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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Several quantitative tests of a general hypothesis linking impacts of large asteroids and comets with mass extinctions of life are possible based on astronomical data, impact dynamics, and geological information. The waiting of large-body impacts on the Earth derive from the flux of Earth-crossing asteroids and comets, and the estimated size of impacts capable of causing large-scale environmental disasters, predict that impacts of objects greater than or equal to 5 km in diameter (greater than or equal to 10 (exp 7) Mt TNT equivalent) could be sufficient to explain the record of approximately 25 extinction pulses in the last 540 Myr, with the 5 recorded major mass extinctions related to impacts of the largest objects of greater than or equal to 10 km in diameter (greater than or equal to 10(exp 8) Mt Events). Smaller impacts (approximately 10 (exp 6) Mt), with significant regional environmental effects, could be responsible for the lesser boundaries in the geologic record.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences; Volume 822; 403-431
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: A self similar model for the expanding flux rope is developed for a magnetohydrodynamic model of interplanetary magnetic clouds. It is suggested that the dependence of the maximum magnetic field on the distance from the sun and the polytropic index gamma has the form B = r exp (-1/gamma), and that the ratio of the electron temperature to the proton temperature increases with distance from the sun. It is deduced that ion acoustic waves should be observed in the cloud. Both predictions were confirmed by Ulysses observations of a 1993 magnetic cloud. Measurements of gamma inside the cloud demonstrate sensitivity to the internal topology of the magnetic field in the cloud.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Proceedings of the 31st ESALB Symposium on Correlated Phenomena at the Sun, in the Heliosphere and in Geospace; 171-175; ESA-SP-415
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: In order to better understand the solar origins of magnetic clouds, statistical distributions of the estimated axial magnetic flux of 30 magnetic clouds at 1 AU, separated according to their occurrence during the solar cycle, were obtained and a comparison was made of the magnetic flux of a magnetic cloud to the aggregate flux of apparently associated photospheric magnetic flux tubes, for some specific cases. The 30 magnetic clouds comprise 12 cases from WIND, and the remainder from IMP-8, earlier IMPs, the International Sun-Earth Explorer (ISEE) 3 and HELIOS. The total magnetic flux along the cloud axis was estimated using a constant alpha, cylindrical, force-free flux rope model to determine cloud diameter and axial magentic field strength. The distribution of magentic fluxes for the 30 clouds is shown to be in the form of a skewed Gaussian.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Proceedings of the 31st ESALB Symposium on Correlated Phenomena at the Sun, in the Heliosphere and in Geospace; 163-170; ESA-SP-415
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: The observations of the Casssiopeia A supernova remnant performed with the short wavelength spectrometer (SWS) and the long wavelength spectrometer (LWS), onboard the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO), are reported on. Broad O III 52 micrometer and 88 micrometer and O I 63 micrometer emission lines were detected. The far infrared O III lines fit the model of a spherical shell with central velocity redshifted by 770 +/- 40 km/s. A pronounced density contrast between the front and back of the shell was detected.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ; 305-306
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: The infrared spectroscopic observations of the comet C/1995 O1 (Hale-Bopp), in April and September-October 1996, are summarized. High resolution spectra were obtained with the long and short wavelength spectrometers of the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO). The results showed that the dust in this comet contains crystalline silicates. The dust of Hale-Bopp is rather similar to that observed in the circumstellar disks of Vega-type stars.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Proceedings of the 1st ISO Workshop on Analytical Spectroscopy; 137-140; ESA-SP-419
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: The low resolution far infrared spectrum of the galaxy Arp 220, obtained with the low wavelength spectrometer (LWS) onboard the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO), is presented. The spectrum is dominated by the OH, H2O, CH, NH3 and O I absorption lines. The upper limits on the far infrared fine structure lines indicate a softer radiation in Arp 220 than in starburst galaxies.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Proceedings of the 1st ISO Workshop on Analytical Spectroscopy; 149-153; ESA-SP-419
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: An ongoing project aiming to relate the evolutionary stages of the Infrared Astronomy Satellite (IRAS) sources in the Mon OB1 dark cloud to the morphology and energetics of outflows associated with some of these sources, is reported on. Previous evolutionary classifications of IRAS sources are refined and potential class O objects are identified. The fully-sampled CO maps of the outflows in this cloud are presented. These observations yield information on outflow structure, kinematics and excitation conditions. Low-intensity, high velocity gas is observed in the youngest outflows. This emission is characterized by relatively flat line wings at the highest velocities in spectral line profiles obtained at the peaks of the outflow emission.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ; 339-342
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: Nucleation is a non-equilibrium process: the products of this process are seldom the most thermodynamically stable condensates but are instead those which form fastest. It should therefore not be surprising that grains formed in a circumstellar outflow will undergo some degree of metamorphism if they are annealed or are exposed to a chemically active reagent. Metamorphism of refractory particles continues in the interstellar medium (ISM) where the driving forces are sputtering by cosmic ray particles, annealing by high energy photons and grain destruction in supernova generated shocks. Studies of the depletion of the elements from the gas phase of the interstellar medium tell us that if grain destruction occurs with high efficiency in the ISM, then there must be some mechanism by which grains can be formed in the ISM. Various workers have shown that refractory mantles could form on refractory cores by radiation processing of organic ices. A similar process may operate to produce refractory inorganic mantles on grain cores which survived the supernova shocks. Most grains in a cloud which collapses to form a star will be destroyed; many of the surviving grains will be severely processed. Grains in the outermost regions of the nebula may survive relatively unchanged by thermal processing or hydration. It is these grains which we hope to find in comets. However, only those grains encased in ice at low temperature can be considered pristine since a considerable degree of hydrous alteration might occur in a cometary regolith if the comet enters the inner solar system. Some discussion of the physical, chemical and isotopic properties of a refractory grain at each stage of its life cycle will be attempted based on the limited laboratory data available to date. Suggestions will be made concerning the types of experimental data which are needed in order to better understand the processing history of cosmic dust.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Analysis of Returned Comet Nucleus Samples; 277-291; NASA/CP-1997-10152
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: The burst acrsecond imaging and spectroscopy (BASIS) mission concept is reviewed. The scientific objectives of the mission are to accurately locate bursts, determine their distance scale and measure the physical characteristics of the emission region. Arcsecond burst positions would be obtained for approximately 100 bursts/yr in the 10 to 200 keV emission region, allowing deep, unconfused counterpart surveys at other wavelengths. The key enabling technology development is the production of CdZnTe room temperature semiconductor detectors with a spatial resolution of the order of 100 microns. Fine spectroscopy would be obtained between 0.2 and 200 keV. The 0.2 keV threshold would allow measurements of the absorption in our Galaxy and possible host galaxies.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ; 495-498
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: Mass spectroscopic measurements on the gas and dust in the coma of Comet Halley revealed the presence of considerable amounts of organic species. Greenberg (1973) proposed that prior to the formation of the comet UV processing of the ice mantles on grains in dense clouds could lead to the formation of complex organic molecules. Theoretical predictions of the internal UV field in dense clouds as well as the discovery in interstellar ices of species like OCS and OCN- which have been formed in simulation experiments by photoprocessing of interstellar ice analogues point to the importance of such processing. We undertook a laboratory simulation study of the formation of organic molecules in interstellar ices and their possible relevance to the Comet Halley results.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Analysis of Returned Comet Nucleus Samples; 217-224; NASA/CP-1997-10152
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: Various components have been isolated from carbonaceous meteorites with an isotopically anomalous elemental composition. Several of these are generally thought to represent stardust containing a nucleosynthetic record of their birthsites. This paper discusses the expected isotopic composition of stardust based upon astronomical observations and theoretical studies of their birthsites: red giants and supergiants, planetary nebulae, C-rich Wolf-Rayet stars, novae and supernovae. Analyzing the stardust budget, it is concluded that about 15% of the elements will be locked up in stardust components in the interstellar medium. This stardust will be isotopically heterogenous on an individual grain basis by factors ranging from 2 to several orders of magnitude. Since comets may have preserved a relatively unprocessed record of the stardust entering the solar nebula, isotopic studies of returned comet samples may provide valuable information on the nucleosynthetic processes taking place in the interiors of stars and the elemental evolution of the Milky Way.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Analysis of Returned Comet Nucleus Samples; 1-28; NASA/CP-1997-10152
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: The observations performed onboard the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) long wavelength spectrometer (LWS) on the fine structure lines in ultraluminous galaxies are reported on. The C II 158 micrometer, the O I 63 and 146 micrometer fine structure lines were detected. These lines were compared to the results of the revised theoretical models of extragalactic photodissociation regions (PDRs). The PDR origin of the fine structure lines and the physical properties of the PDR component are discussed.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Proceedings of the 1st ISO Workshop on Analytical Spectroscopy; 283-284; ESA-SP-419
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: The observations of Titan performed by the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) short wavelength spectrometer (SWS), in the 2 micrometer to 45 micrometer region using the grating mode, are reported on. Special attention is given to data from Titan concerning 7 micrometer to 45 micrometer spectral resolution. Future work for improving Titan's spectra investigation is suggested.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Proceedings of the 1st ISO Workshop on Analytical Spectroscopy; 255-258; ESA-SP-419
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: The long wavelength spectrometer (LWS) fine structure line spectra from infrared luminous galaxies were modeled using stellar evolutionary synthesis models combined with photoionization and photodissociation region models. The calculations were carried out by using the computational code CLOUDY. Starburst and active galactic nuclei models are presented. The effects of dust in the ionized region are examined.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Proceedings of the 1st ISO Workshop on Analytical Spectroscopy; 293-294; ESA-SP-419
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: Computed far infrared (FIR) CO and H2O line spectra from collapsing envelopes around low mass protostars are presented. It is shown how high resolution observations of the CO and H2O rotational lines in the Far Infrared and Submillimeter Telescope (FIRST) wavelength range can be used to demonstrate the presence of infall, and to measure the central mass of the protostar. Selected H2O lines can be used to provide estimates of the mass accretion rate, and of the amount of water evaporated from the ice mantles and injected in the gas phase.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ; 251-254
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: Empirical magnetic field models are discussed in terms of using models in multi-instrument data analysis. The variety of previous applications of field models are demonstrated. The problems found by using data based models are addressed and the prospects of their future development are outlined. Some issues related to time-dependency of the field configuration are presented.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ; 293-317
