7,205 research outputs found
Experimental investigation into the feasibility of an extruded wing
Fabrications of extruded aluminum alloy structures are reviewed. The design criteria and the fabrication of the main structure of a sailplane wing made of a few extruded profiles longitudinally connected one to the other are illustrated. Structural tests recently carried out are reported upon
Survival of microorganisms in desert soil exposed to five years of continuous very high vacuum
Microorganism survivability in desert algal soil crust under continuous very high vacuu
PACE and EISCAT radar observations of short-lived flow bursts on the nightside
Concurrent observations from two widely spaced radar experiments of quasi periodic flow bursts in the nightside are presented. The flow bursts closely resemble single radar observations reported by Williams et al. By using the Polar Anglo-American Conjugate Experiment (PACE) HF radar array at Halley Bay in conjunction with the EISCAT Common Program (CP) 2-D experiment, the flow bursts are shown to be a global phenomenon and important information as to their development and propagation can be determined
Mitochondrial DNA lineages of Italian Giara and Sarcidano horses
Giara and Sarcidano are 2 of the 15 extant native Italian horse breeds with limited dispersal capability that originated from a larger number of individuals. The 2 breeds live in two distinct isolated locations on the island of Sardinia. To determine the genetic structure and evolutionary history of these 2 Sardinian breeds, the first hypervariable segment of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) was sequenced and analyzed in 40 Giara and Sarcidano horses and compared with publicly available mtDNA data from 43 Old World breeds. Four different analyses, including genetic distance, analysis of molecular variance, haplotype sharing, and clustering methods, were used to study the genetic relationships between the Sardinian and other horse breeds. The analyses yielded similar results, and the FST values indicated that a high percentage of the total genetic variation was explained by between-breed differences. Consistent with their distinct phenotypes and geographic isolation, the two Sardinian breeds were shown to consist of 2 distinct gene pools that had no gene flow between them. Giara horses were clearly separated from the other breeds examined and showed traces of ancient separation from horses of other breeds that share the same mitochondrial lineage. On the other hand, the data from the Sarcidano horses fit well with variation among breeds from the Iberian Peninsula and North-West Europe: genetic relationships among Sarcidano and the other breeds are consistent with the documented history of this breed
Polarization retention loss in PbTiO3 ferroelectric films due to leakage currents
The relationship between retention loss in single crystal PbTiO3 ferroelectric thin films and leakage currents is demonstrated by piezoresponse and conductive atomic force microscopy measurements. It was found that the polarization reversal in the absence of an electric field followed a stretched exponential behavior 1−exp[−(t/k)^d] with exponent d>1, which is distinct from a dispersive random walk process with d<1. The latter has been observed in polycrystalline films for which retention loss was associated with grain boundaries. The leakage current indicates power law scaling at short length scales, which strongly depends on the applied electric field. Additional information of the microstructure, which contributes to an explanation of the presence of leakage currents, is presented with high resolution transmission electron microscopy analysis.
Near-infrared spectroscopic indices for unresolved stellar populations: I. Template galaxy spectra
Context. A new generation of spectral synthesis models has been developed in recent years, but there is no matching set of template galaxy spectra, in terms of quality and resolution, for testing and refining the new models.
Aims: Our main goal is to find and calibrate new near-infrared spectral indices along the Hubble sequence of galaxies which will be used to obtain additional constraints to the population analysis based on medium-resolution integrated spectra of galaxies.
Methods: Spectra of previously studied and well-understood galaxies with relatively simple stellar populations (e.g., ellipticals or bulge dominated galaxies) are needed to provide a baseline data set for spectral synthesis models.
Results: X-shooter spectra spanning the optical and infrared wavelengths (350-2400 nm) of bright nearby elliptical galaxies with a resolving power of R \u2dc 4000-5400 were obtained. Heliocentric systemic velocity, velocity dispersion, and Mg, Fe, and H\u3b2 line-strength indices are presented.
Conclusions: We present a library of very-high-quality spectra of galaxies covering a large range of age, metallicity, and morphological type. Such a dataset of spectra will be crucial to addressing important questions of the modern investigation concerning galaxy formation and evolution
The pseudobulge of NGC 1292
The photometric and kinematic properties of Sb NGC 1292 suggest it hosts a
pseudobulge. The properties of the stellar population of such a pseudobulge are
consistent with a slow buildup within a scenario of secular evolution.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure to appear in the proceedings of "Formation and
Evolution of Galaxy Disks", Rome, October 2007, Eds. J. Funes and E. M.
Corsin
Accurate classification of 75 counterparts of objects detected in the 54 month Palermo Swift/BAT hard X-ray catalogue
Through an optical campaign performed at 4 telescopes located in the northern
and the southern hemispheres, we have obtained optical spectroscopy for 75
counterparts of unclassified or poorly studied hard X-ray emitting objects
detected with Swift/BAT and listed in the 54 month Palermo BAT catalogue. All
these objects have also observations taken with Swift/XRT, ROSAT or Chandra
satellites which allowed us to reduce the high energy error box and pinpoint
the most likely optical counterpart/s. We find that 69 sources in our sample
are Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs); of them, 35 are classified as type 1 (with
broad and narrow emission lines), 33 are classified as type 2 (with only narrow
emission lines) and one is an high redshift QSO; the remaining 6 objects are
galactic cataclysmic variables (CVs). Among type 1 AGNs, 32 are objects of
intermediate Seyfert type (1.2-1.9) and one is Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxy;
for 29 out of 35 type 1 AGNs, we have been able to estimate the central black
hole mass and the Eddington ratio. Among type 2 AGNs, two display optical
features typical of the LINER class, 3 are classified as transition objects, 1
is a starburst galaxy and 2 are instead X-ray bright, optically normal
galaxies. All galaxies classified in this work are relatively nearby objects
(0.006 - 0.213) except for one at redshift 1.137.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publications on Astronomy
and Astrophysics, main journal. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1206.509
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Dependence of convective flows and particle precipitation in the high-latitude dayside ionosphere on theXandYcomponents of the interplanetary magnetic field
The asymmetries in the convective flows, current systems, and particle precipitation in the high-latitude dayside ionosphere which are related to the equatorial plane components of the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) are discussed in relation to the results of several recent observational studies. It is argued that all of the effects reported to date which are ascribed to the y component of the IMF can be understood, at least qualitatively, in terms of a simple theoretical picture in which the effects result from the stresses exerted on the magnetosphere consequent on the interconnection of terrestrial and interplanetary fields. In particular, relaxation under the action of these stresses allows, in effect, a partial penetration of the IMF into the magnetospheric cavity, such that the sense of the expected asymmetry effects on closed field lines can be understood, to zeroth order, in terms of the “dipole plus uniform field” model. In particular, in response to IMF By, the dayside cusp should be displaced in longitude about noon in the same sense as By in the northern hemisphere, and in the opposite sense to By in the southern hemisphere, while simultaneously the auroral oval as a whole should be shifted in the dawn-dusk direction in the opposite sense with respect to By. These expected displacements are found to be consistent with recently published observations. Similar considerations lead to the suggestion that the auroral oval may also undergo displacements in the noon-midnight direction which are associated with the x component of the IMF. We show that a previously published study of the position of the auroral oval contains strong initial evidence for the existence of this effect. However, recent results on variations in the latitude of the cusp are more ambiguous. This topic therefore requires further study before definitive conclusions can be drawn
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