1,826 research outputs found
Dust Emissivity in the Far-Infrared
We have derived the dust emissivity in the Far-Infrared (FIR) using data
available in the literature. We use two wavelength dependences derived from
spectra of Galactic FIR emission (Reach et al. 1995). A value for the
emissivity, normalised to the extinction efficiency in the V band, has been
retrieved from maps of Galactic FIR emission, dust temperature and extinction
(Schlegel et al. 1998).
Our results are similar to other measurements in the Galaxy but only
marginally consistent with the widely quoted values of Hildebrand (1983)
derived on one reflection nebula. The discrepancy with measurements on other
reflection nebulae (Casey 1991) is higher and suggests a different grain
composition in these environments with respect to the diffuse interstellar
medium.
We measure dust masses for a sample of six spiral galaxies with FIR
observations and obtain gas-to-dust ratios close to the Galactic value.Comment: 5 pages, 1 ps file, A&A letter accepte
ISO observations of spirals: modelling the FIR emission
ISO observations at 200 micron have modified our view of the dust component
in spiral galaxies. For a sample of seven resolved spirals we have retrieved a
mean temperature of 20K, about 10K lower than previous estimates based on IRAS
data at shorter wavelengths. Because of the steep dependence of far-infrared
emission on the dust temperature, the dust masses inferred from ISO fluxes are
a factor of 10 higher than those derived from IRAS data only, leading to
gas-to-dust ratios close to the value observed in the Galaxy. The scale-length
of the 200 micron emission is larger than for the IRAS 100 micron emission,
with colder dust at larger distances from the galactic centre, as expected if
the interstellar radiation field is the main source of dust heating. The 200
micron scale-length is also larger than the optical, for all the galaxies in
the sample. This suggests that the dust distribution is more extended than that
of the stars.A model of the dust heating is needed to derive the parameters of
the dust distribution from the FIR emission. Therefore, we have adapted an
existing radiative transfer code to deal with dust emission. Simulated maps of
the temperature distribution within the dust disk and of the dust emission at
any wavelength can be produced. The stellar spectral energy distribution is
derived from observations in the ultraviolet, optical and near infrared. The
parameters of the dust distribution (scale-lengths and optical depth) are
chosen to reproduce the observed characteristics of the FIR emission, i.e. the
shape of the spectrum, the flux and the spatial distribution. We describe the
application of the model to one of the galaxies in the sample, NGC 6946.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Contribution to the proceedings of the workshop
"ISO Beyond Point Sources" held at VILSPA 14-17 September 199
Galaxies as Fluctuations in the Ionizing Background Radiation at Low Redshift
Some Lyman continuum photons are likely to escape from most galaxies, and
these can play an important role in ionizing gas around and between galaxies,
including gas that gives rise to Lyman alpha absorption. Thus the gas
surrounding galaxies and in the intergalactic medium will be exposed to varying
amounts of ionizing radiation depending upon the distances, orientations, and
luminosities of any nearby galaxies. The ionizing background can be
recalculated at any point within a simulation by adding the flux from the
galaxies to a uniform quasar contribution. Normal galaxies are found to almost
always make some contribution to the ionizing background radiation at redshift
zero, as seen by absorbers and at random points in space. Assuming that about 2
percent of ionizing photons escape from a galaxy like the Milky Way, we find
that normal galaxies make a contribution of at least 30 to 40 percent of the
assumed quasar background. Lyman alpha absorbers with a wide range of neutral
column densities are found to be exposed to a wide range of ionization rates,
although the distribution of photoionization rates for absorbers is found to be
strongly peaked. On average, less highly ionized absorbers are found to arise
farther from luminous galaxies, while local fluctuations in the ionization rate
are seen around galaxies having a wide range of properties.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, references added, clarified explanation of first
two equation
The Fornax Spectroscopic Survey: The Number of Unresolved Compact Galaxies
We describe a sample of thirteen bright (18.5<Bj<20.1) compact galaxies at
low redshift (0.05<z<0.21) behind the Fornax Cluster. These galaxies are
unresolved on UK Schmidt sky survey plates, so would be missing from most
galaxy catalogs compiled from this material. The objects were found during
initial observations of The Fornax Spectroscopic Survey. This project is using
the Two-degree Field spectrograph on the Anglo-Australian Telescope to obtain
spectra for a complete sample of all 14000 objects, stellar and non-stellar,
with 16.5<Bj<19.7, in a 12 square degree area centered on the Fornax cluster of
galaxies. The surface density of compact galaxies with magnitudes 16.5<Bj<19.7
