3,184 research outputs found
X-shooter search for outgassing from Main Belt Comet P/2012 T1 (Pan-STARRS)
Context. Main Belt Comets are a recently identified population of minor bodies with stable asteroid-like orbits but cometary appearances. Sublimation of water ice is the most likely mechanism for their recurrent activity (i.e. dust tails and dust comae), although there has been no direct detection of gas. These peculiar objects could hold the key to the origin of water on Earth.
Aims. In this paper we present a search for the gas responsible for lifting dust from P/2012 T1 (Pan-STARRS), and review previous attempts at such measurements. To date such searches have mainly been indirect, looking for the common cometary gas CN rather than gasses related to water itself.
Methods. We use the VLT and X-shooter to search for emission from OH in the UV, a direct dissociation product of water.
Results. We do not detect any emission lines, and place an upper limit on water production rate from P/2012 T1 of 8 − 9 × 1025 molecules s−1. This is similar to limits derived from observations using the Herschel space telescope.
Conclusions. We conclude that the best current facilities are incapable of detecting water emission at the exceptionally low levels required to produce the observed activity in Main Belt Comets
Physical and dynamical characterisation of low Delta-V NEA (190491) 2000 FJ10
We investigated the physical properties and dynamical evolution of Near Earth
Asteroid (NEA) (190491) 2000 FJ10 in order to assess the suitability of this
accessible NEA as a space mission target. Photometry and colour determination
were carried out with the 1.54 m Kuiper Telescope and the 10 m Southern African
Large Telescope during the object's recent favourable apparition in 2011-12.
During the earlier 2008 apparition, a spectrum of the object in the 6000-9000
Angstrom region was obtained with the 4.2 m William Herschel Telescope.
Interpretation of the observational results was aided by numerical simulations
of 1000 dynamical clones of 2000 FJ10 up to 10^6 yr in the past and in the
future. The asteroid's spectrum and colours determined by our observations
suggest a taxonomic classification within the S-complex although other
classifications (V, D, E, M, P) cannot be ruled out. On this evidence, it is
unlikely to be a primitive, relatively unaltered remnant from the early history
of the solar system and thus a low priority target for robotic sample return.
Our photometry placed a lower bound of 2 hrs to the asteroid's rotation period.
Its absolute magnitude was estimated to be 21.54+-0.1 which, for a typical
S-complex albedo, translates into a diameter of 130+-20 m. Our dynamical
simulations show that it has likely been an Amor for the past 10^5 yr. Although
currently not Earth-crossing, it will likely become so during the period 50 -
100 kyr in the future. It may have arrived from the inner or central Main Belt
> 1 Myr ago as a former member of a low-inclination S-class asteroid family.
Its relatively slow rotation and large size make it a suitable destination for
a human mission. We show that ballistic Earth-190491-Earth transfer
trajectories with Delta-V < 2 km s^-1 at the asteroid exist between 2052 and
2061.Comment: 2 Tables, 11 Figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
X THEN X: Manipulation of Same-System Runoff Elections
Do runoff elections, using the same voting rule as the initial election but
just on the winning candidates, increase or decrease the complexity of
manipulation? Does allowing revoting in the runoff increase or decrease the
complexity relative to just having a runoff without revoting? For both weighted
and unweighted voting, we show that even for election systems with simple
winner problems the complexity of manipulation, manipulation with runoffs, and
manipulation with revoting runoffs are independent, in the abstract. On the
other hand, for some important, well-known election systems we determine what
holds for each of these cases. For no such systems do we find runoffs lowering
complexity, and for some we find that runoffs raise complexity. Ours is the
first paper to show that for natural, unweighted election systems, runoffs can
increase the manipulation complexity
Magnetically asymmetric interfaces in a (LaMnO)/(SrMnO) superlattice due to structural asymmetries
Polarized neutron reflectivity measurements of a ferromagnetic
[(LaMnO)/(SrMnO)] superlattice reveal a modulated
magnetic structure with an enhanced magnetization at the interfaces where
LaMnO was deposited on SrMnO (LMO/SMO). However, the opposite
interfaces (SMO/LMO) are found to have a reduced ferromagnetic moment. The
magnetic asymmetry arises from the difference in lateral structural roughness
of the two interfaces observed via electron microscopy, with strong
ferromagnetism present at the interfaces that are atomically smooth over tens
of nanometers. This result demonstrates that atomic-scale roughness can
destabilize interfacial phases in complex oxide heterostructures.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Effects of hydrogen/deuterium absorption on the magnetic properties of Co/Pd multilayers
The effects of hydrogen (H2) and deuterium (D2) absorption were studied in
two Co/Pd multilayers with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA) using
polarized neutron reflectivity (PNR). PNR was measured in an external magnetic
field H applied in the plane of the sample with the magnetization M confined in
the plane for {\mu}_o H= 6.0 T and partially out of plane at 0.65 T. Nominal
thicknesses of the Co and Pd layers were 2.5 {\AA} and 21 {\AA}, respectively.
