22,820 research outputs found
Bias-free Measurement of Giant Molecular Cloud Properties
(abridged) We review methods for measuring the sizes, line widths, and
luminosities of giant molecular clouds (GMCs) in molecular-line data cubes with
low resolution and sensitivity. We find that moment methods are robust and
sensitive -- making full use of both position and intensity information -- and
we recommend a standard method to measure the position angle, major and minor
axis sizes, line width, and luminosity using moment methods. Without
corrections for the effects of beam convolution and sensitivity to GMC
properties, the resulting properties may be severely biased. This is
particularly true for extragalactic observations, where resolution and
sensitivity effects often bias measured values by 40% or more. We correct for
finite spatial and spectral resolutions with a simple deconvolution and we
correct for sensitivity biases by extrapolating properties of a GMC to those we
would expect to measure with perfect sensitivity. The resulting method recovers
the properties of a GMC to within 10% over a large range of resolutions and
sensitivities, provided the clouds are marginally resolved with a peak
signal-to-noise ratio greater than 10. We note that interferometers
systematically underestimate cloud properties, particularly the flux from a
cloud. The degree of bias depends on the sensitivity of the observations and
the (u,v) coverage of the observations. In the Appendix to the paper we present
a conservative, new decomposition algorithm for identifying GMCs in
molecular-line observations. This algorithm treats the data in physical rather
than observational units, does not produce spurious clouds in the presence of
noise, and is sensitive to a range of morphologies. As a result, the output of
this decomposition should be directly comparable among disparate data sets.Comment: Accepted to PASP (19 pgs., 12 figures). The submission describes an
IDL software package available from
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~erosolow/cprops
On stochastic control and optimal measurement strategies
The control of stochastic dynamic systems is studied with particular emphasis on those which influence the quality or nature of the measurements which are made to effect control. Four main areas are discussed: (1) the meaning of stochastic optimality and the means by which dynamic programming may be applied to solve a combined control/measurement problem; (2) a technique by which it is possible to apply deterministic methods, specifically the minimum principle, to the study of stochastic problems; (3) the methods described are applied to linear systems with Gaussian disturbances to study the structure of the resulting control system; and (4) several applications are considered
Jamming under tension in polymer crazes
Molecular dynamics simulations are used to study a unique expanded jammed
state. Tension transforms many glassy polymers from a dense glass to a network
of fibrils and voids called a craze. Entanglements between polymers and
interchain friction jam the system after a fixed increase in volume. As in
dense jammed systems, the distribution of forces is exponential, but they are
tensile rather than compressive. The broad distribution of forces has important
implications for fibril breakdown and the ultimate strength of crazes.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Electron propagation in crossed magnetic and electric fields
Laser-atom interaction can be an efficient mechanism for the production of
coherent electrons. We analyze the dynamics of monoenergetic electrons in the
presence of uniform, perpendicular magnetic and electric fields. The Green
function technique is used to derive analytic results for the field--induced
quantum mechanical drift motion of i) single electrons and ii) a dilute Fermi
gas of electrons. The method yields the drift current and, at the same time it
allows us to quantitatively establish the broadening of the (magnetic) Landau
levels due to the electric field: Level number k is split into k+1 sublevels
that render the th oscillator eigenstate in energy space. Adjacent Landau
levels will overlap if the electric field exceeds a critical strength. Our
observations are relevant for quantum Hall configurations whenever electric
field effects should be taken into account.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, submitte
Infrared Photometry of Starless Dense Cores
Deep JHKs photometry was obtained towards eight dense molecular cores and J-H
vs. H-Ks color-color plots are presented. Our photometry, sensitive to the
detection of a 1 solar mass, 1 X 10^6 year old star through approx. 35 - 50
magnitudes of visual extinction, shows no indication of the presence of
star/disk systems based on J-H vs. H-Ks colors of detected objects. The stars
detected towards the cores are generally spatially anti-correlated with core
centers suggesting a background origin, although we cannot preclude the
possibility that some stars detected at H and Ks alone, or Ks alone, are not
low mass stars or brown dwarfs (< 0.3 Solar Masses) behind substantial amounts
of visual extinction (e.g. 53 magnitudes for L183B). Lower limits to optical
extinctions are estimated for the detected background stars, with high
extinctions being encountered, in the extreme case ranging up to at least Av =
46, and probably higher. The extinction data are used to estimate cloud masses
and densities which are comparable to those determined from molecular line
studies. Variations in cloud extinctions are consistent with a systematic
nature to cloud density distributions and column density variations and
extinctions are found to be consistent with submillimeter wave continuum
studies of similar regions. The results suggest that some cores have achieved
significant column density contrasts (approx. 30) on sub-core scales (approx.
0.05 pc) without having formed known stars.Comment: 44 pages including tables and figures, accepted ApJ, March 24, 200
Tidal Disruption of Protoclusters in Giant Molecular Clouds
We study the collapse of protoclusters within a giant molecular cloud (GMC)
to determine the conditions under which collapse is significantly disrupted.
Motivated by observations of star forming regions which exhibit flattened cloud
structures, this study considers collapsing protoclusters with disk geometries.
