957 research outputs found
The Peculiar Type Ia Supernova 1999by: Spectroscopy at Early Epochs
We present medium resolution (lambda/Delta lambda = 2500) optical
spectroscopy of SN 1999by in NGC 2841 made around its light maximum. The depth
ratio of the two Si II features at 5800 AA and 6150 AA being R(SiII) approx.
0.63 at maximum indicates that this SN belongs to the peculiar, sub-luminous
SNe Ia. Radial velocities inferred from the minimum of the 6150 AA trough
reveal a steeper decline of the velocity curve than expected for ``normal'' SNe
Ia, consistent with the behavior of published VRI light curves. A revised
absolute magnitude of SN 1999by and distance to its host galaxy NGC 2841 is
estimated based on the Multi-Color Light Curve Shape (MLCS) method, resulting
in M_V(max)=-18.06+/- 0.1 mag and d = 17.1+/-1.2 Mpc, respectively. An
approximative linear dependence of the luminosity parameter Delta on R(SiII) is
presented.Comment: accepted for publication in Astron. Journal (2001 June
Uncertainty-principle noise in vacuum-tunneling transducers
The fundamental sources of noise in a vacuum-tunneling probe used as an
electromechanical transducer to monitor the location of a test mass are
examined using a first-quantization formalism. We show that a tunneling
transducer enforces the Heisenberg uncertainty principle for the position and
momentum of a test mass monitored by the transducer through the presence of two
sources of noise: the shot noise of the tunneling current and the momentum
fluctuations transferred by the tunneling electrons to the test mass. We
analyze a number of cases including symmetric and asymmetric rectangular
potential barriers and a barrier in which there is a constant electric field.
Practical configurations for reaching the quantum limit in measurements of the
position of macroscopic bodies with such a class of transducers are studied
HST/FOS Eclipse Observations of the Nova-like Cataclysmic Variable UX Ursae Majoris
[abridged abstract]
We present and analyze Hubble Space Telescope observations of the eclipsing
nova-like cataclysmic variable UX UMa obtained with the Faint Object
Spectrograph. Two eclipses each were observed with the G160L grating (covering
the ultraviolet waveband) in August of 1994 and with the PRISM (covering the
near-ultraviolet to near-infrared) in November of the same year. The system was
50% brighter in November than in August, which, if due to a change in the
accretion rate, indicates a fairly substantial increase in Mdot_acc by >~ 50%.
Model disk spectra constructed as ensembles of stellar atmospheres provide
poor descriptions of the observed post-eclipse spectra, despite the fact that
UX UMa's light should be dominated by the disk at this time. Suitably scaled
single temperature model stellar atmospheres with T_eff = 12,500-14,500 K
actually provide a better match to both the ultraviolet and optical
post-eclipse spectra. Evidently, great care must be taken in attempts to derive
accretion rates from comparisons of disk models to observations.
One way to reconcile disk models with the observed post-eclipse spectra is to
postulate the presence of a significant amount of optically thin material in
the system. Such an optically thin component might be associated with the
transition region (``chromosphere'') between the disk photosphere and the fast
wind from the system, whose presence has been suggested by Knigge & Drew
(1997).Comment: 35 pages, including 12 figures; to appear in the ApJ (Vol. 499
Isospectral domains with mixed boundary conditions
We construct a series of examples of planar isospectral domains with mixed
Dirichlet-Neumann boundary conditions. This is a modification of a classical
problem proposed by M. Kac.Comment: 9 figures. Statement of Theorem 5.1 correcte
Determining the Physical Properties of the B Stars I. Methodology and First Results
We describe a new approach to fitting the UV-to-optical spectra of B stars to
model atmospheres and present initial results. Using a sample of lightly
reddened stars, we demonstrate that the Kurucz model atmospheres can produce
excellent fits to either combined low dispersion IUE and optical photometry or
HST FOS spectrophotometry, as long as the following conditions are fulfilled:
1) an extended grid of Kurucz models is employed,
2) the IUE NEWSIPS data are placed on the FOS absolute flux system using the
Massa & Fitzpatrick (1999) transformation, and
3) all of the model parameters and the effects of interstellar extinction are
solved for simultaneously.
