988 research outputs found
The Fractal Dimension of Projected Clouds
The interstellar medium seems to have an underlying fractal structure which
can be characterized through its fractal dimension. However, interstellar
clouds are observed as projected two-dimensional images, and the projection of
a tri-dimensional fractal distorts its measured properties. Here we use
simulated fractal clouds to study the relationship between the tri-dimensional
fractal dimension (D_f) of modeled clouds and the dimension resulting from
their projected images. We analyze different fractal dimension estimators: the
correlation and mass dimensions of the clouds, and the perimeter-based
dimension of their boundaries (D_per). We find the functional forms relating
D_f with the projected fractal dimensions, as well as the dependence on the
image resolution, which allow to estimatethe "real" D_f value of a cloud from
its projection. The application of these results to Orion A indicates in a
self-consistent way that 2.5 < D_f < 2.7 for this molecular cloud, a value
higher than the result D_per+1 = 2.3 some times assumed in literature for
interstellar clouds.Comment: 27 pages, 13 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in ApJ. Minor
change
A "Kane's Dynamics" Model for the Active Rack Isolation System
In the late 1980s, microgravity researchers began to voice their concern that umbilical-transmitted energy could significantly degrade the acceleration environment of microgravity space science experiments onboard manned spacecraft. Since umbilicals are necessary for many experiments, control designers began to seek ways to compensate for these "indirect" disturbances. Hampton, et al., used the Kane s method to develop a model of the active rack isolation system (ARIS) that includes (1) actuator control forces, (2) direct disturbance forces, and (3) indirect, actuator-transmitted disturbances. Their model does not, however, include the indirect, umbilical-transmitted disturbances. Since the umbilical stiffnesses are not negligible, these indirect disturbances must be included in the model. Until the umbilicals have been appropriately included, the model will be incomplete. This Technical Memorandum presents a nonlinear model of ARIS with umbilicals included. Model verification was achieved by utilizing two commercial-off-the-shelf software tools. Various forces and moments were applied to the model to yield simulated responses of the system. Plots of the simulation results show how various critical points on an ARIS-outfitted international standard payload rack behave under the application of direct disturbances, indirect disturbances, and control forces. Simulations also show system response to a variety of initial conditions
Trapping of a spiral-like intermediate of the bacterial cytokinetic protein FtsZ
The earliest stage in bacterial cell division is the formation of a ring, composed of the tubulin-like protein FtsZ, at the division site. Tight spatial and temporal regulation of Z-ring formation is required to ensure that division occurs precisely at midcell between two replicated chromosomes. However, the mechanism of Z-ring formation and its regulation in vivo remain unresolved. Here we identify the defect of an interesting temperature-sensitive ftsZ mutant (ts1) of Bacillus subtilis. At the nonpermissive temperature, the mutant protein, FtsZ(Ts1), assembles into spiral-like structures between chromosomes. When shifted back down to the permissive temperature, functional Z rings form and division resumes. Our observations support a model in which Z-ring formation at the division site arises from reorganization of a long cytoskeletal spiral form of FtsZ and suggest that the FtsZ(Ts1) protein is captured as a shorter spiral-forming intermediate that is unable to complete this reorganization step. The ts1 mutant is likely to be very valuable in revealing how FtsZ assembles into a ring and how this occurs precisely at the division site. <br /
Pre-Existing Superbubbles as the Sites of Gamma-Ray Bursts
According to recent models, gamma-ray bursts apparently explode in a wide
variety of ambient densities ranging from ~ 10^{-3} to 30 cm^{-3}. The lowest
density environments seem, at first sight, to be incompatible with bursts in or
near molecular clouds or with dense stellar winds and hence with the
association of gamma-ray bursts with massive stars. We argue that low ambient
density regions naturally exist in areas of active star formation as the
interiors of superbubbles. The evolution of the interior bubble density as a
function of time for different assumptions about the evaporative or
hydrodynamical mass loading of the bubble interior is discussed. We present a
number of reasons why there should exist a large range of inferred afterglow
ambient densities whether gamma-ray bursts arise in massive stars or some
version of compact star coalescence. We predict that many gamma-ray bursts will
be identified with X-ray bright regions of galaxies, corresponding to
superbubbles, rather than with blue localized regions of star formation.
