90 research outputs found
Photolysis of H2O-H2O2 Mixtures: The Destruction of H2O2
We present laboratory results on the loss of H2O2 in solid H2O + H2O2 mixtures at temperatures between 21 and 145 K initiated by UV photolysis (193 nm). Using infrared spectroscopy and microbalance gravimetry, we measured the decrease of the 3.5 micrometer infrared absorption band during UV irradiation and obtained a photodestruction cross section that varies with temperature, being lowest at 70 K. We use our results, along with our previously measured H2O2 production rates via ionizing radiation and ion energy fluxes from the spacecraft to compare H2O2 creation and destruction at icy satellites by ions from their planetary magnetosphere and from solar UV photons. We conclude that, in many cases, H2O2 is not observed on icy satellite surfaces because the H2O2 photodestruction rate is much higher than the production rate via energetic particles, effectively keeping the H2O2 infrared signature at or below the noise level
N-Photon wave packets interacting with an arbitrary quantum system
We present a theoretical framework that describes a wave packet of light
prepared in a state of definite photon number interacting with an arbitrary
quantum system (e.g. a quantum harmonic oscillator or a multi-level atom).
Within this framework we derive master equations for the system as well as for
output field quantities such as quadratures and photon flux. These results are
then generalized to wave packets with arbitrary spectral distribution
functions. Finally, we obtain master equations and output field quantities for
systems interacting with wave packets in multiple spatial and/or polarization
modes.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures. Published versio
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Energetic feedback in galaxies: Processing of interstellar silicate grains by cosmic rays
The formation and evolution of stars and galaxies is a complex process that involves the cooling and collapse of dense interstellar clouds as well as energetic feedback on these clouds. Interstellar dust grains are central to the radiative transfer, thermal balance, and molecular processes in these clouds and can provide an important diagnostic. Hence, the effects of energetic processing of interstellar dust may have significant consequences. r This may be studied in our own Galaxy, where observations have shown that an appreciable fraction of silicates formed in the outflows from red giants and supergiants have a crystalline structure. Yet, the fraction of crystalline silicates in the interstellar medium is very small, pointing towards an efficient crystalline crystalline-to to-amorphous conversion process. Here we report experimental and modeling results that show that relatively ''low'' energy (0.1 - 5.0 GeV) heavy ion cosmic rays can rapidly ({approx}70 Million yrs) amorphize crystalline silicate grains ejected by stars into the interstellar medium. The implications of this are briefly discussed. We also examine the effects of cosmic ray processing of silicates in the solar system and in stellar debris disks. In the latter systems, cosmic ray processing may play a role for grains trapped in resonance with planetary companions. We speculate that energetic processing of interstellar dust is likely to be even more important in s star forming galaxies, which have higher cosmic ray fluxes due to tar their much larger star formation rates and their emerging active black holes with associated jets
Charged nanograins in the Enceladus plume
There have been three Cassini encounters with the south-pole eruptive plume of
Enceladus for which the Cassini Plasma Spectrometer (CAPS) had viewing in the
spacecraft ram direction. In each case, CAPS detected a cold dense population of heavy
charged particles having mass-to-charge (m/q) ratios up to the maximum detectable by
CAPS ( 104 amu/e). These particles are interpreted as singly charged nanometer-sized
water-ice grains. Although they are detected with both negative and positive net charges,
the former greatly outnumber the latter, at least in the m/q range accessible to CAPS.
On the most distant available encounter (E3, March 2008) we derive a net (negative)
charge density of up to 2600 e/cm3 for nanograins, far exceeding the ambient plasma
number density, but less than the net (positive) charge density inferred from the RPWS
Langmuir probe data during the same plume encounter. Comparison of the CAPS data
from the three available encounters is consistent with the idea that the nanograins leave the
surface vents largely uncharged, but become increasingly negatively charged by plasma
electron impact as they move farther from the satellite. These nanograin
Energetic Processing of Interstellar Silicate Grains by Cosmic Rays
While a significant fraction of silicate dust in stellar winds has a crystalline structure, in the interstellar medium nearly all of it is amorphous. One possible explanation for this observation is the amorphization of crystalline silicates by relatively 'low' energy, heavy ion cosmic rays. Here we present the results of multiple laboratory experiments showing that single-crystal synthetic forsterite (Mg{sub 2}SiO{sub 4}) amorphizes when irradiated by 10 MeV Xe{sup ++} ions at large enough fluences. Using modeling, we extrapolate these results to show that 0.1-5.0 GeV heavy ion cosmic rays can rapidly ({approx}70 Million yrs) amorphize crystalline silicate grains ejected by stars into the interstellar medium
Identification of Saturn's magnetospheric regions and associated plasma processes: Synopsis of Cassini observations during orbit insertion
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94634/1/rog1672.pd
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