5,240 research outputs found
Analytical investigation of solid rocket nozzle failure
On April 5, 1983, an Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) spacecraft experienced loss of control during the burn of the second of two solid rocket motors. The anomaly investigation showed the cause to be a malfunction of the solid rocket motor. This paper presents a description of the IUS system, a failure analysis summary, an account of the thermal testing and computer modeling done at Marshall Space Flight Center, a comparison of analysis results with thermal data obtained from motor static tests, and describes some of the design enhancement incorporated to prevent recurrence of the anomaly
Break up of returning plasma after the 7 June 2011 filament eruption by Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities
A prominence eruption on 7 June 2011 produced spectacular curtains of plasma
falling through the lower corona. At the solar surface they created an
incredible display of extreme ultraviolet brightenings. The aim is to identify
and analyze some of the local instabilities which produce structure in the
falling plasma. The structures were investigated using SDO/AIA 171A and 193A
images in which the falling plasma appeared dark against the bright coronal
emission. Several instances of the Rayleigh-Taylor instability were
investigated. In two cases the Alfven velocity associated with the dense plasma
could be estimated from the separation of the Rayleigh-Taylor fingers. A second
type of feature, which has the appearance of self-similar branching horns, is
also discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, submitted A&A. Movies are at
http://www.mps.mpg.de/data/outgoing/innes/arcs_movie.avi and
http://www.mps.mpg.de/data/outgoing/innes/horns_movie.av
Ferroelectric charge order stabilized by antiferromagnetism in multiferroic LuFe2O4
Neutron diffraction measurements on multiferroic LuFe2O4 show changes in the
antiferromagnetic (AFM) structure characterized by wavevector q = (1/3 1/3 1/2)
as a function of electric field cooling procedures. The increase of intensity
from all magnetic domains and the decrease in the 2D magnetic order observed
below the Neel temperature are indicative of increased ferroelectric charge
order. The AFM order changes the dynamics of the CO state, and stabilizes it.
It is determined that the increase in electric polarization observed at the
magnetic ordering temperature is due to a transition from paramagnetic 2D
charge order to AFM 3D charge order.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
A Multi-Epoch HST Study of the Herbig-Haro Flow from XZ Tauri
We present nine epochs of Hubble Space Telescope optical imaging of the
bipolar outflow from the pre-main sequence binary XZ Tauri. Our data monitors
the system from 1995-2005 and includes emission line images of the flow. The
northern lobe appears to be a succession of bubbles, the outermost of which
expanded ballistically from 1995-1999 but in 2000 began to deform and
decelerate along its forward edge. It reached an extent of 6" from the binary
in 2005. A larger and fainter southern counterbubble was detected for the first
time in deep ACS images from 2004. Traces of shocked emission are seen as far
as 20" south of the binary. The bubble emission nebulosity has a low excitation
overall, as traced by the [S II]/H-alpha line ratio, requiring a nearly
comoving surrounding medium that has been accelerated by previous ejections or
stellar winds.
Within the broad bubbles there are compact emission knots whose alignments
and proper motions indicate that collimated jets are ejected from each binary
component. The jet from the southern component, XZ Tau A, is aligned with the
outflow axis of the bubbles and has tangential knot velocities of 70-200 km/s.
Knots in the northern flow are seen to slow and brighten as they approach the
forward edge of the outermost bubble. The knots in the jet from the other star,
XZ Tau B, have lower velocities of ~100 km/s
Chandra Confirmation of a Pulsar Wind Nebula in DA 495
As part of a multiwavelength study of the unusual radio supernova remnant DA
495, we present observations made with the Chandra X-ray Observatory. Imaging
and spectroscopic analysis confirms the previously detected X-ray source at the
heart of the annular radio nebula, establishing the radiative properties of two
key emission components: a soft unresolved source with a blackbody temperature
of 1 MK consistent with a neutron star, surrounded by a nonthermal nebula 40''
in diameter exhibiting a power-law spectrum with photon index Gamma =
1.6+/-0.3, typical of a pulsar wind nebula. The implied spin-down luminosity of
the neutron star, assuming a conversion efficiency to nebular flux appropriate
to Vela-like pulsars, is ~10^{35} ergs/s, again typical of objects a few tens
of kyr old. Morphologically, the nebular flux is slightly enhanced along a
direction, in projection on the sky, independently demonstrated to be of
significance in radio polarization observations; we argue that this represents
the orientation of the pulsar spin axis. At smaller scales, a narrow X-ray
feature is seen extending out 5'' from the point source, a distance consistent
with the sizes of resolved wind termination shocks around many Vela-like
pulsars. Finally, we argue based on synchrotron lifetimes in the estimated
nebular magnetic field that DA 495 represents a rare pulsar wind nebula in
which electromagnetic flux makes up a significant part, together with particle
flux, of the neutron star's wind, and that this high magnetization factor may