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: The region surrounding the soft gamma ray repeater SGR 1806-20 in the HCO(+) (J = 1-0) transition was observed. Previous observations of compact Galactic objects suggest that a link exists between these objects and molecular clouds in which they are possibly embedded. Such a link would help explain some of the phenomena observed from these objects. A measure of the ionization rate as a function of distance from the source implies that the cloud is associated with the source. The abundance of HCO(+), which varies with increasing or decreasing ionization rates, is considered to be an ideal tool for this measurement. The observations acquired in the direction of the nebula surrounding SGR 1806-20 are presented, and the resulting 7 x 12 arcmin map derived from the HCO(+) data is shown.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Proceedings of 2nd INTEGRAL Workshop 'The Transparent Universe'; 331-334; ESA-SP-382
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: Using (12)CO and (13)CO observations, column density maps of the molecular cloud in the direction of 1E 1740.7-2942 are presented. Hydrogen column densities of the cloud vary between N(sub H) = 3.5 x 10(exp 22)/cu cm and 11 x 10(exp 22)/cu cm, depending on the method employed. From this, it is concluded that, despite the weakness of the iron fluorescent 6.4 keV line, the source may lie inside the cloud, or at least close to its edge. The combined spectra from the Advanced Satellite for Cosmology and Astrophysics (ASCA) and the burst and transient source experiment (BATSE) can be modeled with a two phase accretion disk corona model, where the hot region is detached from the cold disk. Geometrically, the hot phase can be interpreted as a number of active regions above the disk, or as a spherical hot cloud about the central object.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Proceedings of 2nd INTEGRAL Workshop 'The Transparent Universe'; 221-224; ESA-SP-382
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2011-08-23
    Description: The fortunate position of the Galileo spacecraft provided us with a unique opportunity to directly observe the Shoemaker- Levy 9 impacts as they occurred on the far side of Jupiter, and we present observations of the G fireball obtained by the Near Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (NTMS). These measurements were performed using 10 spectral bands, 4 representing continua and spanning the wavelength range 1.84 to 4.38 mu. Fireball signals were evident for up to 80 sec, with the time of intensity maxima and duration being greater for longer wavelengths. Color temperatures and effective emitting areas were estimated by fitting blackbody functions at the four continuum wavelengths. Good blackbody fits were found, and their intensities at shorter wavelengths show excellent agreement with the Galileo Photopolarimeter/Radiometer measurements. Temperatures near the beginning are above 3000 K, decreasing to approximately 1000 K after 1 min. The corresponding areas range from 400 to 20,000 sq km. The effective diameter of the luminous fireball shows approximately linear time variation, at least for the first 45 sec. From the temperature-effective diameter relation we find an adiabatic coefficient of lambda = 1.2+/-0.1, much as expected from theoretical considerations. The luminosity, when integrated over the period of observations and assuming a Stephan-Boltzmann radiator, gives an above-cloud radiative energy loss of 0.48+/- 0.13 x 10(exp 25) erg.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ICARUS (ISSN 0019-1035); Volume 128; Article No. 1S975756; 251-274
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 2011-08-23
    Description: The orbital parameters of the recently discovered transient burster/pulsar GRO J1744-28 indicate that this system is a low-mass X-ray binary in an advanced stage of its mass transfer, with several tenths of a solar mass already transferred from the donor to the compact star. All neutron stars known to have accreted such an amount have very weak magnetic fields, and this has led to the idea that the magnetic fields of neutron stars decay as a result of accretion. The observation of a strongly magnetized neutron star in GRO J1744-28 then suggests that this neutron star was formed recently as a result of the collapse of a white dwarf during an earlier stage of the current phase of mass transfer. It is shown that this model can consistently explain the observed characteristics of GRO J1744-28. Attractive progenitors for such an evolution are the luminous supersoft X-ray sources detected with ROSAT.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Astronomy and Astrophysics; Volume 317; L9-L12
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: The unique nature of chondrules has been known for nearly two centuries. Modern techniques of analysis have shown that these millimeter sized silicate objects are among the oldest objects in our solar system. Researchers have devised textural and chemical classification systems for chondrules in an effort to determine their origins. It is agreed that most chondrules were molten at some point in their history, and experimental analogs suggest that the majority of chondrules formed from temperatures below 1600 C at cooling rates in the range of hundreds of degrees per hour. Although interstellar grains are present in chondrite matrices, their contribution as precursors to chondrule formation is unknown. Models for chondrule formation focus on the pre-planetary solar nebula conditions, although planetary impact models have had proponents.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: From Stardust to Planetesimals: ASP Conference Series; Volume 122; 253-268
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: We present a study of the 158 (micron)meter [C II] fine structure emission line from a sample of 11 low metallicity irregular galaxies using the NASA Kuiper Airborne Observatory (KAO). Our preliminary results demonstrate that the ratio of the 158 (micron)meter [C II] emission to the CO-12(1 yields 0) emission ranges from 6,000 to 46,000. These ratios are significantly enhanced relative to clouds within the Galaxy and to normal metallicity galaxies, which typically have values in the range 2,000 to 6,300. We also find that the [C II] emission in dwarf irregular galaxies can be up to 5% of the far-infrared (FIR) emission, a higher fraction of the FIR than in normal metallicity galaxies. We discuss these results for the dwarf irregular galaxies and compare them to those observed in normal metallicity galaxies. The enhanced 158 (micron)meter [C II] emission relative to CO-12(1 yields 0) emission can be understood in terms of the increased penetration depth of ultraviolet (UV) photons into the clouds in low metallicity environments.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Moriond Astrophysics Meeting; United States|; 101-105
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 2011-08-23
    Description: The unusual object 1996 PW was discovered on 1996 August 9 by the Near-Earth Asteroid Tracking automated search camera operating from Haleakala in Hawaii. Although asteroidal in appearance, it was soon determined that the object is in a near-parabolic orbit similar to that of a long-period comet. No object that was not an active comet has ever been discovered on such an eccentric orbit. The discovery of 1996 PW prompted us to examine and evaluate its possible origins, including the intriguing possibility that it is an asteroid from the Oort cloud. Current models for the formation of the Oort cloud argue that most of the material there should be from the Uranus-Neptune region and thus cometary, not asteroidal, in composition. We better quantify these models and show that approximately 1% of the Oort Cloud population should be asteroids. We find that 1996 PW has almost certainly been a resident of the Oort cloud. However, we find it equally likely that 1996 PW is an extinct comet or an asteroid. Although not conclusive, our results represent a significant change in our understanding of the Oort cloud, because they suggest that the ejection process sampled material from as close to the Sun as the asteroid belt in the primordial solar nebula and hence much warmer formation temperatures than previously thought. This diverse sample is preserved in the Oort cloud.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Astrophysical Journal; Volume 488; L133-L136
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Description: Understanding how astrophysical jets are formed is important for understanding the nature and evolution of such phenomena as active galactic nuclei and quasars, Galactic superluminal x-ray sources, and young stellar objects.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Description: L1457 is the closest known molecular cloud (65pc), and lies near the edge of the local hot bubble, and well out of the galactic plane (b~ -34 deg).
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Astrophysical Journal
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Description: We discuss a somewhat neglected interstellar excitation mechanism by means of which CO can be rotationally excited in diffuse gas.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Astrophysical Journal Letters
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  • 27
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    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Astrophysics
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  • 28
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    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Description: We observed the nuclear region of NGC 4261 (3C270) with the VLBA to determine the morphology of the central radio source on parsec scales.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Description: In this work we present a new 18cm VLBI image, with 3 x 8 mas angular resolution, showing approximately a dozen unresolved resources, S(sub 18cm) = 0.2-1.2mJy, within a 0.2 x 0.4(75 x 150pc) region centered on the NW nucleus of this merging system.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Astrophysical Journal Letters
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Description: We describe the results of over 40 MHD simulations, performed on Caltech/JPL parallel supercomputers, of the coronae of magnetized accretion disks around compact objects.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The objectives of this proposal were: (1) to assemble the existing spacecraft thermal-infrared data and to place these data into a uniform format as specified by the PDS; (2) to develop a standardized software package, user interface, and catalog database to support the access and analysis of existing and planned thermal infrared datasets in order to provide wide community access to these data; (3) to support the distribution of Thermal SubNode data to users as requested; (4) to incorporate future spacecraft thermal observations into the Thermal SubNode; and (5) to sponsor workshops on the applications of Thermal SubNode data.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-113056 , NAS 1.26:113056
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Our goal is to develop software libraries and applications for astrophysical fluid dynamics simulations in multidimensions that will enable us to resolve the large spatial and temporal variations that inevitably arise due to gravity, fronts and microphysical phenomena. The software must run efficiently on parallel computers and be general enough to allow the incorporation of a wide variety of physics. Cosmological structure formation with realistic gas physics is the primary application driver in this work. Accurate simulations of e.g. galaxy formation require a spatial dynamic range (i.e., ratio of system scale to smallest resolved feature) of 104 or more in three dimensions in arbitrary topologies. We take this as our technical requirement. We have achieved, and in fact, surpassed these goals.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-206355 , NAS 1.26:206355
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The local spiral arm with its inherent massive star population is a natural site of recent nucleosynthesis activity. The features found in 1.8 MeV observation of candidate Al-26 sources situated in this structure are discussed. The emphasis is on Loop 1, a nearby superbubble which is possibly the site of a recent supernova explosion.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ; 55-58
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: This grant supported research by the investigators through summer salary support for Strauss and Weinberg, support for graduate students at Princeton University and Ohio State University, and travel, visitor, and publication support for the investigators. The grant originally had a duration of 1 year, and it was extended (without additional funding) for an additional year. The impact of the grant was considerable given its relatively modest duration and funding level, in part because it provided 'seed' funding to get Strauss and Weinberg started at new institutions, and in part because it was combined with support from subsequent grants. Here we summarize progress in the three general areas described in the grant proposal: Lyman alpha absorbers and the intergalactic medium, galaxy formation; and large scale structure.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA-CR-204541 , NAS 1.26:204541