is 7+/-3 /sq.deg., representing 2.8+/-1.6% of all local (z<0.2) galaxies to
this limit. There are 12+/-3 /sq.deg. with 16.5<Bj<20.2. They are luminous
(-21.5<Mb<-18.0, for H0=50 km/s/mpc) and most have strong emission lines (H
alpha equivalent widths of 40-200 A) and small sizes typical of luminous HII
galaxies and compact narrow emission line galaxies. Four out of thirteen have
red colors and early-type spectra, so are unlikely to have been detected in any
previous surveys.Comment: LaTeX source; 5 pages including 3 figures; uses emulateapj.st
Facilitating Personal and Corporate Evangelism at Malvern Uniting Church, Adelaide, Australia
Conscious of the decline in the Australian Church, this project seeks to help members of Malvern Uniting Church to be a faith sharing community through a strategy of: group mentoring in evangelism and a weekend community festival designed as an opportunity to share faith. Malvern Uniting Church is located in a wealthy suburb of Adelaide. Church members relate to a variety of non-believers, yet feel unprepared to share faith. For this project, contextual evangelism is twofold: first, faith sharing for individuals in their everyday location and, secondly, corporate faith sharing for the church community also in its location.
Part One of this paper examines the suburb of Malvern. It highlights history and demographics, the people, their work and social lives, their children and financial priorities. It gives consideration to the negative aspects of the community and perceived unimportance of faith. Turning attention towards the church, this paper examines its history and denominational particulars, its values and stated vision, its focus of ministry and struggle to be relevant in an affluent suburb.
Part Two engages with literature pertinent to that of the Church and evangelism. Both biblical and theological information are considered. This aspect of the paper develops a relevant ecclesiology and draws a discussion of contextual evangelism and its place in the life of the church. This section ends by developing a theology of contextual evangelism that sees a progression from individual to community evangelism as modeled by Jesus and continued by the Spirit.
Part Three focuses on developing contextual evangelism in light of theological reflection, community needs, and location of church members. Careful consideration is given to people, resources, and logistics. It is hoped this would develop contextual evangelism as a way of life for Malvern Church. The goals and direction for future efforts emerge from this trial.
Theological Mentor: Kurt Fredrickson, Ph
Flowering Date of Taxonomic Families Predicts Phenological Sensitivity to Temperature: Implications for Forecasting the Effects of Climate Change on Unstudied Taxa
Premise of the study: Numerous long-term studies in seasonal habitats have tracked interannual variation in fi rst fl owering date (FFD) in relation to climate, documenting the effect of warming on the FFD of many species. Despite these efforts, long-term phenological observations are still lacking for many species. If we could forecast responses based on taxonomic affi nity, however, then we could leverage existing data to predict the climate-related phenological shifts of many taxa not yet studied; Methods: We examined phenological time series of 1226 species occurrences (1031 unique species in 119 families) across seven sites in North America and England to determine whether family membership (or family mean FFD) predicts the sensitivity of FFD to standardized interannual changes in temperature and precipitation during seasonal periods before fl owering and whether families differ signifi cantly in the direction of their phenological shifts; Key results: Patterns observed among species within and across sites are mirrored among family means across sites; earlyfl owering families advance their FFD in response to warming more than late-fl owering families. By contrast, we found no consistent relationships among taxa between mean FFD and sensitivity to precipitation as measured here; Conclusions: Family membership can be used to identify taxa of high and low sensitivity to temperature within the seasonal, temperate zone plant communities analyzed here. The high sensitivity of early-fl owering families (and the absence of earlyfl owering families not sensitive to temperature) may refl ect plasticity in fl owering time, which may be adaptive in environments where early-season conditions are highly variable among years
Radiative equilibrium in Monte Carlo radiative transfer using frequency distribution adjustment
The Monte Carlo method is a powerful tool for performing radiative
equilibrium calculations, even in complex geometries. The main drawback of the
standard Monte Carlo radiative equilibrium methods is that they require
iteration, which makes them numerically very demanding. Bjorkman & Wood
recently proposed a frequency distribution adjustment scheme, which allows
radiative equilibrium Monte Carlo calculations to be performed without
iteration, by choosing the frequency of each re-emitted photon such that it
corrects for the incorrect spectrum of the previously re-emitted photons.
