19,946 research outputs found

    A Proposal for a Comprehensive Restructuring of the Public Information System

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    After more than ten years of legislative, judicial and bureaucratic tinkering, the public information system created by the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) is still far from satisfactory. The present public information system has not been successful because its drafters lacked imagination and failed to do the basic work necessary to create a sound foundation for such a comprehensive program. They failed to analyze the realistic goals of a public information system; they ignored the ultimate goals of improved government performance; they misrepresented the system\u27s costs, both in monetary expense to taxpayers and in diminished government performance. They considered neither alternative techniques nor the problem of designing the public information system as an integral part of the total governmental structure. Actual open government for the benefit of the general populace will be possible only if the basic weaknesses of the present system are explored in depth. This Article is an appeal to Congress to undertake the careful analysis necessary to construct a workable, useful public information system

    Helium Recombination Lines as a Probe of Abundance and Temperature Problems

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    The paper presents a simplified formula to determine an electron temperature, Te(He I), for planetary nebulae (PNe) using the He I 7281/6678 line flux ratio. In our previous studies of Te(He I) (Zhang et al. 2005), we used the He I line emission coefficients given by Benjamin et al. (1999). Here we examine the results of using more recent atomic data presented by Porter et al. (2005). A good agreement is shown, suggesting that the effect of uncertainties of atomic data on the resultant Te(He I) is negligible. We also present an analytical formula to derive electron temperature using the He I discontinuity at 3421 A. Our analysis shows that Te(He I) values are significantly lower than electron temperatures deduced from the Balmer jump of H I recombination spectra, Te(H I), and that inferred from the collisionally excited [O III] nebular-to-auroral forbidden line flux ratio, Te([O III]). In addition, Te(H I) covers a wider range of values than either Te(He I) or Te([O III]). This supports the two-abundance nebular model with hydrogen-deficient material embedded in diffuse gas of a ``normal'' chemical composition (i.e. ~solar).Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. To appear in the RevMexAA proceedings of "The Ninth Texas-Mexico Conference on Astrophysics

    Space shuttle pogo studies

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    Topics covered include: (1) pogo suppression for main propulsion subsystem operation; (2) application of quarter-scale low pressure oxidizer turbopump transfer functions; (3) pogo stability during orbital maneuvering subsystem operation; and (4) errors in frequency response measurements

    Shock-Wave Heating Model for Chondrule Formation: Prevention of Isotopic Fractionation

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    Chondrules are considered to have much information on dust particles and processes in the solar nebula. It is naturally expected that protoplanetary disks observed in present star forming regions have similar dust particles and processes, so study of chondrule formation may provide us great information on the formation of the planetary systems. Evaporation during chondrule melting may have resulted in depletion of volatile elements in chondrules. However, no evidence for a large degree of heavy-isotope enrichment has been reported in chondrules. In order to meet this observed constraint, the rapid heating rate at temperatures below the silicate solidus is required to suppress the isotopic fractionation. We have developed a new shock-wave heating model taking into account the radiative transfer of the dust thermal continuum emission and the line emission of gas molecules and calculated the thermal history of chondrules. We have found that optically-thin shock waves for the thermal continuum emission from dust particles can meet the rapid heating constraint, because the dust thermal emission does not keep the dust particles high temperature for a long time in the pre-shock region and dust particles are abruptly heated by the gas drag heating in the post-shock region. We have also derived the upper limit of optical depth of the pre-shock region using the radiative diffusion approximation, above which the rapid heating constraint is not satisfied. It is about 1 - 10.Comment: 58 pages, including 5 tables and 15 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa

    The ionization structure of the Orion nebula: Infrared line observations and models

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    Observations of the (O III) 52 and 88 micron lines and the (N III) 57 micron line have been made at 6 positions and the (Ne III) 36 micron line at 4 positions in the Orion Nebula to probe its ionization structure. The measurements, made with a -40" diameter beam, were spaced every 45" in a line south from and including the Trapezium. The wavelength of the (Ne III) line was measured to be 36.013 + or - 0.004 micron. Electron densities and abundance ratios of N(++)/O(++) have been calculated and compared to other radio and optical observations. Detailed one component and two component (bar plus halo) spherical models were calculated for exciting stars with effective temperatures of 37 to 40,000K and log g = 4.0 and 4.5. Both the new infrared observations and the visible line measurements of oxygen and nitrogen require T sub eff approx less than 37,000K. However, the double ionized neon requires a model with T sub eff more than or equal to 39,000K, which is more consistent with that inferred from the radio flux or spectral type. These differences in T sub eff are not due to effects of dust on the stellar radiation field, but are probably due to inaccuracies in the assumed stellar spectrum. The observed N(++)/O(++) ratio is almost twice the N(+)/O(+) ratio. The best fit models give N/H = 8.4 x 10 to the -5 power, O/H = 4.0 x 10 to the -4 power, and Ne/H = 1.3 x 10 to the -4 power. Thus neon and nitrogen are approximately solar, but oxygen is half solar in abundance. From the infrared O(++) lines it is concluded that the ionization bar results from an increase in column depth rather than from a local density enhancement

    On the Cosmic Evolution of Fe/Mg in QSO Absorption Line Systems

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    We investigate the variation of the ratio of the equivalent widths of the FeIIλ\lambda2600 line to the MgIIλλ\lambda\lambda2796,2803 doublet as a function of redshift in a large sample of absorption lines drawn from the JHU-SDSS Absorption Line Catalog. We find that despite large scatter, the observed ratio shows a trend where the equivalent width ratio RWFeII/WMgII\mathcal{R}\equiv W_{\rm FeII}/W_{\rm MgII} decreases monotonically with increasing redshift zz over the range 0.55z1.900.55 \le z \le 1.90. Selecting the subset of absorbers where the signal-to-noise ratio of the MgII equivalent width WMgIIW_{\rm MgII} is \ge3 and modeling the equivalent width ratio distribution as a gaussian, we find that the mean of the gaussian distribution varies as R(0.045±0.005)z\mathcal{R}\propto (-0.045\pm0.005)z. We discuss various possible reasons for the trend. A monotonic trend in the Fe/Mg abundance ratio is predicted by a simple model where the abundances of Mg and Fe in the absorbing clouds are assumed to be the result of supernova ejecta and where the cosmic evolution in the SNIa and core-collapse supernova rates is related to the cosmic star-formation rate. If the trend in R\mathcal{R} reflects the evolution in the abundances, then it is consistent with the predictions of the simple model.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, final version published in MNRA
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