account for the nebula's low luminosity.Comment: 26 pages, 5 figures, AASTeX preprint style. Accepted for publication
in The Astrophysical Journa
A multifrequency study of the active star forming complex NGC6357. I. Interstellar structures linked to the open cluster Pis24
We investigate the distribution of the gas (ionized, neutral atomic and
molecular), and interstellar dust in the complex star forming region NGC6357
with the goal of studying the interplay between the massive stars in the open
cluster Pis24 and the surrounding interstellar matter. Our study of the
distribution of the ionized gas is based on narrow-band Hhalfa, [SII], and
[OIII] images obtained with the Curtis-Schmidt Camera at CTIO, Chile, and on
radio continuum observations at 1465 MHz taken with the VLA with a synthesized
beam of 40 arcsec. The distribution of the molecular gas is analyzed using
12CO(1-0) data obtained with the Nanten radiotelescope, Chile (angular
resolution = 2.7 arcmin). The interstellar dust distribution was studied using
mid-infrared data from the GLIMPSE survey and far-infrared observations from
IRAS. NGC6357 consists of a large ionized shell and a number of smaller optical
nebulosities. The optical, radio continuum, and near- and mid-IR images
delineate the distributions of the ionized gas and interstellar dust in the HII
regions and in previously unknown wind blown bubbles linked to the massive
stars in Pis24 revealing surrounding photodissociation regions. The CO line
observations allowed us to identify the molecular counterparts of the ionized
structures in the complex and to confirm the presence of photodissociation
regions. The action of the WR star HD157504 on the surrounding gas was also
investigated. The molecular mass in the complex is estimated to be (4+/-2)X10^5
Mo. Mean electron densities derived from the radio data suggest electron
densities > 200 cm^-3, indicating that NGC6357 is a complex formed in a region
of high ambient density. The known massive stars in Pis24 and a number of newly
inferred massive stars are mainly responsible for the excitation and
photodissociation of the parental molecular cloud.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Multidimensional relativistic MHD simulations of Pulsar Wind Nebulae: dynamics and emission
Pulsar Wind Nebulae, and the Crab nebula in particular, are the best cosmic
laboratories to investigate the dynamics of magnetized relativistic outflows
and particle acceleration up to PeV energies. Multidimensional MHD modeling by
means of numerical simulations has been very successful at reproducing, to the
very finest details, the innermost structure of these synchrotron emitting
nebulae, as observed in the X-rays. Therefore, the comparison between the
simulated source and observations can be used as a powerful diagnostic tool to
probe the physical conditions in pulsar winds, like their composition,
magnetization, and degree of anisotropy. However, in spite of the wealth of
observations and of the accuracy of current MHD models, the precise mechanisms
for magnetic field dissipation and for the acceleration of the non-thermal
emitting particles are mysteries still puzzling theorists to date. Here we
review the methodologies of the computational approach to the modeling of
Pulsar Wind Nebulae, discussing the most relevant results and the recent
progresses achieved in this fascinating field of high-energy astrophysics.Comment: 29 pages review, preliminary version. To appear in the book
"Modelling Nebulae" edited by D. Torres for Springer, based on the invited
contributions to the workshop held in Sant Cugat (Barcelona), June 14-17,
201
Beyond ‘witnessing’: children’s experiences of coercive control in domestic violence and abuse
Children’s experiences and voices are underrepresented in academic literature and professional practice around domestic violence and abuse. The project ‘Understanding Agency and Resistance Strategies’ addresses this absence, through direct engagement with children. We present an analysis from interviews with 21 children in the United Kingdom (12 girls and 9 boys, aged 8-18 years), about their experiences of domestic violence and abuse, and their responses to this violence. These interviews were analysed using interpretive interactionism. Three themes from this analysis are presented: a) ‘Children’s experiences of abusive control’, which explores children’s awareness of controlling behaviour by the adult perpetrator, their experience of that control, and its impact on them; b) ‘Constraint’, which explores how children experience the constraint associated with coercive control in situations of domestic violence, and c) ‘Children as agents’ which explores children’s strategies for managing controlling behaviour in their home and in family relationships. The paper argues that, in situations where violence and abuse occurs between adult intimate partners, children are significantly impacted, and can be reasonably described as victims of abusive control. Recognising children as direct victims of domestic violence and abuse would produce significant changes in the way professionals respond to them, by 1) recognising children’s experience of the impact of domestic violence and abuse; 2) recognising children’s agency, undermining the perception of them as passive ‘witnesses’ or ‘collateral damage’ in adult abusive encounters; and 3) strengthening professional responses to them as direct victims, not as passive witnesses to violence
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