394 research outputs found
Emission-Line Properties of z > 4 Quasars
We present results of a program of high signal-to-noise spectroscopy for 44
QSOs at redshifts > 4 using the MMT and Keck observatories. The quasar spectra
cover 1100 -- 1700 A in the rest frame for sources spanning a luminosity range
of approximately 2 orders of magnitude. Comparisons between these data and
spectra of lower redshift quasars reveal a high degree of similarity, although
differences are present in the profiles and the strengths of some emission
features. An examination of the luminosity dependence of the emission lines
reveals evidence for a weak or absent Baldwin effect among z > 4 QSOs. We
compare measurements for objects in our sample with results from other high
redshift surveys characterized by different selection techniques. Distributions
of equivalent widths for these different ensembles are consistent with a common
parent population, suggesting that our sample is not strongly biased, or in any
case, subject to selection effects that are not significantly different from
other surveys, including the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Based on this
comparison, we tentatively conclude that the trends identified here are
representative of high z QSOs. In particular, the data bolster indications of
supersolar metallicities in these luminous, high-z sources, which support
scenarios that assume substantial star formation at epochs preceding or
concurrent with the QSO phenomena.Comment: 26 pages (incl. 9 figures), AASTeX v5.0, to appear in The
Astrophysical Journa
Helium abundance in the most metal-deficient blue compact galaxies: I Zw 18 and SBS 0335-052
We present high-quality spectroscopic observations of the two most-metal
deficient blue compact galaxies known, I Zw 18 and SBS 0335-052 to determine
the helium abundance. The underlying stellar absorption strongly influences the
observed intensities of He I emission lines in the brightest NW component of I
Zw 18, and hence this component should not be used for primordial He abundance
determination. The effect of underlying stellar absorption, though present, is
much smaller in the SE component. Assuming all systematic uncertainties are
negligible, the He mass fraction derived in this component is Y =
0.243+/-0.007. The high signal-to-noise ratio spectrum (> 100 in the continuum)
of SBS 0335-052 allows us to measure the helium mass fraction with a precision
better than 2% -- 5% in nine different regions along the slit. Assuming all
systematic uncertainties are negligible, the weighted mean He mass fraction in
SBS 0335-052 is Y = 0.2437+/-0.0014 when the three He I 4471, 5876 and 6678
emission lines are used, and is 0.2463+/-0.0015 when the He I 4471 emission
line is excluded. The weighted mean helium mass fraction in the two most
metal-deficient BCGs I Zw 18 and SBS 0335-052, Y=0.2462+/-0.0015, after
correction for the stellar He production results in a primordial He mass
fraction Yp = 0.2452+/-0.0015. The derived Yp leads to a baryon-to-photon ratio
of (4.7+/-1.0) 10^{-10}, consistent with the values derived from the primordial
D and 7Li abundances, and supporting the standard big bang nucleosynthesis
theory. For the most consistent set of primordial D, 4He, and 7Li abundances we
derive an equivalent number of light neutrino species 3.0+/-0.3 (95% C.L.).Comment: 28 pages, 10 figures. To appear in Ap
A contemporaneous infrared flash from a long gamma-ray burst: an echo from the central engine
The explosion that results in a cosmic gamma-ray burst (GRB) is thought to
produce emission from two physical processes -- the activity of the central
engine gives rise to the high-energy emission of the burst through internal
shocking and the subsequent interaction of the flow with the external
environment produces long-wavelength afterglow. While afterglow observations
continue to refine our understanding of GRB progenitors and relativistic
shocks, gamma-ray observations alone have not yielded a clear picture of the
origin of the prompt emission nor details of the central engine. Only one
concurrent visible-light transient has been found and was associated with
emission from an external shock. Here we report the discovery of infrared (IR)
emission contemporaneous with a GRB, beginning 7.2 minutes after the onset of
GRB 041219a. Our robotic telescope acquired 21 images during the active phase
of the burst, yielding the earliest multi-colour observations of any
