16,181 research outputs found
Magnetars' Giant Flares: the case of SGR 1806-20
We first review on the peculiar characteristics of the bursting and flaring
activity of the Soft Gamma-ray Repeaters and Anomalous X-ray Pulsars. We then
report on the properties of the SGR 1806-20's Giant Flare occurred on 2004
December 27th, with particular interest on the pre and post flare
intensity/hardness correlated variability. We show that these findings are
consistent with the picture of a twisted internal magnetic field which stresses
the star solid crust that finally cracks causing the giant flare (and the
observed torsional oscillations). This crustal fracturing is accompanied by a
simplification of the external magnetic field with a (partial) untwisting of
the magnetosphere.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures; accepted for publication in the Chinese Journal
for Astronomy and Astrophysics (Vulcano conference - 2005
EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS TO ADDRESS THE ECONOMIC ADJUSTMENTS FACING TOBACCO FARMERS AND RURAL COMMUNITIES
This paper discusses the context within which educational programs tailored to tobacco producers and related rural communities have developed. Discussion is expanded by examining current program approaches employed by various organizations. Many of these organizations have a manual stake in helping producers in tobacco communities develop their management capacity. A range of initiatives aimed at facilitating economic adjustment is compared, including the major issues addressed and expected outcomes. Many of the initiatives have made useful contributions; however, gaps and limitations remain. These are considered as future educational efforts and issues are discussed.educational programs, tobacco producers, Community/Rural/Urban Development,
Exciton lifetime in InAs/GaAs quantum dot molecules
The exciton lifetimes in arrays of InAs/GaAs vertically coupled quantum
dot pairs have been measured by time-resolved photoluminescence. A considerable
reduction of by up to a factor of 2 has been observed as compared
to a quantum dots reference, reflecting the inter-dot coherence. Increase of
the molecular coupling strength leads to a systematic decrease of with
decreasing barrier width, as for wide barriers a fraction of structures shows
reduced coupling while for narrow barriers all molecules appear to be well
coupled. The coherent excitons in the molecules gain the oscillator strength of
the excitons in the two separate quantum dots halving the exciton lifetime.
This superradiance effect contributes to the previously observed increase of
the homogeneous exciton linewidth, but is weaker than the reduction of .
This shows that as compared to the quantum dots reference pure dephasing
becomes increasingly important for the molecules
Magnetars as cooling neutron stars with internal heating
We study thermal structure and evolution of magnetars as cooling neutron
stars with a phenomenological heat source in a spherical internal layer. We
explore the location of this layer as well as the heating rate that could
explain high observable thermal luminosities of magnetars and would be
consistent with the energy budget of neutron stars. We conclude that the heat
source should be located in an outer magnetar's crust, at densities rho < 5e11
g/cm^3, and should have the heat intensity of the order of 1e20 erg/s/cm^3.
Otherwise the heat energy is mainly emitted by neutrinos and cannot warm up the
surface.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, submitted to MNRA
Effects of the triaxial deformation and pairing correlation on the proton emitter 145Tm
The ground-state properties of the recent reported proton emitter 145Tm have
been studied within the axially or triaxially deformed relativistic mean field
(RMF) approaches, in which the pairing correlation is taken into account by the
BCS-method with a constant pairing gap. It is found that triaxiality and
pairing correlations play important roles in reproducing the experimental one
proton separation energy. The single-particle level, the proton emission orbit,
the deformation parameters beta = 0.22 and gamma = 28.98 and the corresponding
spectroscopic factor for 145Tm in the triaxial RMF calculation are given as
well.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures and 1 table. accepted by Physical Review
Effluent sampling of Scout D and Delta launch vehicle exhausts
Characterization of engine-exhaust effluents (hydrogen chloride, aluminum oxide, carbon dioxide, and carbon monoxide) has been attempted by conducting field experiments monitoring the exhaust cloud from a Scout-Algol III vehicle launch and a Delta-Thor vehicle launch. The exhaust cloud particulate size number distribution (total number of particles as a function of particle diameter), mass loading, morphology, and elemental composition have been determined within limitations. The gaseous species in the exhaust cloud have been identified. In addition to the ground-based measurements, instrumented aircraft flights through the low-altitude, stabilized-exhaust cloud provided measurements which identified CO and HCI gases and Al2O3 particles. Measurements of the initial exhaust cloud during formation and downwind at several distances have established sampling techniques which will be used for experimental verification of model predictions of effluent dispersion and fallout from exhaust clouds
Research on nonlinear optical materials: an assessment. IV. Photorefractive and liquid crystal materials
This panel considered two separate subject areas: photorefractive materials used for nonlinear optics and liquid crystal materials used in light valves. Two related subjects were not considered due to lack of expertise on the panel: photorefractive materials used in light valves and liquid crystal materials used in nonlinear optics. Although the inclusion of a discussion of light valves by a panel on nonlinear optical materials at first seems odd, it is logical because light valves and photorefractive materials perform common functions
Galaxy Formation with local photoionisation feedback I. Methods
We present a first study of the effect of local photoionising radiation on
gas cooling in smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations of galaxy formation.
We explore the combined effect of ionising radiation from young and old stellar
populations. The method computes the effect of multiple radiative sources using
the same tree algorithm used for gravity, so it is computationally efficient
and well resolved. The method foregoes calculating absorption and scattering in
favour of a constant escape fraction for young stars to keep the calculation
efficient enough to simulate the entire evolution of a galaxy in a cosmological
context to the present day. This allows us to quantify the effect of the local
photoionisation feedback through the whole history of a galaxy`s formation. The
simulation of a Milky Way like galaxy using the local photoionisation model
forms ~ 40 % less stars than a simulation that only includes a standard uniform
background UV field. The local photoionisation model decreases star formation
by increasing the cooling time of the gas in the halo and increasing the
equilibrium temperature of dense gas in the disc. Coupling the local radiation
field to gas cooling from the halo provides a preventive feedback mechanism
which keeps the central disc light and produces slowly rising rotation curves
without resorting to extreme feedback mechanisms. These preliminary results
indicate that the effect of local photoionising sources is significant and
should not be ignored in models of galaxy formation.Comment: Accepted for Publication in MNRAS, 13 pages, 13 figure
Relativistic kinetic equation for Compton scattering of polarized radiation in strong magnetic field
We derive the relativistic kinetic equation for Compton scattering of
polarized radiation in strong magnetic field using the Bogolyubov method. The
induced scattering and the Pauli exclusion principle are taken into account.
The electron polarization is also considered in the general form of the kinetic
equation. The special forms of the equation for the cases of the non-polarized
electrons, the rarefied electron gas and the two polarization mode description
of radiation are found. The derived equations are valid for any photon and
electron energies and the magnetic field strength below about 10^{16} G. These
equations provide the basis for formulation of the equation for polarized
radiation transport in atmospheres and magnetospheres of strongly magnetized
neutron stars.Comment: 23 pages, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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