Massive star progenitors are expected to have their own circumstellar winds.
The lack of evidence for individual stellar winds associated with the
progenitor stars for the cases with afterglows in especially low density
environments may imply low wind densities and hence low mass loss rates
combined with high velocities. If gamma-ray bursts are associated with massive
stars, this combination might be expected for compact progenitors with
atmospheres dominated by carbon, oxygen or heavier elements, that is,
progenitors resembling Type Ic supernovae.Comment: 14 pages, no figures, submitted to The Astrophysical Journa
A Test of the Standard Hypothesis for the Origin of the HI Holes in Holmberg II
The nearby irregular galaxy Holmberg II has been extensively mapped in HI
using the Very Large Array (VLA), revealing intricate structure in its
interstellar gas component (Puche et al. 1992). An analysis of these structures
shows the neutral gas to contain a number of expanding HI holes. The formation
of the HI holes has been attributed to multiple supernova events occurring
within wind-blown shells around young, massive star clusters, with as many as
10-200 supernovae required to produce many of the holes. From the sizes and
expansion velocities of the holes, Puche et al. assigned ages of ~10^7 to 10^8
years. If the supernova scenario for the formation of the HI holes is correct,
it implies the existence of star clusters with a substantial population of
late-B, A and F main sequence stars at the centers of the holes. Many of these
clusters should be detectable in deep ground-based CCD images of the galaxy. In
order to test the supernova hypothesis for the formation of the HI holes, we
have obtained and analyzed deep broad-band BVR and narrow-band H-alpha images
of Ho II. We compare the optical and HI data and search for evidence of the
expected star clusters in and around the HI holes. We also use the HI data to
constrain models of the expected remnant stellar population. We show that in
several of the holes the observed upper limits for the remnant cluster
brightness are strongly inconsistent with the SNe hypothesis described in Puche
et al. Moreover, many of the HI holes are located in regions of very low
optical surface brightness which show no indication of recent star formation.
Here we present our findings and explore possible alternative explanations for
the existence of the HI holes in Ho II, including the suggestion that some of
the holes were produced by Gamma-ray burst events.Comment: 30 pages, including 6 tables and 3 images. To appear in Astron.
Journal (June 1999
A Fractal Analysis of the HI Emission from the Large Magellanic Cloud
A composite map of HI in the LMC using the ATCA interferometer and the Parkes
multibeam telescope was analyzed in several ways in an attempt to characterize
the structure of the neutral gas and to find an origin for it. Fourier
transform power spectra in 1D, 2D, and in the azimuthal direction were found to
be approximate power laws over 2 decades in length. Delta-variance methods also
showed the same power-law structure. Detailed models of these data were made
using line-of-sight integrals over fractals that are analogous to those
generated by simulations of turbulence with and without phase transitions. The
results suggested a way to measure directly for the first time the
line-of-sight thickness of the cool component of the HI disk of a nearly
face-on galaxy. The signature of this thickness was found to be present in all
of the measured power spectra.
The character of the HI structure in the LMC was also viewed by comparing
positive and negative images of the integrated emission. The geometric
structure of the high-emission regions was found to be filamentary, whereas the
geometric structure of the low-emission (intercloud) regions was found to be
patchy and round. This result suggests that compressive events formed the
high-emission regions, and expansion events, whether from explosions or
turbulence, formed the low-emission regions. The character of the structure was
also investigated as a function of scale using unsharp masks.
All of these results suggest that most of the ISM in the LMC is fractal,
presumably the result of pervasive turbulence, self-gravity, and self-similar
stirring.Comment: 30 pages, 21 figures, scheduled for ApJ Vol 548n1, Feb 10, 200
Ectopic expression of Thy-1 in the kidneys of transgenic mice induces functional and proliferative abnormalities.
