage Matrix Associated protein/Gla Rich Protein) in phosphate-induced VSMC calcification. We show that Ucma/GRP is present in calcified atherosclerotic plaques and highly expressed in calcifying VSMCs in vitro. VSMCs from Ucma/GRP(-/-) mice showed increased mineralisation and expression of osteo/chondrogenic markers (BMP-2, Runx2, beta-catenin, p-SMAD1/5/8, ALP, OCN), and decreased expression of mineralisation inhibitor MGP, suggesting that Ucma/GRP is an inhibitor of mineralisation. Using BMP signalling inhibitor noggin and SMAD1/5/8 signalling inhibitor dorsomorphin we showed that Ucma/GRP is involved in inhibiting the BMP-2-SMAD1/5/8 osteo/chondrogenic signalling pathway in VSMCs treated with elevated phosphate concentrations. Additionally, we showed for the first time evidence of a direct interaction between Ucma/GRP and BMP-2. These results demonstrate an important role of Ucma/GRP in regulating osteo/chondrogenic differentiation and phosphate-induced mineralisation of VSMCs.NWO ZonMw [MKMD 40-42600-98-13007]; FCT [SFRH/BPD/70277/2010]info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Heavy element abundances in blue compact galaxies
We present high-quality ground-based spectroscopic observations of 54
supergiant H II regions in 50 low-metallicity blue compact galaxies with oxygen
abundances 12 + log O/H between 7.1 and 8.3. We use the data to determine
abundances for the elements N, O, Ne, S, Ar and Fe. We also analyze Hubble
Space Telescope (HST) Faint Object Spectrograph archival spectra of 10
supergiant H II regions to derive C and Si abundances in a subsample of 7 BCGs.
The main result of the present study is that none of the heavy
element-to-oxygen abundance ratios studied here (C/O, N/O, Ne/O, Si/O, S/O,
Ar/O, Fe/O) depend on oxygen abundance for BCGs with 12 + log O/H < 7.6 (Z <
Zsun/20). This constancy implies that all these heavy elements have a primary
origin and are produced by the same massive (M > 10Msun) stars responsible for
O production. The dispersion of the C/O and N/O ratios in these galaxies is
found to be remarkably small, being only +/-0.03 dex and +/-0.02 dex
respectively. This very small dispersion is strong evidence against any
time-delayed production of C and primary N in the lowest-metallicity BCGs
(secondary N production is negligible at these low metallicities). The absence
of a time-delayed production of C and N is consistent with the scenario that
galaxies with 12 + log O/H < 7.6 are undergoing now their first burst of star
formation, and that they are therefore young, with ages not exceeding 40 Myr.
If very low metallicities BCGs are indeed young, this would argue against the
commonly held belief that C and N are produced by intermediate-mass (3Msun < M
< 9Msun) stars at very low metallicities, as these stars would not have yet
completed their evolution in these lowest metallicity galaxies.Comment: 37 pages, 5 EPS figures, to appear in ApJ, February 199
Metal abundances and ionization conditions in a possibly dust-free damped Ly-alpha system at z=2.3
We have obtained a high resolution, high S/N UVES spectrum of the bright QSO
HE2243-6031 to analyze the damped Ly-alpha system (DLA) observed at z=2.33. The
metallicity of this system is 1/12 solar at a neutral hydrogen column density
of log N(HI)=20.7. From the observed ratios [Zn/Cr]=-0.01+/-0.05 and
[S/Si]=-0.06+/-0.03$ we conclude that dust is very likely absent from the ISM
of this protogalaxy. We observe an enhancement of the alpha/Fe-peak ratios of
+0.2 dex for various elements, a marked odd-even effect in Mn, and a strong
underabundance of N relative to Si and S, [N/Si,S]=-1 at [Si/H]=-0.86. All of
these ratios support an environment that is in an early evolutionary stage,
where the onset of star formation has begun only shortly before the DLA was
observed. We also perform a cloud-by-cloud analysis -- without precedent at
high redshift -- and find a tight correlation of all low-ionization species
with respect to FeII extending over 2.5 orders of magnitude in N(FeII). We
interpret this trend as being due to homogeneous physical conditions (very mild
ionization effects, common dust-destruction histories, same chemical
composition) and propose that this line of sight encounters absorbing clouds
that share a common environment. In addition, photoionization models show that
these single clouds are shielded from the external ionizing radiation, so the
fraction of ionized gas is small and, except for argon, does not influence the
measured metal abundances. The observed AlIII/low-ion ratios suggest the mildly
ionized gas occurs in shells surrounding neutral cores of AlII.Comment: To be published in A&
Three-dimensional chemically homogeneous and bi-abundance photoionization models of the "super-metal-rich" planetary nebula NGC 6153
Deep spectroscopy of the planetary nebula (PN) NGC\,6153 shows that its heavy
element abundances derived from optical recombination lines (ORLs) are ten
times higher than those derived from collisionally excited lines (CELs), and
points to the existence of H-deficient inclusions embedded in the diffuse
nebula. In this study, we have constructed chemically homogeneous and
bi-abundance three-dimensional photoionization models, using the Monte Carlo
photoionization code {\sc mocassin}. We attempt to reproduce the multi-waveband
spectroscopic and imaging observations of NGC\,6153, and investigate the nature
and origin of the postulated H-deficient inclusions, as well as their impacts
on the empirical nebular analyses assuming a uniform chemical composition. Our
results show that chemically homogeneous models yield small electron
temperature fluctuations and fail to reproduce the strengths of ORLs from C, N,
O and Ne ions. In contrast, bi-abundance models incorporating a small amount of
metal-rich inclusions ( per cent of the total nebular mass) are able
to match all the observations within the measurement uncertainties. The
metal-rich clumps, cooled down to a very low temperature (~K) by
ionic infrared fine-structure lines, dominate the emission of heavy element
ORLs, but contribute almost nil to the emission of most CELs. We find that the
abundances of C, N, O and Ne derived empirically from CELs, assuming a uniform
chemical composition, are about 30 per cent lower than the corresponding
average values of the whole nebula, including the contribution from the
H-deficient inclusions. Ironically, in the presence of H-deficient inclusions,
the traditional standard analysis of the optical helium recombination lines,
assuming a chemically homogeneous nebula, overestimates the helium abundance by
40 per cent.Comment: 19 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Comparative Absorption and Emission Abundance Analyses of Nebulae: Ion Emission Densities for IC 418
Recent analyses of nebular spectra have resulted in discrepant abundances
from CNO forbidden and recombination lines. We consider independent methods of
determining ion abundances for emission nebulae, comparing ion emission
measures with column densities derived from resonance absorption lines viewed
against the central star continuum. Separate analyses of the nebular emission
lines and the stellar UV absorption lines yield independent abundances for
ions, and their ratio can be expressed in terms of a parameter n_e_{em}, the
``emission density'' for each ion. Adequate data for this technique are still
scarce, but separate analyses of spectra of the planetary nebula and central
star of IC 418 do show discrepant abundances for several ions, especially Fe
II. The discrepancies are probably due to the presence of absorbing gas which
does not emit and/or to uncertain atomic data and excitation processes, and
they demonstrate the importance of applying the technique of combining
emission- and absorption-line data in deriving abundances for nebulae.Comment: 25 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
A Genotyping-by-Sequencing approach brings new insights into the population structure and local adaptation of Western Mediterranean Oaks
XIX ENBE Annual Meeting of the Portuguese Association for Evolutionary Biology, 18-19 December 2023, Lisboninfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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