971 research outputs found
Modeling and development of a microwave heated pilot plant for the production of SiC-based ceramic matrix composites
This paper outlines the development of a microwave heated apparatus for the production of silicon carbide (SiC) based ceramic matrix composites via chemical vapor infiltration. An innovative pilot scale reactor was designed and built. A coupled thermal and electromagnetic model was developed in order to predict the temperature profile inside the reactor. The results obtained from the model demonstrated that the electric field inside the sample was constant. This fact is particularly important in order to prevent the thermal instabilities (run-aways) that are typical in the case of microwave heating. Therefore the heating was uniform with the aid of a mode stirrer that achieved a better distribution of the microwave power and then improved the process efficiency. The infiltration cycles were carried out on SiC fiber preforms and resulted in an excellent average weight increase with respect to the initial sample. By using microwave heating, the treatment times were considerably reduced with respect to the conventional process times reported in the literature. The microstructure of the SiC composites were observed by scanning the electron microscopy in order to evaluate the quality and the degree of densification which was achieved within the fiber tows. The SiC deposition inside of the sample was sufficiently homogeneous and compact, even if a certain degree of inter-tow porosity was still evident
Oxygen- and carbon-rich variable red giant populations in the Magellanic Clouds from EROS, OGLE, MACHO, and 2MASS photometry
The carbon-to-oxygen (C/O) ratio of asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars
constitutes an important index of evolutionary and environment/metallicity
factor. We develop a method for mass C/O classification of AGBs in photometric
surveys without using periods. For this purpose we rely on the slopes in the
tracks of individual stars in the colour-magnitude diagram. We demonstrate that
our method enables the separation of C-rich and O-rich AGB stars with little
confusion. For the Magellanic Clouds we demonstrate that this method works for
several photometric surveys and filter combinations. As we rely on no period
identification, our results are relatively insensitive to the phase coverage,
aliasing, and time-sampling problems that plague period analyses. For a
subsample of our stars, we verify our C/O classification against published C/O
catalogues. With our method we are able to produce C/O maps of the entire
Magellanic Clouds. Our purely photometric method for classification of C- and
O-rich AGBs constitutes a method of choice for large, near-infrared photometric
surveys. Because our method depends on the slope of colour-magnitude variation
but not on magnitude zero point, it remains applicable to objects with unknown
distances.Comment: 14 pages, 16 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Astronomy
& Astrophysic
Architectures and Key Technical Challenges for 5G Systems Incorporating Satellites
Satellite Communication systems are a promising solution to extend and
complement terrestrial networks in unserved or under-served areas. This aspect
is reflected by recent commercial and standardisation endeavours. In
particular, 3GPP recently initiated a Study Item for New Radio-based, i.e., 5G,
Non-Terrestrial Networks aimed at deploying satellite systems either as a
stand-alone solution or as an integration to terrestrial networks in mobile
broadband and machine-type communication scenarios. However, typical satellite
channel impairments, as large path losses, delays, and Doppler shifts, pose
severe challenges to the realisation of a satellite-based NR network. In this
paper, based on the architecture options currently being discussed in the
standardisation fora, we discuss and assess the impact of the satellite channel
characteristics on the physical and Medium Access Control layers, both in terms
of transmitted waveforms and procedures for enhanced Mobile BroadBand (eMBB)
and NarrowBand-Internet of Things (NB-IoT) applications. The proposed analysis
shows that the main technical challenges are related to the PHY/MAC procedures,
in particular Random Access (RA), Timing Advance (TA), and Hybrid Automatic
Repeat reQuest (HARQ) and, depending on the considered service and
architecture, different solutions are proposed.Comment: Submitted to Transactions on Vehicular Technologies, April 201
Variability and spectral classification of LMC giants: results from DENIS and EROS
We present the first cross-identifications of sources in the near-infrared
DENIS survey and in the micro-lensing EROS survey in a field of about 0.5
square degrees around the optical center (OC) of the Large Magellanic Cloud. We
analyze the photometric history of these stars in the EROS data base and obtain
light-curves for about 800 variables. Most of the stars are long period