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Gamma ray lines from radioactive isotopes produced in supernova explosions provide information concerning the nucleosynthesis processes in stars before and during the explosion. Regions with high star formation rate are good candidates for such gamma ray lines. Starburst galaxies are examples of such regions with an explosive formation of massive stars. The emission of the most prominent starburst galaxy M 82 is analyzed. Two methods for the determination of the upper limits of fluxes are used to derive 2sigma upper limits for the fluxes of Al-26 and Fe-60 from Compton Gamma Ray Observatory data. These are found to be above the estimated fluxes originating from a supernova rate of 0.1 per year in M 82. An estimation of the necessary observation time for the detection of these fluxes with the Ge spectrometer onboard the International Gamma Ray Astrophysics Laboratory is given.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Proceedings of 2nd INTEGRAL Workshop 'The Transparent Universe'; 51-54; ESA-SP-382
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Observations from the oriented scintillation spectrometer experiment of the gamma ray lines originating from a variety of Galactic center sources are reviewed. Extensive observations were acquired of the Galactic center region, including the 0.511 MeV positron annihilation line and associated positronium continuum and Al-26 emission. The results reviewed include: Co-57 from SN 1987A; limits on Co-56 from SN 1991T; gamma ray lines from solar flares; searches for Ti-44 emission from Cas A, and searches for C-12 and O-16 lines from the Orion region.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ; 63-66
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The pulsar jet is significant in explaining how the Vela pulsar's rotational energy is transported outward to the rest of the SNR, since direct radiation from the pulsar only accounts for a small percentage of the total power. Our previous ROSAT observations presented the first evidence that the pulsar is driving a narrow, collimated, and remarkably symmetrical jet into the SNR (Markwardt, C. and Oegelman, H., 1995, Nature, 375, p. 40) which we interpret to be from a 'cocoon' of hot gas surrounding the jet itself. We obtained an ASCA exposure of the jet in order to determine whether the spectrum is thermal or power-law continuum. The jet cocoon is detected with ASCA at approximately 2-3 x 10(exp -3) ct/s. The X-ray spectrum of the jet is remarkably similar to the surrounding supernova remnant spectrum and extends to X-ray energies of at least 7 keV, with a total flux of approximately 2 x 10(exp -13) erg/s sq cm sq arcmin. The only strong emission line is from He-like Neon at approx. 0.9 keV; otherwise the spectrum is quite smooth. The spectrum cannot be fit by any one standard plasma emission model, so we used models with two-components. The lower energy component is thermal and has a temperature of 0.29 +/- 0.03 keV; the higher energy portion can either be fit by a thermal component of temperature approx. 4 keV or a power law with photon index approx. 2.0. If the observed spectrum is of a 'traditional' jet cocoon, then we estimate the speed of the jet to be at least 800 km/s, depending on the angle of inclination of the jet axis to our line of sight. The mechanical power driving the jet is greater than or equal to 10(exp 36) erg/s which is comparable to the pulsar's spin-down luminosity of 7 x 10(exp 36) erg/s. and the mass flow rate at the head is greater than or equal to 10(exp -6) solar radius/yr. We conclude that the jet must be entraining material all along its length in order to generate such a large mass flow rate.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-207475 , NAS 1.26:207475
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The Roadmap for the Structure and Evolution of the Universe (SEU) theme embraces three fundamental, scientific quests: (1) To explain structure in the Universe and forecast our cosmic destiny. (2) To explore the cycles of matter and energy in the evolving Universe. (3) To examine the ultimate limits of gravity and energy in the Universe. These quests are developed into six, focused research campaigns addressing the objectives of one or more quests: Identify dark matter and learn how it shapes galaxies and systems of galaxies; Find out where and when the chemical elements were made; Understand the cycles in which matter, energy, and magnetic field are exchanged between stars and the gas between stars; Discover how gas flows in disks and how cosmic jets are formed; Identify the sources of gamma-ray bursts and high-energy cosmic rays; and Measure how strong gravity operates near black holes and how it affects the early Universe. These campaigns lead to a portfolio of future major missions of strong scientific and popular appeal, strongly endorsed by the scientific community and which has undergone significant initial study. Some of these missions are in a state of readiness that makes ideal candidates for the present Office of Space Science Strategic Plan; others may well feature in the next Strategic Plan. Each provides a golden scientific opportunity to advance our understanding of the Universe. Our highest priority science objectives are addressed by five Observatory Class Missions, unranked by science, but in approximate order of readiness: A high-energy gamma-ray facility that will observe relativistic jets and study the sources of cosmic gamma ray bursts; An ultra-sensitive X-ray telescope, optimized for spectroscopy, to examine the hot gas linked with clusters of galaxies, the disks around black holes, and supernova explosions; A large, radio telescope in deep space to map central regions of distant quasars and perform astrometric investigations; An orbiting gravitational coalescing, massive black holes and test how gravity waves distort spacetime; A pair of Earth-orbiting, optical telescopes that will detect flashes of light produced when ultra high-energy cosmic rays impact the upper atmosphere so as to determine their arrival directions and energies. A new program for supporting pertinent international collaboration is strongly endorsed and maintaining a strong Explorer program is important. The flexibility to exploit exceptional opportunities, such as attaching payloads to space station, should also be acquired. A strong technology development program must be initiated now to enable this mission set.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/TM-97-207049 , NP-1997(06)019-GSFC , NAS 1.15:207049
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: During the Voyager 1 and 2 flybys of the outer planets it has been demonstrated that the plasma wave instrument can detect small dust particles striking the spacecraft. In this paper, we examine the Voyager plasma wave data for dust impacts in the interplanetary medium at heliocentric radial distances ranging from 6 to 60 astronomical units (AU). The results show that a small but persistent level of dust impacts exists out to at least 30 to 50 AU. The average number density of these particles is about 2 x 10(exp -8)/cu m, and the average mass of the impacting particles is believed to be a few times 10(exp -11) g, which corresponds to particle diameters in the micron range. Possible sources of these particles are planets, moons, asteroids, comets, and the interstellar medium. Of these, comets appear to be the most likely source. The number densities are only weakly dependent on ecliptic latitude, which indicates that the particles probably do not originate from planets, moons, or asteroids. Comparisons with interstellar dust fluxes measured in the inner regions of the solar system by the Ulysses spacecraft indicate that the particles are not of interstellar origin.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-207155 , NAS 1.26:207155 , U-of-Iowa-97-3
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: During the 15 years that have passed since the first edition of this book was published, there has been a major increase in our knowledge of gamma-ray astronomy. Much of this advance arises from the extensive results that have been forthcoming from the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory. There has been the discovery of a new class of gamma-ray objects, namely high-energy gamma- ray-emitting blazars, a special class of Active Galactic Nuclei, whose basic high-energy properties now seem to be understood. A much improved picture of our galaxy now exists in the frequency range of gamma rays. The question of whether cosmic rays are galactic or metagalactic now seems settled with certainty. Significant new information exists on the gamma-ray properties of neutron star pulsars, Seyfert galaxies, and gamma-ray bursts. Substantial new insight has been obtained on solar phenomena through gamma-ray observations. Hence, this seemed to be an appropriate time to write a new edition of this book to add the important scientific implications of these many new findings. The special importance of gamma-ray astrophysics had long been recognized by many physicists and astronomers, and theorists had pursued many aspects of the subject well before the experimental results began to become available. The slower development of the experimental side was not because of a lack of incentive, but due to the substantial experimental difficulties that had to be overcome. Thus, as the gamma-ray results became available in much greater number and detail, it was possible to build upon the theoretical work that already existed and to make substantial progress in the study of many of the phenomena involved. Consequently, a much better understanding of many of the astrophysical phenomena mentioned here and others is now possible. Our principal aims in writing this book are the same as they were for the first edition: to provide a text which describes the significance of gamma-ray astrophysics and to assemble in one place a treatment of gamma rays emitted from bodies in the solar i system, from objects in our galaxy, as well as from interactions between cosmic rays and the interstellar medium, and from beyond our galaxy. Thus, this book is intended for those in astrophysics who wish to have the opportunity to learn more about the evolving field of gamma-ray astronomy and its relationship to the high-energy, evolutionary processes occurring in the universe. The last three chapters of the book provide a general discussion of the experimental aspects of the field that seemed best treated together, separately from the astrophysical aspects of gamma-ray astronomy that are discussed in the first ten chapters.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA-RP-1386 , NAS 1.61:1386
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Since May 1981, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has used aircraft to collect cosmic dust (CD) particles from Earth's stratosphere. Specially designed dust collectors are prepared for flight and processed after flight in an ultraclean (Class-100) laboratory constructed for this purpose at the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center (JSC) in Houston, Texas. Particles are individually retrieved from the collectors, examined and cataloged, and then made available to the scientific community for research. Cosmic dust thereby joins lunar samples and meteorites as an additional source of extraterrestrial materials for scientific study. This catalog summarizes preliminary observations on 468 particles retrieved from collection surfaces L2021 and L2036. These surfaces were flat plate Large Area Collectors (with a 300 cm2 surface area each) which was coated with silicone oil (dimethyl siloxane) and then flown aboard a NASA ER-2 aircraft during a series of flights that were made during January and February of 1994 (L2021) and June 7 through July 5 of 1994 (L2036). Collector L2021 was flown across the entire southern margin of the US (California to Florida), and collector L2036 was flown from California to Wallops Island, VA and on to New England. These collectors were installed in a specially constructed wing pylon which ensured that the necessary level of cleanliness was maintained between periods of active sampling. During successive periods of high altitude (20 km) cruise, the collectors were exposed in the stratosphere by barometric controls and then retracted into sealed storage container-s prior to descent. In this manner, a total of 35.8 hours of stratospheric exposure was accumulated for collector L2021, and 26 hours for collector L2036.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-112971 , JSC-27897 , NAS 1.26:112971
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Isotopic abundances of the noble gases were measured in the following Martian meteorites: two shock glass inclusions from EET79001, shock vein glass from Shergotty and Y793605, and whole rock samples of ALH84001 and QUE94201. These glass samples, when combined with literature data on a separate single glass inclusion from EET79001 and a glass vein from Zagami, permit examination of the isotopic composition of Ne, Ar, Kr, and Xe trapped from the Martian atmosphere in greater detail. The isotopic composition of Martian Ne, if actually present in these glasses, remains poorly defined. The Ar-40/Ar-36 ratio of Martian atmospheric Ar may be much less than the ratio measured by Viking and possibly as low as approx. 1900. The atmospheric Ar-36/Ar-38 ratio is less than or equal to 4.0. Martian atmospheric Kr appears to be enriched in lighter isotopes by approx. 0.4%/amu compared to both solar wind Kr and to the Martian composition previously reported. The Martian atmospheric Ar-36/Xe-132 and Kr-84/Xe-132 Xe elemental ratios are higher than those reported by Viking by factors of approx. 3.3 and approx. 2.5, respectively. Cosmogenic gases indicate space exposure ages of 13.9 +/- 1 Myr for ALH84001 and 2.7 +/- 0.6 Myr for QUE94201. Small amounts of Ne-21 produced by energetic solar protons may be present in QUE94201, but are not present in ALH84001 or Y793605. The space exposure age for Y793605 is 4.9 +/- 0.6 Myr and appears to be distinctly older than the ages for basaltic shergottites.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-112966 , NAS 1.26:112966
