5,015 research outputs found
An HI survey of the Bootes Void. II. The Analysis
We discuss the results of a VLA HI survey of the Bootes void and compare the
distribution and HI properties of the void galaxies to those of galaxies found
in a survey of regions of mean cosmic density. The Bootes survey covers 1100
Mpc, or 1\% of the volume of the void and consists of 24 cubes of
typically 2 Mpc * 2 Mpc * 1280 km/s, centered on optically known galaxies.
Sixteen targets were detected in HI; 18 previously uncataloged objects were
discovered directly in HI. The control sample consists of 12 cubes centered on
IRAS selected galaxies with FIR luminosities similar to those of the Bootes
targets and located in regions of 1 to 2 times the cosmic mean density. In
addition to the 12 targets 29 companions were detected in HI. We find that the
number of galaxies within 1 Mpc of the targets is the same to within a factor
of two for void and control samples, and thus that the small scale clustering
of galaxies is the same in regions that differ by a factor of 6 in
density on larger scales. A dynamical analysis of the galaxies in the void
suggests that on scales of a few Mpc the galaxies are gravitationally bound,
forming interacting galaxy pairs, loose pairs and loose groups. One group is
compact enough to qualify as a Hickson compact group. The galaxies found in the
void are mostly late-type, gas rich systems. A careful scrutiny of their HI and
optical properties shows them to be very similar to field galaxies of the same
morphological type. This, combined with our finding that the small scale
clustering of the galaxies in the void is the same as in the field, suggests
that it is the near environment that mostly affects the evolution of galaxies.Comment: Latex file of abstract. The postscript version of the complete paper
(0.2 Mb in gzipped format) including all the figures can be retrieved from
http://www.astro.rug.nl:80/~secr/ To appear in the February 1996 issue of the
Astronomical Journa
Discovery of a Radio-loud/Radio-quiet Binary Quasar
We report the discovery of a small separation quasar pair (z=0.586, O=18.4,
19.2, sep. = 2.3 arcsec) associated with the radio source FIRST
J164311.3+315618 (S_1400 = 120 mJy). The spectrum of the brighter quasar (A)
has a much stronger narrow emission-line spectrum than the other (B), and also
stronger Balmer lines relative to the continuum. The continuum ratio of the
spectra is flat in the blue at about 2.1, but falls to 1.5 at longer
wavelengths. A K' image shows two unresolved sources with a flux ratio of 1.3.
The different colors appear to result from the contribution of the host galaxy
of B, which is evident from Ca II and high-order Balmer absorption lines
indicative of a substantial young stellar population. New 3.6 cm VLA
observations show that the compact radio source is coincident with quasar A (B
is only marginally detected). We rule out the lensing hypothesis because the
optical flux ratio is A/B = 1.2 to 2, while the radio flux ratio is A/B > 40,
and conclude that this system is a binary. Moreover, the radio-loud quasar is a
compact steep spectrum source. FIRST J164311.3+315618A, B is the lowest
redshift and smallest separation binary quasar yet identified.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Astrophysical Journal Letter
An HI survey of the bootes void; 1, the data
We present the results of a neutral hydrogen survey of the Bootes void carried out with the VLA in D-array. The survey covers \sim 1100 Mpc^{3}, about 1\% of the volume of the void as defined by Kirshner \etal 1987. We observed 24 fields, centered on known void galaxies; 16 of these were detected in HI. Eighteen uncataloged companion galaxies were discovered directly in the HI line at distances of 45\sec to 14.5\min from the target galaxies. We also present the results of follow-up optical imaging observations and discovery of one additional Bootes void galaxy, found through spectroscopy of a number of apparent companions to known void members. Our angular resolution is \sim 1\min (45 kpc) \footnote{Throughout this paper, we have assumed {H_{0}} = {\rm 100\,km\,s^{-1}Mpc^{-1}}.}, each field has a size of \sim 1\deg (2.7 Mpc). The detected HI masses range from 8\times 10^{8} to 1\times 10^{10} \msol. Typically our 2\sigma HI column density sensitivity is 2\times 10^{19} {\rm cm^{-2}}. The radio and optical data are analyzed and discussed in the following companion article (Paper~2, Szomoru, van Gorkom, Gregg and Strauss 1996)
Discovery of a Classic FR-II Broad Absorption Line Quasar from the FIRST Survey
We have discovered a remarkable quasar, FIRST J101614.3+520916, whose optical
spectrum shows unambiguous broad absorption features while its double-lobed
radio morphology and luminosity clearly indicate a classic Fanaroff-Riley Type
II radio source. Its radio luminosity places it at the extreme of the recently
established class of radio-loud broad absorption line quasars (Becker et al.