Hybrid human--mouse Thy-1.1 genes were injected into pronuclei of Thy-1.2 mice to produce transgenic animals. A hybrid gene composed of the 5' part of the mouse Thy-1.1 gene combined with the 3' human untranslated regions was expressed abnormally in the kidney podocytes, which resulted in severe protein-uria and subsequent death in several founder mice. A hybrid Thy-1 gene composed of the human coding region with the 5' and 3' flanking regions of the mouse gene was expressed abnormally in a different part of the kidney (the tubular epithelia), which resulted in a proliferative kidney disorder. In addition, a neoplasm was found in the brain of one of these mice. These results show that the Thy-1 protein can play an important role in the activation, proliferation, and differentiation of many different cell types
Modeling a high mass turn down in the stellar initial mass function
Statistical sampling from the stellar initial mass function (IMF) for all
star-forming regions in the Galaxy would lead to the prediction of ~1000 Msun
stars unless there is a rapid turn-down in the IMF beyond several hundred solar
masses. Such a turndown is not necessary for dense clusters because the number
of stars sampled is always too small. Here we explore several mechanisms for an
upper mass cutoff, including an exponential decline of the star formation
probability after a turbulent crossing time. The results are in good agreement
with the observed IMF over the entire stellar mass range, and they give a
gradual turn down compared to the Salpeter function above ~100 Msun for normal
thermal Jeans mass, M_J. The upper mass turn down should scale with M_J in
different environments. A problem with the models is that they cannot give both
the observed power-law IMF out to the high-mass sampling limit in dense
clusters, as well as the observed lack of supermassive stars in whole galaxy
disks. Either there is a sharper upper-mass cutoff in the IMF, perhaps from
self-limitation, or the IMF is different for dense clusters than for the
majority of star formation that occurs at lower density. Dense clusters seem to
have an overabundance of massive stars relative to the average IMF in a galaxy.Comment: 19 pages, 2 figures, Astrophysical Journal, Vol 539, August 10, 200
The initial stellar mass function from random sampling in hierarchical clouds II: statistical fluctuations and a mass dependence for starbirth positions and times
Observed variations in the slope of the initial stellar mass function are
shown to be consistent with a model in which the protostellar gas is randomly
sampled from hierarchical clouds at a rate proportional to the square root of
the local density. RMS variations in the IMF slope around the Salpeter value
are +/- 0.4 when only 100 stars are observed, and +/- 0.1 when 1000 stars are
observed. The hierarchical-sampling model also reproduces the tendency for
massive stars to form closer to the center of a cloud, at a time somewhat later
than the formation time of the lower mass stars. The assumed density dependence
for the star formation rate is shown to be appropriate for turbulence
compression, magnetic diffusion, gravitational collapse, and clump or
wavepacket coalescence. The low mass flattening in the IMF comes from the
inability of gas to form stars below the thermal Jeans mass at typical
temperatures and pressures. Consideration of heating and cooling processes
indicate why the thermal Jeans mass should be nearly constant in normal
environments, and why it might increase in some starburst regions. The steep
IMF in the extreme field is not explained by the model, but other origins are
suggested.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures, scheduled for ApJ vol. 515, April 10, 199
Multifractal Scaling, Geometrical Diversity, and Hierarchical Structure in the Cool Interstellar Medium
Multifractal scaling (MFS) refers to structures that can be described as a
collection of interwoven fractal subsets which exhibit power-law spatial
scaling behavior with a range of scaling exponents (concentration, or
singularity, strengths) and dimensions. The existence of MFS implies an
underlying multiplicative (or hierarchical, or cascade) process. Panoramic
column density images of several nearby star- forming cloud complexes,
constructed from IRAS data and justified in an appendix, are shown to exhibit
such multifractal scaling, which we interpret as indirect but quantitative
evidence for nested hierarchical structure. The relation between the dimensions
of the subsets and their concentration strengths (the "multifractal spectrum'')
appears to satisfactorily order the observed regions in terms of the mixture of
geometries present: strong point-like concentrations, line- like filaments or
fronts, and space-filling diffuse structures. This multifractal spectrum is a
global property of the regions studied, and does not rely on any operational
definition of "clouds.'' The range of forms of the multifractal spectrum among
the regions studied implies that the column density structures do not form a
universality class, in contrast to indications for velocity and passive scalar
fields in incompressible turbulence, providing another indication that the
physics of highly compressible interstellar gas dynamics differs fundamentally
from incompressible turbulence. (Abstract truncated)Comment: 27 pages, (LaTeX), 13 figures, 1 table, submitted to Astrophysical
Journa
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