long-wavelength emission associated with a GRB. Analysis of an initial IR pulse
suggests an origin consistent with internal shocks. This opens a new
possibility to study the central engine of GRBs with ground-based observations
at long wavelengths.Comment: Accepted to Nature on March 1, 2005. 9 pages, 4 figures, nature12.cls
and nature1.cls files included. This paper is under press embargo until print
publicatio
Discovery of the Optical Transient of the Gamma Ray Burst 990308
The optical transient of the faint Gamma Ray Burst 990308 was detected by the
QUEST camera on the Venezuelan 1-m Schmidt telescope starting 3.28 hours after
the burst. Our photometry gives , , , and for times ranging from 3.28 to 3.47
hours after the burst. The colors correspond to a spectral slope of close to
. Within the standard synchrotron fireball model,
this requires that the external medium be less dense than , the
electrons contain of the shock energy, and the magnetic field energy
must be less than 24% of the energy in the electrons for normal interstellar or
circumstellar densities. We also report upper limits of at 132 s
(with LOTIS), from 132-1029s (with LOTIS), at 28.2 min
(with Super-LOTIS), and a 8.5 GHz flux of at 110 days (with the
Very Large Array). WIYN 3.5-m and Keck 10-m telescopes reveal this location to
be empty of any host galaxy to and . The lack of a host
galaxy likely implies that it is either substantially subluminous or more
distant than a red shift of .Comment: ApJ Lett submitted, 5 pages, 2 figures, no space for 12 coauthor
Conceptualizing Communication Capital for a Changing Environment
With rapidly evolving technologies, boundaries between traditional modes of communication have blurred, creating an environment that scholars still describe from viewpoints as researchers in interpersonal, organizational or mass communication. This manuscript looks at the social capital literature and argues for conceptualizing âcommunication capitalâ to help understand the impact of communication phenomena in a changing environment. The literature has treated interpersonal communication variables as components of social capital and mass communication variables as factors affecting social capital, but scholars long ago recognized their reinforcing nature, leading us to develop a concept of communication capital merging symbolic activity across domains in its potential for impacting civic engagement, defined as persistent communication patterns that facilitate social problem solving in the community. Analysis of survey data shows that 4 dimensions of communication capital explain variance in civic engagement beyond that accounted for by traditional measures of social capital, media use, neighborhood communication, and efficacy
Reassessing Chinaâs Higher Education Development: A Focus on Academic Culture
During the past three and a half decades, China has been progressing in higher education in a surprisingly dramatic manner, evidenced especially by scientific publications and sheer numbers of graduates. Such a fact has national, regional and global implications. Chinaâs higher education development and its future directions are now placed highly on the research agendas of many from various parts of the world. Unlike the general acknowledgment of Chinaâs achievements, assessment of the future development of Chinaâs higher education is wide open to question. To some, Chinese universities are on a trajectory to become âworld-classâ and Chinaâs high-fliers challenge Western supremacy. To others, Chinaâs notion of âworld-classâ status has been largely imitative. Pumping resources into universities will only lead to diminishing returns as Chinese culture and practices will act as a brake to the pursuit of academic excellence. An increasing deal of attention has been paid to where China will be located in a global higher education landscape and in what shape. Based on the authorâs long-standing professional observation and recent empirical studies, this article assesses Chinaâs higher education development, with a particular focus on the challenges brought forward by academic culture. It interrogates Chinaâs pride of the idea that Chinese universities are not willing to assume that Western models define excellence, and asks how far Chinese universities could move within their current development model.postprin
Resolving the Galaxies within a Giant Lyα Nebula: Witnessing the Formation of a Galaxy Group?