variables (Miras and Semi-Regulars), a few Cepheids are also present. We also
present new spectroscopic data on 126 asymptotic giant branch stars in the OC
field, 30 previously known and 96 newly discovered by the DENIS survey. The
visible spectra are used to assign a carbon- (C-) or oxygen-rich (O-rich)
nature to the observed stars on the basis of the presence of molecular bands of
TiO, VO, CN, C2. For the remaining of the stars we used the (J-Ks) color to
determine whether they are O-rich or C-rich. Plotting Log(period) versus Ks we
find three very distinct period-luminosity relations, mainly populated by
Semi-Regular of type a (SRa), b (SRb) and Mira variables. Carbon-rich stars
occupy mostly the upper part of these relations. We find that 65% of the
asymptotic giant branch population are long period variables (LPVs).Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables (2 via CDS), accepted by A&A journa
The VMC Survey - VI. Quasars behind the Magellanic system
The number and spatial distribution of confirmed quasi-stellar objects (QSOs)
behind the Magellanic system is limited. This undermines their use as
astrometric reference objects for different types of studies. We have searched
for criteria to identify candidate QSOs using observations from the VISTA
survey of the Magellanic Clouds system (VMC) that provides photometry in the
YJKs bands and 12 epochs in the Ks band. The (Y-J) versus (J-Ks) diagram has
been used to distinguish QSO candidates from Milky Way stars and stars of the
Magellanic Clouds. Then, the slope of variation in the Ks band has been used to
identify a sample of high confidence candidates. These criteria were developed
based on the properties of 117 known QSOs presently observed by the VMC survey.
VMC YJKs magnitudes and Ks light-curves of known QSOs behind the Magellanic
system are presented. About 75% of them show a slope of variation in Ks>10^-4
mag/day and the shape of the light-curve is in general irregular and without
any clear periodicity. The number of QSO candidates found in tiles including
the South Ecliptic Pole and the 30 Doradus regions is 22 and 26, respectively,
with a ~20% contamination by young stellar objects, planetary nebulae, stars
and normal galaxies. By extrapolating the number of QSO candidates to the
entire VMC survey area we expect to find about 1200 QSOs behind the LMC, 400
behind the SMC, 200 behind the Bridge and 30 behind the Stream areas, but not
all will be suitable for astrometry. Further, the Ks band light-curves can help
support investigations of the mechanism responsible for the variations.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures, replaced with accepted version by Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Upward migration of Vesuvius magma chamber over the past 20 thousand years
International audienceForecasting future eruptions of Vesuvius is an important challenge for volcanologists, as its reawakening could threaten the lives of 700,000 people living near the volcano1,2. Critical to the evaluation of hazards associated with the next eruption is the estimation of the depth of the magma reservoir, one of the main parameters controlling magma properties and eruptive style. Petrological studies have indicated that during past activity, magma chambers were at depths between 3 and 16km (refs 3– 7). Geophysical surveys have imaged some levels of seismic attenuation, the shallowest of which lies at 8–9km depth8, and these have been tentatively interpreted as levels of preferential magma accumulation. By using experimental phase equilibria, carried out on material from four main explosive events at Vesuvius, we show here that the reservoirs that fed the eruptive activity migrated from 7–8km to 3–4km depth between the AD 79 (Pompeii) and AD 472 (Pollena) events. If data from the Pomici di Base event 18.5 kyr ago9 and the 1944 Vesuvius eruption7 are included, the total upward migration of the reservoir amounts to 9–11 km. The change of preferential magma ponding levels in the upper crust can be attributed to differences in the volatile content and buoyancy of ascending magmas, as well as to changes in local stress field following either caldera formation10 or volcano spreading11. Reservoir migration, and the possible influence on feeding rates12, should be integrated into the parameters used for defining expected eruptive scenarios at Vesuvius
Magellanic Cloud Structure from Near-IR Surveys II: Star Count Maps and the Intrinsic Elongation of the LMC
I construct a near-IR star count map of the LMC and demonstrate, using the
viewing angles derived in Paper I, that the LMC is intrinsically elongated. I
argue that this is due to the tidal force from the Milky Way. The near-IR data
from the 2MASS and DENIS surveys are used to create a star count map of RGB and
AGB stars, which is interpreted through ellipse fitting. The radial number
density profile is approximately exponential with a scale-length 1.3-1.5 kpc.
