113,898 research outputs found
3PointFoundation Partnership
An exciting partnership in collaboration with the Division of Athletics, Recreation, Special Projects and Programs, and the College of Public and Community Service. The project involves students at UMass Boston and the 3PointFoundation which is affiliated with the Boston Celtics. Its mission is to provide academic support and mentoring to middle school urban males using basketball as an incentive and vehicle for growth and development. Through their roughly two hour weekly sessions they hope to build character, academic strength, and promote the pipeline to higher education
The proper motion of the Arches cluster with Keck Laser-Guide Star Adaptive Optics
We present the first measurement of the proper motion of the young, compact
Arches cluster near the Galactic center from near-infrared adaptive optics (AO)
data taken with the recently commissioned laser-guide star (LGS) at the Keck
10-m telescope. The excellent astrometric accuracy achieved with LGS-AO
provides the basis for a detailed comparison with VLT/NAOS-CONICA data taken
4.3 years earlier. Over the 4.3 year baseline, a spatial displacement of the
Arches cluster with respect to the field population is measured to be 24.0 +/-
2.2 mas, corresponding to a proper motion of 5.6 +/- 0.5 mas/yr or 212 +/- 29
km/s at a distance of 8 kpc. In combination with the known line-of-sight
velocity of the cluster, we derive a 3D space motion of 232 +/- 30 km/s of the
Arches relative to the field. The large proper motion of the Arches cannot be
explained with any of the closed orbital families observed in gas clouds in the
bar potential of the inner Galaxy, but would be consistent with the Arches
being on a transitional trajectory from x1 to x2 orbits. We investigate a
cloud-cloud collision as the possible origin for the Arches cluster. The
integration of the cluster orbit in the potential of the inner Galaxy suggests
that the cluster passes within 10 pc of the supermassive black hole only if its
true GC distance is very close to its projected distance. A contribution of
young stars from the Arches cluster to the young stellar population in the
inner few parsecs of the GC thus appears increasingly unlikely. The measurement
of the 3D velocity and orbital analysis provides the first observational
evidence that Arches-like clusters do not spiral into the GC. This confirms
that no progenitor clusters to the nuclear cluster are observed at the present
epoch.Comment: 22 pdflatex pages including 12 figures, reviewed version accepted by
Ap
The shape of jamming arches in two-dimensional deposits of granular materials
We present experimental results on the shape of arches that block the outlet
of a two dimensional silo. For a range of outlet sizes, we measure some
properties of the arches such as the number of particles involved, the span,
the aspect ratio, and the angles between mutually stabilizing particles. These
measurements shed light on the role of frictional tangential forces in arching.
In addition, we find that arches tend to adopt an aspect ratio (the quotient
between height and half the span) close to one, suggesting an isotropic load.
The comparison of the experimental results with data from numerical models of
the arches formed in the bulk of a granular column reveals the similarities of
both, as well as some limitations in the few existing models.Comment: 8 pages; submitted to Physical Review
Identification of arches in 2D granular packings
We identify arches in a bed of granular disks generated by a molecular
dynamic-type simulation. We use the history of the deposition of the particles
to identify the supporting contacts of each particle. Then, arches are defined
as sets of mutually stable disks. Different packings generated through tapping
are analyzed. The possibility of identifying arches from the static structure
of a deposited bed, without any information on the history of the deposition,
is discussed.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
An experimental investigation of retro-reinforced clay brick arches
This paper describes the laboratory testing of eight 2.95m span segmental profile clay brick arches. Seven of the arches were strengthened with longitudinal intrados (soffit) reinforcement; the eighth was left unreinforced as an experimental control. Three of the arches also contained reinforcement to resist inter-ring shear. The barrel of each arch consisted of 3 rings of brickwork laid in stretcher bond; the compressive strength of the mortar used in the arch construction varied from 1.7 to 6.2 MPa. In each case a full width line load was applied incrementally to the arch extrados at quarter span until collapse occurred. Surface crack development and the vertical deflection profile of each arch were recorded at each load increment. In all cases, the longitudinal reinforcement was found to delay the onset of cracking and to increase the load carrying capacity. As expected, premature failure by ring separation was found to occur in the arches constructed with the weakest mortar without inter-ring reinforcement. Radial dowels were found to be the most effective means of preventing ring separation. The effect of the longitudinal reinforcement was found to be greatest in the arches where measures were taken to prevent ring separation
Disks in the Arches cluster -- survival in a starburst environment
Deep Keck/NIRC2 HK'L' observations of the Arches cluster near the Galactic
center reveal a significant population of near-infrared excess sources. We
combine the L'-band excess observations with K'-band proper motions, to confirm
cluster membership of excess sources in a starburst cluster for the first time.