Detailed analysis of the substructure of Lyα nebulae can put important constraints on the physical mechanisms at work and the properties of galaxies forming within them. Using high-resolution Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging of a Lyα nebula at z â 2.656, we have taken a census of the compact galaxies in the vicinity, used optical/near-infrared colors to select system members, and put constraints on the morphology of the spatially extended emission. The system is characterized by (1) a population of compact, low-luminosity (~0.1 L*) sourcesâ17 primarily young, small (R_e â 1-2 kpc), disky galaxies including an obscured active galactic nucleusâthat are all substantially offset (âł20 kpc) from the line-emitting nebula; (2) the lack of a central galaxy at or near the peak of the Lyα emission; and (3) several nearly coincident, spatially extended emission componentsâLyα, He II, and UV continuumâthat are extremely smooth. These morphological findings are difficult to reconcile with theoretical models that invoke outflows, cold flows, or resonant scattering, suggesting that while all of these physical phenomena may be occurring, they are not sufficient to explain the powering and large extent of Lyα nebulae. In addition, although the compact galaxies within the system are irrelevant as power sources, the region is significantly overdense relative to the field galaxy population (by at least a factor of four). These observations provide the first estimate of the luminosity function of galaxies within an individual Lyα nebula system and suggest that large Lyα nebulae may be the seeds of galaxy groups or low-mass clusters
Multi-color Classification in the Calar Alto Deep Imaging Survey
We use a multi-color classification method introduced by Wolf, Meisenheimer &
Roeser (2000) to reliably identify stars, galaxies and quasars in the up to
16-dimensional color space provided by the filter set of the Calar Alto Deep
Imaging Survey (CADIS). The samples of stars, galaxies and quasars obtained
this way have been used for dedicated studies published in separate papers. The
classification is good enough to detect quasars rather completely and
efficiently without confirmative spectroscopy. The multi-color redshifts are
accurate enough for most statistical applications, e.g. evolutionary studies of
the galaxy luminosity function. We characterize our current dataset on the
CADIS 1h-, 9h- and 16h-fields. Using Monte-Carlo simulations we model the
classification performance expected for CADIS. We present a summary of the
classification results and discuss unclassified objects. More than 99% of the
whole catalog sample at R<22 (more than 95% at R<23) are successfully
classified matching the expectations derived from the simulations. A small
number of peculiar objects challenging the classification are discussed in
detail. Spectroscopic observations are used to check the reliability of the
multi-color classification (6 mistakes among 151 objects with R<24). We also
determine the accuracy of the multi-color redshifts which are rather good for
galaxies (sigma_z = 0.03) and useful for quasars. We find the classification
performance derived from the simulations to compare well with results from the
real survey. Finally, we locate areas for potential improvement of the
classification.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures included, accepted for publication in Astronomy
& Astrophysic
Discovery of the optical transient of GRB 990308
The optical transient of the faint gamma-ray burst GRB 990308 was detected by the QUEST camera on the Venezuelan 1 m Schmidt telescope starting 3.28 hr after the burst. Our photometry gives V= 18.32 ± 0.07, R = 18.14 ± 0.06, B = 18.65 ± 0.23, and R = 18.22 ± 0.05 for times ranging from 3.28 to 3.47 hr after the burst. The colors correspond to a spectral slope of close to fv â v1/3. Within the standard synchrotron fireball model, this requires that the external medium be less dense than 104 cm-3, the electrons contain more than 20% of the shock energy, and the magnetic field energy be less than 24% of the energy in the electrons for normal interstellar or circumstellar densities. We also report upper limits of V \u3e 12.0 at 132 s (with LOTIS), V \u3e 13.4 from 132 to 1029 s (with LOTIS), V \u3e 15.3 at 28.2 minutes (with Super-LOTIS), and a 8.5 GHz flux of less than 114 ÎŒJy at 110 days (with the Very Large Array). Wisconsin-Indiana-Yale-NOAO 3.5 m and Keck 10 m telescopes reveal this location to be empty of any host galaxy to R \u3e 25.7 and K \u3e 23.3. The lack of a host galaxy likely implies that it is either substantially subluminous or more distant than a redshift of âŒ1.2
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