1,690 research outputs found
870 micron continuum observations of the bubble-shaped nebula Gum 31
We are presenting here a study of the cold dust in the infrared ring nebula
Gum 31. We aim at deriving the physical properties of the molecular gas and
dust associated with the nebula, and investigating its correlation with the
star formation in the region, that was probably triggered by the expansion of
the ionization front. We use 870 micron data obtained with LABOCA to map the
dust emission. The obtained LABOCA image was compared to archival IR,radio
continuum, and optical images. The 870 micron emission follows the 8 micron
(Spitzer), 250 micron, and 500 micron (Herschel) emission distributions showing
the classical morphology of a spherical shell. We use the 870 micron and 250
micron images to identify 60 dust clumps in the collected layers of molecular
gas using the Gaussclumps algorithm. The clumps have effective deconvolved
radii between 0.16 pc and 1.35 pc, masses between 70 Mo and 2800 Mo, and volume
densities between 1.1x10^3 cm^-3 and 2.04x10^5 cm^-3. The total mass of the
clumps is 37600 Mo. The dust temperature of the clumps is in the range from 21
K to 32 K, while inside the HII region reaches ~ 40 K. The clump mass
distribution is well-fitted by a power law dN/dlog(M/Mo) proportional to
M^(-alpha), with alpha=0.93+/-0.28. The slope differs from those obtained for
the stellar IMF in the solar neighborhood, suggesting that the clumps are not
direct progenitors of single stars/protostars. The mass-radius relationship for
the 41 clumps detected in the 870 microns emission shows that only 37% of them
lie in or above the high-mass star formation threshold, most of them having
candidate YSOs projected inside. A comparison of the dynamical age of the HII
region with the fragmentation time, allowed us to conclude that the collect and
collapse mechanism may be important for the star formation at the edge of Gum
31, although other processes may also be acting.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Three dimensional finite element model of a non-crimp fabric laminated using geometrically straight tows with crimped material properties
COMATCOMP 09 : Donostia - San Sebastian, 7, 8 y 9 de octubre de 2009The compressive failure of a [0,90]n non-crimp fabric laminate is studied using a 3D
finite element model of the representative unit cell at mesoscopic scale. In previous
analyses, tow elements coordinate systems were oriented in the actual direction of the
fibres. Therefore, the same transversely isotropic mechanical behaviour was employed
for every tow element (defined in the element coordinate system). A new approach is
presented in this work, in which the geometrical crimp of the tows is neglected and
straight tows are created. The actual crimp of the fibres is considered by introducing
suitable anisotropic material properties in each zone of the tow. Anisotropic properties
have been obtained by a rotation of the actual transversely isotropic mechanical
behaviour, taking into account the actual orientation of the crimped fibres. This
approach requires a larger amount of work to define the material properties but, on the
contrary, the mesh can be easily created for any configuration. Results obtained with the
new approach (i.e., the ‘straight tows’ model) have been successfully compared with
those of the previous analyses (i.e., the ‘crimped tows’ model)
Black hole mass estimates in quasars - A comparative analysis of high- and low-ionization lines
The inter-line comparison between high- and low-ionization emission lines has
yielded a wealth of information on the quasar broad line region (BLR) structure
and dynamics, including perhaps the earliest unambiguous evidence in favor of a
disk + wind structure in radio-quiet quasars. We carried out an analysis of the
CIV 1549 and Hbeta line profiles of 28 Hamburg-ESO high luminosity quasars and
of 48 low-z, low luminosity sources in order to test whether the
high-ionization line CIV 1549 width could be correlated with Hbeta and be used
as a virial broadening estimator. We analyze intermediate- to high-S/N,
moderate resolution optical and NIR spectra covering the redshifted CIV and
H over a broad range of luminosity log L ~ 44 - 48.5 [erg/s] and
redshift (0 - 3), following an approach based on the quasar main sequence. The
present analysis indicates that the line width of CIV 1549 is not immediately
offering a virial broadening estimator equivalent to H. At the same time
a virialized part of the BLR appears to be preserved even at the highest
luminosities. We suggest a correction to FWHM(CIV) for Eddington ratio (using
the CIV blueshift as a proxy) and luminosity effects that can be applied over
more than four dex in luminosity. Great care should be used in estimating
high-L black hole masses from CIV 1549 line width. However, once corrected
FWHM(CIV) values are used, a CIV-based scaling law can yield unbiased MBH
values with respect to the ones based on H with sample standard
deviation ~ 0.3 dex.Comment: 43 pages, 15 Figures, submitted to A&
Essential and checkpoint functions of budding yeast ATM and ATR during meiotic prophase are facilitated by differential phosphorylation of a meiotic adaptor protein, Hop1
A hallmark of the conserved ATM/ATR signalling is its ability to mediate a wide range of functions utilizing only a limited number of adaptors and effector kinases. During meiosis, Tel1 and Mec1, the budding yeast ATM and ATR, respectively, rely on a meiotic adaptor protein Hop1, a 53BP1/Rad9 functional analog, and its associated kinase Mek1, a CHK2/Rad53-paralog, to mediate multiple functions: control of the formation and repair of programmed meiotic DNA double strand breaks, enforcement of inter-homolog bias, regulation of meiotic progression, and implementation of checkpoint responses. Here, we present evidence that the multi-functionality of the Tel1/Mec1-to-Hop1/Mek1 signalling depends on stepwise activation of Mek1 that is mediated by Tel1/Mec1 phosphorylation of two specific residues within Hop1: phosphorylation at the threonine 318 (T318) ensures the transient basal level Mek1 activation required for viable spore formation during unperturbed meiosis. Phosphorylation at the serine 298 (S298) promotes stable Hop1-Mek1 interaction on chromosomes following the initial phospho-T318 mediated Mek1 recruitment. In the absence of Dmc1, the phospho-S298 also promotes Mek1 hyper-activation necessary for implementing meiotic checkpoint arrest. Taking these observations together, we propose that the Hop1 phospho-T318 and phospho-S298 constitute key components of the Tel1/Mec1- based meiotic recombination surveillance (MRS) network and facilitate effective coupling of meiotic recombination and progression during both unperturbed and challenged meiosis
