4,657 research outputs found

    Evolutionary constraints on the masses of the components of HDE 226868/Cyg X-1 binary system

    Full text link
    Calculations carried out to model the evolution of HDE 226868, under different assumptions about the stellar wind mass loss rate, provide robust limits on the present mass of the star. It has to be in the range 40 +- 5 solar masses if the distance to the system is in the range 1.95 to 2.35 kpc and the effective temperature of HDE 226868 in the range 30000 to 31000 K. Extending the possible intervals of these parameters to 1.8 to 2.35 kpc and 28000 to 32000 K, one gets for the mass of the star the range 40 +- 10 solar masses. Including into the analysis observational properties such as the profiles of the emission lines, rotational broadening of the absorption lines and the ellipsoidal light variations, one can estimate also the mass of the compact component. It has to be in the ranges 20 +- 5 solar masses and 13.5 to 29 solar masses for the cases described above. The same analysis (using the evolutionary models and the observational properties listed above) yields lower limit to the distance to the system of about 2.0 kpc, if the effective temperature of HDE 226868 is higher than 30000 K. This limit to the distance does not depend on any photometric or astrometric considerations.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Numerical study of strain rate effects on stress strain response of soils

    Get PDF
    Imperial Users onl

    Curran, Edward: Humanities Chairman Nomination Hearing (1985): Speech 05

    Get PDF

    FDTD analysis of the tunneling and growing exponential in a pair of epsilon-negative and mu-negative slabs

    Full text link
    Pairing together material slabs with opposite signs for the real parts of their constitutive parameters has been shown to lead to interesting and unconventional properties that are not otherwise observable for single slabs. One such case was demonstrated analytically for the conjugate (i.e., complementary) pairing of infinite planar slabs of epsilon-negative (ENG) and mu-negative (MNG) media [A. Alu, and N. Engheta, IEEE Trans. Antennas Prop., 51, 2558 (2003)]. There it was shown that when these two slabs are juxtaposed and excited by an incident plane wave, resonance, complete tunneling, total transparency and reconstruction of evanescent waves may occur in the steady-state regime under a monochromatic excitation, even though each of the two slabs by itself is essentially opaque to the incoming radiation. This may lead to virtual imagers with sub-wavelength resolution and other anomalous phenomena overcoming the physical limit of diffraction. Here we explore how a transient sinusoidal signal that starts at t = 0 interacts with such an ENG-MNG pair of finite size using an FDTD technique. Multiple reflections and transmissions at each interface are shown to build up to the eventual steady state response of the pair, and during this process one can observe how the growing exponential phenomenon may actually occur inside this bilayer.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Phys Rev

    The new radiation-hard optical links for the ATLAS pixel detector

    Full text link
    The ATLAS detector is currently being upgraded with a new layer of pixel based charged particle tracking and a new arrangement of the services for the pixel detector. These upgrades require the replacement of the opto-boards previously used by the pixel detector. In this report we give details on the design and production of the new opto-boards.Comment: Presentation at the DPF 2013 Meeting of the American Physical Society Division of Particles and Fields, Santa Cruz, California, August 13-17, 201

    Numerical Study of Wave Propagation in Uniaxially Anisotropic Lorentzian Backward Wave Slabs

    Full text link
    The propagation and refraction of a cylindrical wave created by a line current through a slab of backward wave medium, also called left-handed medium, is numerically studied with FDTD. The slab is assumed to be uniaxially anisotropic. Several sets of constitutive parameters are considered and comparisons with theoretical results are made. Electric field distributions are studied inside and behind the slab. It is found that the shape of the wavefronts and the regions of real and complex wave vectors are in agreement with theoretical results.Comment: 6 pages, figure

    On the formation and evolution of the first Be star in a black hole binary MWC 656

    Get PDF
    We find that the formation of MWC 656 (the first Be binary containing a black hole) involves a common envelope phase and a supernova explosion. This result supports the idea that a rapidly rotating Be star can emerge out of a common envelope phase, which is very intriguing because this evolutionary stage is thought to be too fast to lead to significant accretion and spin up of the B star. We predict ∼10−100\sim 10-100 of B BH binaries to currently reside in the Galactic disk, among which around 1/31/3 contain a Be star, but there is only a small chance to observe a system with parameters resembling MWC 656. If MWC 656 is representative of intrinsic Galactic Be BH binary population, it may indicate that standard evolutionary theory needs to be revised. This would pose another evolutionary problem in understanding BH binaries, with BH X-ray Novae formation issue being the prime example. The future evolution of MWC 656 with a ∼5\sim 5 M⊙_{\odot} black hole and with a ∼13\sim 13 M⊙_{\odot} main sequence companion on a ∼60\sim 60 day orbit may lead to the formation of a coalescing BH-NS system. The estimated Advanced LIGO/Virgo detection rate of such systems is up to ∼0.2\sim 0.2 yr−1^{-1}. This empirical estimate is a lower limit as it is obtained with only one particular evolutionary scenario, the MWC 656 binary. This is only a third such estimate available (after Cyg X-1 and Cyg X-3), and it lends additional support to the existence of so far undetected BH--NS binaries.Comment: revised and extended version after MNRAS review 17 pages, 10 figure

    A method to widen the scattering bandwidth of closed cylindrical active coated nano particles

    Full text link
    Plane wave scattering from two closely spaced, closed cylindrical active coated nano particles (CNPs), which have slightly different resonance frequencies, is studied numerically. Although the distance between them is only 0.4λ, the scattering cross-section(SCS) background value of this two-CNP system is increased 5dB when r2 = 15.1 nm and the 3dB SCS bandwidth is 599.95THz-600.1THz, which is a substantially wider working bandwidth near the SCS peak than the one associated with either single CNP, i.e. 600.01THz-600.1THz. © 2013 IEEE

    Numerical Study of the Near-Field and Far-Field Properties of Active Open Cylindrical Coated Nanoparticle Antennas

    Full text link
    A very electrically small, active open cylindrical coated nanoparticle model is constructed, and its electromagnetic properties are investigated in the visible frequency band. Its optical response under both planewave and electric dipole antenna excitations shows very strong dipole behavior at its lowest resonance frequency. The scattering cross section at that dipole resonance frequency is increased by more than +50 dBsm for the planewave excitation. When the open structure is excited by a small current (I0 = 1 × 10−3 A) driven dipole antenna, the maximum radiated power of the composite nanoantenna can be increased by +83.35 dB over its value obtained when the dipole antenna radiates alone in free space. The behaviors under various locations and orientations of the dipole are explored. Dipole orientations along the cylinder axis and symmetric locations of the dipole produced the largest radiated power enhancements. © 2011, IEEE. All rights reserved
    • …
    corecore