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  • Astronomy
  • 2005-2009
  • 2000-2004
  • 1995-1999  (182)
  • 1996  (182)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: This book relates the history of planetary radar astronomy from its origins in radar to the present day and secondarily to bring to light that history as a case of 'Big Equipment but not Big Science'. Chapter One sketches the emergence of radar astronomy as an ongoing scientific activity at Jodrell Bank, where radar research revealed that meteors were part of the solar system. The chief Big Science driving early radar astronomy experiments was ionospheric research. Chapter Two links the Cold War and the Space Race to the first radar experiments attempted on planetary targets, while recounting the initial achievements of planetary radar, namely, the refinement of the astronomical unit and the rotational rate and direction of Venus. Chapter Three discusses early attempts to organize radar astronomy and the efforts at MIT's Lincoln Laboratory, in conjunction with Harvard radio astronomers, to acquire antenna time unfettered by military priorities. Here, the chief Big Science influencing the development of planetary radar astronomy was radio astronomy. Chapter Four spotlights the evolution of planetary radar astronomy at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a NASA facility, at Cornell University's Arecibo Observatory, and at Jodrell Bank. A congeries of funding from the military, the National Science Foundation, and finally NASA marked that evolution, which culminated in planetary radar astronomy finding a single Big Science patron, NASA. Chapter Five analyzes planetary radar astronomy as a science using the theoretical framework provided by philosopher of science Thomas Kuhn. Chapter Six explores the shift in planetary radar astronomy beginning in the 1970s that resulted from its financial and institutional relationship with NASA Big Science. Chapter Seven addresses the Magellan mission and its relation to the evolution of planetary radar astronomy from a ground-based to a space-based activity. Chapters Eight and Nine discuss the research carried out at ground-based facilities by this transformed planetary radar astronomy, as well as the upgrading of the Arecibo and Goldstone radars. A technical essay appended to this book provides an overview of planetary radar techniques, especially range-Doppler mapping.
    Keywords: Astronomy
    Type: NASA-SP-4218 , NAS 1.21:4218 , LC-95-35890
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: Preliminary results of early-type galaxies that will be part of a galaxy catalog to be derived from the complete Rosat data base are presented. The stored data were reduced and analyzed by an automatic pipeline. This pipeline is based on a command language scrip. The important features of the pipeline include new data time screening in order to maximize the signal to noise ratio of faint point-like sources, source detection via a wavelet algorithm, and the identification of sources with objects from existing catalogs. The pipeline outputs include reduced images, contour maps, surface brightness profiles, spectra, color and hardness ratios.
    Keywords: Astronomy
    Type: ; 385-386
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: The results of recent Advanced Satellite for Cosmology and Astrophysics (ASCA) X-ray observations of two pre-main sequence stars are presented: the weak emission line T Tauri star HD 142361, and the Herbig Ae star HD 104237. The solid state imaging spectrometer spectra for HD 142361 shows a clear emission line from H-like Mg 7, and spectral fits reveal a multiple temperature plasma with a hot component of at least 16 MK. The spectra of HD 104237 show a complex temperature structure with the hottest plasma at temperatures of greater than 30 MK. It is concluded that mechanisms that predict only soft X-ray emission can be dismissed for Herbig Ae stars.
    Keywords: Astronomy
    Type: Conference proceedings of the International Conference on X-Ray Astronomy and Astrophysics; 69-70; MPE-263
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: We present high-resolution very long baseline interferometry images of three southern radio sources that the Energetic Gamma-Ray Experiment Telescope (EGRET), on board the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, has identified as greater than 100 MeV gamma-ray sources. These are the first results in a continuing program of VLBI observations of southern EGRET identifications. For two of these sources, PKS 0208-512 (at 4.851 GHz) and PKS 0537-441 (at 4.851 and 8.418 GHz), the images represent first-epoch observations. For the remaining lower redshift object, PKS 0521-365, we present images from three epochs at 4.851 GHz and an image from one further epoch at 8.418 GHz, spanning approximately 1 yr. We discuss the need for further extensive VLBI observations of EGRET-identified radio sources.
    Keywords: Astronomy
    Type: Astrophysical Journal; 464; 170-176
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: We have developed an X-ray telescope that uses a new technique for focusing X-rays with grazing incidence optics. The telescope was built with spherical optics for all of its components, utilizing the high quality surfaces obtainable when polishing spherical (as opposed to aspherical) optics. We tested the prototype X-ray telescope in the 300 meter vacuum pipe at White Sands Missile Range, NM. The telescope features 2 degee graze angles with tungsten coatings, yielding a bandpass of 0.25-1.5 keV with a peak effective area of 0.8 sq cm at 0.83 keV. Results from X-ray testing at energies of 0.25 keV and 0.93 keV (C-K and Cu-L) verify 0.5 arcsecond performance at 0.93 keV. Results from modeling the X-ray telescope's response to the Sun show that the current design would be capable of recording 10 half arcsecond images of a solar active region during a 300 second NASA sounding rocket flight.
