132,164 research outputs found

    Fossil Glasses Produced by Impact of Meteorites, Asteroids and Possibly Comets with the Planet Earth

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    In recent times one of the most intriguing mysteries of geology bas been the occurrence of aerodynamically-shaped glasses on five continents of the earth. These glasses under discussion are obviously not of fulgurite origin. Recent research indicates that these glasses known as tektites are ~he result of meteorite, asteroid, or possibly comet impact. Impact glasses, in general, differ from volcanic glasses in that they are lower in water content, have lower gallium and germanium contents, and are not necessarily in magmatically unstable continental areas

    Constrained Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Atomic Ground-States

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    Constrained molecular dynamics(CoMD) model, previously introduced for nuclear dynamics, has been extended to the atomic structure and collision calculations. Quantum effects corresponding to the Pauli and Heisenberg principle are enforced by constraints, in a parameter-free way. Our calculations for small atomic system, H, He, Li, Be, F reproduce the ground-state binding energies within 3%, compared with the results of quantum mechanical Hartree-Fock calculations.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figure

    Anomalous diffusion in a plasma formed from the exhaust beam of an electron-bombardment ion thruster

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    Electron diffusion process in beam plasma passing through electrically floating anod

    Experimental investigation of a 2.5 centimeter diameter Kaufman microthruster

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    A 2.5-centimeter-diameter Kaufman electron bombardment microthruster was fabricated and tested. The microthruster design was based on the 15-centimeter-diameter SERT 2 and 5-centimeter-diameter Lewis experimental thruster designs. The microthruster with a two-grid system, operating at a net accelerating potential of 600 volts and an accelerator potential of 500 volts, produced a calculated 445 micronewton thrust when it was run with a 9-milliampere beam current. A glass grid was initially used in testing. Later a two-grid system was successfully incorporated. Both the propellant utilization efficiency and the total power efficiency were lower than for large-size advanced thrusters, as expected; but they were sufficiently high that 2.5-centimeter thrusters show promise for future space applications. Total power of the microthruster with an assumed 7-watt hollow-cathode neutralizer was less than 30 watts at a thrust level of 445 micronewton (100 Nu LBf). The hollow cathode was operated at zero tip heater power for power requirement tests

    The Detailed Chemical Abundance Patterns of M31 Globular Clusters

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    We present detailed chemical abundances for >>20 elements in ∼\sim30 globular clusters in M31. These results have been obtained using high resolution (λ/Δλ∼\lambda/\Delta\lambda\sim24,000) spectra of their integrated light and analyzed using our original method. The globular clusters have galactocentric radii between 2.5 kpc and 117 kpc, and therefore provide abundance patterns for different phases of galaxy formation recorded in the inner and outer halo of M31. We find that the clusters in our survey have a range in metallicity of −2.2<-2.2<[Fe/H]<−0.11<-0.11. The inner halo clusters cover this full range, while the outer halo globular clusters at R>>20 kpc have a small range in abundance of [Fe/H]=−1.6±0.10=-1.6 \pm 0.10. We also measure abundances of alpha, r- and s-process elements. These results constitute the first abundance pattern constraints for old populations in M31 that are comparable to those known for the Milky Way halo.Comment: XII International Symposium on Nuclei in the Cosmos August 5-12, 2012 Cairns, Australia. To appear in Proceedings of Scienc

    Diffuse radio emission in the merging cluster MACS J0717.5+3745: the discovery of the most powerful radio halo

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    Hierarchical models of structure formation predict that galaxy clusters grow via mergers of smaller clusters and galaxy groups, as well as through continuous accretion of gas. MACS J0717.5+3745 is an X-ray luminous and complex merging cluster, located at a redshift of 0.55. Here we present Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT) radio observations at 610 MHz of this cluster. The main aim of the observations is to search for diffuse radio emission within the galaxy cluster MACS J0717.5+3745 related to the ongoing merger. These GMRT observations are complemented by Very Large Array (VLA) archival observations at 1.4, 4.9 and 8.5 GHz. We have discovered a radio halo in the cluster MACS J0717.5+3745 with a size of about 1.2 Mpc. The radio power P_1.4 GHz is 5 x 10^25 W/Hz, which makes it the most powerful radio halo known till date. A 700 kpc radio structure, which we classify as a radio relic, is located in between the merging substructures of the system. The location of this relic roughly coincides with regions of the intra-cluster medium (ICM) that have a significant enhancement in temperature as shown by Chandra. The major axis of the relic is also roughly perpendicular to the merger axis. This shows that the relic might be the result of a merger-related shock wave, where particles are accelerated via the diffuse shock acceleration (DSA) mechanism. Alternatively, the relic might trace an accretion shock of a large-scale galaxy filament to the south-west. The global spectral index of radio emission within the cluster is found to be -1.24 +/-0.05 between 4.9 GHz and 610 MHz. We derive a value of 5.8 microGauss for the equipartition magnetic field strength at the location of the radio halo. [abridged].Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&A on August 3, 200

    Probing Fine-Scale Ionospheric Structure with the Very Large Array Radio Telescope

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    High resolution (~1 arcminute) astronomical imaging at low frequency (below 150 MHz) has only recently become practical with the development of new calibration algorithms for removing ionospheric distortions. In addition to opening a new window in observational astronomy, the process of calibrating the ionospheric distortions also probes ionospheric structure in an unprecedented way. Here we explore one aspect of this new type of ionospheric measurement, the differential refraction of celestial source pairs as a function of their angular separation. This measurement probes variations in the spatial gradient of the line-of-sight total electron content (TEC) to 0.001 TECU/km accuracy over spatial scales of under 10 km to over 100 km. We use data from the VLA Low-frequency Sky Survey (VLSS; Cohen et al. 2007, AJ 134, 1245), a nearly complete 74 MHz survey of the entire sky visible to the Very Large Array (VLA) telescope in Socorro, New Mexico. These data comprise over 500 hours of observations, all calibrated in a standard way. While ionospheric spatial structure varies greatly from one observation to the next, when analyzed over hundreds of hours, statistical patterns become apparent. We present a detailed characterization of how the median differential refraction depends on source pair separation, elevation and time of day. We find that elevation effects are large, but geometrically predictable and can be "removed" analytically using a "thin-shell" model of the ionosphere. We find significantly greater ionospheric spatial variations during the day than at night. These diurnal variations appear to affect the larger angular scales to a greater degree indicating that they come from disturbances on relatively larger spatial scales (100s of km, rather than 10s of km).Comment: Accepted for publication by The Astronomical Journa

    Backscattering and secondary-electron emission from metal targets of various thicknesses

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    Backscattering and secondary electron emission from metal targets of various thicknesse
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