1997, 2000; Brotherton et al. 1998). Because of its hybrid nature, we speculate
that FIRST J101614.3+520916 is a typical FR-II quasar which has been
rejuvenated as a broad absorption line (BAL) quasar with a Compact Steep
Spectrum core. The direction of the jet axis of FIRST J101614.3+520916 can be
estimated from its radio structure and optical brightness, indicating that we
are viewing the system at a viewing angle of > 40 degrees. The position angles
of the radio jet and optical polarization are not well-aligned, differing by 20
to 30 degrees. When combined with the evidence presented by Becker et al.
(2000) for a sample of 29 BAL quasars showing that at least some BAL quasars
are viewed along the jet axis, the implication is that no preferred viewing
orientation is necessary to observe BAL systems in a quasar's spectrum. This,
and the probable young nature of compact steep spectrum sources, leads
naturally to the alternate hypothesis that BALs are an early stage in the lives
of quasars.Comment: 14 pages, 6 postscript figures; accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
Reduced regional brain cortical thickness in patients with heart failure.
AimsAutonomic, cognitive, and neuropsychologic deficits appear in heart failure (HF) subjects, and these compromised functions depend on cerebral cortex integrity in addition to that of subcortical and brainstem sites. Impaired autoregulation, low cardiac output, sleep-disordered-breathing, hypertension, and diabetic conditions in HF offer considerable potential to affect cortical areas by loss of neurons and glia, which would be expressed as reduced cortical thicknesses. However, except for gross descriptions of cortical volume loss/injury, regional cortical thickness integrity in HF is unknown. Our goal was to assess regional cortical thicknesses across the brain in HF, compared to control subjects.Methods and resultsWe examined localized cortical thicknesses in 35 HF and 61 control subjects with high-resolution T1-weighted images (3.0-Tesla MRI) using FreeSurfer software, and assessed group differences with analysis-of-covariance (covariates; age, gender; p<0.05; FDR). Significantly-reduced cortical thicknesses appeared in HF over controls in multiple areas, including the frontal, parietal, temporal, and occipital lobes, more markedly on the left side, within areas that control autonomic, cognitive, affective, language, and visual functions.ConclusionHeart failure subjects show reduced regional cortical thicknesses in sites that control autonomic, cognitive, affective, language, and visual functions that are deficient in the condition. The findings suggest chronic tissue alterations, with regional changes reflecting loss of neurons and glia, and presumably are related to earlier-described axonal changes. The pathological mechanisms contributing to reduced cortical thicknesses likely include hypoxia/ischemia, accompanying impaired cerebral perfusion from reduced cardiac output and sleep-disordered-breathing and other comorbidities in HF
Searching for magnetic fields in the descendants of massive OB stars
We present the results of a recent survey of cool, late-type supergiants -
the descendants of massive O- and B-type stars - that has systematically
detected magnetic fields in these stars using spectropolarimetric observations
obtained with ESPaDOnS at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope. Our observations
reveal detectable, often complex, Stokes V Zeeman signatures in Least-Squares
Deconvolved mean line profiles in a significant fraction of the observed sample
of ~30 stars.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, IAUS 272 - Active OB Stars: Structure, Evolution,
Mass Loss and Critical Limit
- …