The robust removal of field contamination provides a reliable disk fraction
down to our completeness limit of H=19 mag, or about 5 Msun at the distance of
the Arches. Of the 24 identified sources with K'-L' > 2.0 mag, 21 have reliable
proper motion measurements, all of which are proper motion members of the
Arches cluster. VLT/SINFONI K'-band spectroscopy of three excess sources
reveals strong CO bandhead emission, which we interpret as the signature of
dense circumstellar disks. The detection of strong disk emission from the
Arches stars is surprising in view of the high mass of the B-type main sequence
host stars of the disks and the intense starburst environment. We find a disk
fraction of 6 +/- 2% among B-type stars in the Arches cluster. A radial
increase in the disk fraction from 3 to 10% suggests rapid disk destruction in
the immediate vicinity of numerous O-type stars in the cluster core. A
comparison between the Arches and other high- and low-mass star-forming regions
provides strong indication that disk depletion is significantly more rapid in
compact starburst clusters than in moderate star-forming environments.Comment: 51 pages preprint2 style, 22 figures, accepted by Ap
Harbor Point Outreach Partnership, Walter Derney Center
The Harbor Point Outreach Partnership is a community-university tutoring and afterschool youth enrichment program based on the work of students in service-learning classes, volunteers and work study students from UMass Boston and the Community. We are part of the UMASS Boston-Harbor Point Apartment Community Memorandum of Agreement. Our primary partner is the Walter Denney Youth Center and most activities take place at this location. We also partner with the Dever-McCormack School
Internal Avalanches in a Granular Medium
Avalanches of grain displacements can be generated by creating local voids
within the interior of a granular material at rest in a bin. Modeling such a
two-dimensional granular system by a collection of mono-disperse discs, the
system on repeated perturbations, shows all signatures of Self-Organized
Criticality. During the propagation of avalanches the competition among grains
creates arches and in the critical state a distribution of arches of different
sizes is obtained. Using a cellular automata model we demonstrate that the
existence of arches determines the universal behaviour of the model system.Comment: 4 pages (Revtex), Four ps figures (included
The present day mass function in the central region of the Arches cluster
We study the evolution of the mass function in young and dense star clusters
by means of direct N-body simulations. Our main aim is to explain the recent
observations of the relatively flat mass function observed near the centre of
the Arches star cluster. In this region, the power law index of the mass
function for stars more massive than about 5-6 solar mass, is larger than the
Salpeter value by about unity; whereas further out, and for the lower mass
stars, the mass function resembles the Salpeter distribution. We show that the
peculiarities in the Arches mass function can be explained satisfactorily
without primordial mass segregation. We draw two conclusions from our
simulations: 1) The Arches initial mass function is consistent with a Salpeter
slope down to ~1 solar mass, 2) The cluster is about half way towards core
collapse. The cores of other star clusters with characteristics similar to
those of the Arches are expected to show similar flattening in the mass
functions for the high mass (>5 solar mass) stars.Comment: 6 pages with 6 figures and 1 table. Submitted to the letters section
of MNRAS. Incorporates changes following suggestions by the refere
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