When these steps are taken, the temperatures, gravities, abundances and
microturbulence velocities of lightly reddened B0-A0 V stars are determined to
high precision. We also demonstrate that the same procedure can be used to fit
the energy distributions of stars which are reddened by any UV extinction curve
which can be expressed by the Fitzpatrick & Massa (1990) parameterization
scheme.
We present an initial set of results and verify our approach through
comparisons with angular diameter measurements and the parameters derived for
an eclipsing B star binary. We demonstrate that the metallicity derived from
the ATLAS 9 fits to main sequence B stars is essentially the Fe abundance. We
find that a near zero microturbulence velocity provides the best-fit to all but
the hottest or most luminous stars (where it may become a surrogate for
atmospheric expansion), and that the use of white dwarfs to calibrate UV
spectrophotometry is valid.Comment: 17 pages, including 2 pages of Tables and 6 pages of Figures.
Astrophysical Jounral, in pres
Starcounts Redivivus. IV. Density Laws Through Photometric Parallaxes
In an effort to more precisely define the spatial distribution of Galactic
field stars, we present an analysis of the photometric parallaxes of 70,000
stars covering nearly 15 square degrees in seven Kapteyn Selected Areas. We
address the affects of Malmquist Bias, subgiant/giant contamination,
metallicity and binary stars upon the derived density laws. The affect of
binary stars is the most significant. We find that while the disk-like
populations of the Milky Way are easily constrained in a simultaneous analysis
of all seven fields, no good simultaneous solution for the halo is found. We
have applied halo density laws taken from other studies and find that the
Besancon flattened power law halo model (c/a=0.6, r^-2.75) produces the best
fit to our data. With this halo, the thick disk has a scale height of 750 pc
with an 8.5% normalization to the old disk. The old disk scale height is
280-300 pc. Corrected for a binary fraction of 50%, these scale heights are 940
pc and 350-375 pc, respectively. Even with this model, there are systematic
discrepancies between the observed and predicted density distributions. Our
model produces density overpredictions in the inner Galaxy and density
underpredictions in the outer Galaxy. A possible solution is modeling the
stellar halo as a two-component system in which the halo has a flattened inner
distribution and a roughly spherical, but substructured outer distribution.
Further reconciliation could be provided by a flared thick disk, a structure
consistent with a merger origin for that population. (Abridged)Comment: 66 pages, accepted to Astrophysical journal, some figures compresse
A review of implant provision for hypodontia patients within a Scottish referral centre
Background: Implant treatment to replace congenitally missing teeth often involves multidisciplinary input in a secondary care environment. High quality patient care requires an in-depth knowledge of treatment requirements.
Aim: This service review aimed to determine treatment needs, efficiency of service and outcomes achieved in hypodontia patients. It also aimed to determine any specific difficulties encountered in service provision, and suggest methods to overcome these.
Methods: Hypodontia patients in the Unit of Periodontics of the Scottish referral centre under consideration, who had implant placement and fixed restoration, or review completed over a 31 month period, were included. A standardised data collection form was developed and completed with reference to the patient's clinical record. Information was collected with regard to: the indication for implant treatment and its extent; the need for, complexity and duration of orthodontic treatment; the need for bone grafting and the techniques employed and indicators of implant success.
Conclusion: Implant survival and success rates were high for those patients reviewed. Incidence of biological complications compared very favourably with the literature
The Star Formation Epoch of the Most Massive Early-Type Galaxies
We present new Keck spectroscopy of early-type galaxies in three galaxy
clusters at z~0.5. We focus on the fundamental plane (FP) relation, and combine
the kinematics with structural parameters determined from HST images. The
galaxies obey clear FP relations, which are offset from the FP of the nearby
Coma cluster due to passive evolution of the stellar populations. The z~0.5
data are combined with published data for 11 additional clusters at
0.18<z<1.28, to determine the evolution of the mean M/L(B) ratio of cluster
galaxies with masses M>10^11 M_sun, as implied by the FP. We find
dlog(M/L(B))/dz = -0.555+-0.042, stronger evolution than was previously
inferred from smaller samples. The observed evolution depends on the
luminosity-weighted mean age of the stars in the galaxies, the initial mass
function (IMF), selection effects due to progenitor bias, and other parameters.
