20,172 research outputs found
Hydrogen-Poor Circumstellar Shells from Pulsational Pair-Instability Supernovae with Rapidly Rotating Progenitors
In certain mass ranges, massive stars can undergo a violent pulsation
triggered by the electron/positron pair instability that ejects matter, but
does not totally disrupt the star. After one or more of these pulsations, such
stars are expected to undergo core-collapse to trigger a supernova explosion.
The mass range susceptible to this pulsational phenomena may be as low as 50-70
Msun if the progenitor is of very low metallicity and rotating sufficiently
rapidly to undergo nearly homogeneous evolution. The mass, dynamics, and
composition of the matter ejected in the pulsation are important aspects to
determine the subsequent observational characteristics of the explosion. We
examine the dynamics of a sample of stellar models and rotation rates and
discuss the implications for the first stars, for LBV-like phenomena, and for
superluminous supernovae. We find that the shells ejected by pulsational
pair-instability events with rapidly rotating progenitors (>30% the critical
value) are hydrogen-poor and helium and oxygen-rich.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figure
Annual Report on Cotton Economics Research 2001/02
Crop Production/Industries,
Multidimensional Simulations of Rotating Pair Instability Supernovae
We study the effects of rotation on the dynamics, energetics and Ni-56
production of Pair Instability Supernova explosions by performing rotating
two-dimensional ("2.5-D") hydrodynamics simulations. We calculate the evolution
of eight low metallicity (Z = 10^-3, 10^-4 Zsun) massive (135-245 Msun) PISN
progenitors with initial surface rotational velocities 50% that of the critical
Keplerian value using the stellar evolution code MESA. We allow for both the
inclusion and the omission of the effects of magnetic fields in the angular
momentum transport and in chemical mixing, resulting in slowly-rotating and
rapidly-rotating final carbon-oxygen cores, respectively. Increased rotation
for carbon-oxygen cores of the same mass and chemical stratification leads to
less energetic PISN explosions that produce smaller amounts of Ni-56 due to the
effect of the angular momentum barrier that develops and slows the dynamical
collapse. We find a non-monotonic dependence of Ni-56 production on rotational
velocity in situations when smoother composition gradients form at the outer
edge of the rotating cores. In these cases, the PISN energetics are determined
by the competition of two factors: the extent of chemical mixing in the outer
layers of the core due to the effects of rotation in the progenitor evolution
and the development of angular momentum support against collapse. Our 2.5-D
PISN simulations with rotation are the first presented in the literature. They
reveal hydrodynamic instabilities in several regions of the exploding star and
increased explosion asymmetries with higher core rotational velocity.Comment: 31 pages, 23 figures, accepted for publication in the Ap
Launch vehicle wind and turbulence response by nonstationary statistical methods
Nonstationary adjoint algorithm for determining launch vehicle flight loads due to winds and turbulenc
Small manufacturing plants, pollution, and poverty : new evidence from Brazil and Mexico
The authors use new data from Brazil and Mexico to analyze relationships linking economic development, the size distribution of manufacturing plants, and exposure to industrial pollution. For lack of data, prior work in this field has been limited largely to water pollution and medium-size plants. This study examines air pollution and encompasses small plants (with 1 to 20 employees) as well as medium-size and large plants. Four main questions are addressed (with answers from plant-level data): a) Are small plants more pollution-intensive than large facilities? Clearly, yes. b) Are there proportionately more small plants in low-income regions? The answer is yes, in thousands of Brazilian municipalities. Small plants dominate poor regions and are a relatively low source of employment in high-income areas. c) Is industry more pollution-intensive in low-income regions? In Brazil, yes. For each municipality, the authors estimate the share of the six most pollution-intensive ("dirty") sectors in total industrial activity. They find that the dirty-sector share declines continuously with increases in municipality income per capita. d) Do poor areas suffer more than wealthy areas from industrial air pollution? Paradoxically, no. The risk of mortality from industrial air pollution is much higher in the top two income deciles among Brazil's municipalities and the great majority of projected deaths is attributable to emissions from large plants.The scale of large-plant emissions dominates all other factors. Lower-income areas suffer much less from industrial air pollution in Brazil, despite the greater emissions-intensity of smaller plants and the prevalence of smaller plants in lower income areas.Water and Industry,Environmental Economics&Policies,Sanitation and Sewerage,Public Health Promotion,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Environmental Economics&Policies,Water and Industry,Health Monitoring&Evaluation,Sanitation and Sewerage,TF030632-DANISH CTF - FY05 (DAC PART COUNTRIES GNP PER CAPITA BELOW USD 2,500/AL
Hidden Dirac Monopoles
Dirac showed that the existence of one magnetic pole in the universe could
offer an explanation of the discrete nature of the electric charge. Magnetic
poles appear naturally in most grand unified theories. Their discovery would be
of greatest importance for particle physics and cosmology. The intense
experimental search carried thus far has not met with success. I proposed a
universe with magnetic poles which are not observed free because they hide in
deeply bound monopole--anti-monopole states named monopolium. I discuss the
realization of this proposal and its consistency with known cosmological
features. I furthermore analyze its implications and the experimental
signatures that confirm the scenario.Comment: Comments: 15 pages, 3 figure
Product Liability Aspects of the Risks of Technological Change--A U.S. Perspective
The Impact of Technological Change in the Canada/U.S. Contex
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