12,217 research outputs found
Preparation, analysis and release of simulated interplanetary grains into low Earth orbit
Astronomical observations which reflect the optical and dynamical properties of interstellar and interplanetary grains are the primary means of identifying the shape, size, and the chemistry of extraterrestrial grain materials. Except for recent samplings of extraterrestrial particles in near-Earth orbit and in the stratosphere observations were the only method of deducing the properties of extraterrestrial particles. In order to elucidate the detailed characteristics of observed dust, the observations must be compared with theoretical studies, some of which are discussed in this volume, or compared with terrestrial laboratory experiments. The formation and optical characterization of simulated interstellar and interplanetary dust with particular emphasis on studying the properties on irregularly shaped particles were discussed. Efforts to develop the techniques to allow dust experiments to be carried out in low-Earth orbit were discussed, thus extending the conditions under which dust experiments may be performed
Frequency-Tunable Josephson Junction Resonator for Quantum Computing
We have fabricated and measured a high-Q Josephson junction resonator with a
tunable resonance frequency. A dc magnetic flux allows the resonance frequency
to be changed by over 10 %. Weak coupling to the environment allows a quality
factor of 7000 when on average less than one photon is stored in the
resonator. At large photon numbers, the nonlinearity of the Josephson junction
creates two stable oscillation states. This resonator can be used as a tool for
investigating the quality of Josephson junctions in qubits below the single
photon limit, and can be used as a microwave qubit readout at high photon
numbers.Comment: 3 pages, 5 figure
Evidence for a Galactic gamma ray halo
We present quantitative statistical evidence for a -ray emission halo
surrounding the Galaxy. Maps of the emission are derived. EGRET data were
analyzed in a wavelet-based non-parametric hypothesis testing framework, using
a model of expected diffuse (Galactic + isotropic) emission as a null
hypothesis. The results show a statistically significant large scale halo
surrounding the center of the Milky Way as seen from Earth. The halo flux at
high latitudes is somewhat smaller than the isotropic gamma-ray flux at the
same energy, though of the same order (O(10^(-7)--10^(-6)) ph/cm^2/s/sr above 1
GeV).Comment: Final version accepted for publication in New Astronomy. Some
additional results/discussion included, along with entirely revised figures.
19 pages, 15 figures, AASTeX. Better quality figs (PS and JPEG) are available
at http://tigre.ucr.edu/halo/paper.htm
Diffuse continuum gamma rays from the Galaxy
A new study of the diffuse Galactic gamma-ray continuum radiation is
presented, using a cosmic-ray propagation model which includes nucleons,
antiprotons, electrons, positrons, and synchrotron radiation. Our treatment of
the inverse Compton (IC) scattering includes the effect of anisotropic
scattering in the Galactic interstellar radiation field (ISRF) and a new
evaluation of the ISRF itself. Models based on locally measured electron and
nucleon spectra and synchrotron constraints are consistent with gamma-ray
measurements in the 30-500 MeV range, but outside this range excesses are
apparent. A harder nucleon spectrum is considered but fitting to gamma rays
causes it to violate limits from positrons and antiprotons. A harder
interstellar electron spectrum allows the gamma-ray spectrum to be fitted above
1 GeV as well, and this can be further improved when combined with a modified
nucleon spectrum which still respects the limits imposed by antiprotons and
positrons. A large electron/IC halo is proposed which reproduces well the
high-latitude variation of gamma-ray emission. The halo contribution of
Galactic emission to the high-latitude gamma-ray intensity is large, with
implications for the study of the diffuse extragalactic component and
signatures of dark matter. The constraints provided by the radio synchrotron
spectral index do not allow all of the <30 MeV gamma-ray emission to be
explained in terms of a steep electron spectrum unless this takes the form of a
sharp upturn below 200 MeV. This leads us to prefer a source population as the
origin of the excess low-energy gamma rays.Comment: Final version accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
(vol. 537, July 10, 2000 issue); Many Updates; 20 pages including 49
ps-figures, uses emulateapj.sty. More details can be found at
http://www.gamma.mpe-garching.mpg.de/~aws/aws.htm
Rapid soft X-ray fluctuations in solar flares observed with the X-ray polychromator
Three flares observed by the Soft X-Ray Polychromator on the Solar Maximum Mission were studied. Flare light curves from the Flat Crystal Spectrometer and Bent Crystal Spectrometer were examined for rapid signal variations. Each flare was characterized by an initial fast (less than 1 min) burst, observed by the Hard X-Ray Burst Spectrometer (HXRBS), followed by softer gradual X-ray emission lasting several minutes. From an autocorrelation function analysis, evidence was found for quasi-periodic fluctuations with rise and decay times of 10 s in the Ca XIX and Fe XXV light curves. These variations were of small amplitude (less than 20%), often coincided with hard X-ray emissions, and were prominent during the onset of the gradual phase after the initial hard X-ray burst. It is speculated that these fluctuations were caused by repeated energy injections in a coronal loop that had already been heated and filled with dense plasma associated with the initial hard X-ray burst
Role of appetitive phenotype trajectory groups on child body weight during a family-based treatment for children with overweight or obesity.