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: This document reports the extent of the progress attained by Lockheed Martin Astronautics (LMA) in the development of equipment designed for the miniature Comet Ice and Dust EXperiment (mini-CIDEX) on NASA contract No. NAS2-14042 from the Ames Research Center (ARC). This report is in two parts. The first part summarizes progress in chronological order. The contents of the first part have been extracted from the monthly reports submitted by LMA to ARC over the duration of the program. The second part is a summary of the designs that were extracted from the mini-CIDEX contract designs and implemented into mission studies performed under different funding but in parallel to the mini- CIDEX contract time period. These second part activities were not performed under contract No. NAS2-14042; however, they are included in this report to show how it was intended that the mini-CIDEX be used on actual mission spacecraft.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-206136 , NAS 1.26:206136 , MCR-94-1322-Pt-1
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The availability of 116 new meteorites from the 1994-1996 collections is announced. There are 4 special chondrites, 2 carbonaceous chondrites, and 1 achondrite among the new meteorites. Also included is a redescription of Lodranite GRA95209.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/TM-97-112618 , NAS 1.15:112618
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  • 45
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: We are continuing our systematic investigation of the nuclear structure of nearby active galactic nuclei (AGN). Upon completion, our study will characterize hypothetical constructs such as narrow-line clouds, obscuring tori, nuclear gas disks. and central black holes with physical measurements for a complete sample of nearby AGN. The major scientific goals of our program are: (1) the morphology of the NLR; (2) the physical conditions and dynamics of individual clouds in the NLR; (3) the structure and physical conditions of the warm reflecting gas; (4) the structure of the obscuring torus; (5) the population and morphology of nuclear disks/tori in AGN; (6) the physical conditions in nuclear disks; and (7) the masses of central black holes in AGN. We will use the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) to obtain high-resolution images and spatially resolved spectra. Far-UV spectroscopy of emission and absorption in the nuclear regions using HST/FOS and the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope (HUT) will help establish physical conditions in the absorbing and emitting gas. By correlating the dynamics and physical conditions of the gas with the morphology revealed through our imaging program, we will be able to examine mechanisms for fueling the central engine and transporting angular momentum. The kinematics of the nuclear gas disks may enable us to measure the mass of the central black hole. Contemporaneous X-ray observations using ASCA will further constrain the ionization structure of any absorbing material. Monitoring of variability in the UV and X-ray absorption will be used to determine the location of the absorbing gas, possibly in the outflowing warm reflecting gas, or the broad-line region, or the atmosphere of the obscuring torus. Supporting ground-based observations in the optical, near-IR, imaging polarimetry, and the radio will complete our picture of the nuclear structures. With a comprehensive survey of these characteristics in a complete sample of nearby AGN, our conclusions should be more reliably extended to AGN as a class.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-205927 , NAS 1.26:205927
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The properties of accretion disk corona in a parameter regime suitable for Galactic black hole candidates are considered and the results of an analysis of these properties using a self-consistent Monte Carlo code are presented. Examples of the coronal temperature structure, the shape and angular dependency of the spectrum and the maximum temperature allowed for each optical depth of the corona are presented. It is shown that the observed spectrum of the Galactic black hole candidate Cygnus X-1 cannot be explained by accreting disk corona models with a slab geometry, where the accretion disk is sandwiched by the comptonizing medium.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Proceedings of 2nd INTEGRAL Workshop 'The Transparent Universe'; 233-236; ESA-SP-382
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  • 47
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: A large-scale code called Cloudy was designed to simulate non-equilibrium plasmas and predict their spectra. The goal was to apply it to studies of galactic and extragalactic emission line objects in order to reliably deduce abundances and luminosities. Quasars are of particular interest because they are the most luminous objects in the universe and the highest redshift objects that can be observed spectroscopically, and their emission lines can reveal the composition of the interstellar medium (ISM) of the universe when it was well under a billion years old. The lines are produced by warm (approximately 10(sup 4)K) gas with moderate to low density (n less than or equal to 10(sup 12) cm(sup -3)). Cloudy has been extended to include approximately 10(sup 4) resonance lines from the 495 possible stages of ionization of the lightest 30 elements, an extension that required several steps. The charge transfer database was expanded to complete the needed reactions between hydrogen and the first four ions and fit all reactions with a common approximation. Radiative recombination rate coefficients were derived for recombination from all closed shells, where this process should dominate. Analytical fits to Opacity Project (OP) and other recent photoionization cross sections were produced. Finally, rescaled OP oscillator strengths were used to compile a complete set of data for 5971 resonance lines. The major discovery has been that high redshift quasars have very high metallicities and there is strong evidence that the quasar phenomenon is associated with the birth of massive elliptical galaxies.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA-CR-203971 , NAS 1.26:203971
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: We present here our final report for the NASA grant "HIRES Dust Imaging of the NGC 6334 Star Forming Complex." This project was designed to study the photodissociation regions surrounding several OB stars in this cloud complex. NGC 6334 is unique in having at least seven distinct massive star forming regions in the same molecular cloud complex. The obvious advantage of studying young stars in the same molecular complex is that the stars all formed in the same global environment. Consequently, global factors like density waves, abundances, global magnetic field strength, and age of the parental molecular cloud cannot contribute to the differences among the star forming regions. Instead, the differences must arise only from local effects such as the mass, age, and UV fields of the individual stars. A study of NGC 6334 will greatly simplify the general problem of comparing different star formation regions by eliminating global effects.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-207723 , NAS 1.26:207723
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The nature of the physical structures giving rise to damped Lyman alpha absorption systems (DLAS) at high redshifts is investigated. The proposal that rapidly rotating large disks are the only viable explanation for the observed asymmetric profiles of low ionization absorption lines is examined. Using hydrodynamic simulations of galaxy formation, it is demonstated that irregular protogalactic clumps can reproduce the observed velocity width distribution and asymmetries of the absorption profiles equally well. The velocity broadening in the simulated clumps is due to a mixture of rotation, random motions, infall and merging. The observed velocity width correlates with the virial velocity for the dark matter halo of the forming protogalactic clump. The typical virial velocity of the halos required to lead to the DLAS population is approximately 100 km/s. It is concluded that the evidence that DLAS at high redshift are related to large, rapidly rotating disks, is not compelling.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-207707 , NAS 1.26:207707 , MPA-1029
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  • 50
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Boron abundances in A- and B-type stars may be a successful way to track evolutionary effects in these hot stars. The light elements - Li, Be, and B - are tracers of exposure to temperatures more moderate than those in which the H-burning CN-cycle operates. Thus, any exposure of surface stellar layers to deeper layers will affect these light element abundances. Li and Be are used in this role in investigations of evolutionary processes in cool stars, but are not observable in hotter stars. An investigation of boron, however, is possible through the B II 1362 A resonance line. We have gathered high resolution spectra from the IUE database of A- and B-type stars near 10 solar mass for which nitrogen abundances have been determined. The B II 1362 A line is blended throughout; the temperature range of this program, requiring spectrum syntheses to recover the boron abundances. For no star could we synthesize the 1362 A region using the meteoritic/solar boron abundance of log e (B) = 2.88; a lower boron abundance was necessary which may reflect evolutionary effects (e.g., mass loss or mixing near the main-sequence), the natal composition of the star forming regions, or a systematic error in the analyses (e.g., non-LTE effects). Regardless of the initial boron abundance, and despite the possibility of non-LTE effects, it seems clear that boron is severely depleted in some stars. It may be that the nitrogen and boron abundances are anticorrelated, as would be expected from mixing between the H-burning and outer stellar layers. If, as we suspect, a residue of boron is present in the A-type supergiants, we may exclude a scenario in which mixing occurs continuously between the surface and the deep layers operating the CN-cycle. Further exploitation of the B II 1362 A line as an indicator of the evolutionary status of A- and B-type stars will require a larger stellar sample to be observed with higher signal-to-noise as attainable with the Hubble Space Telescope.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-112574 , NAS 1.26:112574
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Kusunose, Mineshige & Yamada (1996; hereafter KMY) extended the model of Kusunose & Mineshige (1995) to the Galactic black hole candidates by considering nonthermal electron injection with gamma(EQ\0(,\s\up2(less than),\s\do-l(_))) 10. The effects of pair escape and advection on the disk structure and general relativistic effects on the emission spectrum were also examined. They found that the energy spectral index (alpha)(sub x) of the power law X-rays is about-0.8 and-2.0 when 1(sub soft)/1 = 0.2 and 2, respectively, where 1(sub soft)/1 is the ratio of the compactness of the injected soft photons to that of the gravitational energy. The power law index was found to be nearly independent of the mass accretion which is consistent with the observed luminosity independence. The model with small 1(sub soft)/1 (less than 1) shows promise for explaining the low state observed in Galactic black hole candidates. Model fits were provided for GX339-4 and Cyg X- 1 data from COMPTEL and OSSE on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory. The difference in emission spectra between thermal disks and the model of KMY appears only in the energy range greater than 100 keV. Li, Kusunose and Liang (1996) studied stochastic particle acceleration to produce nonthermal particle distributions which then were used in the model of Kusunose & Mineshige (1995) to model the spectrum above 1 Mev from GBHC's. Under certain conditions, stochastic electron acceleration overcame Coulomb and Compton losses resulting in a suprathermal electron population. Good fits were obtained by COMPTEL and OSSE observations of Cyg X-1 and GRO J0422+23. Kusunose & Mineshige (1996a) examined the role of electron-positron pairs in advection-dominated disks. They found that the results for advection-dominated disks without pairs are not qualitatively changed by including pairs. Summaries of work sponsored by this grant are given in Wheeler, Kim, Moscoso, Kusunose & Mineshige (1996) and Kusunose (1996) Work was also done on developing a model for an e(+-) pair wind from the inner disk region of a black hole. The model consists of three zones: a pair production/annihilation zone at the base of the wind, a pair annihilation zone slightly further out from the disk and a wind zone extending to infinity where no annihilation occurs. The model assumes an input X-ray / gamma-ray power-law spectrum as a function of photon energy and angular distribution. Pairs are created in the pair production/annihilation zone via photon-photon, photonparticle and particle-particle collisions. The bulk velocity of the pairs is obtained from the momentum component perpendicular to the disk taking into account the radiation pressure acceleration of the pairs. Energy balance in the pair production/annihilation zone is calculated by assuming that the momentum component parallel to the disk is thermalized and by taking into account heating/cooling via anisotropic thermal Compton scattering along with the cooling processes of bremsstrahlung and synchrotron radiation. The pair density is also calculated. The outer boundary of the pair production/annihilation zone is where the optical depth for photon-photon pair produciton is unity. Beyond this point only pair annihilation will occur in the pair annihilation zone. When the pair density becomes small, pair annihilation will be negligible and the pairs will flow freely to infinity. In this model we have found that the X-ray power-law spectral index, alpha(sub x) is the primary parameter which determines the density, temperature and velocity of the pair production/annihilation zone (Moscoso, Kusunose & Wheeler 1996).
