1,051 research outputs found
Extension of a Modular Particle-Continuum Method to Vibrationally Excited, Hypersonic Flows
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/90632/1/AIAA-55681-143.pd
Effects of Rotational Energy Relaxation in a Modular Particle-Continuum Method
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/90623/1/AIAA-50720-713.pd
Application of a Modular Particle-Continuum Method to Hypersonic Propulsive Deceleration
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/90682/1/AIAA-2011-3137-898.pd
The Photoionization of a Star-Forming Core in the Trifid Nebula
We have carried out a comprehensive multiwavelength study of Bright-Rimmed Globule TC2 in the Trifid Nebula using the IRAM~30m telescope, the VLA centimeter array and the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO). TC2 is one of the very few globules to exhibit signs of active ongoing star formation while being photoevaporated. The study of the kinematics shows that TC2 is currently undergoing an implosion driven by the ionization field. The physical structure of the molecular core, the Photon-Dominated Region and the ionization front are characterized. The properties of the PDR are in good agreement with some recent PDR models. The molecular emission suggests that the star formation process was probably initiated a few 0.1 Myr ago, in the large burst which led to the formation of the nebula. The impact of photoionization on the star formation process appears limited.Peer reviewe
GHIGLS: HI mapping at intermediate Galactic latitude using the Green Bank Telescope
This paper introduces the data cubes from GHIGLS, deep Green Bank Telescope
surveys of the 21-cm line emission of HI in 37 targeted fields at intermediate
Galactic latitude. The GHIGLS fields together cover over 1000 square degrees at
9.55' spatial resolution. The HI spectra have an effective velocity resolution
about 1.0 km/s and cover at least -450 < v < +250 km/s. GHIGLS highlights that
even at intermediate Galactic latitude the interstellar medium is very complex.
Spatial structure of the HI is quantified through power spectra of maps of the
column density, NHI. For our featured representative field, centered on the
North Ecliptic Pole, the scaling exponents in power-law representations of the
power spectra of NHI maps for low, intermediate, and high velocity gas
components (LVC, IVC, and HVC) are -2.86 +/- 0.04, -2.69 +/- 0.04, and -2.59
+/- 0.07, respectively. After Gaussian decomposition of the line profiles, NHI
maps were also made corresponding to the narrow-line and broad-line components
in the LVC range; for the narrow-line map the exponent is -1.9 +/- 0.1,
reflecting more small scale structure in the cold neutral medium (CNM). There
is evidence that filamentary structure in the HI CNM is oriented parallel to
the Galactic magnetic field. The power spectrum analysis also offers insight
into the various contributions to uncertainty in the data. The effect of 21-cm
line opacity on the GHIGLS NHI maps is estimated.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal, 2015 July 16.
32 pages, 21 figures (Fig. 10 new). Minor revisions from review, particularly
Section 8 and Appendix C; results unchanged. Additional surveys added and
made available; new Appendix B. Added descriptions of available FITS files
and links to four illustrative movies on enhanced GHIGLS archive
(www.cita.utoronto.ca/GHIGLS/
Excitation lines and the breakdown of Stokes-Einstein relations in supercooled liquids
By applying the concept of dynamical facilitation and analyzing the
excitation lines that result from this facilitation, we investigate the origin
of decoupling of transport coefficients in supercooled liquids. We illustrate
our approach with two classes of models. One depicts diffusion in a strong
glass former, and the other in a fragile glass former. At low temperatures,
both models exhibit violation of the Stokes-Einstein relation,
, where is the self diffusion constant and is the
structural relaxation time. In the strong case, the violation is sensitive to
dimensionality , going as for , and as for . In the fragile case, however, we argue that
dimensionality dependence is weak, and show that for , . This scaling for the fragile case compares favorably with the
results of a recent experimental study for a three-dimensional fragile glass
former.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
On the use of fractional Brownian motion simulations to determine the 3D statistical properties of interstellar gas
Based on fractional Brownian motion (fBm) simulations of 3D gas density and
velocity fields, we present a study of the statistical properties of
spectro-imagery observations (channel maps, integrated emission, and line
centroid velocity) in the case of an optically thin medium at various
temperatures. The power spectral index gamma_W of the integrated emission is
identified with that of the 3D density field (gamma_n) provided the medium's
depth is at least of the order of the largest transverse scale in the image,