Because of these small values, the actual layer chemical composition,
thickness, and interface roughness parameters were determined from the nuclear
scattering length density profile ({\rho}_n) and its derivative obtained from
both x-ray reflectivity and PNR, and uncertainties were determined using Monte
Carlo analysis. The PNR {\rho}_n showed that although D2 absorption occurred
throughout the samples, absorption in the multilayer stack was modest (0.02 D
per Pd atom) and thus did not expand. Direct magnetometry showed that H2
absorption decreased the total M at saturation and increased the component of M
in the plane of the sample when not at saturation. The PNR magnetic scattering
length density ({\rho}_m) revealed that the Pd layers in the multilayer stack
were magnetized and that their magnetization was preferentially modified upon
D2 absorption. In one sample, a modulation of M with twice the multilayer
period was observed at {\mu}_o H= 0.65 T, which increased upon D2 absorption.
These results indicate that H2 or D2 absorption decreases both the PMA and
total magnetization of the samples. The lack of measurable expansion during
absorption indicates that these changes are primarily governed by modification
of the electronic structure of the material.Comment: to appear in Physics review B, 201
Magnetic non-uniformity and thermal hysteresis of magnetism in a manganite thin film
We measured the chemical and magnetic depth profiles of a single crystalline
(LaPr)CaMnO (x = 0.52\pm0.05, y =
0.23\pm0.04, {\delta} = 0.14\pm0.10) film grown on a NdGaO3 substrate using
x-ray reflectometry, electron microscopy, electron energy-loss spectroscopy and
polarized neutron reflectometry. Our data indicate that the film exhibits
coexistence of different magnetic phases as a function of depth. The magnetic
depth profile is correlated with a variation of chemical composition with
depth. The thermal hysteresis of ferromagnetic order in the film suggests a
first order ferromagnetic transition at low temperatures
An improved tip vortex cavitation model for propeller-rudder interaction
The paper starts with the computational modelling of the tip vortex cavitation in uniform flow conditions with an isolated propeller in detail and provides experimental validation. It then moves onto further modelling to include the effect of non-uniform flow and the presence of a rudder placed in the propeller slipstream. The propeller-rudder arrangement of the Newcastle University research vessel, The Princess Royal, and associated experimental data were used for Experimental Fluid Dynamics (EFD) analysis to validate the modelling. The cavitation simulations were conducted using commercial CFD software, Star CCM+. A new meshing technique, which utilizes a Mesh Adaptive Refinement approach for Cavitation Simulations (MARCS), recently developed by the authors, has been applied successfully to simulate the tip vortex cavitation, particularly to trace its extension up to the rudder in the propeller slipstream. The comparison of the CFD and EFD methods for the isolated propeller in cavitation tunnel conditions showed very good agreement in terms of the thrust and torque coefficients of the propeller as well as the sheet and tip vortex cavitation patterns observed. The cavitation simulations have been extended for the same propeller by using the new mesh refinement approach to include the effect of the hull wake and the presence of the rudder. Although the latter simulations fall short of the EFD results and hence they are still under development, the paper presents the developments and results so far to achieve the ultimate aim of this study, i.e. computational modelling of cavitating tip vortices of a propeller interacting with a rudder
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