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-113017 , NAS 1.26:113017
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: This report covers the research conducted from September 1996 to August 1997 (eighteen months into the three year grant). We have obtained a number of significant findings based on the on the work that we have conducted under this grant during the past year. As we stated in our original proposal the work has focused on multi-dimensional models of the convective epoch in core collapse supernovae. During the past year we have developed a large number of models of the convective epoch in 2-D under two levels of neutrino transport approximation and we are currently working on 3-D models. In the following pages will endeavor to give brief descriptions of our results.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA-CR-205144 , NAS 1.26:205144
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  • 53
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Models were developed to simulate planet formation. Three major phases are characterized in the simulations: (1) planetesimal accretion rate, which dominates that of gas, rapidly increases owing to runaway accretion, then decreases as the planet's feeding zone is depleted; (2) occurs when both solid and gas accretion rates are small and nearly independent of time; and (3) starts when the solid and gas masses are about equal and is marked by runaway gas accretion. The models applicability to planets in our Solar System are judged using two basic "yardsticks". The results suggest that the solar nebula dissipated while Uranus and Neptune were in the second phase, during which, for a relatively long time, the masses of their gaseous envelopes were small but not negligible compared to the total masses. Background information, results and a published article are included in the report.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-112546 , NAS 1.26:112546
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  • 54
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Collaboration with Ames' personnel was in: 1) grant administration, 2) intellectual science support, 3) collaboration with the University of Paris for the Mir flight experiment, and 4) arranging scanning and X-ray probe analytical support from UCB and SUNYP. LNIMS provided access to: 1) analytical research instruments, 2) chemical analyses support, 3) cleanroom facilities, and 4) design and fabrication expertise of hardware and electronics. They also supported the hypervelocity testing along with test data acquisition and its reduction for the breadboard instrument. A&M Associates provided technical expertise and support on determining the expected charges on orbital particles and a conceptual design for a breadboard particle charge detection sensor. University of California provided analytical support for the recovered Mir flight modules using their unique scanning capability to detect particle tracks in the aerogel. SUNYP, along with help from the University of Chicago, analyzed particle tracks found in the aerogel for biogenic compounds using an x-ray probe instrument. Dr. Schultz provided access to his experiments and the benefits of his considerable hyper-velocity testing expertise at the Ames hypervelocity gun facility, and this proved beneficial to our development testing, significantly reducing the test time and cost for the breadboard instrument development testing. The participants in this activity acknowledge and thank the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and its Ames Research Center for providing the necessary support and resources to conduct this investigation on instrument technology for exobiology application and being able to acquire some interesting results. Primarily, the newly identified technology problems for future research are the important results of this research.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-207698 , NAS 1.26:207698
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  • 55
    Publication Date: 2018-06-05
    Description: For a number of years there has been considerable interest in the earth's radiation budget (ERB) or energy balance, and entails making the best measurements possible of absorbed solar radiation, reflected shortwave radiation (RSW), thermal outgoing longwave radiation (OLR), and net radiation. ERB data are fundamental to the development of realistic climate models and studying natural and anthropogenic perturbations of the climate. Much of the interest and investigations in the earth's energy balance predated the age of earth-orbiting satellites (Hunt et al., 1986). Beginning in the mid 1960's earth-orbiting satellites began to play an important role in making measurements of the earth's radiation flux although much effort had gone into measuring ERB parameters prior to 1960 (House et al., 1986). Beginning in 1974 and extending until the present time, three different satellite experiments (not all operating at the same time) have been making radiation budget measurements almost continually in time. Two of the experiments were totally dedicated to making radiation budget measurements of the earth, and the other experiment flown on NOAA sun-synchronous AVHRR weather satellites produced radiation budget parameters as a by-product. The heat budget data from the AVHRR satellites began collecting data in June 1974 and have operated almost continuously for 23 years producing valuable data for long term climate monitoring.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
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  • 56
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Astrophysics
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The alpha-amino and alpha-hydroxy acids found in the Murchison carbonaceous chondrite are deuterium enriched. These compounds are thought to have originated from common deuterium enriched carbonyl precursors, by way of a Strecker synthesis which took place in a solution of HCN, NH3, and carbonyl compounds during the period of aqueous alteration of the meteorite parent body. However, the hydroxy acids found on Murchison are less deuterium enriched than the amino acids. With the objective of determining if the discrepancy in deuterium enrichment between the amino acids and the hydroxy acids found on Murchison is consistent with their formation in a Strecker synthesis, we have measured the deuterium content of alpha-amino and alpha-hydroxy acids produced in solutions of deuterated carbonyl compounds, KCN and NH4Cl, and also in mixtures of such solutions and Allende dust at 263 K and 295 K. Retention of the isotopic signature of the starting carbonyl by both alpha amino acids and alpha hydroxy acids is more dependent upon temperature, concentration and pH than upon the presence of meteorite dust in the solution. The constraints these observations place on Murchison parent body conditions will be discussed.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Gordon Research Conference; Jul 27, 1997 - Aug 01, 1997; Henniker, NH; United States
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: Possible signatures of interstellar pickup hydrogen have been identified in data from the Pioneer 10 and 11 Ames plasma analyzers at locations out to beyond the orbit of Saturn, and at a wide range of longitudes in the heliosphere, both upstream and downstream in the interstellar wind. These signatures have their highest amplitudes near shocks and CIRs in the solar wind stream structure, and lower amplitudes elsewhere. Also the signatures have lower amplitudes in the downstream direction with respect to the interstellar flow.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
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  • 59
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The European Space Exposure Facility (ESEF) has flown two collection boxes (B1 and B2) outside the MIR station from October 1995 to February 1996, during the EST EUROMIR95 mission. B1 was opened only during the encounter with the Orionides meteor stream and the last 5 weeks of the mission, while B2 stayed open during the entire mission, except during docking operations on MIR, to minimise contamination. We describe here the results of the analyses performed on various passive collectors of the COMRADE experiment. We also indicate the improvements that will be given to the collecting techniques, in the objective of the future COMET-99 collection, programmed by French CNES.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Meteoritical Society Meeting; Jul 21, 1997 - Jul 25, 1997; Maui, HI; United States
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  • 60
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: Modern theories of star and planet formation, which are based upon observations of the Solar System and of young stars and their environments, state that planets grow from circumstellar disks of gas and dust. Interstellar dust and/or disk condensates settle towards the midplane of the disk and agglomerate into kilometer-sized solid bodies known as planetesimals. These planetesimals then interact with one another via gravitational forces and collisions. Terrestrial planets are believed to grow via pairwise accretion until the spacing of planetary orbits becomes large enough that the configuration is stable for the age of the system. Giant planets begin their growth in the same manner as do terrestrial planets, but they become -massive enough that they are able to accumulate substantial amounts of gas before the protoplanetary disk dissipates. Models for the formation of our Solar System and of the giant planets found in recent radial velocity searches are discussed.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Workshop on Planetary Sciences; Nov 02, 1997 - Nov 06, 1997; Rio de Janeiro; Brazil
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  • 61
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: This paper will review our current knowledge of circumstellar and interstellar dust with the emphasis on infrared spectroscopy with ISO. Objects embedded in or located behind molecular clouds show a wealth of absorption features due to simple molecules in an icy mantle. The SWS on ISO has provided us, for the first time, with complete 3-45 um spectra which allow an inventory of interstellar ice. Among the species identified are H2O, CH3OH, CH4, CO2, CO, and OCS. These species are formed through simple reactions among gas phase species accreted on grain surfaces, possibly modified by FUV photolysis and warm-up (ie., outgassing). The implications of the observations for our understanding of these processes will be reviewed. The IR spectra of many UV bright objects are dominated by strong emission features at 3.3, 6.2, 7.7, and 11.3 micrometers. These are generally attributed to Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) molecules. The observational evidence will be reviewed. The emphasis will be on recent data which show widespread spectral variations, particularly among protoplanetary and planetary nebulae, and their implications. One of the most exciting, recent discoveries on interstellar and circumstellar dust has been the detection of spectral structure due to crystalline olivine and enstatite in a variety of objects surrounded by circumstellar silicates. These spectra will be reviewed and circumstellar silicate mineralogy will be discussed.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: International Conferences ISO''s View on Stellar Evolution; Jun 26, 1997 - Jul 08, 1997; Amsterdam; Netherlands
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  • 62
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: Modern theories of star and planet formation, which are based upon observations of the Solar System and of young stars and their environments, predict that most single stars should have rocky planets in orbit about them; the frequency of gas giant planets is more difficult to predict theoretically. Terrestrial planets are believed to grow via pairwise accretion until the spacing of planetary orbits becomes large enough that the configuration is stable for the age of the system. Giant planets begin their growth like terrestrial planets, but they become massive enough that they are able to accumulate substantial amounts of gas before the protoplanetary disk dissipates. Models for the formation of the giant planets found in recent radial velocity searches are discussed.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
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  • 63
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: Modern theories of star and planet formation, which are based upon observations of the Solar System and of young stars and their environments, predict that rocky planets should form around most single stars, although it is possible that most such planets are lost to orbital decay within the protoplanetary disk. The frequency of formation of gas giant planets is more difficult to predict theoretically. Terrestrial planets are believed to grow via pairwise accretion until the spacing of planetary orbits becomes large enough that the configuration is stable for the age of the system. Giant planets begin their growth like terrestrial planets, but they become massive enough that they are able to accumulate substantial amounts of gas before the protoplanetary disk dissipates. Models for the formation of the giant planets found in recent radial velocity searches are discussed.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: 9th Rencontres de Blois Planetary Systems: The Long View Conference; Jun 22, 1997 - Jun 28, 1997; Blois; France
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  • 64
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: One of the most interesting phenomenon associated with planets is life. In this paper I consider how life on Earth, and in particular life in extreme environments on Earth, define the range of environmental conditions for life, From this we can speculate on how life that is similar to life on Earth might survive on other worlds. Finally the possibility that life in some other planetary environments may have to be fundamental different from life on Earth to exist is considered.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: 9th Rencontres de Blois Planetary Systems: The Long View Conference; Jun 22, 1997 - Jun 28, 1997; Blois; France
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: Recent findings of isotopic anomalies of Ca-44 (the decay product of Ti-44) and the enhanced ratio of Si-28/Si-30 in SiC grains X, TiC subgrains, and graphite dust grains within primitive meteorites provides strong evidence that these presolar grains came from core-collapse supernovae. The chemical composition of the presolar grains requires macroscopic mixing of newly nucleo-synthesized elements from explosive silicon burning at the innermost zone of the ejects to higher velocities where C exists and where C/O 〉 1 in either the outer edge of the oxygen zone or in the He-C zone. To date, the only core-collapse supernova observed to form dust is the brightest supernova of the past four centuries, SN1987A in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Observations of SN1987A confirm large scale macroscopic mixing occurs in the explosions of massive stars. Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities macroscopically mix most of the ejects into regions which are still chemically homogeneous and which cool with different time scales. Only small clumps in the ejects are microscopically mixed. Observations show that dust condensed in the ejects of SN1987A after approx.500 days in the Fe-rich gas. Neither silicates nor SiC grains were seen in the dust emission spectrum of SN1987A. SN1987A, the Rosetta Stone of core-collapse supernovae, shows that while the mixing required to explain presolar grains occurs, the rapid cooling of the Fe zone and the sustained high temperatures of the O-Si, O-C, and He-C zones favor the formation of iron-rich rather than oxygen- or carbon-rich grains.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Supernova Explosion: Their Causes and Consequences; Aug 05, 1997 - Aug 09, 1997; Santa Barbara, CA; United States
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  • 66
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: Comets, such as Hale-Bopp (C/1995 O1), are frozen reservoirs of primitive solar nebula dust grains and ices. Analysis of the composition of cometary dust grains from infrared spectroscopic techniques permits an estimation of the types of organic and inorganic materials that constituted the early primitive solar nebula. In addition, the cometary bombardment of the Earth (approximately 3.5 Gy ago) supplied the water for the oceans and brought organic materials to Earth which may have been biogenic. Spectroscopic observations of comet Hale-Bopp suggest the possible presence of organic hydrocarbon species, silicate and olivine dust grains, and water ice. Spectroscopy near 3 microns obtained in Nov 1996 r=2.393 AU, delta=3.034 AU) shows a feature which we attribute to PAH emission. The spatial morphology of the 3.28 microns PAH feature is also presented. Optical and infrared spectrophotometric observations of comets convey valuable information about the spatial distribution and properties of dust and gas within the inner coma. In the optical and NIR shortward of 2 microns, the observed light is primarily scattered sunlight from the dust grains. At longer wavelengths, particularly in the 10 gm window, thermal emission from these grains dominates the radiation allowing an accurate estimate of grain sizes and chemical composition. Here we present an initial analysis of spectra taken with the NASA HIFOGS at 7-14 microns as part of a multiwavelength temporal study of the "comet of the century".
