Thursday, 16 May 2013

364. Nuclear astrophysics


Nuclear astrophysics

        Nuclear astrophysics is an interdisciplinary branch of physics involving close collaboration among researchers in various subfields of nuclear physics and astrophysics, with significant emphasis in areas such as
measurement and theoretical estimation of nuclear reaction rates,
X-ray astronomy, and extending our knowledge about nuclear lifetimes and masses.
In general terms, nuclear astrophysics aims to understand the origin of the chemical elements and the energy generation in stars.

History

        The basic principles of explaining the origin of the elements and the energy generation in stars were laid down in the theory of nucleosynthesis which came together in the late 1950s from the seminal works of Burbidge, Burbidge, Fowler, and Hoyle in a famous paper and independently by Cameron. Fowler is largely credited with initiating the collaboration between astronomers, astrophysicists, and experimental nuclear physicists which is what we now know as nuclear astrophysics.
        The basic tenets of nuclear astrophysics are that only isotopes of hydrogen and helium (and traces of lithium, beryllium, and boron) can be formed in a homogeneous big bang model (see big bang nucleosynthesis), and all other elements are formed in stars. The conversion of nuclear mass to kinetic energy (by merit of Einstein's famous mass-energy relation in relativity) is the source of energy which allows stars to shine for up to billions of years.
        Many notable physicists of the 19th century, such as Mayer, Waterson, von Helmholtz, and Lord Kelvin, postulated that the Sun radiates thermal energy based on converting gravitational potential energy into heat.
        The lifetime of the Sun under such a model can be calculated relatively easily using the virial theorem, yielding around 19 million years, an age that was not consistent with the interpretation of geological records or the then recently proposed theory of biological evolution.
        A back-of-the-envelope calculation indicates that if the Sun consisted entirely of a fossil fuel like coal, a source of energy familiar to many people, considering the rate of thermal energy emission, then the Sun would have a lifetime of merely four or five thousand years, which is not even consistent with records of human civilization.
        The now discredited hypothesis that gravitational contraction is the Sun's primary source of energy was, however, reasonable before the advent of modern physics; radioactivity itself was not discovered by Becquerel until 1895.
        Besides the prerequisite knowledge of the atomic nucleus, a proper understanding of stellar energy is not possible without the theories of relativity and quantum mechanics.
        After Aston demonstrated that the mass of helium is less than four times the mass of the proton, Eddington proposed that in the core of the Sun, through an unknown process, hydrogen was transmuted into helium, liberating energy. 20 years later, Bethe and von Weizsäcker independently derived the CN cycle, the first known nuclear reaction cycle which can accomplish this transmutation; however, it is now understood that the Sun's primary energy source is the pp-chains, which can occur at much lower energies and are much slower than catalytic hydrogen fusion. The time-lapse between Eddington's proposal and the derivation of the CN cycle can mainly be attributed to an incomplete understanding of nuclear structure, and a proper understanding of nucleosynthetic processes was not possible until Chadwick discovered the neutron in 1932 and a contemporary theory of beta decay developed. Nuclear physics gives a self-consistent picture of the energy source for the Sun and its subsequent lifetime, as the age of the solar system derived from meteoritic abundances of lead and uranium isotopes is about 4.5 billion years. A star the mass of the Sun has enough nuclear fuel to allow for core hydrogen burning on the main sequence of the HR-diagram via the pp-chains for about 9 billion years, a lifetime primarily set by the extremely slow production of deuterium,
1
1
H
 
1
1
H
 
→ 
2
1
D
 
e+ 
ν
e
 
0.42 MeV
which is governed by the nuclear weak force.

Predictions

        The theory of stellar nucleosynthesis reproduces the chemical abundances observed in the solar system and galaxy, which from hydrogen to uranium, show an extremely varied distribution spanning twelve orders of magnitude (one trillion). While impressive, these data were used to formulate the theory, and a scientific theory must be predictive in order to have any merit. The theory of stellar nucleosynthesis has been well-tested by observation and experiment since the theory was first formulated.
        The theory predicted the observation of technetium (the lightest chemical element with no stable isotopes) in stars, observation of galactic gamma-emitters such as 26Al and 44Ti, observation of solar neutrinos, and observation of neutrinos from supernova 1987a. These observations have far-reaching implications. 26Al has a lifetime a bit less than one million years, which is very short on a galactic timescale, proving that nucleosynthesis is an on-going process even in our own time. Work which lead to the discovery of neutrino oscillation, implying a non-zero mass for the neutrino and thus not predicted by the Standard Model of particle physics, was motivated by a solar neutrino flux about three times lower than expected, which was a long-standing concern in the nuclear astrophysics community such that it was colloquially known simply as the Solar neutrino problem. The observable neutrino flux from nuclear reactors is much larger than that of the Sun, and thus Davis and others were primarily motivated to look for solar neutrinos for astronomical reasons.

