611 research outputs found
IRIS: A new generation of IRAS maps
The Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) had a tremendous impact on many
areas of modern astrophysics. In particular it revealed the ubiquity of
infrared cirrus that are a spectacular manifestation of the interstellar medium
complexity but also an important foreground for observational cosmology. With
the forthcoming Planck satellite there is a need for all-sky complementary data
sets with arcminute resolution that can bring informations on specific
foreground emissions that contaminate the Cosmic Microwave Background
radiation. With its 4 arcmin resolution matching perfectly the high-frequency
bands of Planck, IRAS is a natural data set to study the variations of dust
properties at all scales. But the latest version of the images delivered by the
IRAS team (the ISSA plates) suffer from calibration, zero level and striping
problems that can preclude its use, especially at 12 and 25 micron. In this
paper we present how we proceeded to solve each of these problems and enhance
significantly the general quality of the ISSA plates in the four bands (12, 25,
60 and 100 micron). This new generation of IRAS images, called IRIS, benefits
from a better zodiacal light subtraction, from a calibration and zero level
compatible with DIRBE, and from a better destriping. At 100 micron the IRIS
product is also a significant improvement from the Schlegel et al. (1998) maps.
IRIS keeps the full ISSA resolution, it includes well calibrated point sources
and the diffuse emission calibration at scales smaller than 1 degree was
corrected for the variation of the IRAS detector responsivity with scale and
brightness. The uncertainty on the IRIS calibration and zero level are
dominated by the uncertainty on the DIRBE calibration and on the accuracy of
the zodiacal light model.Comment: 16 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ (Suppl). Higher
resolution version available at
http://www.cita.utoronto.ca/~mamd/IRIS/IrisTechnical.htm
A characteristic lengthscale causes anomalous size effects and boundary programmability in mechanical metamaterials
The architecture of mechanical metamaterialsis designed to harness geometry,
non-linearity and topology to obtain advanced functionalities such as shape
morphing, programmability and one-way propagation. While a purely geometric
framework successfully captures the physics of small systems under idealized
conditions, large systems or heterogeneous driving conditions remain
essentially unexplored. Here we uncover strong anomalies in the mechanics of a
broad class of metamaterials, such as auxetics, shape-changers or topological
insulators: a non-monotonic variation of their stiffness with system size, and
the ability of textured boundaries to completely alter their properties. These
striking features stem from the competition between rotation-based
deformations---relevant for small systems---and ordinary elasticity, and are
controlled by a characteristic length scale which is entirely tunable by the
architectural details. Our study provides new vistas for designing, controlling
and programming the mechanics of metamaterials in the thermodynamic limit.Comment: Main text has 4 pages, 4 figures + Methods and Supplementary
Informatio
A mid-IR survey of the L 1641-N region with ISOCAM
We present an analysis of the L 1641 outflow region using broad-band and
narrow-band imaging data at mid-infrared wavelengths from ISOCAM. We detect a
total of 34 sources in the x region covered by
the broad-band filters. Four of these sources have no reported detection in
previous studies of the region. We find that the source previously identified
as the near-IR counter-part to the IRAS detected point-source (IRAS 05338-0624)
is not the brightest source in the wavelength region of the IRAS 12 \micron\
filter. We find instead that a nearby object (within the beam of IRAS and not
detected at near-IR wavelengths) outshines all others sources in the area by a
factor of 2. We submit that this source is likely to be the IRAS detected
point source. A comparison of the near-IR (J-H vs H-K) and mid-IR (J-K vs [6.7
um]-[14 um]) color-color plots shows only four sources with excess emission at
near-IR wavelengths, but atleast 85% of all sources show excess emission at
mid-IR wavelengths. The CVF spectra suggest a range of evolutionary status in
the program stars ranging from embedded YSOs to the young disks. When combined
with optical and near-IR age estimates, these results show active current
star-formation in the region that has been on-going for at least 2 Myr.Comment: Submitted to ApJ. Abstracted edited for arXiv submission Replaced by
version accepted by Ap
Inverted and Programmable Poynting Effects in Metamaterials
The Poynting effect generically manifests itself as the extension of the
material in the direction perpendicular to an applied shear deformation
(torsion) and is a material parameter hard to design. Unlike isotropic solids,
in designed structures, peculiar couplings between shear and normal
deformations can be achieved and exploited for practical applications. Here, we
engineer a metamaterial that can be programmed to contract or extend under
torsion and undergo nonlinear twist under compression. First, we show that our
system exhibits a novel type of inverted Poynting effect, where axial
compression induces a nonlinear torsion. Then the Poynting modulus of the
structure is programmed from initial negative values to zero and positive
values via a pre-compression applied prior to torsion. Our work opens avenues
for programming nonlinear elastic moduli of materials and tuning the couplings
between shear and normal responses by rational design. Obtaining inverted and
programmable Poynting effects in metamaterials inspires diverse applications
from designing machine materials, soft robots and actuators to engineering
biological tissues, implants and prosthetic devices functioning under
compression and torsion.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Can the jamming transition be described using equilibrium statistical mechanics?
When materials such as foams or emulsions are compressed, they display solid
behaviour above the so-called `jamming' transition. Because compression is done
out-of-equilibrium in the absence of thermal fluctuations, jamming appears as a
new kind of a nonequilibrium phase transition. In this proceeding paper, we
suggest that tools from equilibrium statistical mechanics can in fact be used
to describe many specific features of the jamming transition. Our strategy is
to introduce thermal fluctuations and use statistical mechanics to describe the
complex phase behaviour of systems of soft repulsive particles, before sending
temperature to zero at the end of the calculation. We show that currently
available implementations of standard tools such as integral equations,
mode-coupling theory, or replica calculations all break down at low temperature
and large density, but we suggest that new analytical schemes can be developed
to provide a fully microscopic, quantitative description of the jamming
transition.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figs. Talk presented at Statphys24 (July 2010, Cairns,
Australia
65 Cybele in the thermal infrared: Multiple observations and thermophysical analysis
We investigated the physical and thermal properties of 65 Cybele}, one of the
largest main-belt asteroids. Based on published and recently obtained thermal
infrared observations, including ISO measurements, we derived through
thermophysical modelling (TPM) a size of 302x290x232 km (+/- 4 %) and an
geometric visible albedo of 0.050+/-0.005. Our model of a regolith covered
surface with low thermal inertia and "default" roughness describes the
wavelengths and phase angle dependent thermal aspects very well. Before/after
opposition effect and beaming behaviour can be explained in that way. We found
a constant emissivity of 0.9 at wavelengths up to about 100 micron and lower
values towards the submillimetre range, indicating a grain size distribution
dominated by 200 micron particle sizes. The spectroscopic analysis revealed an
emissivity increase between 8.0 and 9.5 micron. We compared this emissivity
behaviour with the Christiansen features of carbonaceous chondrite meteorites,
but a conclusive identification was not possible. A comparison between the
Standard Thermal Model (STM) and the applied TPM clearly demonstrates the
limitations and problems of the STM for the analysis of multi-epoch and
-wavelengths observations. While the TPM produced a unique diameter/albedo
solution, the calculated STM values varied by +/-30 % and showed clear trends
with wavelength and phase angle. Cybele can be considered as a nice textbook
case for the thermophysical analysis of combined optical and thermal infrared
observations.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication by A&
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