2,114 research outputs found
A Dusty Mg~II absorber Associated with the Quasar SDSS J003545.13+011441.2
We report on a dusty Mg~II absorber associated with the quasar
SDSSJ003545.13+011441.2 (hereafter J0035+0114) at =1.5501, which is the
strongest one among the three Mg~II absorbers along the sight line of quasar.
The two low redshift intervening absorbers are at =0.7436, 0.5436,
respectively. Based on the photometric and spectroscopic data of Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (hereafter SDSS), we infer the rest frame color excess E(\bv) due to
the associated dust is more than 0.07 by assuming a Small Magellanic Cloud
(hereafter SMC) type extinction curve. Our follow-up moderate resolution
spectroscopic observation at the 10-m Keck telescope with the ESI spectrometer
enable us to reliably identify most of the important metal elements, such as
Zn, Fe, Mn, Mg, Al, Si, Cr, and Ni in the associated system. We measure the
column density of each species and detect significant dust depletion. In
addition, we develop a simulation technique to gauge the significance of
2175-{\AA} dust absorption bump on the SDSS quasar spectra. By using it, we
analyze the SDSS spectrum of J0035+0114 for the presence of a associated
2175-{\AA} extinction feature and report a tentative detection at
2 significant level.Comment: 24 Pages, 8 Figures, 4 Tables; Published on Ap
Towards Detecting The 2175-{\AA} Dust Feature Associated With Strong High Redshift Mg {\ss}II Absorption Lines
We report detections of 39 2175-{\AA} dust extinction bump candidates
associated with strong Mg II absorption lines at z 1--1.8 on quasar
spectra in Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) DR3. These strong Mg II absorption
line systems are detected among 2,951 strong Mg II absorbers with the rest
equivalent width 1.0{\AA} at , which is part
of a full sample of 7,421 strong Mg II absorbers compiled by Prochter et al.
(2006). The redshift range of the absorbers is chosen to allow the 2175-{\AA}
extinction features to be completely covered within the SDSS spectrograph
operation wavelength range. An upper limit of the background quasar emission
redshift at z2.1 is set to prevent the Ly forest lines from
contaminating the sensitive spectral region for the 2175-{\AA} bump
measurements. The FM90 (Fitzpatrick & Massa 1990) parameterization is applied
to model the Optical/UV extinction curve in the rest frame of Mg II absorbers
of the 2175-{\AA} bump candidates. The simulation technique developed by Jiang
et al. (2010a, b) is used to derive the statistical significance of the
candidate 2175-{\AA} bumps. A total of 12 absorbers are detected with
2175-{\AA} bumps at a 5 level of statistical significance, 10 are
detected at a 4 level and 17 are detected at a 3 level. Most of
the candidate bumps in this work are similar to the relatively weak 2175-{\AA}
bumps observed in the Large Magellanic Clouds (LMC) LMC2 supershell rather than
the strong ones observed in the Milky Way (MW). This sample has greatly
increased the total number of 2175-{\AA} extinction bumps measured on SDSS
quasar spectra. Follow-up observations may rule out some of possible false
detections and reveal the physical and chemical natures of 2175-{\AA} quasar
absorbers.Comment: 71 pages, 6 tables, 49 figures, accepted by ApJ, Table 1 is available
entirely at http://home.ustc.edu.cn/~jpaty/dataset/qso_dr7.dat ;Table 2 is
available entirely at http://home.ustc.edu.cn/~jpaty/dataset/rejected.lis
Grain Refinement in Iron-Based Materials
A process for manufacturing an iron-based alloy comprising forming targeted fine oxide and/or carbide dispersoids in a melt, and sequentially precipitating transition-metal nitrides on the dispersoids for heterogeneous nucleation of equiaxed grains. An iron-based cast alloy having a highly equiaxed fine grain structure
Comparison of Wide and Compact Fourth Order Formulations of the Navier-Stokes Equations
In this study the numerical performances of wide and compact fourth order
formulation of the steady 2-D incompressible Navier-Stokes equations will be
investigated and compared with each other. The benchmark driven cavity flow
problem will be solved using both wide and compact fourth order formulations
and the numerical performances of both formulations will be presented and also
the advantages and disadvantages of both formulations will be discussed
The z=5 Quasar Luminosity Function from SDSS Stripe 82
We present a measurement of the Type I quasar luminosity function at z=5
using a large sample of spectroscopically confirmed quasars selected from
optical imaging data. We measure the bright end (M_1450<-26) with Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (SDSS) data covering ~6000 deg^2, then extend to lower luminosities
(M_1450<-24) with newly discovered, faint z~5 quasars selected from 235 deg^2
of deep, coadded imaging in the SDSS Stripe 82 region (the celestial equator in
the Southern Galactic Cap). The faint sample includes 14 quasars with spectra
obtained as ancillary science targets in the SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation
Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS), and 59 quasars observed at the MMT and Magellan
telescopes. We construct a well-defined sample of 4.7<z<5.1 quasars that is
highly complete, with 73 spectroscopic identifications out of 92 candidates.
