10,256 research outputs found
Picosecond Laser Ablation of Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs): Comparative Study of Neat and Blended Material Response
Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) have emerged as a promising biodegradable and biocompatible material for scaffold manufacturing in the tissue engineering field and food packaging. Surface modification is usually required to improve cell biocompatibility and/or reduce bacteria proliferation. Picosecond laser ablation was applied for surface micro structuring of short- and medium-chain length-PHAs and its blend. The response of each material as a function of laser energy and wavelength was analyzed. Picosecond pulsed laser modified the surface topography without affecting the material properties. UV wavelength irradiation showed halved ablation thresholds compared to visible (VIS) wavelength, revealing a greater photochemical nature of the ablation process at ultraviolet (UV) wavelength. Nevertheless, the ablation rate and, therefore, ablation efficiency did not show a clear dependence on beam wavelength. The different mechanical behavior of the considered PHAs did not lead to different ablation thresholds on each polymer at a constant wavelength, suggesting the interplay of the material mechanical parameters to equalize ablation thresholds. Blended-PHA showed a significant reduction in the ablation threshold under VIS irradiation respect to the neat PHAs. Picosecond ablation was proved to be a convenient technique for micro structuring of PHAs to generate surface microfeatures appropriate to influence cell behavior and improve the biocompatibility of scaffolds in tissue engineerin
Scaling relations of the colour-detected cluster RzCS 052 at z=1.016 and of some other high redshift clusters
We report on the discovery of the z=1.016 cluster RzCS 052 using a modified
red sequence method, followup spectroscopy and X-ray imaging. This cluster has
a velocity dispersion of 710+-150 km/s, a virial mass of 4.0e14 Msol (based on
21 spectroscopically confirmed members) and an X-ray luminosity of (0.68+-
0.47)e44 ergs/s in the [1-4] keV band. This optically selected cluster appears
to be of richness class 3 and to follow the known L_X-sigma_v relation for high
redshift X-ray selected clusters. Using these data, we find that the halo
occupation number for this cluster is only marginally consistent with what
expected assuming a self-similar evolution of cluster scaling relations,
suggesting perhaps a break of them at z~1. We also rule out a strong galaxy
merging activity between z=1 and today. Finally, we present a Bayesian approach
to measuring cluster velocity dispersions and X-ray luminosities in the
presence of a background: we critically reanalyze recent claims for X-ray
underluminous clusters using these techniques and find that the clusters can be
accommodated within the existing L_X -sigma_v relation.Comment: MNRAS, in pres
Chemical fractionation of siderophile elements in impactites from Australian meteorite craters
The abundance pattern of siderophile elements in terrestrial and lunar impact melt rocks was used extensively to infer the nature of the impacting projectiles. An implicit assumption made is that the siderophile abundance ratios of the projectiles are approximately preserved during mixing of the projectile constituents with the impact melts. As this mixture occurs during flow of strongly shocked materials at high temperatures, however there are grounds for suspecting that the underlying assumption is not always valid. In particular, fractionation of the melted and partly vaporized material of the projectile might be expected because of differences in volatility, solubility in silicate melts, and other characteristics of the constituent elements. Impactites from craters with associated meteorites offer special opportunities to test the assumptions on which projectile identifications are based and to study chemical fractionation that occurred during the impact process
X-ray Over-Luminous Elliptical Galaxies: A New Class of Mass Concentrations in the Universe?
We detect four isolated, X-ray over-luminous (Lx>2e43 [h/0.5]**-2 erg/s)
elliptical galaxies (OLEGs) in our 160 square degree ROSAT PSPC survey. The
extent of their X-ray emission, total X-ray luminosity, total mass, and mass of
the hot gas in these systems correspond to poor clusters, and the optical
luminosity of the central galaxies (M_R<-22.5 + 5 lg h) is comparable to that
of cluster cDs. However, there are no detectable fainter galaxy concentrations
around the central elliptical. The mass-to-light ratio within the radius of
detectable X-ray emission is in the range 250-450 Msun/Lsun, which is 2-3 times
higher than typically found in clusters or groups. These objects can be the
result of galaxy merging within a group. However, their high M/L values are
difficult to explain in this scenario. OLEGs must have been undisturbed for a
very long time, which makes them the ultimate examples of systmes in
hydrostatic equilibrium. The number density of OLEGs is n=2.4(+3.1-1.2}x10**-7
(h/0.5)**-3 Mpc**-3 at the 90% confidence. They comprise 20% of all clusters
and groups of comparable X-ray luminosity, and nearly all galaxies brighter
than M_R=-22.5. The estimated contirubution of OLEGs to the total mass density
in the Universe is close to that of T>7 keV clusters.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, uses emulateapj.sty, submitted to ApJ Letter
Climate Modeling of a Potential ExoVenus
The planetary mass and radius sensitivity of exoplanet discovery capabilities
has reached into the terrestrial regime. The focus of such investigations is to
search within the Habitable Zone where a modern Earth-like atmosphere may be a
viable comparison. However, the detection bias of the transit and radial
velocity methods lies close to the host star where the received flux at the
planet may push the atmosphere into a runaway greenhouse state. One such
exoplanet discovery, Kepler-1649b, receives a similar flux from its star as
modern Venus does from the Sun, and so was categorized as a possible exoVenus.
