1,159 research outputs found
Paleomagnetic constraints on deformation of superfast-spread oceanic crust exposed at Pito Deep Rift
The uppermost oceanic crust produced at the superfast spreading (âŒ142 km Ma â1, fullâspreading rate) southern East Pacific Rise (EPR) during the Gauss Chron is exposed in a tectonic window along the northeastern wall of the Pito Deep Rift. Paleomagnetic analysis of fully oriented dike (62) and gabbro (5) samples from two adjacent study areas yield bootstrapped mean remanence directions of 38.9° ± 8.1°, â16.7° ± 15.6°, n = 23 (Area A) and 30.4° ± 8.0°, â25.1° ± 12.9°, n = 44 (Area B), both are significantly distinct from the Geocentric Axial Dipole expected direction at 23° S. Regional tectonics and outcropâscale structural data combined with bootstrapped remanence directions constrain models that involve a sequence of three rotations that result in dikes restored to subvertical orientations related to (1) inwardâtilting of crustal blocks during spreading (Area A = 11°, Area B = 22°), (2) clockwise, verticalâaxis rotation of the Easter Microplate (A = 46°, B = 44°), and (3) block tilting at Pito Deep Rift (A = 21°, B = 10°). These data support a structural model for accretion at the southern EPR in which outcropâscale faulting and block rotation accommodates spreadingârelated subaxial subsidence that is generally less than that observed in crust generated at a fast spreading rate exposed at Hess Deep Rift. These data also support previous estimates for the clockwise rotation of crust adjacent to the Easter Microplate. Dike sample natural remanent magnetization (NRM) has an arithmetic mean of 5.96 A/m ± 3.76, which suggests that they significantly contribute to observed magnetic anomalies from fastâ to superfastâspread crust
Direct evidence from anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility for lateral melt migration at superfast spreading centers
Rare, faultâbounded escarpments expose natural cross sections of ocean crust in several areas and provide an unparalleled opportunity to study the end products of tectonic and magmatic processes that operated at depth beneath oceanic spreading centers. We mapped the geologic structure of ocean crust produced at the East Pacific Rise (EPR) and now exposed along steep cliffs of the Pito Deep Rift near the northern edge of the Easter microplate. The upper oceanic crust in this area is typified by basaltic lavas underlain by a sheeted dike complex comprising northeast striking, moderately to steeply southeast dipping dikes. Paleomagnetic remanence of oriented blocks of dikes collected with both Alvin and Jason II indicate clockwise rotation of âŒ61° related to rotation of the microplate indicating structural coupling between the microplate and crust of the Nazca Plate to the north. The consistent southeast dip of dikes formed as the result of tilting at the EPR shortly after their injection. Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility of dikes provides wellâdefined magmatic flow directions that are dominantly dikeâparallel and shallowly plunging. Corrected to their original EPR orientation, magma flow is interpreted as nearâhorizontal and parallel to the ridge axis. These data provide the first direct evidence from sheeted dikes in ocean crust for alongâaxis magma transport. These results also suggest that lateral transport in dikes is important even at fast spreading ridges where a laterally continuous subaxial magma chamber is present
A Review of Problem Structuring Methods for Consideration in Prognostics and Smart Manufacturing
Successful use of prognostics involves the prediction of future system behaviors in an effort to maintain system availability and reduce the cost of maintenance and repairs. Recent work by the National Institute of Standards and Technology indicates that the field of prognostics and health management is vital for remaining competitive in todayâs manufacturing environment. While prognostics-based maintenance involves many traditional operations research-centric challenges for successful deployment such as limited availability of information and concerns regarding computational efficiency, the authors argue in this paper that the field of prognostics and health management, still in its embryonic development stage, could benefit greatly from considering soft operations research techniques as well. Specifically, the authors propose the use of qualitative problem structuring techniques that aid in problem understanding and scoping. This paper provides an overview of these soft methods and discusses and demonstrates how manufacturers might use them. An approach combining problem structuring methods with traditional operations research techniques would help accelerate the development of the prognostics field
Wandering Black Hole Candidates in Dwarf Galaxies at VLBI Resolution
Thirteen dwarf galaxies have recently been found to host radio-selected