ObjectiveEmerging evidence suggests that individual appetitive traits may usefully explain patterns of weight loss in behavioral weight loss treatments for children. The objective of this study was to identify trajectories of child appetitive traits and the impact on child weight changes over time.MethodsSecondary data analyses of a randomized noninferiority trial conducted between 2011 and 2015 evaluated children's appetitive traits and weight loss. Children with overweight and obesity (mean age = 10.4; mean BMI z = 2.0; 67% girls; 32% Hispanic) and their parent (mean age = 42.9; mean BMI = 31.9; 87% women; 31% Hispanic) participated in weight loss programs and completed assessments at baseline, 3, 6,12, and 24 months. Repeated assessments of child appetitive traits, including satiety responsiveness, food responsiveness and emotional eating, were used to identify parsimonious grouping of change trajectories. Linear mixed-effects models were used to identify the impact of group trajectory on child BMIz change over time.ResultsOne hundred fifty children and their parent enrolled in the study. The three-group trajectory model was the most parsimonious and included a high satiety responsive group (HighSR; 47.4%), a high food responsive group (HighFR; 34.6%), and a high emotional eating group (HighEE; 18.0%). Children in all trajectories lost weight at approximately the same rate during treatment, however, only the HighSR group maintained their weight loss during follow-ups, while the HighFR and HighEE groups regained weight (adjusted p-value < 0.05).ConclusionsDistinct trajectories of child appetitive traits were associated with differential weight loss maintenance. Identified high-risk subgroups may suggest opportunities for targeted intervention and maintenance programs
The Spatial Distribution of Atomic Carbon Emission in the Giant Molecular Cloud NGC 604-2
We have mapped a giant molecular cloud in the giant HII region NGC 604 in M33
in the 492 GHz ^3P_1 -- ^3P_0 transition of neutral atomic carbon using the
James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. We find the distribution of the [CI] emission to
be asymmetric with respect to the CO J=1--0 emission, with the peak of the [CI]
emission offset towards the direction of the center of the HII region. In
addition, the line ratio I_{[CI]}/I_{CO} is highest (~ 0.2) facing the HII
region and lowest (< 0.1) away from it. These asymmetries indicate an edge-on
morphology where the [CI] emission is strongest on the side of the cloud facing
the center of the HII region, and not detected at all on the opposite side This
suggests that the sources of the incident flux creating C from the dissociation
of CO are the massive stars of the HII region. The lowest line ratios are
similar to what is observed in Galactic molecular clouds, while the highest are
similar to starburst galaxies and other regions of intense star formation. The
column density ratio, N(C)/N(H_2) is a few times 10^{-6}, in general agreement
with models of photodissociation regions.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 8 pages, 5 figures, 3 table
An ASCA Study of the W51 Complex
We present the analysis of ASCA archival data from the Galactic source W51.
The ASCA spectra show that the soft (kT<= 2.5 keV) X-rays are of thermal origin
and are compatible with W51C being a single, isothermal (kT~0.3 keV) supernova
remnant at the far-side of the Sagittarius arm. The ASCA images reveal hard
(kT>=2.5 keV) X-ray sources which were not seen in previous X-ray observations.
Some of these sources are coincident with massive star-forming regions and the
spectra are used to derive X-ray parameters. By comparing the X-ray absorbing
column density with atomic hydrogen column density, we infer the location of
star-forming regions relative to molecular clouds. There are unidentified hard
X-ray sources superposed on the supernova remnant and we discuss the
possibility of their association.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, to be published in Astronomical Journa
New results on source and diffusion spectral features of Galactic cosmic rays: I- B/C ratio
In a previous study (Maurin et al., 2001), we explored the set of parameters
describing diffusive propagation of cosmic rays (galactic convection,
reacceleration, halo thickness, spectral index and normalization of the
diffusion coefficient), and we identified those giving a good fit to the
measured B/C ratio. This study is now extended to take into account a sixth
free parameter, namely the spectral index of sources. We use an updated version
of our code where the reacceleration term comes from standard minimal
reacceleration models. The goal of this paper is to present a general view of
the evolution of the goodness of fit to B/C data with the propagation
parameters. In particular, we find that, unlike the well accepted picture, and
in accordance with our previous study, a Kolmogorov-like power spectrum for
diffusion is strongly disfavored. Rather, the analysis points towards
along with source spectra index . Two
distinct energy dependences are used for the source spectra: the usual
power-law in rigidity and a law modified at low energy, the second choice being
only slightly preferred. We also show that the results are not much affected by
a different choice for the diffusion scheme. Finally, we compare our findings
to recent works, using other propagation models. This study will be further
refined in a companion paper, focusing on the fluxes of cosmic ray nuclei.Comment: 32 pages, 13 figures, accepted in A&
Recent results from COMPTEL observations of Cygnus X‐1
The COMPTEL experiment on the Compton Gamma‐Ray Observatory (CGRO) has now observed Cyg X‐1 on four separate occasions during phase 1 and phase 2 of its orbital mission (April, 1991 to August, 1993). Here we report on the results of the latest analysis of these data, which provide a spectrum extending to energies greater than 2 MeV. A spectral analysis of these data, in the context of a classical Comptonization model, indicates an electron temperature much higher than previous hard X‐ray measurements would suggest (200 keV vs 60–80 keV). This implies either some limitations in the standard Comptonization model and/or the need to incorporate a reflected component in the hard X‐ray spectrum. Although significant variability near 1 MeV has been observed, there is no evidence for any ‘MeV excess.
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