Future work

        Although the foundations of the science are bona fide, there are still many remaining open questions. A few of the long-standing issues are helium fusion (specifically the 12C(α,γ)16O  reaction), the astrophysical site of the r-process, anomalous lithium abundances in Population III stars, and the explosion mechanism in core-collapse supernovae.

363. JEEVITAM – 1


JEEVITAM – 1
09-05-2013,  Thursday

1]    BREAKING  POINT
Every man has a breaking point. It indicates his tolerance. Below that he remains cools, discusses things well, behaves very nicely, etc. Above that point he becomes mad. Feel tension. Tries to take revenge.

2]    Each man is a book
A man’s life is influenced by many factors such as father’s influence, mother’s influence, society’s influence, beliefs, failures, etc. The sum total of all these things together is called his character. There are certain in born genetic factors, factors taught by his society, etc. So a person should be understood individually. We cannot  generalize the factors. We can never expect every one should be as mentally stable as we have been.

3]    Temporary defeat, but forever victory
Generally there are two things.
1.Temporary success, permanent failure
2.Temporary failure, but permanent success
It depends on one’s individual nature. Some may like no.1 and some may like no.2
Then what is right? We don’t say.

4]    One year, 12 fields
Our success depends mostly on our understanding of this world.
That is why everyone should learn as many fields  as possible. This wide knowledge will enrich our logic, problem solving, how to be defencive, etc.

5]    Indebtedness
Every one who helps us for our upliftment, for guiding us, for showing us path for events we should always remain indebted to them.
This is the minimum curtesy.
If time permits, we should repay them.
While leaving this world, we carry no physical thing but these thoughts for generations.

6]    Rich  Dad – Poor  Dad
This book really influenced me.

A Poor Dad – for him children are income. He employs his children here and there, gets money and leads his family or some times enjoys himself. He always depends on his children.

A Rich Dad – for him children are like industries. He invests lakhs of rupees on him. He never depends on his children.

A Middleclass Dad – for him children are burden. He cannot educate his children to higher studies nor send him to labour work. These are the people who mostly depend on salary.

7]    Hobby – Profession
My hobby is reading books. Now my profession is teaching. If it is so I  can concentrate more in that. I read a lot. Search Net for a lot of information. Attend seminars. Attend sahitya sammelanas. Even if a student asks for a doubt, we can clarify perfectly.
If hobby and profession are different then this much of concentration won’t be there.

8]    Money command
Money is essetial for life. He who commands money, commands everything.
Always plan less than what you have. There should always be surplus money. Step by step go up and up in your life.
9]    Sharab pilaake…
It is very easy to collapse somebody from rising. But it will be very difficult  to support and raise the man in need is very great.


10]  Don’t advise unless asked
People take things very cheap.
The other one may not need such advice.
He may not like we speaking on that  subject openly without his consent.


11]  Need or Idealism [avasarama?  Aashayama??]
A common many generally has more needs than ideals.
It may be due to

12]  Holding power :-
If the CM comes to our house, for how long can we retain him? It indicates ours holding power. Similarly in our life we can hold some people for a long time, some a few hours and some for seconds and some more,  of course, never.
To hold people We should have
1.Good knowledge
2.Feasibility
3.Dealing people
4.Logic
5.Peoples’ nature
6.Good listener
Etc.,

13]  Plan Ahead :-
This is very much essential.
Azeem Premji plans for 30 years.
Narayana Murthy too.
Ramoji Rao too.
Laxmi  Nivas Mittal for winning the world.
Generally,  common people can not plan. If they get more money they enjoy. If they have no money they suffer.
Brahmins who were Doraas  of those days, lost everything and have been suffering.
They have adament nature.