Our color selection method is also highly efficient: of the 73 spectra
obtained, 71 are high redshift quasars. These observations reach below the
break in the luminosity function (M_1450* ~ -27). The bright end slope is steep
(beta <~ -4), with a constraint of beta < -3.1 at 95% confidence. The break
luminosity appears to evolve strongly at high redshift, providing an
explanation for the flattening of the bright end slope reported previously. We
find a factor of ~2 greater decrease in the number density of luminous quasars
(M_1450<-26) from z=5 to z=6 than from z=4 to z=5, suggesting a more rapid
decline in quasar activity at high redshift than found in previous surveys. Our
model for the quasar luminosity function predicts that quasars generate ~30% of
the ionizing photons required to keep the universe ionized at z=5.Comment: 29 pages, 22 figures, ApJ accepted (updated to published version
FIRST-2MASS Red Quasars: Transitional Objects Emerging from the Dust
We present a sample of 120 dust-reddened quasars identified by matching radio
sources detected at 1.4 GHz in the FIRST survey with the near-infrared 2MASS
catalog and color-selecting red sources. Optical and/or near-infrared
spectroscopy provide broad wavelength sampling of their spectral energy
distributions that we use to determine their reddening, characterized by
E(B-V). We demonstrate that the reddening in these quasars is best-described by
SMC-like dust. This sample spans a wide range in redshift and reddening (0.1 <
z < 3, 0.1 < E(B-V) < 1.5), which we use to investigate the possible
correlation of luminosity with reddening. At every redshift, dust-reddened
quasars are intrinsically the most luminous quasars. We interpret this result
in the context of merger-driven quasar/galaxy co-evolution where these reddened
quasars are revealing an emergent phase during which the heavily obscured
quasar is shedding its cocoon of dust prior to becoming a "normal" blue quasar.
When correcting for extinction, we find that, depending on how the parent
population is defined, these red quasars make up < 15-20% of the luminous
quasar population. We estimate, based on the fraction of objects in this phase,
that its duration is 15-20% as long as the unobscured, blue quasar phase.Comment: 21 pages, 17 figures plus a spectral atlas. Accepted for publication
in the Astrophysical Journa
Real-Time Sensing of Single-Ligand Delivery with Nanoaperture-Integrated Microfluidic Devices
The measurement of biological events on the surface of live cells at the single-molecule level is complicated by several factors including high protein densities that are incompatible with single-molecule imaging, cellular autofluorescence, and protein mobility on the cell surface. Here, we fabricated a device composed of an array of nanoscale apertures coupled with a microfluidic delivery system to quantify single-ligand interactions with proteins on the cell surface. We cultured live cells directly on the device and isolated individual epidermal growth factor receptors (EGFRs) in the apertures while delivering fluorescently labeled epidermal growth factor. We observed single ligands binding to EGFRs, allowing us to quantify the ligand turnover in real time. These results demonstrate that this nanoaperture-coupled microfluidic device allows for the spatial isolation of individual membrane proteins while maintaining them in their cellular environment, providing the capability to monitor single-ligand binding events while maintaining receptors in their physiological environment. These methods should be applicable to a wide range of membrane proteins
Finishing genomes with limited resources: lessons from an ensemble of microbial genomes
While new sequencing technologies have ushered in an era where microbial genomes can be easily sequenced, the goal of routinely producing high-quality draft and finished genomes in a cost-effective fashion has still remained elusive. Due to shorter read lengths and limitations in library construction protocols, shotgun sequencing and assembly based on these technologies often results in fragmented assemblies. Correspondingly, while draft assemblies can be obtained in days, finishing can take many months and hence the time and effort can only be justified for high-priority genomes and in large sequencing centers. In this work, we revisit this issue in light of our own experience in producing finished and nearly-finished genomes for a range of microbial species in a small-lab setting. These genomes were finished with surprisingly little investments in terms of time, computational effort and lab work, suggesting that the increased access to sequencing might also eventually lead to a greater proportion of finished genomes from small labs and genomics cores
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project : an investigation of biases in C iv emission line properties
We investigate the dependence on data quality of quasar properties measured from the C iv emission line region at high redshifts. Our measurements come from 32 epochs of Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project spectroscopic observations of 482 z > 1.46 quasars. We compare the differences between measurements made from the single-epoch (SE) and coadded spectra, focusing on the C iv λ1549 emission line because of its importance for studies of high-redshift quasar demographics and physical properties, including black hole masses. In addition to statistical errors increasing (by factors of ∼2–4), we find increasing systematic offsets with decreasing signal-to-noise ratio (S/N). The systematic difference (measurement uncertainty) in our lowest-S/N ( 10, although offsets in lower-S/N spectra exceed the statistical uncertainties by only a factor of ∼1.5 and may depend on the type of functional fit to the line. Characterizing the C iv line profile by the kurtosis is the least robust property investigated, as the median systematic coadded–SE measurement differences are larger than the statistical uncertainties for all S/N subsamples.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
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