1,722 research outputs found
The Resolved Outer Population of NGC6822 with WFPC2
We present F336W (U), F439W (B), F555W (V), and F675W (R) Wide Field
Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) photometry of two outer regions of the Local Group
dwarf irregular galaxy NGC6822. The NE region is ~13 arcmin from the galaxy
centre, while the W region lies 10 arcmin out, and within the wispy low surface
brightness outer regions of the galaxy. The fields are not crowded and contain
few NGC 6822 stars. We discuss errors and uncertainties and find that the W
region contains a main sequence that extends to stars of about 2 solar masses,
with an age of about 200 Myr. The NE region has no main sequence or stars
younger than 1 Gyr, but does contain some luminous red stars that are not
matched in the W field. These stars are not clumped in the field. The results
suggest that the W region may be a trace of a tidal event that triggered the
current star-formation in this isolated galaxy.Comment: 12 pages including 2 tables, plus 4 figures (#1 omitted) To appear in
PAS
Proof of the Double Bubble Conjecture in R^n
The least-area hypersurface enclosing and separating two given volumes in R^n
is the standard double bubble.Comment: 20 pages, 22 figure
Parenting for Lifelong Health for young children: a randomized controlled trial of a parenting program in South Africa to prevent harsh parenting and child conduct problems
Background:
Parenting programs suitable for delivery at scale in lowâresource contexts are urgently needed. We conducted a randomized trial of Parenting for Lifelong Health (PLH) for Young Children, a lowâcost 12âsession program designed to increase positive parenting and reduce harsh parenting and conduct problems in children aged 2â9.
Methods:
Two hundred and ninetyâsix caregivers, whose children showed clinical levels of conduct problems (Eyberg Child Behavior Inventory Problem Score, >15), were randomly assigned using a 1:1 ratio to intervention or control groups. At t0, and at 4â5 months (t1) and 17 months (t2) after randomization, research assistants blind to group assignment assessed (through caregiver selfâreport and structured observation) 11 primary outcomes: positive parenting, harsh parenting, and child behavior; four secondary outcomes: parenting stress, caregiver depression, poor monitoring/supervision, and social support. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02165371); Pan African Clinical Trial Registry (PACTR201402000755243); Violence Prevention Trials Register (http://www.preventviolence.info/Trials?ID=24).
Results:
Caregivers attended on average 8.4 sessions. After adjustment for 30 comparisons, strongest results were as follows: at t1, frequency of selfâreported positive parenting strategies (10% higher in the intervention group, p = .003), observed positive parenting (39% higher in the intervention group, p = .003), and observed positive child behavior (11% higher in the intervention group, p = .003); at t2, both observed positive parenting and observed positive child behavior were higher in the intervention group (24%, p = .003; and 17%, p = .003, respectively). Results with pâvalues < .05 prior to adjustment were as follows: At t1, the intervention group selfâreported 11% fewer child problem behaviors, 20% fewer problems with implementing positive parenting strategies, and less physical and psychological discipline (28% and 14% less, respectively). There were indications that caregivers reported 20% less depression but 7% more parenting stress at t1. Group differences were nonsignificant for observed negative child behavior, and caregiverâreported child behavior, poor monitoring or supervision, and caregiver social support.
Conclusions:
PLH for Young Children shows promise for increasing positive parenting and reducing harsh parenting
Probing the Kinematics of the Narrow-Line Region in Seyfert Galaxies with Slitless Spectroscopy: Observational Results
We present slitless spectra of 10 Seyfert galaxies observed with the Space
Telescope Imaging Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope. The spectra cover
the [OIII] 4959, 5007 emission lines at a spectral resolving power of ~9000 and
a spatial resolution of 0.1". We compare the slitless spectra with previous HST
narrow-band images to determine the velocity shifts and dispersions of the
bright emission-line knots in the narrow-line regions (NLRs) of these Seyferts.
Many knots are spatially resolved with sizes of tenths of arcsecs,
corresponding to tens of pcs, and yet they appear to move coherently with
radial velocities between zero and +/- 1200 km/s with respect to the systemic
velocities of their hostgalaxies. The knots also show a broad range in velocity
dispersion, ranging from ~30 km/s (the velocity resolution) to ~1000 km/s FWHM.
Most of the Seyfert galaxies in this sample show an organized flow pattern,
with radial velocities near zero at the nucleus (defined by the optical
continuum peak) and increasing to maximum blueshifts and redshifts within ~1''
of the nucleus, followed by a decline to the systemic velocity. The
emission-line knots also follow a general trend of decreasing velocity
dispersion with increasing distance. In the Seyfert 2 galaxies, the presence of
blueshifts and redshifts on either side of the nucleus indicates that rotation
alone cannot explain the observed radial velocities, and that radial outflow
plays an important role. Each of the Seyfert galaxies in this sample (with the
exception of Mrk 3) shows a bright, compact (FWHM < 0.5") [O III] knot at the
position of its optical nucleus. These nuclear emission-line knots have
radial-velocity centroids near zero, but they typically have the highest
velocity dispersions.Comment: 28 pages, 5 figures (on 9 pages), accepted for A
FUSE Observations of Intrinsic Absorption in the Seyfert 1 Galaxy Mrk 509
We present far-ultraviolet spectra of the Seyfert 1 galaxy Mrk 509 obtained
in 1999 November with the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE). Our
data span the observed wavelength range 915-1185 A at a resolution of ~20 km/s.