Although the method appears to yield correct results, we argue that its
theoretical basis is not completely transparent, and that it is not completely
clear whether this technique is an exact rigorous method, or whether it is just
a good and convenient approximation. We critically study the general problem of
how an already sampled distribution can be adjusted to a new distribution by
adding data points sampled from an adjustment distribution. We show that this
adjustment is not always possible, and that it depends on the shape of the
original and desired distributions, as well as on the relative number of data
points that can be added. Applying this theorem to radiative equilibrium Monte
Carlo calculations, we provide a firm theoretical basis for the frequency
distribution adjustment method of Bjorkman & Wood, and we demonstrate that this
method provides the correct frequency distribution through the additional
requirement of radiative equilibrium. We discuss the advantages and limitations
of this approach, and show that it can easily be combined with the presence of
additional heating sources and the concept of photon weighting. However, the
method may fail if small dust grains are included... (abridged)Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in New Astronom
AMI Large Array radio continuum observations of Spitzer c2d small clouds and cores
We perform deep 1.8 cm radio continuum imaging towards thirteen protostellar
regions selected from the Spitzer c2d small clouds and cores programme at high
resolution (25") in order to detect and quantify the cm-wave emission from
deeply embedded young protostars. Within these regions we detect fifteen
compact radio sources which we identify as radio protostars including two
probable new detections. The sample is in general of low bolometric luminosity
and contains several of the newly detected VeLLO sources. We determine the 1.8
cm radio luminosity to bolometric luminosity correlation, L_rad -L_bol, for the
sample and discuss the nature of the radio emission in terms of the available
sources of ionized gas. We also investigate the L_rad-L_IR correlation and
suggest that radio flux density may be used as a proxy for the internal
luminosity of low luminosity protostars.Comment: submitted MNRA
The HST/ACS Coma Cluster Survey. II. Data Description and Source Catalogs
The Coma cluster was the target of a HST-ACS Treasury program designed for
deep imaging in the F475W and F814W passbands. Although our survey was
interrupted by the ACS instrument failure in 2007, the partially completed
survey still covers ~50% of the core high-density region in Coma. Observations
were performed for 25 fields that extend over a wide range of cluster-centric
radii (~1.75 Mpc) with a total coverage area of 274 arcmin^2. The majority of
the fields are located near the core region of Coma (19/25 pointings) with six
additional fields in the south-west region of the cluster. In this paper we
present reprocessed images and SExtractor source catalogs for our survey
fields, including a detailed description of the methodology used for object
detection and photometry, the subtraction of bright galaxies to measure faint
underlying objects, and the use of simulations to assess the photometric
accuracy and completeness of our catalogs. We also use simulations to perform
aperture corrections for the SExtractor Kron magnitudes based only on the
measured source flux and half-light radius. We have performed photometry for
~73,000 unique objects; one-half of our detections are brighter than the
10-sigma point-source detection limit at F814W=25.8 mag (AB). The slight
majority of objects (60%) are unresolved or only marginally resolved by ACS. We
estimate that Coma members are 5-10% of all source detections, which consist of
a large population of unresolved objects (primarily GCs but also UCDs) and a
wide variety of extended galaxies from a cD galaxy to dwarf LSB galaxies. The
red sequence of Coma member galaxies has a constant slope and dispersion across
9 magnitudes (-21<M_F814W<-13). The initial data release for the HST-ACS Coma
Treasury program was made available to the public in 2008 August. The images
and catalogs described in this study relate to our second data release.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJS. A high-resolution version is
available at http://archdev.stsci.edu/pub/hlsp/coma/release2/PaperII.pd
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