8,433 research outputs found
Strong irradiation of protostellar cores in Corona Australis
The importance of the physical environment in the evolution of newly formed
low-mass stars remains an open question. In particular, radiation from nearby
more massive stars may affect both the physical and chemical structure of these
kinds of young stars. Aims: To constrain the physical characteristics of a
group of embedded low-mass protostars in Corona Australis in the vicinity of
the young luminous Herbig Be star R CrA. Methods: Millimetre wavelength maps of
molecular line and continuum emission towards the low-mass star forming region
IRS7 near R CrA from the SMA and APEX are presented. The maps show the
distribution of 18 lines from 7 species (H2CO, CH3OH, HC3N, c-C3H2, HCN, CN and
SiO) on scales from 3" to 60" (400-8000 AU). Using a set of H2CO lines, we
estimate the temperatures and column densities in the region using LTE and
non-LTE methods. The results are compared with 1-D radiative transfer modelling
of the protostellar cores. These models constrain which properties of the
central source, envelope, and environment can give rise to the observed line
and continuum emission. Results: Most of the H2CO emission from the regions
emerges from two elongated narrow ridges dominating the emission picked up in
both interferometric and single-dish measurements. The temperatures inferred
from the H2CO lines are no less than ~30 K and more likely 50-60 K, and the
line emission peaks are offset by ~2500 AU from the location of the embedded
protostars. The temperatures can not be explained by the heating from the young
stellar objects themselves. Irradiation by the nearby Herbig Be star R CrA
could, however, explain the high temperatures. The elevated temperatures can in
turn impact the physical and chemical characteristics of protostars and lead to
enhanced abundances of typical tracers of photon dominated regions seen in
single-dish line surveys of embedded protostars in the region.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A; 21 pages, 28 figures; Added footnote
in Section 2.
A 928 sq m (10000 sq ft) solar array
As the power requirements for space vehicles increases, the area of solar arrays that convert solar energy to usable electrical power increases. The requirements for a 928 sq m (10,000 sq ft) array, its design, and a full-scale demonstration of one quadrant (232 sq m (2500 sq ft)) deployed in a one-g field are described
Externally heated protostellar cores in the Ophiuchus star-forming region
We present APEX 218 GHz observations of molecular emission in a complete
sample of embedded protostars in the Ophiuchus star-forming region. To study
the physical properties of the cores, we calculate HCO and c-CH
rotational temperatures, both of which are good tracers of the kinetic
temperature of the molecular gas. We find that the HCO temperatures range
between 16 K and 124 K, with the highest HCO temperatures toward the hot
corino source IRAS 16293-2422 (69-124 K) and the sources in the Oph A
cloud (23-49 K) located close to the luminous Herbig Be star S 1, which
externally irradiates the Oph A cores. On the other hand, the
c-CH rotational temperature is consistently low (7-17 K) in all
sources. Our results indicate that the c-CH emission is primarily
tracing more shielded parts of the envelope whereas the HCO emission (at
the angular scale of the APEX beam; 3600 au in Ophiuchus) mainly traces the
outer irradiated envelopes, apart from in IRAS 16293-2422, where the hot corino
emission dominates. In some sources, a secondary velocity component is also
seen, possibly tracing the molecular outflow.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Robust autoresonant excitation in the plasma beat-wave accelerator: a theoretical study
A modified version of the Plasma Beat-Wave Accelerator scheme is introduced
and analyzed, which is based on autoresonant phase-locking of the nonlinear
Langmuir wave to the slowly chirped beat frequency of the driving lasers via
adiabatic passage through resonance. This new scheme is designed to overcome
some of the well-known limitations of previous approaches, namely relativistic
detuning and nonlinear modulation or other non-uniformity or non-stationarity
in the driven Langmuir wave amplitude, and sensitivity to frequency mismatch
due to measurement uncertainties and density fluctuations and inhomogeneities
