19,803 research outputs found
Reference list for stability theory in ordinary differential equations
Reference list for stability and control theory in ordinary differential equation
Determination of Chilling Requirement of Arkansas Thornless Blackberry Cultivars
Little research has been done to determine the chilling requirement for blackberry cultivars. However, field observations from areas where fewer hours of chilling occur indicate that ‘Navaho’ requires more hours of chilling than does ‘Arapaho’. The objective of our study was to determine a method for measuring the chilling requirement using whole plants of two blackberry cultivars, Arapaho and Navaho. One-year old, bare-root plants were field-dug on 26 October 1999 and placed in a cold chamber at 3ºC. Ten single-plant replications of each cultivar were removed at 100-hour intervals up to 1000 hours. The plants were potted and placed in a greenhouse (daily minimum temperature 15ºC), and plants were arranged on benches in a completely randomized design. Budbreak was recorded on a weekly basis. Data for budbreak were analyzed as a two-factor factorial (2 cultivars and 10 chilling treatments) by SAS and means were separated by least significant difference (P = 0.05). Data indicated that the chilling requirement for Arapaho is between 400 and 500 hours. For Navaho, the data indicated the chilling requirement was between 800 and 900 hours. These data support previous observations and indicate that the method used was successful in determining the chilling requirement for blackberries
Prospects of Turbulence Studies in High-Energy Density Laser-Generated Plasma: Numerical Investigations in Two Dimensions
We investigate the possibility of generating and studying turbulence in
plasma by means of high-energy density laser-driven experiments. Our focus is
to create supersonic, self-magnetized turbulence with characteristics that
resemble those found in the interstellar medium (ISM).
We consider a target made of a spherical core surrounded by a shell made of
denser material. The shell is irradiated by a sequence of laser pulses sending
inward-propagating shocks that convert the inner core into plasma and create
turbulence. In the context of the evolution of the ISM, the shocks play the
role of supernova remnant shocks and the core represents the ionized
interstellar medium. We consider the effects of both pre-existing and
self-generating magnetic fields and study the evolution of the system by means
of two-dimensional numerical simulations.
We find that the evolution of the turbulent core is generally, subsonic with
rms-Mach number . We observe an isotropic, turbulent velocity
field with an inertial range power spectra of . We
account for the effects of self-magnetization and find that the resulting
magnetic field has characteristic strength G. The
corresponding plasma beta is --,
indicating that the magnetic field does not play an important role in the
dynamical evolution of the system.
The natural extension of this work is to study the system evolution in
three-dimensions, with various laser drive configurations, and targets with
shells and cores of different masses. The latter modification may help to
increase the turbulent intensity and possibly create transonic turbulence. One
of the key challenges is to obtain transonic turbulent conditions in a
quasi-steady state environment.Comment: High Energy Density Physics, in pres
Bare quark stars or naked neutron stars? The case of RX J1856.5-3754
In a cool neutron star (T less than or similar to 10(6) K) endowed with a rather highmagnetic field (B greater than or similar to 10(13) G), a phase transition may occur in the outermost layers. As a consequence, the neutron star becomes "bare,'' i.e., no gaseous atmosphere sits on the top of the crust. The surface of a cooling, bare neutron star does not necessarily emit a blackbody spectrum because the emissivity is strongly suppressed at energies below the electron plasma frequency, omega(p). Since omega(p) approximate to 1 keV under the conditions typical of the dense electron gas in the condensate, the emission from a T similar to 100 eV bare neutron star will be substantially depressed with respect to that of a perfect Planckian radiator atmost energies. Here we present a detailed analysis of the emission properties of a bare neutron star. In particular, we derive the surface emissivity for an Fe composition in a range of magnetic fields and temperatures representative of cooling isolated neutron stars, like RX J1856.5 - 3754. We find that the emitted spectrum is strongly dependent on the electron conductivity in the solid surface layers. In the cold electron gas approximation ( no electron-lattice interactions), the spectrum turns out to be a featureless depressed blackbody in the 0.1 - 2 keV band with a steeper low-energy distribution. When damping effects due to collisions between electrons and the ion lattice ( mainly due to electron-phonon interactions) are accounted for, the spectrum is more depressed at low energies and spectral features may be present, depending on the magnetic field strength. Details of the emitted spectrum are found, however, to be strongly dependent on the assumed treatment of the transition from the external vacuum to the metallic surface. The implications of our results for RX J1856.5 - 3754 and other isolated neutron stars are discussed
