7,103 research outputs found
Fe I and Fe II Abundances of Solar-Type Dwarfs in the Pleiades Open Cluster
We have derived Fe abundances of 16 solar-type Pleiades dwarfs by means of an
equivalent width analysis of Fe I and Fe II lines in high-resolution spectra
obtained with the Hobby - Eberly Telescope and High Resolution Spectrograph.
Abundances derived from Fe II lines are larger than those derived from Fe I
lines (herein referred to as over-ionization) for stars with Teff < 5400 K, and
the discrepancy (deltaFe = [Fe II/H] - [Fe I/H]) increases dramatically with
decreasing Teff, reaching over 0.8 dex for the coolest stars of our sample. The
Pleiades joins the open clusters M 34, the Hyades, IC 2602, and IC 2391, and
the Ursa Major moving group, demonstrating ostensible over-ionization trends.
The Pleiades deltaFe abundances are correlated with Ca II infrared triplet and
Halpha chromospheric emission indicators and relative differences therein.
Oxygen abundances of our Pleiades sample derived from the high-excitation O I
triplet have been previously shown to increase with decreasing Teff, and a
comparison with the deltaFe abundances suggests that the over-excitation
(larger abundances derived from high excitation lines relative to low
excitation lines) and over-ionization effects that have been observed in cool
open cluster and disk field main sequence (MS) dwarfs share a common origin.
Star-to-star Fe I abundances have low internal scatter, but the abundances of
stars with Teff < 5400 K are systematically higher compared to the warmer
stars. The cool star [Fe I/H] abundances cannot be connected directly to
over-excitation effects, but similarities with the deltaFe and O I triplet
trends suggest the abundances are dubious. Using the [Fe I/H] abundances of
five stars with Teff > 5400 K, we derive a mean Pleiades cluster metallicity of
[Fe/H] = +0.01 +/- 0.02.Comment: 32 pages, 7 figures, 7 tables; accepted by PAS
Internal Migration and Regional Population Dynamics in Europe: Switzerland Case Study
This paper reports on internal migration and regional population dynamics in Switzerland. It examines briefly the main population trends in the last century and then turns to more detailed examination of internal migration patterns and trends in three years, 1984, 1994 and 1996 and compares them. First, inter-cantonal migration is investigated in the context of the life course. On the communal level population change patterns and underlying in-, out- and net migration are examined. An attempt is made to link migration with such variables as population density, level of unemployment, prevailing language and with a functional classification of the urban system. The methodology used is the same as in a number of other studies, making the results as comparable as possible with the results of other studies of migration in European states (Rees and Kupiszewski 1999)
Postoperative pain management
This literature review examined two pharmacological forms of postoperative pain
management and one nonpharmacological intervention to help reduce pain (See
Appendix A). Sources were gathered from the nursing research databases of
Cumulative Index to Nursing & Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) and PubMed.
Articles and studies between 2004 and 2015 were analyzed to write the review. The
focus was to look at postoperative patients and determine if epidural or patient
controlled analgesia (PCA) provided the same satisfaction for individuals who
underwent surgery. In addition, music therapy was researched to explore the effects
of listening to a pleasurable sound and how it might reduce the pain experience.