Here we discuss the planetary parameters of Kepler-1649b with relation to Venus
to establish its potential as a Venus analog. We utilize the general
circulation model ROCKE-3D to simulate the evolution of the surface temperature
of Kepler-1649b under various assumptions, including relative atmospheric
abundances. We show that in all our simulations the atmospheric model rapidly
diverges from temperate surface conditions towards a runaway greenhouse with
rapidly escalating surface temperatures. We calculate transmission spectra for
the evolved atmosphere and discuss these spectra within the context of the
James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec)
capabilities. We thus demonstrate the detectability of the key atmospheric
signatures of possible runaway greenhouse transition states and outline the
future prospects of characterizing potential Venus analogs.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journal. The data from this paper are open source and are
available from the following data portals:
https://portal.nccs.nasa.gov/GISS_modelE/ROCKE-3D/Climate_Modeling_of_a_Potential_ExoVenus
https://archive.org/details/Climate_Modeling_of_a_Potential_ExoVenu
Light to Mass Variations with Environment
Large and well defined variations exist between the distribution of mass and
the light of stars on extragalactic scales. Mass concentrations in the range
10^12 - 10^13 M_sun manifest the most light per unit mass. Group halos in this
range are typically the hosts of spiral and irregular galaxies with ongoing
star formation. On average M/L_B ~ 90 M_sun/L_sun in these groups . More
massive halos have less light per unit mass. Within a given mass range, halos
that are dynamically old as measured by crossing times and galaxy morphologies
have distinctly less light per unit mass. At the other end of the mass
spectrum, below 10^12 M_sun, there is a cutoff in the manifestation of light.
Group halos in the range 10^11 - 10^12 M_sun can host dwarf galaxies but with
such low luminosities that M/L_B values can range from several hundred to
several thousand. It is suspected that there must be completely dark halos at
lower masses. Given the form of the halo mass function, it is the low relative
luminosities of the high mass halos that has the greatest cosmological
implications. Of order half the clustered mass may reside in halos with greater
than 10^14 M_sun. By contrast, only 5-10% of clustered mass would lie in
entities with less than 10^12 M_sun.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables, Accepted Astrophysical Journal 619,
000, 2005 (Jan 1
Photometric observations of Southern Abell Cluster Redshifts Survey Clusters: Structure of galaxies in the inner region of clusters of galaxies
We analyze photometric properties of 1384 cluster galaxies as a function of
the normalized distance to cluster center. These galaxies were selected in the
central region ( 0.8) of 14 southern Abell clusters chosen from
the Southern Abell Cluster Redshifts Survey (SARS). For 507 of these galaxies
we also obtained their luminosity profiles. We have studied the
morphology-clustercentric distance relation on the basis of the shape parameter
of the S\'ersic's law. We also have analyzed the presence of a possible
segregation in magnitude for both, the galaxy total luminosity and that of
their components (i.e. the bulge and the disk).
Results show a marginal ( level) decrease of the total luminosity as
a function of normalized radius. However, when bulges are analyzed separately,
a significant luminosity segregation is found ( and for
galaxies in projection and member galaxies respectively). The fraction of
bulges brighter than is three times larger in the core of
clusters than in the outer region. Our analysis of the disk component suggests
that disks are, on average, less luminous in the cluster core than at
. In addition, we found that the magnitude-size relation as
a function of indicates (at level) that disks are smaller
and centrally brighter in the core of clusters. However, the Kormendy relation
(the bulge magnitude-size relation) appears to be independent of environment.Comment: To appear in the A
Representaciones subyacentes de un mundo insustentable
La relación entre la humanidad y la crisis ambiental, se encuentra en un punto de inflexión, con
problemas que se manifiestan en los niveles local, regional y global. Cuando se piensa en el
futuro, existe una tendencia a extrapolar linealmente lo que viene sucediendo; sin embargo, son
numerosos los casos en los que las .situaciones futuras no son necesariamente una continuación
de lo que venía ocurriendo. Existen virajes, reacciones desproporcionadas, colapsos y
discontinuidades en los sistemas naturales y sociales en respuesta a muchas de las actividades
humanas a las que son sometidos
- …
