306 research outputs found
Abundance anomalies in pre-main-sequence stars: Stellar evolution models with mass loss
The effects of atomic diffusion on internal and surface abundances of A and F
pre-main-sequence stars with mass loss are studied in order to determine at
what age the effects materialize, as well as to further understand the
processes at play in HAeBe and young ApBp stars. Self-consistent stellar
evolution models of 1.5 to 2.8Msun with atomic diffusion (including radiative
accelerations) for all species within the OPAL opacity database were computed
and compared to observations of HAeBe stars. Atomic diffusion in the presence
of weak mass loss can explain the observed abundance anomalies of
pre-main-sequence stars, as well as the presence of binary systems with metal
rich primaries and chemically normal secondaries such as V380 Ori and HD72106.
This is in contrast to turbulence models which do not allow for abundance
anomalies to develop on the pre-main-sequence. The age at which anomalies can
appear depends on stellar mass. For A and F stars, the effects of atomic
diffusion can modify both the internal and surface abundances before the onset
of the MS. The appearance of important surface abundance anomalies on the
pre-main-sequence does not require mass loss, though the mass loss rate affects
their amplitude. Observational tests are suggested to decipher the effects of
mass loss from those of turbulent mixing. If abundance anomalies are confirmed
in pre-main-sequence stars they would severely limit the role of turbulence in
these stars.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, accepeted for publicatio
Seismic Survey of Buried Bedrock Topography in the Cannon River Valley
A seismic survey of the Cannon River Valley between Northfield and Cannon Falls, Minnesota, revealed the presence of a 30-meter deep buried river valley under or near the Cannon River. The buried channel emanates from the Spring Creek Valley in Northfield, makes a 90-degree turn to the northeast at the confluence of Spring Creek and the Cannon River. and follows the Cannon to Cannon Falls. Buried tributary valleys appear to join the main buried channel at several locations. There may be buried tributary valleys or a network of abandoned Cannon River channels eroded into bedrock under the lake plain north of Lake Byllesby. The material of this survey also was reported by Timothy D. Vick, one of the three researchers, at the 1980 meeting of the Institute on Lake Superior Geology
Tissue Engineering Strategies for Myocardial Regeneration: Acellular Versus Cellular Scaffolds?
Heart disease remains one of the leading causes of death in industrialized nations with myocardial infarction (MI) contributing to at least one fifth of the reported deaths. The hypoxic environment eventually leads to cellular death and scar tissue formation. The scar tissue that forms is not mechanically functional and often leads to myocardial remodeling and eventual heart failure. Tissue engineering and regenerative medicine principles provide an alternative approach to restoring myocardial function by designing constructs that will restore the mechanical function of the heart. In this review, we will describe the cellular events that take place after an MI and describe current treatments. We will also describe how biomaterials, alone or in combination with a cellular component, have been used to engineer suitable myocardium replacement constructs and how new advanced culture systems will be required to achieve clinical success
Abundance anomalies in pre-main-sequence stars: Stellar evolution models with mass loss
The effects of atomic diffusion on internal and surface abundances of A and F
pre-main-sequence stars with mass loss are studied in order to determine at
what age the effects materialize, as well as to further understand the
processes at play in HAeBe and young ApBp stars. Self-consistent stellar
evolution models of 1.5 to 2.8Msun with atomic diffusion (including radiative
accelerations) for all species within the OPAL opacity database were computed
and compared to observations of HAeBe stars. Atomic diffusion in the presence
of weak mass loss can explain the observed abundance anomalies of
pre-main-sequence stars, as well as the presence of binary systems with metal
rich primaries and chemically normal secondaries such as V380 Ori and HD72106.
This is in contrast to turbulence models which do not allow for abundance
anomalies to develop on the pre-main-sequence. The age at which anomalies can
appear depends on stellar mass. For A and F stars, the effects of atomic
diffusion can modify both the internal and surface abundances before the onset
of the MS. The appearance of important surface abundance anomalies on the
pre-main-sequence does not require mass loss, though the mass loss rate affects
their amplitude. Observational tests are suggested to decipher the effects of
mass loss from those of turbulent mixing. If abundance anomalies are confirmed
in pre-main-sequence stars they would severely limit the role of turbulence in
these stars.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, accepeted for publicatio
Phase transitions and configuration space topology
Equilibrium phase transitions may be defined as nonanalytic points of
thermodynamic functions, e.g., of the canonical free energy. Given a certain
physical system, it is of interest to understand which properties of the system
account for the presence of a phase transition, and an understanding of these
properties may lead to a deeper understanding of the physical phenomenon. One
possible approach of this issue, reviewed and discussed in the present paper,
is the study of topology changes in configuration space which, remarkably, are
found to be related to equilibrium phase transitions in classical statistical
mechanical systems. For the study of configuration space topology, one
considers the subsets M_v, consisting of all points from configuration space
with a potential energy per particle equal to or less than a given v. For
finite systems, topology changes of M_v are intimately related to nonanalytic
points of the microcanonical entropy (which, as a surprise to many, do exist).