Observations of the Hubble Deep Field South with the Infrared Space Observatory - II. Associations and star formation rates
We present results from a deep mid-IR survey of the Hubble Deep Field South
(HDF-S) region performed at 7 and 15um with the CAM instrument on board ISO. We
found reliable optical/near-IR associations for 32 of the 35 sources detected
in this field by Oliver et al. (2002, Paper I): eight of them were identified
as stars, one is definitely an AGN, a second seems likely to be an AGN, too,
while the remaining 22 appear to be normal spiral or starburst galaxies. Using
model spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of similar galaxies, we compare
methods for estimating the star formation rates (SFRs) in these objects,
finding that an estimator based on integrated (3-1000um) IR luminosity
reproduces the model SFRs best. Applying this estimator to model fits to the
SEDs of our 22 spiral and starburst galaxies, we find that they are forming
stars at rates of ~1-100 M_sol/yr, with a median value of ~40M_sol/yr, assuming
an Einstein - de Sitter universe with a Hubble constant of 50 km/s/Mpc, and
star formation taking place according to a Salpeter (1955) IMF across the mass
range 0.1-100M_sol. We split the redshift range 0.0<z<0.6 into two equal-volume
bins to compute raw estimates of the star formation rate density contributed by
these sources, assuming the same cosmology and IMF as above and computing
errors based on estimated uncertainties in the SFRs of individual galaxies. We
compare these results with other estimates of the SFR density made with the
same assumptions, showing them to be consistent with the results of Flores et
al. (1999) from their ISO survey of the CFRS 1415+52 field. However, the
relatively small volume of our survey means that our SFR density estimates
suffer from a large sampling variance, implying that our results, by
themselves, do not place tight constraints on the global mean SFR density.Comment: Accepted for MNRAS. 23 pages, 10 figures (Figs. 4&6 included here as
low resolution JPEGS), latex, uses mn,epsfig. Further information and full
resolution versions of Figs 4&6 available at http://astro.ic.ac.uk/hdfs (v2:
full author list added
HE0359-3959: an extremely radiating quasar
We present a multiwavelength spectral study of the quasar HE0359-3959, which
has been identified as an extreme radiating source at intermediate redshift
(z=1.5209). Along the spectral range, the different ionic species give
information about the substructures in the broad line region. The presence of a
powerful outflow with an extreme blueshifted velocity of -6000500 km
s is shown in the CIV{\lambda}1549 emission line. A prominent
blueshifted component is also associated with the 1900{\AA} blend, resembling
the one observed in CIV{\lambda}1549. We detect a strong contribution of very
the low-ionization lines, FeII and Near-Infrared CaII triplet. We find that the
physical conditions for the low, intermediate and high-ionization emission
lines are different, which indicate that the emission lines are emitted in
different zones of the broad line region. The asymmetries shown by the profiles
reveal different forces over emitter zones. The high-ionization region is
strongly dominated by radiation forces, which also affect the low and
intermediate-ionization emitter region, commonly governed by virial motions.
These results support the idea that highly radiating sources host a slim disk.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Dinoflagelados. Nomenclatura portuguesa
Dinoflagellates are planktonic unicellular microorganisms, that under certain conditions may produce cysts prone to fossilization. These cysts are abundant in the sedimentary record since the Palaeozoic, supplying important biostratigraphical and
palaeoecological information.
In Portugal, the study of dinoflagellates is still in its beginnings. Considering the late developments in this domain, an updated
nomenclature in Portuguese language is presented, pertaining to it's biology, taxonomy, ecology, palaeoecology and biostratigraphy
Budding yeast ATM/ATR control meiotic double-strand break (DSB) levels by down-regulating Rec114, an essential component of the DSB-machinery
An essential feature of meiosis is Spo11 catalysis of programmed DNA double strand breaks (DSBs). Evidence suggests that the number of DSBs generated per meiosis is genetically determined and that this ability to maintain a pre-determined DSB level, or "DSB homeostasis", might be a property of the meiotic program. Here, we present direct evidence that Rec114, an evolutionarily conserved essential component of the meiotic DSB-machinery, interacts with DSB hotspot DNA, and that Tel1 and Mec1, the budding yeast ATM and ATR, respectively, down-regulate Rec114 upon meiotic DSB formation through phosphorylation. Mimicking constitutive phosphorylation reduces the interaction between Rec114 and DSB hotspot DNA, resulting in a reduction and/or delay in DSB formation. Conversely, a non-phosphorylatable rec114 allele confers a genome-wide increase in both DSB levels and in the interaction between Rec114 and the DSB hotspot DNA. These observations strongly suggest that Tel1 and/or Mec1 phosphorylation of Rec114 following Spo11 catalysis down-regulates DSB formation by limiting the interaction between Rec114 and DSB hotspots. We also present evidence that Ndt80, a meiosis specific transcription factor, contributes to Rec114 degradation, consistent with its requirement for complete cessation of DSB formation. Loss of Rec114 foci from chromatin is associated with homolog synapsis but independent of Ndt80 or Tel1/Mec1 phosphorylation. Taken together, we present evidence for three independent ways of regulating Rec114 activity, which likely contribute to meiotic DSBs-homeostasis in maintaining genetically determined levels of breaks
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