10,018 research outputs found
Alpha Channeling with High-field Launch of Lower Hybrid Waves
Although lower hybrid waves are effective at driving currents in present-day
tokamaks, they are expected to interact strongly with high-energy particles in
extrapolating to reactors. In the presence of a radial alpha particle birth
gradient, this interaction can take the form of wave amplification rather than
damping. While it is known that this amplification more easily occurs when
launching from the tokamak high-field side, the extent of this amplification
has not been made quantitative. Here, by tracing rays launched from the high-
field-side of a tokamak, the required radial gradients to achieve amplification
are calculated for a temperature and density regime consistent with a
hot-ion-mode fusion reactor. These simulations, while valid only in the linear
regime of wave amplification, nonetheless illustrate the possibilities for wave
amplification using high-field launch of the lower hybrid wave.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Cepheid Masses: FUSE Observations of S Mus
S Mus is the Cepheid with the hottest known companion. The large ultraviolet
flux means that it is the only Cepheid companion for which the velocity
amplitude could be measured with the echelle mode of the HST GHRS.
Unfortunately, the high temperature is difficult to constrain at wavelengths
longer than 1200 \AA because of the degeneracy between temperature and
reddening. We have obtained a FUSE spectrum in order to improve the
determination of the temperature of the companion. Two regions which are
temperature sensitive near 16,000 K but relatively unaffected by H
absorption (940 \AA, and the Ly wings) have been identified. By
comparing FUSE spectra of S Mus B with spectra of standard stars, we have
determined a temperature of 17,000 500 K. The resultant Cepheid mass is
6.0 0.4 M. This mass is consistent with main sequence
evolutionary tracks with a moderate amount of convective overshoot.Comment: accepted to Ap
Probing the Galaxy I. The galactic structure towards the galactic pole
Observations of (B-V) colour distributions towards the galactic poles are
compared with those obtained from synthetic colour-magnitude diagrams to
determine the major constituents in the disc and spheroid. The disc is
described with four stellar sub-populations: the young, intermediate, old, and
thick disc populations, which have respectively scale heights of 100 pc, 250
pc, 0.5 kpc, and 1.0 kpc. The spheroid is described with stellar contributions
from the bulge and halo. The bulge is not well constrained with the data
analyzed in this study. A non-flattened power-law describes the observed
distributions at fainter magnitudes better than a deprojected R^{1/4}-law.
Details about the age, metallicity, and normalizations are listed in Table 1.
The star counts and the colour distributions from the stars in the intermediate
fields towards the galactic anti-centre are well described with the stellar
populations mentioned above. Arguments are given that the actual solar offset
is about 15 pc north from the galactic plane.Comment: 11 pages TeX, 4 separate pages with additional figures, accepted for
publication in A&
TransPhormER/ECrire
R éseaux : structures dynamiques entre-tressées, non hiérarchisées, produisant la signifiance textuelle. E t de fait, à partir d'un court texte, est décrite la tresse inextricable de l'érotique et du biographique, spécifique de l'écriture perecquienne. S ens et force : le tourniquet. U sine à troc, le texte. M almené, il l'est, le texte, un peu, par une lectriture homéomorphe à son objet, vers un E change généralisé des signifiants, non point sauvage, mais strictement réglé .Using a short excerpt from la Vie mode d'emploi, this article describes the inextricable intertexture of erotic and biographical elements specific to Perec's writing. By a slight mishandling of the text and its recasting in homomorphic form, a generalized interchange of signifiers is obtained that is not in the least wild, but altogether controlled
GAIA: AGB stars as tracers of star formation histories in the Galaxy and beyond
We discuss the tracing of star formation histories with ESA's space
astrometry mission GAIA, emphasizing the advantages of AGB stars for this
purpose. GAIA's microarcsecond-level astrometry, multi-band photometry and
spectroscopy will provide individual distances, motions, effective
temperatures, gravities and metallicities for vast numbers of AGB stars in the
Galaxy and beyond. Reliable ages of AGB stars can be determined to distances of
\~200 kpc in a wide range of ages and metallicities, allowing star formation
histories to be studied in a diversity of astrophysical environments.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, to be appear in 'Mass-Losing Pulsating Stars and
their Circumstellar Matter', eds. Y. Nakada, M. Honma & M. Seki, Kluwer ASSL
series, vol. 28
A chemical study of M67 candidate blue stragglers and evolved blue stragglers observed with APOGEE DR14
Within the variety of objects populating stellar clusters, blue straggler
stars (BSSs) are among the most puzzling ones. BSSs are commonly found in
globular clusters, but they are also known to populate open clusters of the
Milky Way. Two main theoretical scenarios (collisions and mass transfer) have
been suggested to explain their formation, although finding observational
evidence in support of either scenario represents a challenging task. Among the
APOGEE observations of the old open cluster M67, we found 8 BSS candidates
known from the literature and two known evolved BSSs. We carried out a chemical
analysis of 3 BSS candidates and of the 2 evolved BSSs out of the sample and
found that the BSS candidates have surface abundances similar to those of stars
on the main-sequence turn-off of M67. Especially the absence of any anomaly in
their carbon abundances seems to support a collisional formation scenario for
these stars. Furthermore, we note that the abundances of the evolved BSSs S1040
and S1237 are consistent with the abundances of the red clump stars of M67. In
particular, they show a depletion in carbon by dex, which could be
either interpreted as the signature of mass transfer or as the product of
stellar evolutionary processes. Finally, we summarise the properties of the
individual BSS stars observed by APOGEE, as derived from their APOGEE spectra
and/or from information available in the literature.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, accepted by MNRA
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