Listed are all scientific papers resulting from an ISSI activity written or co-authored by ISSI Team members, Working Group members, Workshop participants, visitors or staff members.
Metasomatism refers to the process during which a pre-existing rock undergoes compositional and mineralogical transformations associated with chemical reactions triggered by the reaction of fluids which invade the protolith. It changes chemical compositions of minerals, promotes their dissolution and precipitation of new minerals.
We present the first numerical simulations of a thin accretion disk around a Reissner–Nordström (RN) naked singularity (NkS; a charged point mass). The gravity of the RN NkS is modeled with a pseudo-Newtonian potential that reproduces exactly the radial dependence of the RN Keplerian orbital frequency; in particular, orbital angular velocity vanishes at the zero gravity radius and has a maximum at 4/3 of that radius.
An instability criterion in the magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) with the open boundary of a magnetic field is proposed in this paper. We use a series of linear force-free extrapolation fields, in which the normal part of the magnetic field is fixed, to obtain the linear fitting coefficient called relative alpha by using the cojoined value of magnetic free energy and magnetic flux at the open boundary (EfΦ2) and the square of relative magnetic helicity ( HR2 ).
In this work, we present Solar Feature Tracking, a novel feature-tracking tool developed in Python and designed to detect, identify, and track magnetic elements in the solar atmosphere. It relies on a watershed segmentation algorithm to effectively detect magnetic clumps within magnetograms, which are then associated across successive frames to follow the motion of magnetic structures in the photosphere.
We present an analysis of the spatial distribution of globular cluster (GC) systems of 118 nearby early-type galaxies in the Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey and Mass Assembly of early-Type GaLAxies with their fine Structures survey programs, which both used MegaCam on the Canada–France–Hawaii Telescope.
Evapotranspiration (ET) serves as a crucial indicator for understanding both global and regional water cycles and the impacts of climate change. Traditionally, water balance-based ET derived using satellite gravimetry, runoff and precipitation is considered as a benchmark for ET assessment.
Context. It has been recently accepted that the standard classification of the solar wind solely according to flow speed is outdated, and particular interest has been devoted to the study of the origin and evolution of so-called Alfvénic slow solar wind streams and to what extent such streams resemble or differ from fast wind. Aims. In March 2022, Solar Orbiter completed its first nominal phase perihelion passage.
Aims. The objective of this work is to study the influence of a highly non-isothermal porous dust layer on the formation of a comet’s inner coma. We studied the water gas activity of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko to find a link between the gas properties around the comet and the properties of the dust surface crust. The effects on the radiative transfer spectral lines were studied and compared with MIRO remote sensing observations. Methods.
Aims. We aim to investigate the energy-resolved pulse profile changes of the accreting X-ray pulsar V 0332+53 focusing in the cyclotron line energy range, using the full set of available NuSTAR observations. Methods. We applied a tailored pipeline to study the energy dependence of the pulse profiles and to build the pulsed fraction spectra (PFS) for the different observations. We also studied the profile changes using cross-correlation and lag spectra.
The latest ALMA and JWST observations provide new information on the birth and evolution of galaxies in the early Universe at the epoch of reionization. Measurements at redshift z > 5 of their cold-gas budget are particularly important because this budget is known to be the main fuel for star formation. A powerful tool for probing the physics characterising galaxies at high redshift is the [C II] 158 μm emission line.