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: May 18, 1997 - May 23, 1997; Estes Park, CO; United States
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  • 67
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Sillanpaa et al. have demonstrated that the active galactic nucleus OJ 287 has intensity peaks that recur within a period of about 12 yr. I suggest that this is the result of the sweeping of a precessing relativistic beam across our line of sight. In analogy to Hercules X-1 and SS 433, precession is attributed to the torque exerted by a companion mass on an accretion disk. Secondary maxima observed 1.2 yr after two of these peaks may be evidence of nodding motion.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Astrophysical Journal; 478; 2; 478-527
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: We present millimeter and centimeter wave spectroscopic observations of the H II region NGC 6334A. We have mapped the source in several transitions of CO, CS, and NH3. The molecular emission shows a distinct flattened structure in the east-west direction. This structure is probably a thick molecular disk or torus (2.2 x 0.9 pc) responsible for the bipolarity of the near-infrared (NIR) and radio continuum emission which extends in two "lobes" to the north and south of the shell-like H II region. The molecular disk is rotating from west to east (omega approximately equals 2.4 km/s.pc) about an axis approximately parallel to the radio and NIR emission lobes. By assuming virial equilibrium, we find that the molecular disk contains approximately 2000 solar mass. Single-component gas excitation model calculations show that the molecular gas in the disk is warmer and denser (T(sub k) approximately equals 60 K, n approximately equals 3000/cc) than the gas to the north and south (T(sub k) approximately equals 50 K, n approximately equals 400/cc). High resolution (approximately 5 sec) NH3 (3, 3) images of NGC 6334A reveal several small (approximately 0.1 pc) clumps, one of which lies southwest of the radio continuum shell, and is spatially coincident with a near-infrared source, IRS 20. A second NH3 clump is coincident with an H2O maser and the center of a molecular outflow. The dense gas tracers, CS J = 5 approaches 4 and 7 approaches 6, peak near IRS 20 and the H2O maser, not at NGC 6334A. IRS 20 has a substantial far-infrared (FIR) luminosity L(sub FIR) approximately 10(exp 5) solar luminosity, which indicates the presence of an O 7.5 star but has no detected radio continuum (F(sub 6 cm) 〈 0.02 Jy). The combination of dense gas, a large FIR luminosity and a lack of radio continuum can best be explained if IRS 20 is a protostar. A third clump of NH3 emission lies to the west of IRS 20 but is not associated with any other molecular or continuum features. The star formation activity in the region has moved west of NGC 6334A to IRS 20 and the H2O maser position. We suggest that NGC 6334A, IRS 20, and the H2O maser spot are part of a "protocluster" of stars which is condensing from the massive molecular disk. The similarity between the structure around NGC 6334A and other large (r approximately 1 pc), massive (M approximately 10(exp 3) solar mass), rotating disks (K3-50A and G10.6-0.4) suggests that this may be a common mechanism by which open clusters form.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-1997-207724 , NAS 1.26:207724 , The Astrophysical Journal; 478; 614-623
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  • 69
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: GRO J1744-28 is the first known X-ray source to display bursts, periodic pulsations, and quasi-periodic oscillations. This source may thus provide crucial clues that will lead to an understanding of the differences in the nature of the X-ray variability from various accreting neutron stars. The orbital period is 11.8 days, and the measured mass function of 1.31 x 10(exp -4) solar mass is one of the smallest among all known binaries. If we assume that the donor star is a low-mass giant transferring matter through the inner Lagrange point, then we can show that its mass is lower than approximately 0.7 solar mass and probably closer to 0.25 solar mass. Higher mass, but unevolved, donor stars are shown to be implausible. We also demonstrate that the current He core mass of the donor star lies in the range of 0.20-0.25 solar mass. Thus, this system is most likely in the final stages of losing its hydrogen-rich envelope, with only a small amount of mass remaining in the envelope. If this picture is correct, then GRO J1744-28 may well represent the closest observational link that we have between the low-mass X-ray binaries and recycled binary pulsars in wide orbits. We have carried out a series of binary evolution calculations and explored, both systematically and via a novel Monte Carlo approach, the range of initial system parameters and input physics that can lead to the binary parameters of the present-day GRO J1744-28 system. The input parameters include both the initial total mass and the core mass of the donor star, the neutron-star mass, the strength of the magnetic braking, the mass-capture fraction, and the specifics of the core mass/radius relation for giants. Through these evolution calculations, we compute probability distributions for the current binary system parameters (i.e., the total mass, core mass, radius, luminosity, and K-band magnitude of the donor star, the neutron star mass, the orbital inclination angle, and the semimajor axis of the binary). Our calculations yield the following values for the GRO J1744-28 system parameters (with 95% confidence limits in parentheses): donor star mass: 0.24 solar mass (0.2-0.7 solar mass); He core mass of the donor star: 0.22 solar mass (0.20-0.25 solar mass); neutron-star mass: 1.7 solar mass (1.39-1.96 solar mass); orbital inclination angle: 18deg (7deg-22deg); semi- major axis: 64 lt-s (60-67 lt-s); radius of the donor star: 6.2 solar radius(6-9 solar radius); luminosity of donor star: 23 solar luminosity (15-49 solar luminosity), and long-term mass transfer rate at the current epoch: 5 x 10(exp -10)solar mass/yr (2 x 10(exp -10) to 5 x 10(exp -9)solar mass/yr). We deduce that the magnetic field of the underlying neutron star lies in the range of approximately 1.8 x 10(exp 11)G to approximately 7 x 10(exp 11)G, with a most probable value of 2.7 x 10(exp 11)G. This is evidently sufficiently strong to funnel the accretion flow onto the magnetic polar caps and suppress the thermonuclear flashes that would otherwise give rise to the type 1 X-ray bursts observed in most X-ray bursters. We present a simple paradigm for magnetic accreting neutron stars where X-ray pulsars, GRO J1744-28, the Rapid Burster, and the type 1 X-ray bursters may form a continuum of possible behaviors among accreting neutron stars, with the strength of the neutron-star magnetic field serving as a crucial parameter that determines the mode of X-ray variability from a given object.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-1997-207715 , NAS 1.26:207715 , Astrophysical Journal; 486; 435-444
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  • 70
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The discovery of evidence for biogenic activity and possible microfossils in a Martian meteorite may have initiated a paradigm shift regarding the existence of extraterrestrial microbial life. Terrestrial extremophiles that live in deep granite and hydrothermal vents and nanofossils in volcanic tuffs have altered the premise that microbial life and microfossils are inconsistent with volcanic activity and igneous rocks. Evidence for biogenic activity and microfossils in meteorites can no longer be dismissed solely because the meteoritic rock matrix is not sedimentary. Meteorite impact-ejection and comets provide mechanisms for planetary cross-contamination of biogenic chemicals, microfossils, and living microorganisms. Hence, previously dismissed evidence for complex indigenous biochemicals and possible microfossils in carbonaceous chondrites must be re-examined. Many similar, unidentifiable, biological-like microstructures have been found in different carbonaceous chondrites and the prevailing terrestrial contaminant model is considered suspect. This paper reports the discovery of microfossils indigenous to the Murchison meteorite. These forms were found in-situ in freshly broken, interior surfaces of the meteorite. Environmental Scanning Electron Microscope (ESEM) and optical microscopy images indicate that a population of different biological-like forms are represented. Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy reveals these forms have high carbon content overlaying an elemental distribution similar to the matrix. Efforts at identification with terrestrial microfossils and microorganisms were negative. Some forms strongly resemble bodies previously isolated in the Orgueil meteorite and considered microfossils by prior researchers. The Murchison forms are interpreted to represent an indigenous population of the preserved and altered carbonized remains (microfossils) of microorganisms that lived in the parent body of this meteorite at diverse times during the past 4.5 billion years (Gy).
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/TM-97-207366 , NAS 1.26:207366 , SPIE: The International Society for Optical Engineering (ISSN 0277-786X); 3111; 115-136|Instruments, Methods, and Missions for the Investigation of Extraterrestrial Microoganisms; Jul 29, 1997 - Aug 01, 1997; San Diego, CA; United States
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The results of a spatial stability analysis of a two-dimensional slab jet, in which optically thin radiative cooling is dynamically important, are presented. We study both magnetized and unmagnetized jets at external Mach numbers of 5 and 20. We model the cooling rate by using two different cooling curves: one appropriate to interstellar gas, and the other to photoionized gas of reduced metallicity. Thus, our results will be applicable to both protostellar (Herbig-Haro) jets and optical jets from active galactic nuclei. We present analytical solutions to the dispersion relations in useful limits and solve the dispersion relations numerically over a broad range of perturbation frequencies. We find that the growth rates and wavelengths of the unstable Kelvin-Helmholtz (K-H) modes are significantly different from the adiabatic limit, and that the form of the cooling function strongly affects the results. In particular, if the cooling curve is a steep function of temperature in the neighborhood of the equilibrium state, then the growth of K-H modes is reduced relative to the adiabatic jet. On the other hand, if the cooling curve is a shallow function of temperature, then the growth of K-H modes can be enhanced relative to the adiabatic jet by the increase in cooling relative to heating in overdense regions. Inclusion of a dynamically important magnetic field does not strongly modify the important differences between an adiabatic jet and a cooling jet, provided the jet is highly supermagnetosonic and not magnetic pressure-dominated. In the latter case, the unstable modes behave more like the transmagnetosonic magnetic pressure-dominated adiabatic limit. We also plot fluid displacement surfaces associated with the various waves in a cooling jet in order to predict the structures that might arise in the nonlinear regime. This analysis predicts that low-frequency surface waves and the lowest order body modes will be the most effective at producing observable features in the jet.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-207158 , NAS 1.26:207158 , The Astrophysical Journal; 483; 121-135
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  • 72
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The investigations of advection-dominated accretion flows (ADAFs), with emphasis on applications to X-ray binaries containing black holes and neutron stars is presented. This work is now being recognized as the standard paradigm for understanding the various spectral states of black hole X-ray Binaries (BHXBs). Topics discussed include: (1) Problem in BHXBS, namely that several of these binaries have unusually large concentrations of lithium in their companion stars; (2) A novel test to show that black holes have event horizons; (3) Application of the ADAF model to the puzzling X-ray delay in the recent outburst of the BHXB, GRO J1655-40; (4) Description of the various spectral states in BHXBS; (5) Application of the ADAF model to the famous supermassive black hole at the center of our Galaxy, Sgr A(*); (6) Writing down and solving equations describing steady-state, optically thin, advection-dominated accretion onto a Kerr black hole; (7) The effect of "photon bubble" instability on radiation dominated accretion disks; and (8) Dwarf nova disks in quiescence that have rather low magnetic Reynolds number, of order 10(exp 3).