and the power spectrum of the centroid velocity map is found to have the same
index gamma_C as that of the velocity field (gamma_v). Further tests with
non-fBm density and velocity fields show that this last result holds, and is
not modified either by the effects of density-velocity correlations. A
comparison is made with the theoretical predictions of Lazarian & Pogosyan
(2000).Comment: 28 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ. For preprint
with higher-resolution figures, see
http://www.cita.utoronto.ca/~mamd/miville_fbm2003.pd
Anisotropic Local Stress and Particle Hopping in a Deeply Supercooled Liquid
The origin of the microscopic motions that lead to stress relaxation in
deeply supercooled liquid remains unclear. We show that in such a liquid the
stress relaxation is locally anisotropic which can serve as the driving force
for the hopping of the system on its free energy surface. However, not all
hopping are equally effective in relaxing the local stress, suggesting that
diffusion can decouple from viscosity even at local level. On the other hand,
orientational relaxation is found to be always coupled to stress relaxation.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Explanatory Supplement of the ISOGAL-DENIS Point Source Catalogue
We present version 1.0 of the ISOGAL-DENIS Point Source Catalogue (PSC),
containing more than 100,000 point sources detected at 7 and/or 15 micron in
the ISOGAL survey of the inner Galaxy with the ISOCAM instrument on board the
Infrared Space Observatory (ISO). These sources are cross-identified, wherever
possible, with near-infrared (0.8-2.2 micron) data from the DENIS survey. The
overall surface covered by the ISOGAL survey is about 16 square degrees, mostly
(95%) distributed near the Galactic plane (|b| < 1 deg), where the source
extraction can become confusion limited and perturbed by the high background
emission. Therefore, special care has been taken aimed at limiting the
photometric error to ~0.2 magnitude down to a sensitivity limit of typically 10
mJy. The present paper gives a complete description of the entries and the
information which can be found in this catalogue, as well as a detailed
discussion of the data processing and the quality checks which have been
completed. The catalogue is available via the VizieR Service at the Centre de
Donn\'ees Astronomiques de Strasbourg (CDS,
http://vizier.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/VizieR/) and also via the server at the
Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris (http://www-isogal.iap.fr/). A more complete
version of this paper, including a detailed description of the data processing,
is available in electronic form through the ADS service.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures. A&A in press. Full length version with 32
figures and detailed description of the data processing is available here:
http://www-isogal.iap.fr/Publications/ExplSupplFull.ps.g
CMBPol Mission Concept Study: Prospects for polarized foreground removal
In this report we discuss the impact of polarized foregrounds on a future
CMBPol satellite mission. We review our current knowledge of Galactic polarized
emission at microwave frequencies, including synchrotron and thermal dust
emission. We use existing data and our understanding of the physical behavior
of the sources of foreground emission to generate sky templates, and start to
assess how well primordial gravitational wave signals can be separated from
foreground contaminants for a CMBPol mission. At the estimated foreground
minimum of ~100 GHz, the polarized foregrounds are expected to be lower than a
primordial polarization signal with tensor-to-scalar ratio r=0.01, in a small
patch (~1%) of the sky known to have low Galactic emission. Over 75% of the sky
we expect the foreground amplitude to exceed the primordial signal by about a
factor of eight at the foreground minimum and on scales of two degrees. Only on
the largest scales does the polarized foreground amplitude exceed the
primordial signal by a larger factor of about 20. The prospects for detecting
an r=0.01 signal including degree-scale measurements appear promising, with 5
sigma_r ~0.003 forecast from multiple methods. A mission that observes a range
of scales offers better prospects from the foregrounds perspective than one
targeting only the lowest few multipoles. We begin to explore how optimizing
the composition of frequency channels in the focal plane can maximize our
ability to perform component separation, with a range of typically 40 < nu <
300 GHz preferred for ten channels. Foreground cleaning methods are already in
place to tackle a CMBPol mission data set, and further investigation of the
optimization and detectability of the primordial signal will be useful for
mission design.Comment: 42 pages, 14 figures, Foreground Removal Working Group contribution
to the CMBPol Mission Concept Study, v2, matches AIP versio
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