7,533 research outputs found
Tracer sensitive tapes
A leak detection system has been developed, consisting of a tape that can be wrapped around possible leak sites on a system pressurized with air or gaseous nitrogen. Carbon monoxide, at a level of 100 to 1000 parts per million is used as a trace gas in the pressurized system. The sensitive element of the tape is palladium chloride supported on specially prepared silica gel and specially dried. At a CO level of 100 ppm and a leak rate of 10-20 ml/hr, discoloration of the sensitive element is observed in 1.5 to 3 min. The tape and trace gas are compatible with aerospace hardware, safe to handle, and economically reasonable to produce and handle
QCD: Challenges for the Future
Despite many experimental verifications of the correctness of our basic
understanding of QCD, there remain numerous open questions in strong
interaction physics and we focus on the role of future colliders in addressing
these questions. We discuss possible advances in the measurement of ,
in the study of parton distribution functions, and in the understanding of low
physics at present colliders and potential new facilities. We also touch
briefly on the role of spin physics in advancing our understanding of QCD.Comment: 12 pages, LATEX2e with snow2e, epsfig and 2 figures. Also available
at http://penguin.phy.bnl.gov/~dawson/qcdsnow.ps . QCD working group summary
at DPF/DPB Summer Study on New Directions for High Energy Physics, Snowmass,
CO, June 25- July 12, 199
Possible Solutions to the Radius Anomalies of Transiting Giant Planets
We calculate the theoretical evolution of the radii of all fourteen of the
known transiting extrasolar giant planets (EGPs) for a variety of assumptions
concerning atmospheric opacity, dense inner core masses, and possible internal
power sources. We incorporate the effects of stellar irradiation and customize
such effects for each EGP and star. Looking collectively at the family as a
whole, we find that there are in fact two radius anomalies to be explained. Not
only are the radii of a subset of the known transiting EGPs larger than
expected from previous theory, but many of the other objects are smaller than
the default theory would allow. We suggest that the larger EGPs can be
explained by invoking enhanced atmospheric opacities that naturally retain
internal heat. This explanation might obviate the necessity for an extra
internal power source. We explain the smaller radii by the presence in perhaps
all the known transiting EGPs of dense cores, such as have been inferred for
Saturn and Jupiter. Importantly, we derive a rough correlation between the
masses of our "best-fit" cores and the stellar metallicity that seems to
buttress the core-accretion model of their formation. Though many caveats and
uncertainties remain, the resulting comprehensive theory that incorporates
enhanced-opacity atmospheres and dense cores is in reasonable accord with all
the current structural data for the known transiting giant planets.Comment: 22 pages in emulateapj format, including 10 figures (mostly in
color), accepted to the Astrophysical Journal (February 9, 2007); to appear
in volume 661, June 200
Dimensional Dependence of the Hydrodynamics of Core-Collapse Supernovae
The multidimensional character of the hydrodynamics in core-collapse
supernova (CCSN) cores is a key facilitator of explosions. Unfortunately, much
of this work has necessarily been performed assuming axisymmetry and it remains
unclear whether or not this compromises those results. In this work, we present
analyses of simplified two- and three-dimensional CCSN models with the goal of
comparing the multidimensional hydrodynamics in setups that differ only in
dimension. Not surprisingly, we find many differences between 2D and 3D models.
While some differences are subtle and perhaps not crucial to understanding the
explosion mechanism, others are quite dramatic and make interpreting 2D CCSN
models problematic. In particular, we find that imposing axisymmetry
artificially produces excess power at the largest spatial scales, power that
has been deemed critical in the success of previous explosion models and has
been attributed solely to the standing accretion shock instability.