However, there is an excess density at large radii that may be due to the tidal
effect of the Milky Way. The position angle and ellipticity profile converge to
PA_maj = 189.3 +/- 1.4 degrees and epsilon = 0.199 +/- 0.008 for r > 5 deg. At
large radii there is a drift of the center of the star count contours towards
the near side of the plane, which can be undrestood as due to viewing
perspective. The fact that PA_maj differes from the line of nodes position
angle Theta = 122.5 +/- 8.3 (cf. Paper I) indicates that the LMC disk is not
circular, but has an intrinsic ellipticity of 0.31. The LMC is elongated in the
general direction of the Galactic center, and is elongated perpendicular to the
Magellanic Stream and the velocity vector of the LMC center of mass. This
suggests that the elongation of the LMC has been induced by the tidal force of
the Milky Way. The position angle of the line of nodes differs from the
position angle Theta_max of the line of maximum line of sight velocity
gradient: Theta_max - Theta = 20-60 degrees. This could be due to: (a)
streaming along non-circular orbits in the elongated disk; (b) uncertainties in
the transverse motion of the LMC center of mass; (c) precession and nutation of
the LMC disk as it orbits the Milky Way (expected on theoretical grounds).
[Abridged]Comment: Astronomical Journal, in press. 34 pages, LaTeX, with 7 PostScript
figures. Contains minor revisions with respect to previously posted version.
Check out http://www.stsci.edu/~marel/lmc.html for a large scale (23x21
degree) stellar number-density image of the LMC constructed from RGB and AGB
stars in the 2MASS and DENIS surveys. The paper is available with higher
resolution color figures from
http://www.stsci.edu/~marel/abstracts/abs_R32.htm
OGLE small amplitude red giant variables in the Galactic Bar
Among over 200,000 Galactic Bulge variable stars in the public domain OGLE
catalogue, we found over 15,000 red giant variables following two well defined
period -- amplitude relations. The periods are in the range 10 < P < 100 days,
and amplitudes in the range 0.005 < A < 0.13 mag in I-band. The variables cover
a broad range of reddening corrected colours, 1 < (V-I)_0 < 5, and a fairly
narrow range of extinction corrected apparent magnitudes, 10.5 < I_0 < 13 . A
subset of variables (type A) has a rms scatter of only 0.44 mag. The average
magnitudes for these stars are well correlated with the Galactic longitude, and
vary from I_{k,0} = 11.82 for l = +8 deg to I_{k,0} = 12.07 for l = -5 deg,
clearly indicating that they are located in the Galactic Bar. Most variables
have several oscillation periods.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures (7 in low resolution), submitted to MNRAS.
Article in full resolution can be obtained at
http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~leyer/wrayetal.p
Spatial distribution of stellar populations in the Magellanic Clouds: Implementation to Gaia
The main goal of our project is to investigate the spatial distribution of
different stellar populations in the Magellanic Clouds. The results from
modelling the Magellanic Clouds can be useful, among others, for simulations
during the Gaia mission preparation. Isodensity contour maps have been used in
order to trace the morphology of the different stellar populations and estimate
the size of these structures. Moreover, star density maps are constructed
through star counts and projected radial density profiles are obtained. Fitting
exponential disk and King law curves to the spatial distribution allows us to
derive the structural parameters that describe these profiles. The
morphological structure and spatial distributions of various stellar components
in the Magellanic Clouds (young and intermediate age stars, carbon stars) along
with the overall spatial distribution in both Clouds are provided.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, to be published in Astronomy & Astrophysics;
typos and language correcte
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