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-206454 , NAS 1.26:206454
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Intramolecular carbon, hydrogen, and sulfur isotope ratios were measured on a homologous series of organic sulfonic acids discovered in the Murchison meteorite. Mass-independent sulfur isotope fractionations were observed along with high deuterium/hydrogen ratios. The deuterium enrichments indicate formation of the hydrocarbon portion of these compounds in a low-temperature environment that is consistent with that of interstellar clouds. Sulfur-33 enrichments observed in methanesulfonic acid could have resulted from gas-phase ultraviolet irradiation of a precursor, carbon disulfide. The source of the sulfonic acid precursors may have been the reactive interstellar molecule carbon monosulfide.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-207330 , NAS 1.26:207330 , Science; 277; 1072-1074
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 2019-07-20
    Description: The final report discusses work completed on proposals to construct state-of-the-art, theoretical, two-component, chromospheric models for single stars of different spectral types and different evolutionary status. We suggested to use these models to predict the level of the "basal flux", the observed range of variation of chromospheric activity for a given spectral type, and the decrease of this activity with stellar age. In addition, for red giants and supergiants, we also proposed to construct self-consistent, purely theoretical, chromosphere-wind models, and investigate the origin of "dividing lines" in the H-R diagram. In the report, we list the following six specific goals for the first and second year of the proposed research and then describe the completed work: (1) To calculate the acoustic and magnetic wave energy fluxes for stars located in different regions of the H-R diagram; (2) To investigate the transfer of this non-radiative energy through stellar photospheres and to estimate the amount of energy that reaches the chromosphere; (3) To identify major sources of radiative losses in stellar chromospheres and calculate the amount of emitted energy; (4) To use (1) through (3) to construct purely theoretical, two-component, chromospheric models based on the local energy balance. The models will be constructed for stars of different spectral types and different evolutionary status; (5) To explain theoretically the "basal flux", the location of stellar temperature minima and the observed range of chromospheric activity for stars of the same spectral type; and (6) To construct self-consistent, time-dependent stellar wind models based on the momentum deposition by finite amplitude Alfven waves.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-112552 , NAS 1.26:112552 , UAH-5-33996
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  • 75
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: Interstellar dust is an important component of the interstellar medium. Dust grains are the dominant opacity source and thus regulate the radiative transfer in the interstellar medium. Besides the spectral characteristics of sources, dust therefore influences directly the molecular composition of clouds through photodissociation and the heating of the gas through the photoelectric effect. Furthermore, dust grains also provide surfaces for active chemistry. This paper will review the destruction of interstellar dust with an emphasis on processing by interstellar shocks. Interstellar dust is affected by a variety of processes. Stars in the late stages of their evolution form dust grains by chemical nucleation and growth and injected them into the ISM. Grains in the ISM are processed by strong shock waves which sputter, vaporize, diamondize, and shatter them. The physics of interstellar shock waves and of these destruction processes will be reviewed. The ISM is organized in a number of phases: HI and molecular clouds, warm (neutral/ionized) intercloud medium, and coroner gas. Dust destruction is dominated by supernova shock waves in the intercloud medium. Because of rapid exchange of dust and gas between the phases, the effects of this are felt through all phases. This will be briefly discussed.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Formation and Evolution of Solids in Space Conference; Mar 13, 1997 - Mar 21, 1997; Sicily; Italy
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: We have detected quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) near 1 kHz from the low mass X-ray binary 4U 0614+091 in observations with RXTE. The observations span several months and sample the source over a large range of X-ray luminosity. In every interval QPOs are present above 400 Hz with fractional RMS amplitudes from 3 to 12% over the full PCA band. At high count rates, two high frequency QPOs are detected simultaneously. The difference of their frequency centroids is consistent with a constant value of 323 Hz in all observations. During one interval a third signal is detected at 328 +/- 2 Hz. This suggests the system has a stable 'clock' which is most likely the neutron star with spin period 3.1 msec. Thus, our observations of 4U 0614+091 and those of 4U 1728-34 provide the first evidence for millisecond pulsars within low-mass X-ray binary systems and reveal the 'missing-link' between millisecond radiopulsars and the late stages of binary evolution in low mass X-ray binaries. The constant difference of the high frequency QPOs sug,,ests a beat-frequency interpretation. In this model, the high frequency QPO is associated with the Keplerian frequency of the inner accretion disk and the lower frequency QPO is a 'beat' between the differential rotation frequency of the inner disk and the spinning neutron star. Assuming the high frequency QPO is a Keplerian orbital frequency for the accretion disk, we find a maximum mass of 1.9 solar mass and a maximum radius of 17 km for the neutron star.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: This paper will review our current knowledge of circumstellar and interstellar dust from an astronomical point of view. About half of the interstellar dust volume consists of amorphous silicates. The remainder has to be made up of an carbonaceous component such as graphite, amorphous carbon (i.e., soot), Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon molecules (PAHs), and/or organic grain mantles (i.e., mixed polymers). The observational evidence for these components will be reviewed and their relative importance assessed. The emphasis will be on recent observations using the Infrared Space Observatory. Most of these dust components are formed in the outflows from stars in the late stages of their evolution (i.e., red giants, planetary nebulae, novae, supergiants, Wolf Rayet stars, and supernovae). Indeed, observation of such objects indicate an even richer spectrum of stardust components, including also SiC, MgS, and aluminates and crystalline silicates. These observations will be briefly discussed. The stardust budget of the galaxy will be reviewed and the relative importance of the various birth sites assessed. Finally, in recent years, isotopic composition studies have shown that some circumstellar and interstellar dust grains have been incorporated into solar system bodies such as planetary dust particles and meteorites without totally losing their identity. Among the components identified are SiC, graphite, diamonds, PAHs, aluminum oxides, as well as various trace element carbides. Studies of this kind have opened up a new window on the composition and structure of interstellar dust. These different sources of information on interstellar and circumstellar dust will be briefly contrasted.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: UMIST Workshop; Mar 22, 1997 - Mar 27, 1997; Manchester; United Kingdom
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  • 78
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The key to studying central regions by means of nobody numerical experiments is to concentrate on the central few parsecs of a galaxy, replacing the remainder of the galaxy by a suitable boundary condition, rather after the manner in which stellar interiors can be studied without a detailed stellar atmosphere by replacing the atmosphere with a boundary condition. Replacements must be carefully designed because the long range gravitational force means that the core region is sensitive to mass outside that region and because particles can exchange between the outer galaxy and the core region. We use periodic boundary conditions, coupled with an iterative procedure to generate initial particle loads in isothermal equilibrium. Angular momentum conservation is ensured for problems including systematic rotation by a circular reflecting boundary and by integrating in a frame that rotates with the mean flow. Mass beyond the boundary contributes to the gravitational potential, but does not participate in the dynamics. A symplectic integration scheme has been developed for rotating coordinate systems. This combination works well, leading to robust configurations. Some preliminary results with this combination show that: (1) Rotating systems are extremely sensitive to non-axisymmetric external potentials, and (2) that a second core, orbiting near the main core (like the M31 second core system), shows extremely rapid orbital decay. The experimental setups will be discussed, along with preliminary results.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: This talk will review the various types of organic materials observed in different environments in the interstellar medium, discuss the processes by which these materials may have formed and been modified, and present the evidence supporting the contention that at least a fraction of this material survived incorporation, substantially unaltered, into our Solar System during its formation. The nature of this organic material is of direct interest to issues associated with the origin of life, both because this material represents a large fraction of the Solar System inventory of the biogenically-important elements, and because many of the compounds in this inventory have biogenic implications. Several specific examples of such molecules will be briefly discussed.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: 1997 International Origins Conference; May 19, 1997 - May 23, 1997; Estes Park, CO; United States
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: Over 10,000 meteorite fragments have been collected on only a dozen or so small icefields in Antarctica. The terrestrial history of these meteorites is important, both from the perspective of the effects of their ambient environment on the meteorites themselves, and on the information that can be derived in relation to ice flow and ice stability over periods of time up to 1 million years. We discuss the relative importance of meteorite infall, and ice and aeolian transport in creating meteorite accumulations and the importance of ice and aeolian transport and weathering in removing meteorites at various icefields in Antarctica. The present analysis is confined to equibrated ordinary chondrites. We use the natural thermoluminescence (TL) to to examine the effects of weathering. Natural TL is used in combination with size analysis to gauge the effects of aeolian transport. Some icefields, especially the Lewis Cliff Ice Tongue, are dominated by wind-transported fragments, while others, including the Far Western field at Allan Hills, have lost fragments. It appears that most Antarctic icefields preserve meteorite collections on time scales of a few tens of thousands of years.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-207734 , NAS 1.26:207734
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: Hipparcos proper motion and parallax data are combined for nearby stars with ground-based radial velocity measurements in order to identify stars which may have passed, or will pass, close enough to the sun to perturb the Oort cloud. Close stellar encounters could deflect large numbers of comets into the inner solar system, with possible serious consequences for impact hazards on the earth. Only one star, Gliese 710 is found with a predicted closest approach of less than 0.5 pc, although several stars come within 1 pc during a 8.5 M year interval. In most cases, the uncertainty in closest approach distance is dominated by uncertainties in the barycenter motion of binary systems. A program to obtain new radial velocities for stars in the sample with no previously published values is underway.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ; 617-620
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: Material and objective prism spectral classification work is used to determine the space density distribution of nearby common stars to the limits of objective prism spectral surveys. The aim is to extend the knowledge of the local densities of specific spectral types from a radius of 25 pc from the sun, as limited in the Gliese catalog of nearby stars, to 50 pc or more. Future plans for the application of these results to studies of the kinematic and dynamical properties of stars in the solar neighborhood as a function of their physical properties and ages are described.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ; 549-550
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: Hipparcos astrometric and kinematical data of oxygen-rich Mira variables are used to calibrate absolute near-infrared magnitudes and kinematic parameters. Three distinct classes of stars with different kinematics and scale heights were identified. The two most significant groups present characteristics close to those usually assigned to extended/thick disk-halo populations and old disk populations, respectively, and thus they may differ by their metallicity abundance. Two parallel period-luminosity relations are found, one for each population. The shift between these relations is interpreted as the consequence of the effects of metallicity abundance on the luminosity.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ; 383-386
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  • 84
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: The gravitational instability theory and its application to the origin of large scale structure are reviewed. The modeling of galaxy formation is described, from forwards and backwards perspectives. The emphasis is on the interactions between stellar and galactic formation.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ; 153-158
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: Observations of rotational translations of neutral molecules, radicals and ions in the comet Hale-Bopp are reported on. Sample spectra and maps of the emission for the J = 1 to 0 transition of HCN, the J = 2 to 1 transition of CS and the J = 1 to 0 transition of HCO+ are presented. While the emission from HCN is typically centered on the position of the nucleus and is symmetric, the emission from HCO+ exhibits multiple peaks, together with evidence for acceleration away from the nucleus.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ; 277-280
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: The Charon/Pluto mass ratio is a fundamental but poorly known parameter of the two-body system. Previous values for the mass ratio have ranged from 0.0837 plus or minus 0.0147 (Null et al., 1993, Astron. J. 105, 2319-2335) to 0.1566 plus or minus 0.0035 (Young et al., 1994, Icarus 108,186-199). We report here a new determination of the Charon/Pluto mass ratio, using five sets of groundbased images taken at four sites in support of Pluto occultation predictions. Unlike the Null et al. and Young et A determinations, where the centers of light for Pluto and Charon could be determined separately, this technique examines the motion of the center of light of the blended Pluto-Charon image. We compute the offsets of the observed center-of-light position of Pluto-Charon from the ephemeris position of the system and fit these offsets to a model of the Pluto-Charon system. The least-squares fits to the five data sets agree within their errors, and the weighted mean mass ratio is 0.117 plus or minus 0.006. The effects of errors in the Charon light fraction, semimajor axis, and ephemeris have been examined and are equal to only a small fraction of the formal error from the fit. This result is intermediate between those of Null et al., and Young et al. and matches a new value of 0.124 plus or minus 0.008 by Null and Owen (1996, Astron. J. 111, 1368-1381). The mass ratio and resulting individual masses and densities of Pluto and Charon are consistent with a collisional origin for the Pluto-Charon system.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: IS965656 , Icarus (ISSN 0019-1035); 126; 362-372
