1,523 research outputs found
Foreign direct investment and the political economy of protection
Trade Barriers;Foreign Investment
The Detection of Outflows in the IR-Quiet Molecular Core NGC 6334 I(North)
We find strong evidence for outflows originating in the dense molecular core
NGC 6334 I(North): a 1000 Msol molecular core distinguished by its lack of HII
regions and mid-IR emission. New observations were obtained of the SiO 2-1 and
5-4 lines with the SEST 15-m telescope and the H2 (1-0) S(1) line with the ESO
2.2-m telescope. The line profiles of the SiO transitions show broad wings
extending from -50 to 40 km/s, and spatial maps of the line wing emission
exhibit a bipolar morphology with the peaks of the red and blue wing separated
by 30". The estimated mass loss rate of the outflow is comparable to those for
young intermediate to high-mass stars. The near-IR images show eight knots of
H2 emission. Five of the knots form a linear chain which is displaced from the
axis of the SiO outflow; these knots may trace shock excited gas along the path
of a second, highly collimated outflow. We propose that I(N) is a rare example
of a molecular core in an early stage of cluster formation.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX, 3 ps figures, accepted by ApJ
High-velocity feature of the class I methanol maser in G309.38-0.13
The Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) has been used to map class I
methanol masers at 36 and 44 GHz in G309.38-0.13. Maser spots are found at nine
locations in an area of 50''x30'', with both transitions reliably detected at
only two locations. The brightest spot is associated with shocked gas traced by
4.5 micron emission. The data allowed us to make a serendipitous discovery of a
high-velocity 36-GHz spectral feature, which is blue-shifted by about 30 km/s
from the peak velocity at this frequency, but spatially located close to
(within a few arcseconds of) the brightest maser spot. We interpret this as
indicating an outflow parallel to the line of sight. Such a high velocity
spread of maser features, which has not been previously reported in the class I
methanol masers associated with a single molecular cloud, suggests that the
outflow most likely interacts with a moving parcel of gas.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted by MNRAS Letter
New class I methanol masers
We review properties of all known collisionally pumped (class I) methanol
maser series based on observations with the Australia Telescope Compact Array
(ATCA) and the Mopra radio telescope. Masers at 36, 84, 44 and 95 GHz are most
widespread, while 9.9, 25, 23.4 and 104 GHz masers are much rarer, tracing the
most energetic shocks. A survey of many southern masers at 36 and 44 GHz
suggests that these two transitions are highly complementary. The 23.4 GHz
maser is a new type of rare class I methanol maser, detected only in two
high-mass star-forming regions, G357.97-0.16 and G343.12-0.06, and showing a
behaviour similar to 9.9, 25 and 104 GHz masers. Interferometric positions
suggest that shocks responsible for class I masers could arise from a range of
phenomena, not merely an outflow scenario. For example, some masers might be
caused by interaction of an expanding HII region with its surrounding molecular
cloud. This has implications for evolutionary sequences incorporating class I
methanol masers if they appear more than once during the evolution of the
star-forming region. We also make predictions for candidate maser transitions
at the ALMA frequency range.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, to appear in proceedings for IAUS 287: Cosmic
Masers - from OH to H
Cliophysics: Socio-political Reliability Theory, Polity Duration and African Political (In)stabilities
Quantification of historical sociological processes have recently gained
attention among theoreticians in the effort of providing a solid theoretical
understanding of the behaviors and regularities present in sociopolitical
dynamics. Here we present a reliability theory of polity processes with
emphases on individual political dynamics of African countries. We found that
the structural properties of polity failure rates successfully capture the risk
of political vulnerability and instabilities in which 87.50%, 75%, 71.43%, and
0% of the countries with monotonically increasing, unimodal, U-shaped and
monotonically decreasing polity failure rates, respectively, have high level of
state fragility indices. The quasi-U-shape relationship between average polity
duration and regime types corroborates historical precedents and explains the
stability of the autocracies and democracies.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Mid-Infrared Imaging of NGC 6334 I
We present high-resolution (<0.5") mid-infrared Keck II images of individual
sources in the central region of NGC 6334 I. We compare these images to images
at a variety of other wavelengths from the near infrared to cm radio continuum
and speculate on the nature of the NGC 6334 I sources. We assert that the
cometary shape of the UCHII region here, NGC 6334 F, is due to a champagne-like
flow from a source on the edge of a molecular clump and not a due to a bow
shock caused by the supersonic motion of the UCHII region through the
interstellar medium. The mid-infrared emission in concentrated into an arc of
dust that define the boundary between the UCHII region and the molecular clump.
