7,240 research outputs found
Gamma-ray burster recurrence timescales
Three optical transients have been found which are associated with gamma-ray bursters (GRBs). The deduced recurrence timescale for these optical transients (tau sub opt) will depend on the minimum brightness for which a flash would be detected. A detailed analysis using all available data of tau sub opt as a function of E(gamma)/E(opt) is given. For flashes similar to those found in the Harvard archives, the best estimate of tau sub opt is 0.74 years, with a 99% confidence interval from 0.23 years to 4.7 years. It is currently unclear whether the optical transients from GRBs also give rise to gamma-ray events. One way to test this association is to measure the recurrence timescale of gamma-ray events tau sub gamma. A total of 210 gamma-ray error boxes were examined and it was found that the number of observed overlaps is not significantly different from the number expected from chance coincidence. This observation can be used to place limits on tau sub gamma for an assumed luminosity function. It was found that tau sub gamma is approx. 10 yr if bursts are monoenergetic. However, if GRBs have a power law luminosity function with a wide dynamic range, then the limit is tau sub gamma 0.5 yr. Hence, the gamma-ray data do not require tau sub gamma and tau sub opt to be different
Analytical comparisons of ablative nozzle materials final report, jun. 20, 1963 - nov. 20, 1964
Reaction kinetics ablation program to predict ablation performance of rocket nozzle heat protection material
Search for infrared counterparts of gamma-ray bursters
The result of two searches for infrared counterparts of Gamma-ray Bursters (GRB's) is reported. The first search was made using data from the Infrared Astronomy Satellite and covered 23 positions. The second search was made with the Kitt Peak 1.5 m telescope and covered 3 positions. In neither of these two searches was any infrared candidate detected
One hundred angstrom niobium wire
Composite of fine niobium wires in copper is used to study the size and proximity effects of a superconductor in a normal matrix. The niobium rod was drawn to a 100 angstrom diameter wire on a copper tubing
The Role of Mentoring in the Careers of Female Airline Transport Pilots
Women have been a part of aviation since its inception, yet they have been traditionally underrepresented in the ranks of commercial pilots. This study explored what role mentoring played in the lives and careers of female Airline Transport Pilots (ATP).
It was determined that there was no statistically significant difference in self-reported perceptions of success between female ATP who had been mentored and those who had not. Of the female ATP who had been mentored, those who reported an informal mentoring relationship rated their relationship higher than those who reported a formal mentoring relationship when it came to career oriented assistance and advice. The results for mentoring factors related to psychosocial needs and activities were less certain, but the preponderance of evidence supports the assertion that those female ATP who reported an informal mentoring relationship were more satisfied in these areas than their formal mentor counterparts
Nonabelian dark matter: models and constraints
Numerous experimental anomalies hint at the existence of a dark matter (DM)
multiplet chi_i with small mass splittings. We survey the simplest such models
which arise from DM in the low representations of a new SU(2) gauge symmetry,
whose gauge bosons have a small mass mu < 1 GeV. We identify preferred
parameters M_chi ~ 1 TeV, mu ~ 100 MeV, alpha_g ~ 0.04 and the chi chi -> 4e
annihilation channel, for explaining PAMELA, Fermi, and INTEGRAL/SPI lepton
excesses, while remaining consistent with constraints from relic density,
diffuse gamma rays and the CMB. This consistency is strengthened if DM
annihilations occur mainly in subhalos, while excitations (relevant to the
excited DM proposal to explain the 511 keV excess) occur in the galactic center
(GC), due to higher velocity dispersions in the GC, induced by baryons. We
derive new constraints and predictions which are generic to these models.
Notably, decays of excited DM states chi' -> chi gamma arise at one loop and
could provide a new signal for INTEGRAL/SPI; big bang nucleosynthesis (BBN)
constraints on the density of dark SU(2) gauge bosons imply a lower bound on
the mixing parameter epsilon between the SU(2) gauge bosons and photon. These
considerations rule out the possibility of the gauge bosons that decay into
e^+e^- being long-lived. We study in detail models of doublet, triplet and
quintuplet DM, showing that both normal and inverted mass hierarchies can
occur, with mass splittings that can be parametrically smaller, e.g., O(100)
keV, than the generic MeV scale of splittings. A systematic treatment of Z_2
symmetry which insures the stability of the intermediate DM state is given for
cases with inverted mass hierarchy, of interest for boosting the 511 keV signal
from the excited dark matter mechanism.Comment: 28 pages, 17 figures; v2. added brief comment, reference
Black Holes and Black String-like Solutions in Codimension-2 Braneworlds
We discuss black hole solutions with a Gauss-Bonnet term in the bulk and an
induced gravity term on a thin brane of codimension-2. We show that these black
holes can be localized on the brane, and they can be extended further into the
bulk by a warp function. These solutions have regular horizons and no other
curvature singularities appear apart from the string-like ones. The projection
of the Gauss-Bonnet term on the brane imposes a constraint relation which
dictates the form of matter on the brane and in the bulk.Comment: 9 pages, no figures, plenary talk given at the 7th Friedmann
International Seminar on Gravitation and Cosmology, 29 June-5 July 2008, Joao
Pessoa, Brazil, to appear in the proceeding
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