4,505 research outputs found
Manufacture of dense sintered bodies containing silicon nitride
Sintered bodies containing 1-32.5 Si oxide and 1.5 wt.% SiC (Si oxide/SiC wt. ratio 3/2) are prepared and kept in a 10-3000 kg/2 sq. cm. N (g) atmosphere at 1500-2300 degrees, while simultaneously maintaining the CO (g) partial pressure around the body lower than the nitrogenation equil. pressure to give a dense sintered body. The prepared dense sintered body has high strength at high temperatures. Thus, SiC 40, oxide 30 and Si3N4 30 wt% were fired to a body which was kept in 1500 kg/sq. cm. N (g) for 20 h at 2000 degrees to give a dense sintered body having high bending strength at high temperatures
An improved method for determining the DC magnetization curve using a ring specimen
When the DC magnetization curve (B-H) of nonoriented material is measured in a ring specimen, there is an intrinsic error due to the assumption that the mean magnetic path length is equal to the mean geometric path length. A novel method for determining the B-H curve accurately is proposed. The validity of the method is verified by experiments</p
Spectroscopy of Candidate Members of the Eta Cha and MBM12 Young Associations
We present an analysis of candidate members of the Eta Cha and MBM 12A young
associations. For an area of 0.7 deg^2 toward Eta Cha, we have performed a
search for members of the association by combining JHK_s photometry from 2MASS
and i photometry from DENIS with followup optical spectroscopy at Magellan
Observatory. We report the discovery of three new members with spectral types
of M5.25-M5.75, corresponding to masses of 0.13-0.08 M_sun by theoretical
evolutionary models. Two and three of these members were found independently by
Lyo and coworkers and Song and coworkers, respectively. Meanwhile, no brown
dwarfs were detected in Eta Cha down to the completeness limit of 0.015 M_sun.
For MBM 12A, we have obtained spectra of three of the remaining candidate
members that lacked spectroscopy at the end of the survey by Luhman, all of
which are found to be field M dwarfs. Ogura and coworkers have recently
presented four "probable" members of MBM 12A. However, two of these objects
were previously classified as field dwarfs by the spectroscopy of Luhman. In
this work, we find that the other two objects are field dwarfs as well.Comment: to be published in The Astrophysical Journal, 19 pages, 7 figure
The Diverse Stellar Populations of the W3 Star Forming Complex
An 800 sq-arcmin mosaic image of the W3 star forming complex obtained with
the Chandra X-ray Observatory gives a valuable new view of the spatial
structure of its young stellar populations. The Chandra image reveals about
1300 faint X-ray sources, most of which are PMS stars in the cloud. Some, but
not all, of the high-mass stars producing hypercompact and ultracompact H II
(UCHII) regions are also seen, as reported in a previous study.
The Chandra images reveal three dramatically different embedded stellar
populations. The W3 Main cluster extends over 7 pc with about 900 X-ray stars
in a nearly-spherical distribution centered on the well-studied UCHII regions
and high-mass protostars. The cluster surrounding the prototypical UCHII region
W3(OH) shows a much smaller (<0.6 pc), asymmetrical, and clumpy distribution of
about 50 PMS stars. The massive star ionizing the W3 North H II region is
completely isolated without any accompanying PMS stars. In W3 Main, the
inferred ages of the widely distributed PMS stars are significantly older than
the inferred ages of the central OB stars illuminating the UCHIIs. We suggest
that different formation mechanisms are necessary to explain the diversity of
the W3 stellar populations: cluster-wide gravitational collapse with delayed OB
star formation in W3 Main, collect-and-collapse triggering by shock fronts in
W3(OH), and a runaway O star or isolated massive star formation in W3 North.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journal. 21 pages, 5 figures. A
version with high-quality figures is available at
http://www.astro.psu.edu/users/edf/W3_Chandra.pd
CHANGE OF TROPHIC STATUS IN LAKE SUWA DURING 20 YEARS -ELUCIDATION BY RELATIVE ABUNDANCES OF LIPID COMPOUNDS IN SEDIMENTS-
Sterols, normal alkanols, normal alkanoic acids, chlorophyll like substances, total lipid carbon, total organic carbon and C/N in the core sediment of Lake Suwa were determined. The profile of the relative abundances of these lipid compounds seemed to reflect a history of production rate in the lake during about 20 years.Article信州大学理学部付属諏訪臨湖実験所報告 7: 41-46(1991)departmental bulletin pape
Young Stellar Population of the Bright-Rimmed Clouds BRC 5, BRC 7 and BRC 39
Bright-rimmed clouds (BRCs), illuminated and shaped by nearby OB stars, are
potential sites of recent/ongoing star formation. Here we present an optical
and infrared photometric study of three BRCs: BRC 5, BRC 7 and BRC 39 to obtain
a census of the young stellar population, thereby inferring the star formation
scenario, in these regions. In each BRC, the Class I sources are found to be
located mostly near the bright rim or inside the cloud, whereas the Class II
sources are preferentially outside, with younger sources closer to the rim.
This provides strong support to sequential star formation triggered by
radiation driven implosion due to the UV radiation. Moreover, each BRC contains
a small group of young stars being revealed at its head, as the next-generation
stars. In particular, the young stars at the heads of BRC 5 and BRC 7 are found
to be intermediate/high mass stars, which, under proper conditions, may
themselves trigger further star birth, thereby propagating star formation out
to long distances.Comment: 30 pages, 7 Figures, 6 Tables, accepted for publication in Monthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Societ
The population in the background of open clusters: Tracer of the Norma-Cygnus arm
We present colour-magnitude diagrams of open clusters, located in the range
, manifesting stellar populations in the background
of clusters. Some of the populations are found to be located beyond the Perseus
arm and may be the part of Norma-Cygnus (outer) arm. The outer arm seems to be
continued from to . The background populations
follow the downward warp of the Galactic plane around .Comment: Accepted for the publication in MNRAS, 9 pages, 9 figures, 2 table
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