accreting massive black hole (MBH) candidates, some of which are ``wandering"
in the outskirts of their hosts. We present 9 GHz Very Long Baseline Array
(VLBA) observations of these sources at milliarcsecond resolution. Our
observations have beam solid angles times smaller than the
previous Very Large Array (VLA) observations at 9 GHz, with comparable point
source sensitivities. We detect milliarcsecond-scale radio sources at the
positions of the four VLA sources most distant from the photo-centers of their
associated dwarf galaxies. These sources have brightness temperatures of
, consistent with active galactic nuclei (AGNs), but the
significance of their preferential location at large distances
(-value~) favors a background AGN interpretation. The VLBA
non-detections toward the other 9 galaxies indicate that the VLA sources are
resolved out on scales of tens of milliarcseconds, requiring extended radio
emission and lower brightness temperatures consistent with either star
formation or radio lobes associated with AGN activity. We explore the star
formation explanation by calculating the expected radio emission for these nine
VLBA non-detections, finding that about 5 have VLA luminosities that are
inconsistent with this scenario. Of the remaining four, two are associated with
spectroscopically confirmed AGNs that are consistent with being located at
their galaxy photo-centers. There are therefore between 5 and 7 wandering MBH
candidates out of the 13 galaxies we observed, although we cannot rule out
background AGNs for five of them with the data in hand.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, Accepted in Ap
A Review of Problem Structuring Methods for Consideration in Prognostics and Smart Manufacturing
Successful use of prognostics involves the prediction of future system behaviors in an effort to maintain system availability and reduce the cost of maintenance and repairs. Recent work by the National Institute of Standards and Technology indicates that the field of prognostics and health management is vital for remaining competitive in todayâs manufacturing environment. While prognostics-based maintenance involves many traditional operations researchcentric challenges for successful deployment such as limited availability of information and concerns regarding computational efficiency, the authors argue in this paper that the field of prognostics and health management, still in its embryonic development stage, could benefit greatly from considering soft operations research techniques as well. Specifically, the authors propose the use of qualitative problem structuring techniques that aid in problem understanding and scoping. This paper provides an overview of these soft methods and discusses and demonstrates how manufacturers might use them. An approach combining problem structuring methods with traditional operations research techniques would help accelerate the development of the prognostics field
VLA FRAMEx. I. Wideband Radio Properties of the AGN in NGC 4388
We present the first results from Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA)
observations as a part of the Fundamental Reference Active Galactic Nucleus
(AGN) Monitoring Experiment (FRAMEx), a program to understand the relationship
between AGN accretion physics and wavelength-dependent position as a function
of time. With this VLA survey, we investigate the radio properties from a
volume-complete sample of 25 hard X-ray-selected AGNs using the VLA in its
wideband mode. We observed the targets in the A-array configuration at
GHz with all polarization products. In this work, we introduce our calibration
and imaging methods for this survey, and we present our results and analysis
for the radio quiet AGN NGC 4388. We calibrated and imaged these data using the
multi-term, multi-frequency synthesis imaging algorithm to determine its
spatial, spectral and polarization structure across a continuous GHz
band. In the AGN, we measure a broken power law spectrum with
below a break frequency of 7.3 GHz and above. We detect
polarization at sub-arcsecond resolution across both the AGN and a secondary
radio knot. We compare our results to ancillary data and find that the VLA
radio continuum is likely due to AGN winds interacting with the local
interstellar medium that gets resolved away at sub-parsec spatial scales as
probed by the Very Long Baseline Array. A well-known ionization cone to the
southwest of the AGN appears likely to be projected material onto the underside
of the disk of the host galaxy.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, Accepted in Ap
Monitoring the US ATLAS Network Infrastructure with perfSONAR-PS