The spectrum shows a blue continuum, broad OVI 1032,1038 emission, and a broad
CIII 977 emission line. Superposed on these emission components, we resolve
associated absorption lines of OVI 1032,1038, CIII 977, and Lyman lines through
Lzeta. Seven distinct kinematic components are present, spanning a velocity
range of -440 to +170 km/s relative to the systemic velocity. The absorption is
clustered in two groups, one centered at -370m km/s and another at the systemic
velocity. The blue-shifted cluster may be associated with the extended line
emission visible in deep images of Mrk 509 obtained by Phillips et al. Although
several components appear to be saturated, they are not black at their centers.
Partial covering or scattering permits ~7% of the broad-line or continuum flux
to be unaffected by absorption. Of the multiple components, only one has the
same ionization state and column density as highly ionized gas that produces
the OVII and OVIII ionization edges in X-ray spectra of Mrk 509.
This paper will appear in a special issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters
devoted to the first scientific results from the FUSE mission.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journal (Letters). 4 pages, 3 color
PostScript figures. Figures are best viewed and printed in color. Added
acknowledgment that this is one of many papers to be published in a special
issue of ApJL devoted to the first scientific results from the FUSE missio
Far-UV FUSE spectroscopy of the OVI resonance doublet in Sand2 (WO)
We present Far-Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) spectroscopy of Sand
2, a LMC WO-type Wolf-Rayet star, revealing the OVI resonance P Cygni doublet
at 1032-38A. These data are combined with HST/FOS ultraviolet and Mt Stromlo
2.3m optical spectroscopy, and analysed using a spherical, non-LTE,
line-blanketed code. Our study reveals exceptional stellar parameters:
T*=150,000K, v_inf=4100 km/s, log (L/Lo)=5.3, and Mdot=10^-5 Mo/yr if we adopt
a volume filling factor of 10%. Elemental abundances of C/He=0.7+-0.2 and
O/He=0.15(-0.05+0.10) by number qualitatively support previous recombination
line studies. We confirm that Sand 2 is more chemically enriched in carbon than
LMC WC stars, and is expected to undergo a supernova explosion within the next
50,000 yr.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, AASTeX preprint format. This paper will appear
in a special issue of ApJ Letters devoted to the first scientific results
from the FUSE missio
Magnetic structure of Yb2Pt2Pb: Ising moments on the Shastry-Sutherland lattice.
Neutron diffraction measurements were carried out on single crystals and powders of Yb2Pt2Pb, where Yb moments form two interpenetrating planar sublattices of orthogonal dimers, a geometry known as Shastry-Sutherland lattice, and are stacked along the c axis in a ladder geometry. Yb2Pt2Pb orders antiferromagnetically at TN=2.07K, and the magnetic structure determined from these measurements features the interleaving of two orthogonal sublattices into a 5Ă5Ă1 magnetic supercell that is based on stripes with moments perpendicular to the dimer bonds, which are along (110) and (â110). Magnetic fields applied along (110) or (â110) suppress the antiferromagnetic peaks from an individual sublattice, but leave the orthogonal sublattice unaffected, evidence for the Ising character of the Yb moments in Yb2Pt2Pb that is supported by point charge calculations. Specific heat, magnetic susceptibility, and electrical resistivity measurements concur with neutron elastic scattering results that the longitudinal critical fluctuations are gapped with ÎEâ0.07meV
A comparative HST imaging study of the host galaxies of radio-quiet quasars, radio-loud quasars and radio galaxies: Paper I
We present the first results from a major HST WFPC2 imaging study aimed at
providing the first statistically meaningful comparison of the morphologies,
luminosities, scalelengths and colours of the host galaxies of radio-quiet
quasars, radio-loud quasars, and radio galaxies. We describe the design of this
study and present the images which have been obtained for the first half of our
33-source sample. We find that the hosts of all three classes of luminous AGN
are massive elliptical galaxies, with scalelengths ~=10 kpc, and R-K colours
consistent with mature stellar populations. Most importantly this is the the
first unambiguous evidence that, just like radio-loud quasars, essentially all
radio-quiet quasars brighter than M_R = -24 reside in massive ellipticals. This
result removes the possibility that radio `loudness' is directly linked to host
galaxy morphology, but is however in excellent accord with the
black-hole/spheroid mass correlation recently highlighted by Magorrian et al.
(1998). We apply the relations given by Magorrian et al. to infer the expected
Eddington luminosity of the putative black hole at the centre of each of the
spheroidal host galaxies we have uncovered. Comparison with the actual nuclear
R-band luminosities suggests that the black holes in most of these galaxies are
radiating at a few percent of the Eddington luminosity; the brightest host
galaxies in our low-z sample are capable of hosting quasars with M_R = -28,
comparable to the most luminous quasars at z = 3. Finally we discuss our
host-derived black-hole masses in the context of the
radio-luminosity:black-hole mass correlation recently uncovered for nearby
galaxies by Franceschini et al. (1998), and the resulting implications for the
physical origin of radio loudness.Comment: Submitted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal, 55 pages of
latex, plus 12 postscript figures (Figures 1a-1s (greyscales of images and
model fits, and Figures 2a-2g (luminosity profiles and model fits) can be
downloaded from http://www.roe.ac.uk/astronomy/html/rjm1.shtml
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