Assuming a normal IMF but allowing for various other sources of uncertainty we
find z* = 2.01+-0.20 for the luminosity-weighted mean star formation epoch. The
main uncertainty is the slope of the IMF in the range 1-2 Solar masses: we find
z* = 4.0 for a top-heavy IMF with slope x=0. The M/L(B) ratios of the cluster
galaxies are compared to those of recently published samples of field
early-type galaxies at 0.32<z<1.14. Assuming that progenitor bias and the IMF
do not depend on environment we find that the present-day age of stars in
massive field galaxies is 4.1 +- 2.0 % (~0.4 Gyr) less than that of stars in
massive cluster galaxies, consistent with most, but not all, previous studies
of local and distant early-type galaxies. This relatively small age difference
is surprising in the context of expectations from ``standard'' hierarchical
galaxy formation models. [ABRIDGED]Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. Minor corrections to match published
versio
Structural Parameters of Thin and Thick Disks in Edge-On Disk Galaxies
We analyze the global structure of 34 late-type, edge-on, undisturbed, disk
galaxies spanning a wide range of mass. We measure structural parameters for
the galaxies using two-dimensional least-squares fitting to our -band
photometry. The fits require both a thick and a thin disk to adequately fit the
data. The thick disks have larger scale heights and longer scale lengths than
the embedded thin disks, by factors of ~2 and ~1.25, respectively. The observed
structural parameters agree well with the properties of thick and thin disks
derived from star counts in the Milky Way and from resolved stellar populations
in nearby galaxies. We find that massive galaxies' luminosities are dominated
by the thin disk. However, in low mass galaxies (Vc < 120 km/s), thick disk
stars contribute nearly half of the luminosity and dominate the stellar mass.
Thus, although low mass dwarf galaxies appear blue, the majority of their stars
are probably quite old.
Our data are most easily explained by a formation scenario where the thick
disk is assembled through direct accretion of stellar material from merging
satellites while the thin disk is formed from accreted gas. The baryonic
fraction in the thin disk therefore constrains the gas-richness of the merging
pre-galactic fragments. If we include the mass in HI as part of the thin disk,
the thick disk contains <10% of the baryons in high mass galaxies, and ~25-30%
of the baryons in low-mass galaxies. We discuss how our trends can be explained
by supernova-driven outflow at early times as well as the possibilities for
predicting abundance trends in thick disks, and for removing discrepancies
between semi-analytic galaxy formation models and the observed colors of low
mass galaxies. (abstract abridged)Comment: 25 pages, 24 figures, accepted for publication in A
Mass-Selection and the Evolution of the Morphology-Density Relation from z=0.8 to z=0
We examined the morphology-density relations for galaxy samples selected by
luminosity and by mass in each of five massive X-ray clusters from z=0.023 to
0.83 for 674 spectroscopically-confirmed members. Rest-frame optical colors and
visual morphologies were obtained primarily from Hubble Space Telescope images.
Morphology-density relations (MDR) are derived in each cluster from a complete,
luminosity-selected sample of 452 galaxies with a magnitude limit M_V <
M^{*}_{V} + 1. The change in the early-type fraction with redshift matches
previous work for massive clusters of galaxies. We performed a similar
analysis, deriving MDRs for complete, mass-selected samples of 441 galaxies
with a mass-limit of 10^{10.6} M_{\sun}. Our mass limit includes faint objects,
the equivalent of =~1 mag below L^{*} for the red cluster galaxies, and
encompasses =~70% of the stellar mass in cluster galaxies. The MDRs in the
mass-selected sample at densities of Sigma > 50 galaxies Mpc^{-2} are similar
to those in the luminosity-selected sample but show larger early-type
fractions. However, the trend with redshift in the fraction of elliptical and
S0 galaxies with masses > 10^{10.6} M_{\sun} differs significantly between the
mass- and luminosity-selected samples. The clear trend seen in the early-type
fraction from z=0 to z=~ 0.8 is not found in mass-selected samples. The
early-type galaxy fraction changes much less, and is consistent with being
constant at 92% +/- 4% at \Sigma> 500 galaxies Mpc^{-2} and 83 +/- 3% at 50 <
\Sigma < 500 galaxies Mpc^{-2}. This suggests that galaxies of mass lower than
> 10^{10.6} M_{\sun} play a significant role in the evolution of the early-type
fraction in luminosity-selected samples. (Abstract abridged)Comment: 18 pages in emulate ApJ format, with 10 color figures, Accepted to
ApJ. Version updated to reflect published version, includes new references
and a correction to table
- …