In the thermodynamic limit, a more complex relation between nonanalytic points
of thermodynamic functions (i.e., phase transitions) and topology changes is
observed. For some class of short-range systems, a topology change of the M_v
at v=v_t was proved to be necessary for a phase transition to take place at a
potential energy v_t. In contrast, phase transitions in systems with long-range
interactions or in systems with non-confining potentials need not be
accompanied by such a topology change. Instead, for such systems the
nonanalytic point in a thermodynamic function is found to have some
maximization procedure at its origin. These results may foster insight into the
mechanisms which lead to the occurrence of a phase transition, and thus may
help to explore the origin of this physical phenomenon.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figure
Horizontal Branch evolution, metallicity and sdB stars
Context. Abundance anomalies have been observed in field sdB stars and in
nearly all Horizontal Branch (HB) stars of globular clusters with Teff > 11
000K whatever be the cluster metallicity. Aims. The aim is to determine the
abundance variations to be expected in sdB stars and in HB stars of
metallicities Z \geq 0.0001 and what observed abundances teach us about
hydrodynamical processes competing with atomic diffusion. Methods. Complete
stellar evolution models, including the effects of atomic diffusion and
radiative acceleration, have been computed from the zero age main-sequence for
metallicities of Z0 = 0.0001, 0.001, 0.004 and 0.02. On the HB the masses were
selected to cover the Teff interval from 7000 to 37000K. Some 60 evolutionary
HB models were calculated. The calculations of surface abundance anomalies
during the horizontal branch depend on one parameter, the surface mixed mass.
Results. For sdB stars with Teff 11 000K
in all observed clusters, independent of metallicity, it was found that most
observed abundance anomalies (even up to ~ x 200) were compatible, within error
bars, with expected abundances. A mixed mass of ~1.E-7 M\odot was determined by
comparison with observations. Conclusions. Observations of globular cluster HB
stars with Teff > 11 000K and of sdB stars with Teff < 37 000K suggest that
most observed abundance anomalies can be explained by element separation driven
by radiative acceleration occuring at a mass fraction of ~1.E-7 M\odot. Mass
loss or turbulence appear to limit the separation between 1.E-7 M\odot and the
surface.Comment: Accepted for publication by A&
Enhanced inverse bremsstrahlung heating rates in a strong laser field
Test particle studies of electron scattering on ions, in an oscillatory
electromagnetic field have shown that standard theoretical assumptions of small
angle collisions and phase independent orbits are incorrect for electron
trajectories with drift velocities smaller than quiver velocity amplitude. This
leads to significant enhancement of the electron energy gain and the inverse
bremsstrahlung heating rate in strong laser fields. Nonlinear processes such as
Coulomb focusing and correlated collisions of electrons being brought back to
the same ion by the oscillatory field are responsible for large angle, head-on
scattering processes. The statistical importance of these trajectories has been
examined for mono-energetic beam-like, Maxwellian and highly anisotropic
electron distribution functions. A new scaling of the inverse bremsstrahlung
heating rate with drift velocity and laser intensity is discussed.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure
Characterisation of the bacterial and fungal communities associated with different lesion sizes of Dark Spot Syndrome occurring in the Coral Stephanocoenia intersepta
The number and prevalence of coral diseases/syndromes are increasing worldwide. Dark Spot Syndrome (DSS) afflicts numerous coral species and is widespread throughout the Caribbean, yet there are no known causal agents. In this study we aimed to characterise the microbial communities (bacteria and fungi) associated with DSS lesions affecting the coral Stephanocoenia intersepta using nonculture molecular techniques. Bacterial diversity of healthy tissues (H), those in advance of the lesion interface (apparently healthy AH), and three sizes of disease lesions (small, medium, and large) varied significantly (ANOSIM R = 0.052 p,0.001), apart from the medium and large lesions, which were similar in their community profile. Four bacteria fitted into the pattern expected from potential pathogens; namely absent from H, increasing in abundance within AH, and dominant in the lesions themselves. These included ribotypes related to Corynebacterium (KC190237), Acinetobacter (KC190251), Parvularculaceae (KC19027), and Oscillatoria (KC190271). Furthermore, two Vibrio species, a genus including many proposed coral pathogens, dominated the disease lesion and were absent from H and AH tissues, making them candidates as potential pathogens for DSS. In contrast, other members of bacteria from the same genus, such as V. harveyii were present throughout all sample types, supporting previous studies where potential coral pathogens exist in healthy tissues. Fungal diversity varied significantly as well, however the main difference between diseased and healthy tissues was the dominance of one ribotype, closely related to the plant pathogen, Rhytisma acerinum, a known causal agent of tar spot on tree leaves. As the corals’ symbiotic algae have been shown to turn to a darker pigmented state in DSS (giving rise to the syndromes name), the two most likely pathogens are R. acerinum and the bacterium Oscillatoria, which has been identified as the causal agent of the colouration in Black Band Disease, another widespread coral disease
AmFm and lithium gap stars: Stellar evolution models with mass loss
A thorough study of the effects of mass loss on internal and surface
abundances of A and F stars is carried out in order to constrain mass loss
rates for these stars, as well as further elucidate some of the processes which
compete with atomic diffusion. Self-consistent stellar evolution models of 1.3
to 2.5 M_sun stars including atomic diffusion and radiative accelerations for
all species within the OPAL opacity database were computed with mass loss and
compared to observations as well as previous calculations with turbulent
mixing. Models with unseparated mass loss rates between 5 x 10^-14 and 10^-13
M_sun/yr reproduce observations for many cluster AmFm stars as well as Sirius A
and o Leonis. These models also explain cool Fm stars, but not the Hyades
lithium gap. Like turbulent mixing, these mass loss rates reduce surface
abundance anomalies; however, their effects are very different with respect to
internal abundances. For most of the main sequence lifetime of an A or F star,
surface abundances in the presence of such mass loss depend on separation which
takes place between log(Delta M/M_star)= -6 and -5. The current observational
constraints do not allow us to conclude that mass loss is to be preferred over
turbulent mixing (induced by rotation or otherwise) in order to explain the
AmFm phenomenon. Internal concentration variations which could be detectable
through asteroseismic tests should provide further information. If atomic
diffusion coupled with mass loss are to explain the Hyades Li gap, the wind
would need to be separated.Comment: 27 pages, 25 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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