323 research outputs found
Solar walls for high-performance buildings
Passive solar design can reduce building energy demand for heating, cooling and ventilation, while also contributing to the comfort, well-being and productivity of the building’s occupants. The successful application of passive solar features, such as solar walls, requires a good understanding of the factors influencing their energy performance and a correct assessment of this performance during the design process. This paper discusses some basic design strategies for successful application of solar walls and the factors with the most significant impact on their efficiency. It summarizes the principle results and findings of an experimental study, based on dynamic simulations and test site measurements. The energy performance of various configurations of unvented solar walls was investigated in different climatic conditions. The outcomes of the dynamic simulations were used to develop a simplified quasisteady-state model, which can be used for approximate evaluation of the heat gains and heat losses through an unvented solar wall on a monthly basis. The model is compatible with the monthly method of EN ISO 13790.This work has been supported by The National Science Fund of Bulgaria under projects number ДУНК-01/3 (DUNK-01/3) and ДФНИ Е 02/17 (DFNI E 02/17)
Merging Galaxies in the SDSS EDR
We present a new catalog of merging galaxies obtained through an automated
systematic search routine. The 1479 new pairs of merging galaxies were found in
approximately 462 sq deg of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Early Data Release
(SDSS EDR; Stoughton et al. 2002) photometric data, and the pair catalog is
complete for galaxies in the magnitude range 16.0 <= g* <= 20.
The selection algorithm, implementing a variation on the original
Karachentsev (1972) criteria, proved to be very efficient and fast. Merging
galaxies were selected such that the inter-galaxy separations were less than
the sum of the component galaxies' radii.
We discuss the characteristics of the sample in terms of completeness, pair
separation, and the Holmberg effect. We also present an online atlas of images
for the SDSS EDR pairs obtained using the corrected frames from the SDSS EDR
database. The atlas images also include the relevant data for each pair member.
This catalog will be useful for conducting studies of the general
characteristics of merging galaxies, their environments, and their component
galaxies. The redshifts for a subset of the interacting and merging galaxies
and the distribution of angular sizes for these systems indicate the SDSS
provides a much deeper sample than almost any other wide-area catalog to date.Comment: 58 pages, which includes 15 figures and 6 tables. Figures 2, 8, 9,
10, 11, 13, and 14 are provided as JPEG files. For online atlas, see
http://home.fnal.gov/~sallam/MergePair/ . Accepted for publication in A
The large-scale ionised outflow of CH Cygni
HST and ground-based [OII} and [NII] images obtained from 1996 to 1999 reveal
the existence of a ionised optical nebula around the symbiotic binary CH Cyg
extending out to 5000 A.U. from the central stars. The observed velocity range
of the nebula, derived from long-slit echelle spectra, is of 130 km/s. In spite
of its complex appearence, the velocity data show that the basic morphology of
the inner regions of the optical nebula is that of a bipolar (or conical)
outflow extending nearly along the plane of the sky out to some 2000 A.U. from
the centre. Even if the extension of this bipolar outflow and its position
angle are consistent with those of the radio jet produced in 1984 (extrapolated
to the time of our optical imagery), no obvious counterpart is visible of the
original, dense radio bullets ejected by the system. We speculate that the
optical bipolar outflow might be the remannt of the interaction of the bullets
with a relatively dense circumstellar medium.Comment: 8 text pages + 3 figures (jpeg). ApJ in press. For a full PostScript
version with figures inline see
ftp://ftp.ll.iac.es/pub/research/preprints/PP252001.ps.g
Lithium in the Symbiotic Mira V407 Cyg
We report an identification of the lithium resonance doublet LiI 6708A in the
spectrum of V407 Cyg, a symbiotic Mira with a pulsation period of about 745
days. The resolution of the spectra used was R~18500 and the measured
equivalent width of the line is ~0.34A. It is suggested that the lithium
enrichment is due to hot bottom burning in the intermediate mass AGB variable,
although other possible origins cannot be totally ruled out. In contrast to
lithium-rich AGB stars in the Magellanic clouds, ZrO 5551A, 6474A absorption
bands were not found in the spectrum of V407Cyg. These are the bands used to
classify the S-type stars at low-resolution. Although we identified weak ZrO
5718A, 6412A these are not visible in the low-resolution spectra, and we
therefore classify the Mira in V407 Cyg as an M type. This, together with other
published work, suggests lithium enrichment can precede the third dredge up of
s-process enriched material in galactic AGB stars.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to be published in MNRA
UVSat: a concept of an ultraviolet/optical photometric satellite
Time-series photometry from space in the ultraviolet can be presently done
with only a few platforms, none of which is able to provide wide-field
long-term high-cadence photometry. We present a concept of UVSat, a twin space
telescope which will be capable to perform this kind of photometry, filling an
observational niche. The satellite will host two telescopes, one for
observations in the ultraviolet, the other for observations in the optical
band. We also briefly show what science can be done with UVSat.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in the Proceedings of
the PAS (Proc. of the 2nd BRITE Science conference, Innsbruck
Time Serial Analysis of the Induced LEO Environment within the ISS 6A
Anisotropies in the low Earth orbit (LEO) radiation environment were found to influence the thermoluminescence detectors (TLD) dose within the (International Space Station) ISS 7A Service Module. Subsequently, anisotropic environmental models with improved dynamic time extrapolation have been developed including westward and northern drifts using AP8 Min & Max as estimates of the historic spatial distribution of trapped protons in the 1965 and 1970 era, respectively. In addition, a directional dependent geomagnetic cutoff model was derived for geomagnetic field configurations from the 1945 to 2020 time frame. A dynamic neutron albedo model based on our atmospheric radiation studies has likewise been required to explain LEO neutron measurements. The simultaneous measurements of dose and dose rate using four Liulin instruments at various locations in the US LAB and Node 1 has experimentally demonstrated anisotropic effects in ISS 6A and are used herein to evaluate the adequacy of these revised environmental models
Orbifold projection in supersymmetric QCD at N_f\leq N_c
Supersymmetric orbifold projection of N=1 SQCD with relatively small number
of flavors (not larger than the number of colors) is considered. The purpose is
to check whether orbifolding commutes with the infrared limit. On the one hand,
one considers the orbifold projection of SQCD and obtains the low-energy
description of the resulting theory. On the other hand, one starts with the
low-energy effective theory of the original SQCD, and only then perfoms
orbifolding. It is shown that at finite N_c the two low-energy theories
obtained in these ways are different. However, in the case of stabilized
run-away vacuum these two theories are shown to coincide in the large N_c
limit. In the case of quantum modified moduli space, topological solitons
carrying baryonic charges are present in the orbifolded low-energy theory.
These solitons may restore the correspondence between the two theories provided
that the soliton mass tends to zero in the large N_c limit.Comment: 10 pages; misprint corrected, reference adde
Pre-engineering Spaceflight Validation of Environmental Models and the 2005 HZETRN Simulation Code
The HZETRN code has been identified by NASA for engineering design in the next phase of space exploration highlighting a return to the Moon in preparation for a Mars mission. In response, a new series of algorithms beginning with 2005 HZETRN, will be issued by correcting some prior limitations and improving control of propagated errors along with established code verification processes. Code validation processes will use new/improved low Earth orbit (LEO) environmental models with a recently improved International Space Station (ISS) shield model to validate computational models and procedures using measured data aboard ISS. These validated models will provide a basis for flight-testing the designs of future space vehicles and systems of the Constellation program in the LEO environment
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