14]  Depend on yourself :-
We should always depend on ourselves. There are certain things which we cannot do them for ourselves. In such cases we  may depend on them. For example we cannot cure ourselves from ailments. So we can go to a doctory.
It is our common sense which warns us to depend on ourself.
Own thinking, own implementation, our decision making, etc can elevate ourselves in this life.

15]  If you beg after sinking
How much you have to think, you have to sink, … that much you sink. After wards if you cry for help no one can help us.

16]  Do you want 1 lady or 99 sorrows?
A man has hundreds of desires. Among them a lady is one. For a lady her husband is her world. If he makes her as his world, what achievements can he do? Instead of persuading his aims, he becomes a worker of her.


17]  Stay in Bombay for at least 1 month :-
Right from 1st class to the end of our academic career, we are engrossed in studies. We lose certain things. Mostly we are away from this worldly afairs. So we fail. It may be either deception, threatenig, exploitation, etc. So we should study life as a subject. It should be not from books but from real time experiences. That  is why one should become rough and tough.

18]  Do you know price or value?
Everyone can easily undersand the price, because it is marked on the item.
Value is different. Gandhiji is a valuable man.
Mother is valuable to each individual.

19]  Hypocrasy :-
People live internally  in one way and externally in another way. It may be due to fear, inferiority, cowardice, etc.
People are afraid of God because of sin,
People are afraid of health because of death,
People are afraid of police because of beating,
People are afraid of wife because of money,
And so on for many reasons.

20]  Never deceive yourself :-
An intelligent man can deceive others. But a common man can deceive himself himself. It may be lack of knowledge, too much belief, too much manness, etc.
The converted Christians they know that they belong to so and so caste of Hinduism but they say that they belong to Christian religion.
If a dog feels that it is like a lion then whose mistake is that of ?




362. Frequency Allocation


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                         Frequency   Allocation

Use of radio frequency bands of the electromagnetic spectrum is regulated by governments in most countries, in a Spectrum management process known as frequency allocation or spectrum allocation. Radio propagation does not stop at national boundaries. Giving technical and economic reasons, governments have sought to harmonise the allocation of RF bands and their standardization.
A number of forums and standards bodies work on standards for frequency allocation, including:
These standards bodies have assigned frequency bands in three types of allocation:
High-demand sections of the electromagnetic spectrum may sometimes be allocated through auctions.

Daily impact

Every day, users rely on allocation of frequencies for efficient use of such devices as:
Power levels vary widely (from 1 milliwatt in a Bluetooth node to 1 kilowatt in a microwave oven). While the general RF band controls propagation characteristics, who uses what is arbitrary and historical. A particular frequency may require line of sight, or may be attenuated by rain, but whether it carries ambulance or pizza delivery traffic depends on what region it's used in.
Earlier equipment could not process higher frequencies, nor was it compact enough to support certain uses. Over time the exploitable frequencies have increased and semiconductors have shrunk. A tube radio is neither mobile nor reasonably battery powered; GPS works at 1,500 MHz and fits in a pocket. A Bluetooth headset can talk to a mobile phone which is trunked on a microwave link, and at the other end someone is on a cordless phone.

International conventions

The range of "radio frequencies" is a matter of international convention. The separation of countries into the three formal ITU RF allocation regions is one source of different RF allocation policies in different parts of the world. The definition of the ITU Regions is based largely on longitude. According to ITU Radio Regulations section 5.1: Member States assign licenses to stations; article 5 of the ITU regulations allocates frequencies to services (such as broadcasting and mobile). The ITU divides the world into five administrative regions:
A the Americas,
B Western Europe,
C Eastern Europe and Northern Asia,
D Africa, and
E Asia and Australasia.
The ITU also categorises states into three Radio regulatory Regions:
Region 1
Europe, Middle East, Africa, the former Soviet Union, including Siberia; and Mongolia;
Region 2
North and South America and Pacific (East of the International Date Line);
Region 3
Asia, Australia and the Pacific Rim (West of the International Date Line).
Thus, the RF allocations fundamentally differ between continents. Longitude may traverse continents, for example, the 40°E meridian crosses Europe (Russia), Asia (Middle East) and Africa.

647. PRESENTATION SKILLS MBA I - II

PRESENTATION  SKILLS MBA   I - II There are many types of presentations.                    1.       written,        story, manual...