X-Ray Wakes in Abell 160
`Wakes' of X-ray emission have now been detected trailing behind a few (at
least seven) elliptical galaxies in clusters. To quantify how widespread this
phenomenon is, and what its nature might be, we have obtained a deep (70 ksec)
X-ray image of the poor cluster Abell 160 using the ROSAT HRI. Combining the
X-ray data with optical positions of confirmed cluster members, and applying a
statistic designed to search for wake-like excesses, we confirm that this
phenomenon is observed in galaxies in this cluster. The probability that the
detections arise from chance is less than 0.0038. Further, the wakes are not
randomly distributed in direction, but are preferentially oriented pointing
away from the cluster centre. This arrangement can be explained by a simple
model in which wakes arise from the stripping of their host galaxies'
interstellar media due to ram pressure against the intracluster medium through
which they travel.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Three-dimensional simulations of the orientation and structure of reconnection X-lines
This work employs Hall magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations to study the
X-lines formed during the reconnection of magnetic fields with differing
strengths and orientations embedded in plasmas of differing densities. Although
random initial perturbations trigger the growth of X-lines with many
orientations, at late time a few robust X-lines sharing an orientation
reasonably consistent with the direction that maximizes the outflow speed, as
predicted by Swisdak and Drake [Geophys. Res. Lett., 34, L11106, (2007)],
dominate the system. The existence of reconnection in the geometry examined
here contradicts the suggestion of Sonnerup [J. Geophys. Res., 79, 1546 (1974)]
that reconnection occurs in a plane normal to the equilibrium current. At late
time the growth of the X-lines stagnates, leaving them shorter than the
simulation domain.Comment: Accepted by Physics of Plasma
Recommended from our members
Inverse Geometry for Stereolithographic Manufacturing
As parts produced by stereolithography form and cure, they warp and shrink
to produce Pitrts that are not quite the san~ ~ as those originally specified. This
research attempts to solve the inverse geomptry problem, that is, what shape
should be specified initially so that the she pe produced is the desired one.
Assuming that 'the process is repeatable, we ~neasure the difference between the
ideal and actua). part dimensions. A finite-element based model is built which
mirrors the distortion from the ideal geometry. A "pre-deformed" geometry is
then built so that it deforms to the ideal geometry under the conditions imposed
on the finite element model. This pre-warped geometry is the geometry we seek.Mechanical Engineerin
H2O abundances in the atmospheres of three hot Jupiters
The core accretion theory for giant planet formation predicts enrichment of
elemental abundances in planetary envelopes caused by runaway accretion of
planetesimals, which is consistent with measured super-solar abundances of C,
N, P, S, Xe, and Ar in Jupiter's atmosphere. However, the abundance of O which
is expected to be the most dominant constituent of planetesimals is unknown for
solar system giant planets, owing to the condensation of water in their
ultra-cold atmospheres, thereby posing a key unknown in solar system formation.
On the other hand, hundreds of extrasolar hot Jupiters are known with very high
temperatures (>~1000 K) making them excellent targets to measure H2O abundances
and, hence, oxygen in their atmospheres. We constrain the atmospheric H2O
abundances in three hot Jupiters (HD 189733b, HD 209458b, and WASP-12b),
spanning a wide temperature range (1200-2500 K), using their near-infrared
transmission spectra obtained using the HST WFC3 instrument. We report
conclusive measurements of H2O in HD 189733b and HD 209458b, while that in
WASP-12b is not well constrained by present data. The data allow nearly solar
as well as significantly sub-solar abundances in HD 189733b and WASP-12b.
However, for HD 209458b, we report the most precise H2O measurement in an
exoplanet to date that suggests a ~20-135 sub-solar H2O abundance. We discuss
the implications of our results on the formation conditions of hot Jupiters and
on the likelihood of clouds in their atmospheres. Our results highlight the
critical importance of high-precision spectra of hot Jupiters for deriving
their H2O abundances.Comment: ApJ Letters, in pres
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