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: We have constructed three-dimensional models for the equilibrium abundance of molecular hydrogen in diffuse interstellar clouds of arbitrary geometry that are illuminated by ultraviolet radiation. The position-dependent photodissociation rate of H2 in such clouds was computed with a 26 ray approximation to model the attenuation of the incident ultraviolet radiation field by dust and by H2 line absorption. We have applied our modeling technique to the isolated diffuse cloud G236+39, assuming that the cloud has a constant density and that the thickness of the cloud along the line of sight is at every point proportional to the 100 micron continuum intensity measured by IRAS. We find that our model can successfully account for observed variations in the ratio of 100 micron continuum intensity to H I column density, with larger values of that ratio occurring along lines of sight in which the molecular hydrogen fraction is expected to be the largest. Using a standard chi square analysis to assess the goodness of fit of our models, we find (at the 60 a level) that a three-dimensional model is more successful in matching the observational data than a one-dimensional model in which the geometrical extent of the cloud along the line of sight is assumed to be much smaller than its extent in the plane of the sky. If D is the distance to G236 + 39, and given standard assumptions about the rate of grain-catalyzed H2 formation, we find that the cloud has an extent along the line of sight that is 0.9 +/- 0.1 times its mean extent projected onto the plane of the sky and a gas density of 53 +/- 8 (100 pc/D) H nuclei/cc and is illuminated by a radiation field of 1.1 +/- 0.2 (100 pc/D) times the mean interstellar radiation field. The derived 100 micron emissivity per nucleon is 1.13 +/- 0.06 x 10(exp -20) MJy/sr sq cm.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Astrophysical Journal; 484; 785-793
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: While the need for accurate calculation of nucleosynthesis and the resulting rate of thermonuclear energy release within hydrodynamic models of stars and supernovae is clear, the computational expense of these nucleosynthesis calculations often force a compromise in accuracy to reduce the computational cost. To redress this trade-off of accuracy for speed, the authors present an improved nuclear network which takes advantage of quasi- equilibrium in order to reduce the number of independent nuclei, and hence the computational cost of nucleosynthesis, without significant reduction in accuracy. In this paper they will discuss the first application of this method, the further reduction in size of the minimal alpha network. The resultant QSE- reduced alpha network is twice as fast as the conventional alpha network it replaces and requires the tracking of half as many abundance variables, while accurately estimating the rate of energy generation. Such reduction in cost is particularly necessary for future generation of multi-dimensional models for supernovae.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: DE98-005053 , ORNL/CP-97176 , CONF-971208 , Atomic and Nuclear Astrophysics; 206 Dec. 1997; Oak Ridge, TN; United States
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  • 89
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: Atomic and molecular physics of supernovae is discussed with an emphasis on the importance of detailed treatments of the critical atomic and molecular processes with the best available atomic and molecular data. The observations of molecules in SN 1987A are interpreted through a combination of spectral and chemical modelings, leading to strong constraints on the mixing and nucleosynthesis of the supernova. The non-equilibrium chemistry is used to argue that carbon dust can form in the oxygen-rich clumps where the efficient molecular cooling makes the nucleation of dust grains possible. For Type Ia supernovae, the analyses of their nebular spectra lead to strong constraints on the supernova explosion models.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: DE98-005054 , ORNL/CP-97164 , CONF-971208 , Atomic and Nuclear Astrophysics; United States
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  • 90
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: The research concentrated on high angular resolution (arc-second scale) studies of molecular cloud cores associated with very young star formation. New ways to study disks and protoplanetary systems were explored. Findings from the areas studied are briefly summarized: (1) molecular clouds; (2) gravitational contraction; (3) jets, winds, and outflows; (4) Circumstellar Disks (5) Extrasolar Planetary Systems. A bibliography of publications and submitted papers produced during the grant period is included.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA-CR-204475 , NAS 1.26:204475
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  • 91
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: Recent numerical simulations of accretion disk boundary layers have shown qualitatively the importance tance of advected energy in the inner region of the disk. In this short paper we present quantitative results of advective boundary layers in the optically thick regime. Numerical results are obtained for various systems, by means of a one-dimensional time-dependent numerical code. At high accretion mass rates, dot-M approx. = 10(exp -4) solar mass/yr, or low values of the viscosity parameter, alpha approx. = 0.001-0.01 (characteristic of FU Orionis systems and some symbiotic stars), the optical thickness in the inner part of the disk becomes very large (tau much greater than 1). The disk, unable to cool efficiently, becomes geometrically thick (H/r approx. = 0.5). The energy dissipated in the dynamical boundary layer is radiated outward to larger radii and advected into the star. The boundary-layer luminosity is only a fraction of its expected value; the rest of the energy is advected into the star. The fraction of the advected energy is zeta = L(sub adv)/L(sub acc) approx. = 0.1 in symbiotic stars (accretion onto a low-mass main-sequence star) and zeta approx. = 0.2 in FU Ori systems (accretion onto a pre-main sequence star).
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Astrophysical Journal (ISSN 0004-6256); 483; 882-886
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  • 92
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: A two-dimensional time-dependent hybrid Fourier-Chebyshev method of collocation is developed and used for the study of tidal effects in accretion disks, under the assumptions of a polytropic equation of state and a standard alpha viscosity prescription. Under the influence of the m = 1 azimuthal component of the tidal potential, viscous oscillations in the outer disk excite an m = 1 eccentric instability in the disk. While the m = 2 azimuthal component of the tidal potential excites a Papaloizou-Pringle instability in the inner disk (a saturated m = 2 azimuthal mode), with an elliptic pattern rotating at about a fraction (approx. = 1/3) of the local Keplerian velocity in the inner disk. The period of the elliptic mode corresponds well to the periods of the short-period oscillations observed in cataclysmic variables. In cold disks (r(Omega)/c(sub s) = M approx. = 40) we also find a critical value of the viscosity parameter (alpha approx. = 0.01), below which shock dissipation dominates and is balanced by the wave amplification due to the wave action conservation. In this case the double spiral shock propagates all the way to the inner boundary with a Mach number M(sub s) approx. = 1.3.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Astrophysical Journal (ISSN 0004-6256); 480; 329-343
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  • 93
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: During the early history of the solar system, it is likely that the outer planets changed their distance from the sun, and hence, their influence on the asteroid belt evolved with time. The gravitational influence of Jupiter and Saturn on the orbital evolution of asteroids in the outer asteroid belt was calculated. The results show that the sweeping of mean motion resonances associated with planetary migration efficiently destabilizes orbits in the outer asteroid belt on a time scale of 10 million years. This mechanism provides an explanation for the observed depletion of asteroids in that region.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA-CR-204695 , NAS 1.26:204695 , LPI-Contrib-905 , Science; 275; 375-377
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: We have made progress in the areas related to the propulsion and confinement of gas responsible for broad absorption troughts in QSOs: Radiative Acceleration in BALQSOs; The "Ghost" of Lyman (alpha); and Magnetic Confinement of Absorbing Gas.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-1997-113019 , NAS 1.26:113019
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: We report the first detection of interstellar hydrogen fluoride. Using the Long Wavelength Spectrometer of the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO), we have detected the 121.6973 micron J = 2-1 line of HF in absorption toward the far-infrared continuum source Sagittarius B2. The detection is statistically significant at the 13 sigma level. On the basis of our model for the excitation of HF in Sgr B2, the observed line equivalent width of 1.0 nm implies a hydrogen fluoride abundance of about 3 x 10 (exp -10) relative to H, If the elemental abundance of fluorine in Sgr B2 is the same as that in the solar system, then HF accounts for about 2% of the total number of fluorine nuclei. We expect hydrogen fluoride to be the dominant reservoir of gas-phase fluorine in Sgr B2, because it is formed rapidly in exothermic reactions of atomic fluorine with either water or molecular hydrogen; thus, the measured HF abundance suggests a substantial depletion of fluorine onto dust grains. Similar conclusions regarding depletion have previously been reached for the case of chlorine in dense interstellar clouds. We also find evidence at a lower level of statistical significance (about 5 sigma) for an emission feature at the expected position of the 4(sub 32)-4(sub 23) 121.7219 micron line of water. The emission-line equivalent width of 0.5 mm for the water feature is consistent with the water abundance of 5 x 10(exp -6) relative to H, that has been inferred previously from observations of the hot core of Sgr B2.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: The Astrophysical Journal; 488; 2; L141-L144
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: Laboratory data are needed to understand the formation of organics in cometary and precometary materials and for deciding on the fate of the volatiles. Appropriate experiments were described in the talk at Milipitas. Because of its importance for the comet sample return mission, I discuss here the relevance of this data for predicting the thickness, nature, and ability to survive of the cosmic-ray produced primordial comet mantle ('crust'). That part of the mantle which becomes predominantly refractory is approx. 30 gm/sq cm thick. The tensile strength of this outer mantle is such that it might survive the comet's entrance into the inner solar system. In addition, important modifications to the ices occur to depths approx. 300 gm/cu cm. Based on this it is expected that a deep probe is needed to obtain minimally altered material.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Analysis of Returned Comet Nucleus Samples; 255-275; NASA/CP-1997-10152
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  • 97
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: During the current reporting period we have continued our studies of the dissociative recombination (DR) of HeH(+) with an electron with the goal of calculating accurate cross sections and rate coefficients to allow for the accurate modelling of the abundance of HeH(+) in planetary nebulae and supernova envelopes. We have also started studies of the DR of H3(+), a process of great importance in the interstellar medium.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA-CR-205082 , NAS 1.26:205082
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  • 98
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: Red variables are traditionally classified into Mira, semiregular (SR), and slow irregular (L) variables. The Mira variables are the best defined subgroup, whereas SR and L stars are more numerous. The SR subgroup is additionally subdivided into: SRa variables, which feature regular variability with smaller pulsation amplitudes than Miras; SRb variables, which are less regular; SRc variables, which are more luminous; and SRd variables, which are warmer. Relationships within each group are not clear. An analysis of long-term American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSP) light curves is reported on. It is found that Mira-type variables are clearly different and distinguishable from SR variables. Similarly, M-type Miras and C-type Miras feature different light curve properties. The M-Miras form a homogeneous group. The pulsations of SR variables are unstable.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: ; 269-274
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  • 99
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: High quality spectra of interstellar absorption from C I toward beta(sup 1) S(sub co), rho O(sub ph) A, and chi O(sub ph) were obtained with the Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph on HST. Many weak lines were detected within the observed wavelength intervals: 1150-1200 A for beta(sup 1) S(sub co) and 1250-1290 A for rho O(sub ph) A and chi O(sub ph). Curve-of-growth analyses were performed in order to extract accurate column densities and Doppler parameters from lines with precise laboratory-based f-values. These column densities and b-values were used to obtain a self-consistent set of f-values for all the observed C I lines. A particularly important constraint was the need to reproduce data for more than one line of sight. For about 50% of the lines, the derived f-values differ appreciably from the values quoted by Morton.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-207262 , NAS 1.26:207262 , The Astrophysical Journal; 484; 2; 820-827
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  • 100
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: At the end of three days' spirited discussion of the type 2 Seyfert galaxy NGC 1068, what do we think we understand about this object? New observations, particularly in the infrared and radio are helping to resolve old problems, while drawing attention to new ones. It appears that NGC 1068 is a relatively normal spiral galaxy in which large-scale gravitational disturbances are funneling matter into the nucleus. A collimated outflow disturbs the interstellar medium out to kiloparsec scales, but the nucleus itself is hidden behind an opaque screen. Radio observations have now pierced the screen, and suggest that at the center of it all, a 10-20 million solar mass black hole is accreting at close to its Eddington limit.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: NASA/CR-97-207136 , NAS 1.26:207136 , Astrophysics and Space Science; 248; 1-8
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