This dust arc contains a majority of the masers in the region. We discuss the
nature of the four near-infrared sources associated with IRS-I 1, and suggest
that one of the sources, IRS1E, is responsible for the heating and ionizing of
the UCHII region and the mid-infrared dust arc. Infrared source IRS-I 2, which
has been thought to be a circumstellar disk associated with a linear
distribution of methanol masers, is found not to be directly coincident with
the masers and elongated at a much different position angle. IRS-I 3 is found
to be a extended source of mid-infrared emission coming from a cluster of young
dusty sources seen in the near-infrared.Comment: Accepted for publication by the Astrophysical Journal, 27 pages, 9
figure
A bilateral shear layer between two parallel Couette flows
We consider a shear layer of a kind not previously studied to our knowledge.
Contrary to the classical free shear layer, the width of the shear zone does
not vary in the streamwise direction but rather exhibits a lateral variation.
Based on some simplifying assumptions, an analytic solution has been derived
for the new shear layer. These assumptions have been justified by a comparison
with numerical solutions of the full Navier-Stokes equations, which accord with
the analytical solution to better than 1% in the entire domain. An explicit
formula is found for the width of the shear zone as a function of wall-normal
coordinate. This width is independent of wall velocities in the laminar regime.
Preliminary results for a co-current laminar-turbulent shear layer in the same
geometry are also presented. Shear-layer instabilities were then developed and
resulted in an unsteady mixing zone at the interface between the two co-current
streams.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
A Review of Maser Polarization and Magnetic Fields
Through polarization observations masers are unique probes of the magnetic
field in a variety of different astronomical objects, with the different maser
species tracing different physical conditions. In recent years maser
polarization observations have provided insights in the magnetic field strength
and morphology in, among others, the envelopes around evolved stars, Planetary
Nebulae (PNe), massive star forming regions and supernova remnants. More
recently, maser observations have even been used to determine the magnetic
field in megamaser galaxies. This review will present an overview of maser
polarization observations and magnetic field determinations of the last several
years and discuss the implications of the magnetic field measurements for
several important fields of study, such as aspherical PNe creation and massive
star formation.Comment: 10 pages, Review paper from IAU symposium 242 "Astrophysical Masers
and their Environments
High-spatial-resolution observations of NH3 and CH3OH towards the massive twin cores NGC6334 I & I(N)
Molecular line observations of NH3 (J,K)=(1,1), (2,2) and CH3OH at 24.93GHz
taken with the Australian Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) toward the massive
twin cores NGC6334 I & I(N) reveal significant variations in the line emission
between the two massive cores. The UCHII region/hot core NGC6334 I exhibits
strong thermal NH3 and CH3OH emission adjacent to the UCHII region and
coincident with two mm continuum peaks observed by Hunter et al. (in prep.). In
contrast, we find neither compact NH3 nor thermal CH3OH line emission toward
NGC6334 I(N). There, the NH3 emission is distributed over a broad region (>1')
without a clear peak, and we find Class I CH3OH maser emission with peak
brightness temperatures up to 7000K. The maser emission peaks appear to be
spatially associated with the interfaces between the molecular outflows and the
ambient dense gas. Peak NH3(1,1) line brightness temperatures >= 70K in both
regions indicate gas temperatures of the same order. NH3 emission is also
detected toward the outflow in NGC6334 I resulting in an estimated rotational
temperature of Trot~19K. Furthermore, we observe CH3OH and NH3 absorption
toward the UCHII region, the velocity structure is consistent with expanding
molecular gas around the UCHII region. Thermal and kinematic effects possibly
imposed from the UCHII region on the molecular core are also discussed.Comment: Accepted for the Astrophysical Journa
Analytical and Numerical Verification of the Nernst Theorem for Metals
In view of the current discussion on the subject, an effort is made to show
very accurately both analytically and numerically how the Drude dispersion
model gives consistent results for the Casimir free energy at low temperatures.
Specifically, for the free energy near T=0 we find the leading term to be
proportional to T^2 and the next-to-leading term proportional to T^{5/2}. These
terms give rise to zero Casimir entropy as T approaches zero, and is thus in
accordance with Nernst's theorem.Comment: 19 pages latex, 3 figures. v4: Figures updated. This is the final
version, accepted for publication in Physical Review
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