12,313 research outputs found
Collision strengths and transition probabilities for Co III forbidden lines
In this paper we compute the collision strengths and their thermally-averaged
Maxwellian values for electron transitions between the fifteen lowest levels of
doubly-ionised cobalt, Co^{2+}, which give rise to forbidden emission lines in
the visible and infrared region of spectrum. The calculations also include
transition probabilities and predicted relative line emissivities. The data are
particularly useful for analysing the thermodynamic conditions of supernova
ejecta.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, 11 table
Emission and recombination coefficients for hydrogen with kappa-distributed electron energies
We provide a data set of emission and recombination coefficients of hydrogen
using a kappa-distribution of electron energies rather than the more
traditional Maxwell-Boltzmann (MB) distribution. The data are mainly relevant
to thin and relatively cold plasma found in planetary nebulae and H II regions.
The data set extends the previous data sets provided by Storey and Hummer which
were computed using a MB distribution. The data set, which is placed in the
public domain, is structured as a function of electron number density,
temperature and kappa. Interactive fortran 77 and C++ data servers are also
provided as an accessory to probe the data and obtain Lagrange-interpolated
values for any choice of all three variables between the explicitly computed
values.Comment: 3 page
Health of children and young people in secure settings
This small-scale descriptive study was commissioned by the Children and Young People's Public Health team within the Department of Health, in partnership with Offender Health, in order to inform preparation and implementation of an Offender Health Strategy document for children and young people. The overall aim was to review what is currently known about healthcare for children and young people in the secure estate, covering all three types of settings (Young Offender Institution, Secure Training Centre and Secure Children's Home) and all aspects of health, but with a particular focus on physical health since more is already known about mental health and substance misuse among young people in secure settings
Collision strengths and transition probabilities for Co II infrared forbidden lines
We calculate collision strengths and their thermally-averaged Maxwellian
values for electron excitation and de-excitation between the fifteen lowest
levels of singly-ionised cobalt, Co+, which give rise to emission lines in the
near- and mid-infrared. Transition probabilities are also calculated and
relative line intensities predicted for conditions typical of supernova ejecta.
The diagnostic potential of the 10.52, 15.46 and 14.74 micro-metre transition
lines is briefly discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 7 table
Three-Dimensional Ionisation, Dust RT and Chemical Modelling of Planetary Nebulae
The assumption of spherical symmetry is not justified for the vast majority
of PNe. The interpretation of spatially-resolved observations cannot rely
solely on the application of 1D codes, which may yield incorrect abundances
determinations resulting in misleading conclusions. The 3D photoionisation code
MOCASSIN (Monte CAarlo SimulationS of ionised Nebulae) is designed to remedy
these shortcomings. The 3D transfer of both primary and secondary radiation is
treated self-consistently without the need of approximations. The code was
benchmarked and has been applied to the study of several PNe. The current
version includes a fully self-consistent radiative transfer treatment for dust
grains mixed within the gas, taking into account the microphysics of dust-gas
interactions within the geometry-independent Monte Carlo transfer. The new code
provides an excellent tool for the self-consistent analysis of dusty ionised
regions showing asymmetries and/or density and chemical inhomogeneities. Work
is currently in progress to incorporate the processes that dominate the thermal
balance of photo-dissociation regions (PDRs), as well as the formation and
destruction processes for all the main molecular species.Comment: 3 pages, to appear in Proc. IAU Symp. 234, Planetary Nebulae in Our
Galaxy and Beyond (3-7 Apr 2006), eds. M.J. Barlow & R.H. Mendez (Cambridge
Univ. Press
Mocassin: A fully three-dimensional Monte Carlo photoionization code
The study of photoionized environments is fundamental to many astrophysical
problems. Up to the present most photoionization codes have numerically solved
the equations of radiative transfer by making the extreme simplifying
assumption of spherical symmetry. Unfortunately very few real astronomical
nebulae satisfy this requirement. To remedy these shortcomings, a
self-consistent, three-dimensional radiative transfer code has been developed
using Monte Carlo techniques. The code, Mocassin, is designed to build
realistic models of photoionized nebulae having arbitraries geometry and
density distributions with both the stellar and diffuse radiation fields
treated self-consistently. In addition, the code is capable of tretating on or
more exciting stars located at non-central locations. The gaseous region is
approximated by a cuboidal Cartesian grid composed of numerous cells. The
physical conditions within each grid cell are determined by solving the thermal
equilibrium and ionization balance equations This requires a knowledge of the
local primary and secondary radiation fields, which are calculated
self-consistently by locally simulating the individual processes of ionization
and recombination. The main structure and computational methods used in the
Mocassin code are described in this paper. Mocassin has been benchmarked
against established one-dimensional spherically symmetric codes for a number of
standard cases, as defined by the Lexington/Meudon photoionization workshops
(Pequignot et al., 1986; Ferland et al., 1995; Pequignot et al.,
2001)\citep{pequignot86,ferland95, pequignot01}. The results obtained for the
benchmark cases are satisfactory and are presented in this paper. A performance
analysis has also been carried out and is discussed here.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, 1 appendix Changes: appendix adde
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