648 research outputs found
Using x ray images to detect substructure in a sample of 40 Abell clusters
Using a method for constraining the dynamical state of a galaxy cluster by examining the moments of its x-ray surface brightness distribution, we determine the statistics of cluster substructure for a sample of 40 Abell clusters. Using x-ray observations from the Einstein Observatory Imaging Proportional Counter (IPC), we measure the first moment M1(r), the ellipsoidal orientation angle theta2(r), and the axial ratio eta(r) at several different radii in the cluster. We determine the effects of systematics such as x-ray point source emission, telescope vignetting, Poisson noise, and characteristics of the IPC by measuring the same parameters on an ensemble of simulated cluster images. Due to the small band-pass of the IPC, the ICM emissivity is nearly independent of temperature so the intensity at each point in the IPC images is simply proportional to the emission measure calculated along the line of sight through the cluster (e.g. Fabricant et al. 1980). Therefore, barring a change superposition of two x-ray emitting clusters, a significant variation in the image centroid M1(r) as a function of radius indicates that the center of mass of the intra-cluster medium (ICM) varies with radius. We argue that such a configuration (essentially an m = 1 component in the ICM density distribution) is a non-equilibrium component; it results from an off-center subclump or a recent merger in the ICM
Genetic Map of Bacteriophage [var phi]X174
Bacteriophage [var phi]X174 temperature-sensitive and nonsense mutations in eight cistrons were mapped by using two-, three-, and four-factor genetic crosses. The genetic map is circular with a total length of 24 × 10−4wt recombinants per progeny phage. The cistron order is D-E-F-G-H-A-B-C. High negative interference is seen, consistent with a small closed circular deoxyribonucleic acid molecule as a genome
A Broad Search for Counterrotating Gas and Stars: Evidence for Mergers and Accretion
We measure the frequency of bulk gas-stellar counterrotation in a sample of
67 galaxies drawn from the Nearby Field Galaxy Survey, a broadly representative
survey of the local galaxy population down to M_B-15. We detect 4
counterrotators among 17 E/S0's with extended gas emission (24% +8 -6). In
contrast, we find no clear examples of bulk counterrotation among 38 Sa-Sbc
spirals, although one Sa does show peculiar gas kinematics. This result implies
that, at 95% confidence, no more than 8% of Sa-Sbc spirals are bulk
counterrotators. Among types Sc and later, we identify only one possible
counterrotator, a Magellanic irregular. We use these results together with the
physical properties of the counterrotators to constrain possible origins for
this phenomenon.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, AJ, accepte
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