Global scientific collaborations, such as ATLAS, continue to push the network requirements envelope. Data movement in this collaboration is routinely including the regular exchange of petabytes of datasets between the collection and analysis facilities in the coming years. These requirements place a high emphasis on networks functioning at peak efficiency and availability; the lack thereof could mean critical delays in the overall scientific progress of distributed data-intensive experiments like ATLAS. Network operations staff routinely must deal with problems deep in the infrastructure; this may be as benign as replacing a failing piece of equipment, or as complex as dealing with a multi-domain path that is experiencing data loss. In either case, it is crucial that effective monitoring and performance analysis tools are available to ease the burden of management. We will report on our experiences deploying and using the perfSONAR-PS Performance Toolkit at ATLAS sites in the United States. This software creates a dedicated monitoring server, capable of collecting and performing a wide range of passive and active network measurements. Each independent instance is managed locally, but able to federate on a global scale; enabling a full view of the network infrastructure that spans domain boundaries. This information, available through web service interfaces, can easily be retrieved to create customized applications. The US ATLAS collaboration has developed a centralized ĂąâŹĆĄĂâĂÂșdashboardĂąâŹĆĄĂâĂÂč offering network administrators, users, and decision makers the ability to see the performance of the network at a glance. The dashboard framework includes the ability to notify users (alarm) when problems are found, thus allowing rapid response to potential problems and making perfSONAR-PS crucial to the operation of our distributed computing infrastructure.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98635/1/1742-6596_396_4_042038.pd
Dynamics of Quasi-ordered Structure in a Regio-regulated pi-Conjugated Polymer:Poly(4-methylthiazole-2,5-diyl)
Dynamics of regio-regulated Poly(4-methylthiazole-2,5-diyl) [HH-P4MeTz] was
inves tigated by solid-state 1H, 2D, 13C NMR spectroscopies, and differential
scanning calorimetry(DSC) measurements. DSC, 2D quadrupolar echo NMR, 13C
cross-polarization and magic-angle spinning(CPMAS) NMR, and 2D spin-echo(2DSE)
CPMAS NMR spectroscopy suggest existence of a quasi-ordered phase in which
backbone twists take place with weakened pi-stackings. Two-dimensional exchange
2D NMR(2DEX) detected slow dynamics with a rate of an order of 10^2Hz for the
CD_3 group in d_3-HH-P4MeTz at 288K. The frequency dependence of proton
longitudinal relaxation rate at 288K shows a omega^-1/2 dependence, which is
due to the one-dimensional diffusion-like motion of backbone conformational
modulation waves. The diffusion rate was estimated as 3+/-2 GHz, which was
approximately 10^7 times larger than that estimated by 2DEX NMR measurements.
These results suggest that there exists anomalous dispersion of modulation
waves in HH-P4MeTz. The one-dimensional group velocity of the wave packet is
responsible for the behavior of proton longitudinal relaxation time. On the
other hand, the 2DEX NMR is sensitive to phase velocity of the nutation of
methyl groups that is associated with backbone twists. From proton T_1 and T_2
measurements, the activation energy was estimated as 2.9 and 3.4 kcal/mol,
respectively. These were in agreement with 3.0 kcal/mol determined by
Moller-Plesset(MP2) molecular orbital(MO) calculation. We also performed
chemical shielding calculation of the methyl-carbon in order to understand
chemical shift tensor behavior, leading to the fact that a quasi-ordered phase
coexist with the crystalline phase.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, to appear in Phys.Rev.
Early Radio and X-Ray Observations of the Youngest Nearby Type Ia Supernova PTF 11kly (SN 2011fe)
On 2011 August 24 (UT) the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) discovered PTF11kly (SN 2011fe), the youngest
and most nearby Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) in decades. We followed this event up in the radio (centimeter and
millimeter bands) and X-ray bands, starting about a day after the estimated explosion time.We present our analysis
of the radio and X-ray observations, yielding the tightest constraints yet placed on the pre-explosion mass-loss rate
from the progenitor system of this supernova. We find a robust limit of áč ⟠10^(â8)(w/100 km s^(â1))M_â yr^(â1) from
sensitive X-ray non-detections, as well as a similar limit from radio data, which depends, however, on assumptions
about microphysical parameters. We discuss our results in the context of single-degenerate models for SNe Ia and
find that our observations modestly disfavor symbiotic progenitor models involving a red giant donor, but cannot
constrain systems accreting from main-sequence or sub-giant stars, including the popular supersoft channel. In
view of the proximity of PTF11kly and the sensitivity of our prompt observations, we would have to wait for a long
time (a decade or longer) in order to more meaningfully probe the circumstellar matter of SNe Ia
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