Although, epidural and PCA are widely used to reduce pain management in surgical
patients, epidural administration was more effective in controlling pain levels but is
associated with serious risks. Patient controlled analgesia allows patients to have a
sense of control and reduce the level of fear associated with surgery, potential pain,
and sense of inferiority
Li I and K I Scatter in Cool Pleiades Dwarfs
We utilize high-resolution (R~60,000), high S/N (~100) spectroscopy of 17
cool Pleiades dwarfs to examine the confounding star-to-star scatter in the
6707 Li I line strengths in this young cluster. Our Pleiads, selected for their
small projected rotational velocity and modest chromospheric emission, evince
substantial scatter in the linestrengths of 6707 Li I feature that is absent in
the 7699 K I resonance line. The Li I scatter is not correlated with that in
the high-excitation 7774 O I feature, and the magnitude of the former is
greater than the latter despite the larger temperature sensitivity of the O I
feature. These results suggest that systematic errors in linestrength
measurements due to blending, color (or color-based T_eff) errors, or line
formation effects related to an overlying chromosphere are not the principal
source of Li I scatter in our stars. There do exist analytic spot models that
can produce the observed Li scatter without introducing scatter in the K I line
strengths or the color-magnitude diagram. However, these models predict factor
of >3 differences in abundances derived from the subordinate 6104 and resonance
6707 Li I features; we find no difference in the abundances determined from
these two features. These analytic spot models also predict CN line strengths
significantly larger than we observe in our spectra. The simplest explanation
of the Li, K, CN, and photometric data is that there must be a real abundance
component to the Pleiades Li dispersion. We suggest that this real abundance
component is the manifestation of relic differences in erstwhile
pre-main-sequence Li burning caused by effects of surface activity on stellar
structure. We discuss observational predictions of these effects.Comment: 35 pages, 7 figures; accepted by Ap
John H. Schuler to J. H. Nelson (5 May 1860)
Discusses business, mutual acquaintances, and familyhttps://egrove.olemiss.edu/ciwar_corresp/1621/thumbnail.jp
John H. Schuler to J. H. Nelson (24 June 1860)
Talks about family connections; thanks Mr. Nelson for all of his help; talking about beginning a mercantile business at Duck Hill; likes the state a lot and thinks there are several prospects for making a living; family wishes he would return to Virginiahttps://egrove.olemiss.edu/ciwar_corresp/1623/thumbnail.jp
The First 200 Studies in Applied Economics
The Studies in Applied Economics working paper series began as a way to disseminate research by Steve Hanke’s undergraduate students that deserved wider notice. The series broadened to include work by established scholars and practitioners. We use the landmark of 200 papers to review what the series has achieved and what we have learned about guiding bright undergraduate students in doing original scholarly research.Keywords. Economics, Writing, Students.JEL. A22; A30
Are the reactions a challenge for the factorized Pomeron at high energies?
We would like to point to the strong violation of the putative factorized
Pomeron exchange model in the reactions in the
high-energy region where this model works fairly well in all other cases.Comment: 4 pages, LaTex, 1 fig. in postscript, minor typos corrected, to be
published in Phys. Rev. D 60, 117503 (1999
Investigation of the stability of commercial neutron probes
At the Paul Scherrer Institute's Calibration Laboratory, neutron reference fields are provided for the calibration of ambient and personal dose equivalent (rate) metres and passive dosemeters. To ensure traceability to the standards of the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) in Germany, the neutron fields are characterised by means of a PTB-calibrated Berthold LB6411 neutron probe which is used as a secondary standard. The LB6411 detector suffers from an unstable, increasing dose rate reading in the order of up to +5 % (according to the manufacturers, this is due to a charging effect in the 3He proportional counter). In a calibration, this instability is usually corrected for based on the reading obtained with a test source. In this work, the instability was investigated by means of measurements under irradiation with ambient dose equivalent rates up to 24 mSv h-1 for up to 20 h and compared with the behaviour of an LB6419 and a Thermo Wendi-2 probe. The reading of the instruments was found to reach a plateau, e.g. it becomes stable after ∼90 min during irradiation with 10 mSv h-1 neutrons. The plateau is reached faster for higher dose rates. This supports the interpretation as a charging effect in the proportional counter. The effect could also be duplicated in an irradiation with photons from a 137Cs source. The decay time of the accumulated charge was found to be very long, i.e. the instrument showed a stable reproducible reading for up to 6 h after the plateau was reached. From these observations, a conditioning procedure was derived which ensures a stable operation of the instrument after an irradiation of the instrument preceding its use in the reference measurement
- …