DNA Vaccines Encoding Antigen Targeted to MHC Class II Induce Influenza-Specific CD8+ T Cell Responses, Enabling Faster Resolution of Influenza Disease
Current influenza vaccines are effective but imperfect, failing to cover against emerging strains of virus and requiring seasonal administration to protect against new strains. A key step to improving influenza vaccines is to improve our understanding of vaccine induced protection. Whilst it is clear that antibodies play a protective role, vaccine induced CD8+ T cells can improve protection. To further explore the role of CD8+ T cells we used a DNA vaccine that encodes antigen dimerised to an immune cell targeting module. Immunising CB6F1 mice with the DNA vaccine in a heterologous prime boost regime with the seasonal protein vaccine improved the resolution of influenza disease compared to protein alone. This improved disease resolution was dependent on CD8+ T cells. However, DNA vaccine regimes that induced CD8+ T cells alone were not protective and did not boost the protection provided by protein. The MHC targeting module used was an anti-I-Ed single chain antibody specific to the BALB/c strain of mice. To test the role of MHC targeting we compared the response between BALB/c, C57BL/6 mice and an F1 cross of the two strains (CB6F1). BALB/c mice were protected, C57BL/6 were not and the F1 had an intermediate phenotype; showing that the targeting of antigen is important in the response. Based on these findings, and in agreement with other studies using different vaccines, we conclude that in addition to antibody, inducing a protective CD8 response is important in future influenza vaccines
A survey of HC_3N in extragalactic sources: Is HC_3N a tracer of activity in ULIRGs?
Context. HC_3N is a molecule that is mainly associated with Galactic star-forming regions, but it has also been detected in extragalactic environments.
Aims. To present the first extragalactic survey of HC_3N, when combining earlier data from the literature with six new single-dish detections, and to compare HC_3N with other molecular tracers (HCN, HNC), as well as other properties (silicate absorption strength, IR flux density ratios, C_(II) flux, and megamaser activity).
Methods. We present mm IRAM 30 m, OSO 20 m, and SEST observations of HC_3N rotational lines (mainly the J = 10–9 transition) and of the J = 1–0 transitions of HCN and HNC. Our combined HC_3N data account for 13 galaxies (excluding the upper limits reported for the non-detections), while we have HCN and HNC data for more than 20 galaxies.
Results. A preliminary definition “HC_3N-luminous galaxy” is made based upon the HC_3N/HCN ratio. Most (~80%) HC_3N-luminous galaxies seem to be deeply obscured galaxies and (U)LIRGs. A majority (~60% or more) of the HC3N-luminous galaxies in the sample present OH mega- or strong kilomaser activity. A possible explanation is that both HC_3N and OH megamasers need warm dust for their excitation. Alternatively, the dust that excites the OH megamaser offers protection against UV destruction of HC_3N. A high silicate absorption strength is also found in several of the HC_3N-luminous objects, which may help the HC3N to survive. Finally, we find that a high HC_3N/HCN ratio is related to a high dust temperature and a low C_(II) flux
The uniting of Europe and the foundation of EU studies: revisiting the neofunctionalism of Ernst B. Haas
This article suggests that the neofunctionalist theoretical legacy left by Ernst B. Haas is somewhat richer and more prescient than many contemporary discussants allow. The article develops an argument for routine and detailed re-reading of the corpus of neofunctionalist work (and that of Haas in particular), not only to disabuse contemporary students and scholars of the normally static and stylized reading that discussion of the theory provokes, but also to suggest that the conceptual repertoire of neofunctionalism is able to speak directly to current EU studies and comparative regionalism. Neofunctionalism is situated in its social scientific context before the theory's supposed erroneous reliance on the concept of 'spillover' is discussed critically. A case is then made for viewing Haas's neofunctionalism as a dynamic theory that not only corresponded to established social scientific norms, but did so in ways that were consistent with disciplinary openness and pluralism
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