Nevertheless, our 3D models, which have an order of magnitude less power on
large scales compared to 2D models, explode earlier. Since we see explosions
earlier in 3D than in 2D, the vigorous sloshing associated with the large scale
power in 2D models is either not critical in any dimension or the explosion
mechanism operates differently in 2D and 3D. Possibly related to the earlier
explosions in 3D, we find that about 25% of the accreted material spends more
time in the gain region in 3D than in 2D, being exposed to more integrated
heating and reaching higher peak entropies, an effect we associate with the
differing characters of turbulence in 2D and 3D. Finally, we discuss a simple
model for the runaway growth of buoyant bubbles that is able to quantitatively
account for the growth of the shock radius and predicts a critical luminosity
relation.Comment: Submitted to the Astrophysical Journa
Spatial distribution and broad-band spectral characteristics of the diffuse X-ray background, 0.1 - 1.0 keV
Preliminary maps covering more than 85 percent of the sky are presented for three energy bands: the B band, the C band, and the M band. The study was undertaken to find evidence that most of the diffuse X-ray background at energies less than 1 keV is local to the galaxy and that it is most probably due to thermal radiation from a low density plasma which fills a substantial fraction of interstellar space. A preliminary analysis of the data is provided including a report that most of the B and C band flux has a common origin, probably in a 10 to the 6th power K region surrounding the Sun, and that most of the M band flux does not originate from the same material
Three years of greenhouse gas column-averaged dry air mole fractions retrieved from satellite – Part 2: Methane
Carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) are the two most important anthropogenic greenhouse gases. SCIAMACHY on ENVISAT is the first satellite instrument whose measurements are sensitive to concentration changes of the two gases at all altitude levels down to the Earth's surface where the source/sink signals are largest. We have processed three years (2003–2005) of SCIAMACHY near-infrared nadir measurements to simultaneously retrieve vertical columns of CO2 (from the 1.58 µm absorption band), CH4 (1.66 µm) and oxygen (O2 A-band at 0.76 µm) using the scientific retrieval algorithm WFM-DOAS. We show that the latest version of WFM-DOAS, version 1.0, which is used for this study, has been significantly improved with respect to its accuracy compared to the previous versions while essentially maintaining its high processing speed (~1 min per orbit, corresponding to ~6000 single measurements, and per gas on a standard PC). The greenhouse gas columns are converted to dry air column-averaged mole fractions, denoted XCO2 (in ppm) and XCH4 (in ppb), by dividing the greenhouse gas columns by simultaneously retrieved dry air columns. For XCO2 dry air columns are obtained from the retrieved O2 columns. For XCH4 dry air columns are obtained from the retrieved CO2 columns because of better cancellation of light path related errors compared to using O2 columns retrieved from the spectrally distant O2 A-band. Here we focus on a discussion of the XCH4 data set. The XCO2 data set is discussed in a separate paper (Part 1). For 2003 we present detailed comparisons with the TM5 model which has been optimally matched to highly accurate but sparse methane surface observations. After accounting for a systematic low bias of ~2% agreement with TM5 is typically within 1–2%. We investigated to what extent the SCIAMACHY XCH4 is influenced by the variability of atmospheric CO2 using global CO2 fields from NOAA's CO2 assimilation system CarbonTracker. We show that the CO2 corrected and uncorrected XCH4 spatio-temporal pattern are very similar but that agreement with TM5 is better for the CarbonTracker CO2 corrected XCH4. In line with previous studies (e.g., Frankenberg et al., 2005b) we find higher methane over the tropics compared to the model. We show that tropical methane is also higher when normalizing the CH4 columns with retrieved O2 columns instead of CO2. In consistency with recent results of Frankenberg et al. (2008b) it is shown that the magnitude of the retrieved tropical methane is sensitive to the choice of the spectroscopic line parameters of water vapour. Concerning inter-annual variability we find similar methane spatio-temporal pattern for 2003 and 2004. For 2005 the retrieved methane shows significantly higher variability compared to the two previous years, most likely due to somewhat larger noise of the spectral measurement
Supernova Neutrino Opacity from Nucleon-Nucleon Bremsstrahlung and Related Processes
Elastic scattering on nucleons, \nu N -> N \nu, is the dominant supernova
(SN) opacity source for \mu and \tau neutrinos. The dominant energy- and
number-changing processes were thought to be \nu e^- -> e^- \nu and \nu\bar \nu
e^+ e^- until Suzuki (1993) showed that the bremsstrahlung process \nu\bar
\nu NN NN was actually more important. We find that for energy exchange,
the related ``inelastic scattering process'' \nu NN NN \nu is even more
effective by about a factor of 10. A simple estimate implies that the \nu_\mu
and \nu_\tau spectra emitted during the Kelvin-Helmholtz cooling phase are much
closer to that of \nu\bar_e than had been thought previously. To facilitate a
numerical study of the spectra formation we derive a scattering kernel which
governs both bremsstrahlung and inelastic scattering and give an analytic
approximation formula. We consider only neutron-neutron interactions, we use a
one-pion exchange potential in Born approximation, nonrelativistic neutrons,
and the long-wavelength limit, simplifications which appear justified for the
surface layers of a SN core. We include the pion mass in the potential and we
allow for an arbitrary degree of neutron degeneracy. Our treatment does not
include the neutron-proton process and does not include nucleon-nucleon
correlations. Our perturbative approach applies only to the SN surface layers,
i.e. to densities below about 10^{14} g cm^{-3}.Comment: 36 pages, LaTeX, 6 postscript figs included, matches version accepted
for publication in Astrophysical Journa
A Theory for the Radius of the Transiting Giant Planet HD 209458b
Using a full frequency-dependent atmosphere code that can incorporate
irradiation by a central primary star, we calculate self-consistent boundary
conditions for the evolution of the radius of the transiting planet HD 209458b.
Using a well-tested extrasolar giant planet evolutionary code, we then
calculate the behavior of this planet's radius with age. The measured radius is
in fact a transit radius that resides high in HD 209458b's inflated atmosphere.
Using our derived atmospheric and interior structures, we find that irradiation
plus the proper interpretation of the transit radius can yield a theoretical
radius that is within the measured error bars. We conclude that if HD 209458b's
true transit radius is at the lower end of the measured range, an extra source
of core heating power is not necessary to explain the transit observations.Comment: 6 pages in emulateapj format, plus 2 figures (one color), accepted to
the Astrophysical Journa
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