    Keywords: Astronomy
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: Authors have conducted a program of research focused on studies of the lunar atmosphere. Also present preliminary results of an ongoing effort to determine the degree that metal abundances in the lunar atmosphere are stoichiometric, that is, reflective of the lunar surface composition. We make the first-ever mid-ultraviolet spectroscopic search for emission from the lunar atmosphere.
    Keywords: Astronomy
    Type: NASA-CR-203114 , NAS 1.26:203114
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: The Space Telescope Science Institute has compressed an all-sky collection of ground-based images and has printed the data on a two volume, 102 CD-ROM disc set. The first part of the survey (containing images of the southern sky) was published in May 1994. The second volume (containing images of the northern sky) was published in January 1995. Software which manages the image retrieval is included with each volume. The Astronomical Society of the Pacific (ASP) is handling the distribution of the lOx compressed data and has sold 310 sets as of October 1996. ASP is also handling the distribution of the recently published 100x version of the northern sky survey which is publicly available at a low cost. The target markets for the 100x compressed data set are the amateur astronomy community, educational institutions, and the general public. During the next year, we plan to publish the first version of a photometric calibration database which will allow users of the compressed sky survey to determine the brightness of stars in the images.
    Keywords: Astronomy
    Type: NASA-CR-202508 , NAS 1.26:202508
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: In an effort to formulate the high-frequency coupling between antennas located on airframes composed of multilayer imperfectly conducting materials a general model was sought which would embody the electromagnetic properties of the layers and would apply over a broader range of separations of the antennas. Such a model is described here. This work is a generalization of the work of Pearson [1986, 1987a] concerning the high-frequency asymptotic representation of the fields of elemental sources diffracted by a multilayer cylinder. In that work the source and field points were located off the cylinder surface, and they were sufficiently separated to permit the effective use of the residue series representation of the spectral integrals involved. Here the source and field points are located on the cylinder surface and are permitted to be sufficiently close as to render the residue series poorly convergent. To obtain a more effective representation in this situation, the cylinder is modeled by an anisotropic impedance cylinder, and the resulting spectral integrals are evaluated by reduction to forms amenable to multiple applications of techniques described in the literature in connection with treatment of axially uniform sources in this context.
    Keywords: Astronomy
    Type: Paper-95RS03365 , Radio Science (ISSN 0048-6604); 31; 2; 389-399
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: The star formation status of the translucent high-latitude molecular cloud, MBM 40, is explored through analysis of radio, infrared, optical, and X-ray data. With a peak visual extinction of 1 to 2 mag, MBM 40 is an example of a high-latitude cloud near the diffuse/translucent demarcation. However, unlike most translucent clouds, MBM 40 exhibits a compact morphology and a kinetic energy-to gravitational potential energy ratio near unity. Our radio data, encompassing the CO (J = 1-0), CS (J = 2-1), and H2CO 1(sub 11-1(sub 10), spectral line transitions, reveal that the cloud contains a ridge of molecular gas with n greater than or equal to 10(exp 3)/ cc. In addition, the molecular data, together with IRAS data, indicate that the mass of MBM 40 is approx. 40 solar mass. In light of the ever-increasing number of recently formed stars far from any dense molecular clouds or cores, we searched the environs of MBM 40 for any trace of recent star formation. We used the ROSAT All-Sky Survey X-ray data and a ROSAT PSPC pointed observation toward MBM 40 to identify 33 stellar candidates with properties consistent with pre-main-sequence (PMS) stars. Follow-up optical spectroscopy of the candidates with V less than 15.5 was conducted with the 1.5 m Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory telescope in order to identify signatures of T Tauri or pre-main- sequence stars (such as the Li 6708 A resonance line). Since none of our optically observed candidates display standard PMS signatures, we conclude that MBM 40 displays no evidence of recent or ongoing star formation. The absence of high-density molecular cores in the cloud and the relatively low column density compared to star-forming interstellar clouds may be the principal reasons that MBM 40 is devoid of star formation. More detailed comparison between this cloud and other, higher extinction translucent and dark clouds may elucidate the necessary initial conditions for the onset of low-mass star formation.
    Keywords: Astronomy
    Type: Astrophysical Journal (ISSN 0004-637X); 465; 825-839
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: Very-long baseline interferometry (VLBI) observations of the Ulysses spacecraft near its encounter with Jupiter on 1992 February 8 were made to determine the angular position of Jupiter with respect to well known extragalactic radio sources. Spacecraft range and Doppler data were used to determine the position of the spacecraft with respect to Jupiter. Thirty-one VLBI observations of the spacecraft were made within 30 days of Ulysses closest approach to Jupiter, using the California-Spain and California-Australia baselines of NASA's Deep Space Network. When combined, these data determine the position of Jupiter at the time of encounter with an accuracy of 0.003 min in right ascension and 0.005 sec in declination. In addition, the Earth-Jupiter distance was determined with 20 m accuracy.
    Keywords: Astronomy
    Type: Astronomical Journal (ISSN 0004-6256); 112; 3; 1294-1297
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