The collapse of a 10^3 Msun protocluster initially a distance of 2-10 pc from a
10^3 - 10^6 Msun point mass is numerically calculated. Simulations with zero
initial relative velocity between the two are completed as well as simulations
with relative velocities consistent with those observed in GMCs. The results
allow us to define the conditions under which it is safe to assume protocluster
collapse proceeds as if in isolation. For instance, we find the collapse of a
10^3 Msun protocluster will be significantly disrupted if it is within 2-4 pc
of a 10^4 Msun point mass. Thus, the collapse of a 10^3 Msun protocluster can
be considered to proceed as if in isolation if it is more than ~ 4 pc away from
a 10^4 Msun compact object. In addition, in no portion of the sampled parameter
space does the gravitational interaction between the protocluster disk and the
massive particle significantly disperse the disk into the background GMC. We
discuss the distribution of clusters of young stellar objects within the
Perseus and Mon R2 star forming regions, which are consistent with the results
of our simulations and the limitations of our results in gas dominated regions
such as the Orion cloud.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
Chemistry in isolation: High CCH/HCO+ line ratio in the AMIGA galaxy CIG 638
Multi-molecule observations towards an increasing variety of galaxies have
been showing that the relative molecular abundances are affected by the type of
activity. However, these studies are biased towards bright active galaxies,
which are typically in interaction. We study the molecular composition of one
of the most isolated galaxies in the local Universe where the physical and
chemical properties of their molecular clouds have been determined by intrinsic
mechanisms. We present 3 mm broad band observations of the galaxy CIG 638,
extracted from the AMIGA sample of isolated galaxies. The emission of the J=1-0
transitions of CCH, HCN, HCO+, and HNC are detected. Integrated intensity
ratios between these line are compared with similar observations from the
literature towards active galaxies including starburst galaxies (SB), active
galactic nuclei (AGN), luminous infrared galaxies (LIRG), and GMCs in M33. A
significantly high ratio of CCH with respect to HCN, HCO+, and HNC is found
towards CIG 638 when compared with all other galaxies where these species have
been detected. This points to either an overabundance of CCH or to a relative
lack of dense molecular gas as supported by the low HCN/CO ratio, or both. The
data suggest that the CIG 638 is naturally a less perturbed galaxy where a
lower fraction of dense molecular gas, as well as a more even distribution
could explain the measured ratios. In this scenario the dense gas tracers would
be naturally dimmer, while the UV enhanced CCH, would be overproduced in a less
shielded medium.Comment: Letter accepted for publication in A&
Quantum Resonances of Weakly Linked, Mesoscopic, Superconducting Dots
We examine quantum properties of mesoscopic, Josephson coupled
superconducting dots, in the limit that charging effects and quantization of
energy levels within the dots are negligible, but quasi-particle transmission
into the weak link is not. We demonstrate that quasi-particle resonances lead
to current-phase relations, which deviate markedly from those of weak links
connecting macroscopic superconductors. Results for the steady state dc
Josephson current of two coupled dots are presented.Comment: Tex, 3 figures available on request to [email protected] (Andy
Martin
Humanistic Perspectives in Criminology
In the past two decades, the field of criminology has changed dramatically. Mainstream criminology, which focused primarily on the etiology of behavior taken for granted as criminal, has been successively challenged by a number of different sociological theories and perspectives. These challenges have come from the labeling or interactionist perspective, various pluralistic conflict theories, and a number of radical, critical, or Marxist approaches. Although there are many differences among these theoretical developments, they share a common set of humanistic concerns. All of these perspectives attempt to combine a theoretical explanation of crime and social control with a practical concern for human liberation and social justice. All of these perspectives are concerned, in one way or another, with the way in which the social structuring of crime and social control affects the human rights, survival, and material well-being of people
Release of Mast Cell Tryptase into Saliva: A Tool to Diagnose Food Allergy by a Mucosal Challenge Test?
Background: Our aim was to examine whether measurement of the saliva mast cell tryptase (MCT) concentrations before and after a mucosal challenge test with the offending food would be helpful in diagnosing food allergy. Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of 44 food challenge tests performed in 38 patients between 2006 and 2009. Patients with a suspected history of food allergy chewed the food until they developed symptoms or until the amount of time known from the patients' history to usually be required for the provocation of symptoms had passed. In 5 patients, saliva samples for the measurement of MCT were collected at minutes 0, 1, 4, 8, 11, and 16 after the first onset of symptoms. The remainder of the patients only had samples taken before chewing and 4 min after the end of the test period. Results: During repeated measurements, MCT peaked about 4 min after the onset of symptoms (p = 0.028). During 33 of the 44 tests (75.0%), we observed oral symptoms during testing; after 25 of the 33 (75.8%) tests evoking symptoms, the saliva MCT concentration increased. The MCT increase was negative in all other tests where no oral symptoms could be provoked. Conclusions: The measurement of saliva MCT 4 min after the onset of symptoms may be helpful to diagnose food allergy. Because of numerous confounding variables, however, a negative saliva MCT increase does not exclude food allergy. Copyright (C) 2011 S. Karger AG, Base
- …