698 research outputs found

    Solid state bistable power switch

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    Tin and copper provide high current and switching time capabilities for high-current resettable fuses. They show the best performance for trip current and degree of reliability, and have low coefficients of thermal expansion

    Solid state bistable power switch study

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    Feasibility of transforming solid state switches into high current resettable fuse

    Towards Dark Matter Searches with the MAGIC Telescope

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    On the possibility of a warped disc origin of the inclined stellar discs at the Galactic Centre

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    (Abridged) The Galactic Center (GC) hosts a population of young stars some of which seem to form mutually inclined discs of clockwise and counter clockwise rotating stars. We present a warped disc origin scenario for these stars assuming that an initially flat accretion disc becomes warped due to the Pringle instability, or due to Bardeen-Petterson effect, before it fragments to stars. We show that this is plausible if the star formation efficiency ϵSF≲1\epsilon_{SF} \lesssim 1, and the viscosity parameter α∼0.1\alpha \sim 0.1. After fragmentation, we model the disc as a collection of concentric, circular, mutually tilted rings, and construct warped disc models for mass ratios and other parameters relevant to the GC environment, but also for more massive discs. We take into account the disc's self-gravity and the torques exerted by a surrounding star cluster. We show that a self-gravitating low-mass disc (Md/Mbh∼0.001M_d / M_{bh} \sim 0.001) precesses in integrity in the life-time of the stars, but precesses freely when the torques from a non-spherical cluster are included. An intermediate-mass disc (Md/Mbh∼0.01M_d / M_{bh} \sim 0.01) breaks into pieces which precess independently in the self-gravity-only case, and become disrupted in the presence of the star cluster torques. For a high-mass disc (Md/Mbh∼0.1M_d / M_{bh} \sim 0.1) the evolution is dominated by self-gravity and the disc is broken but not dissolved. The time-scale after which the disc breaks scales almost linearly with (Md/MbhM_d / M_{bh}) for self-gravitating models. Typical values are longer than the age of the stars for a low mass disc, and are in the range ∼8×104−105\sim 8 \times 10^4-10^5 yr for high and intermediate-mass discs respectively. None of these models explain the rotation properties of the two GC discs, but a comparison of them with the clockwise disc shows that the lowest mass model in a spherical star cluster matches the data best.Comment: 16 pages, 19 figures, abstract abridged to meet arXiv requirements. Accepted for publication in MNRA

    The power of monitoring stellar orbits

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    The center of the Milky Way hosts a massive black hole. The observational evidence for its existence is overwhelming. The compact radio source Sgr A* has been associated with a black hole since its discovery. In the last decade, high-resolution, near-infrared measurements of individual stellar orbits in the innermost region of the Galactic Center have shown that at the position of Sgr A* a highly concentrated mass of 4 x 10^6 M_sun is located. Assuming that general relativity is correct, the conclusion that Sgr A* is a massive black hole is inevitable. Without doubt this is the most important application of stellar orbits in the Galactic Center. Here, we discuss the possibilities going beyond the mass measurement offered by monitoring these orbits. They are an extremely useful tool for many scientific questions, such as a geometric distance estimate to the Galactic Center or the puzzle, how these stars reached their current orbits. Future improvements in the instrumentation will open up the route to testing relativistic effects in the gravitational potential of the black hole, allowing to take full advantage of this unique laboratory for celestial mechanics.Comment: Proceedings of the Galactic Center Workshop 2009, Shangha

    Study of the performance and capability of the new ultra-fast 2 GSample/s FADC data acquisition system of the MAGIC telescope

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    In February 2007 the MAGIC Air Cherenkov Telescope for gamma-ray astronomy was fully upgraded with an ultra fast 2 GSamples/s digitization system. Since the Cherenkov light flashes are very short, a fast readout can minimize the influence of the background from the light of the night sky. Also, the time structure of the event is an additional parameter to reduce the background from unwanted hadronic showers. An overview of the performance of the new system and its impact on the sensitivity of the MAGIC instrument will be presented.Comment: Contribution to the 30th ICRC, Merida Mexico, July 2007 on behalf of the MAGIC Collaboratio
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