11,788 research outputs found
Young stars and dust in AFGL437: NICMOS/HST polarimetric imaging of an outflow source
We present near infrared broad band and polarimetric images of the compact
star forming cluster AFGL437 obtained with the NICMOS instrument aboard HST.
Our high resolution images reveal a well collimated bipolar reflection
nebulosity in the cluster and allow us to identify WK34 as the illuminating
source. The scattered light in the bipolar nebulosity centered on this source
is very highly polarized (up to 79%). Such high levels of polarization implies
a distribution of dust grains lacking large grains, contrary to the usual dust
models of dark clouds. We discuss the geometry of the dust distribution giving
rise to the bipolar reflection nebulosity and make mass estimates for the
underlying scattering material. We find that the most likely inclination of the
bipolar nebulosity, south lobe inclined towards Earth, is consistent with the
inclination of the large scale CO molecular outflow associated with the
cluster, strengthening the identification of WK34 as the source powering it.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figues. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
The Internal Ultraviolet-to-Optical Color Dispersion: Quantifying the Morphological K-Correction
We present a quantitative measure of the internal color dispersion within
galaxies, which quantifies differences in morphology as a function of
wavelength. We apply this statistic to a local galaxy sample with archival
images at 1500 and 2500 Angstroms from the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope, and
ground-based B-band observations to investigate how the color dispersion
relates to global galaxy properties. The intenal color dispersion generally
correlates with transformations in galaxy morphology as a function of
wavelength, i.e., it quantifies the morphological K-correction. Mid-type spiral
galaxies exhibit the highest dispersion in their internal colors, which stems
from differences in the bulge, disk, and spiral-arm components. Irregulars and
late-type spirals show moderate internal color dispersion, which implies that
young stars generally dominate the colors. Ellipticals, lenticulars, and
early-type spirals generally have low or negligible internal color dispersion,
which indicates that the stars contributing to the UV-to-optical emission have
a very homogeneous distribution. We discuss the application of the internal
color dispersion to high-redshift galaxies in deep, Hubble Space Telescope
images. By simulating local galaxies at cosmological distances, many of the
galaxies have luminosities that are sufficiently bright at rest--frame optical
wavelengths to be detected within the limits of the currently deepest
near-infrared surveys even with no evolution. Under assumptions that the
luminosity and color evolution of the local galaxies conform with the measured
values of high-redshift objects, we show that galaxies' intrinsic internal
color dispersion remains measurable out to z ~ 3.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 41 pages, 13
figures (3 color). Full resolution version (~8 Mb) available at
http://mips.as.arizona.edu/~papovich/papovich_astroph.p
The Indian family on UK reality television: Convivial culture in salient contexts
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final published article is available from the link below, copyright 2012 @ the author.This article demonstrates how The Family (2009), a fly-on-the wall UK reality series about a British Indian family, facilitates both current public service broadcasting requirements and mass audience appeal. From a critical cultural studies perspective, the author examines the journalistic and viewer responses to the series where authenticity, universality, and comedy emerge as major themes. Textual analysis of the racialized screen representations also helps locate the series within the contexts of contested multiculturalism, genre developments in reality television and public service broadcasting. Paul Gilroy’s concept of convivial culture is used as a frame in understanding how meanings of the series are produced within a South Asian popular representational space. The author suggests that the social comedy taxonomy is a prerequisite for the making of this particular observational documentary. Further, the popular (comedic) mode of conviviality on which the series depends is both expedient and necessary within the various sociopolitical contexts outlined
The reliability of the ankle brachial index : a systematic review
Background: The ankle brachial index (ABI) is widely used in clinical practice as a non-invasive method to detect the presence and severity of peripheral arterial disease (PAD). Current guidelines suggest that it should be used to monitor potential progression of PAD in affected individuals. As such, it is important that the test is reliable when used for repeated measurements, by the same or different health practitioners. This systematic review aims to examine the literature to evaluate the inter- and intra-rater reliability of the ABI. Methods: A systematic search of MEDLINE, EMBASE and CINAHL Complete was conducted to 20 January 2019. Two authors independently reviewed and selected relevant studies and extracted the data. Methodological quality was determined using the Quality Appraisal of Reliability (QAREL) Checklist. Results: Fifteen studies of ABI reliability in a range of patient populations were identified as suitable for inclusion in the review: seven considered inter-rater reliability, four intra-rater reliability, and four studies evaluated both inter- and intra-rater reliability. Inter-rater reliability was found to be highly variable, with intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC's) ranging from poor to excellent (ICC 0.42-1.00), while intra-rater also demonstrated considerable variation, with ICCs from 0.42-0.98. Meta-analysis was not possible due to the lack of statistical information reported. Conclusions: Results of included studies suggest the inter- and intra-tester reliability of the ABI is acceptable. However, inconsistencies in obtaining systolic pressure measurements, calculating ABI values, and incomplete reporting of methodologies and statistical analysis make it difficult to determine the validity of the results of included studies. Further research, with more consistent reliability methodology, statistical analysis and reporting conducted in populations at risk of PAD is needed to conclusively determine the ABI reliability
Determination of the s-wave Scattering Length of Chromium
We have measured the deca-triplet s-wave scattering length of the bosonic
chromium isotopes Cr and Cr. From the time constants for
cross-dimensional thermalization in atomic samples we have determined the
magnitudes and ,
where . By measuring the rethermalization rate of Cr over a
wide temperature range and comparing the temperature dependence with the
effective-range theory and single-channel calculations, we have obtained strong
evidence that the sign of is positive. Rescaling our Cr
model potential to Cr strongly suggests that is positive,
too.Comment: v3: corrected typo in y-axis scaling of Figs. 3 and
A massive, distant proto-cluster at z=2.47 caught in a phase of rapid formation?
Numerical simulations of cosmological structure formation show that the
Universe's most massive clusters, and the galaxies living in those clusters,
assemble rapidly at early times (2.5 < z < 4). While more than twenty
proto-clusters have been observed at z > 2 based on associations of 5-40
galaxies around rare sources, the observational evidence for rapid cluster
formation is weak. Here we report observations of an asymmetric, filamentary
structure at z = 2.47 containing seven starbursting, submillimeter-luminous
galaxies and five additional AGN within a comoving volume of 15000 Mpc.
As the expected lifetime of both the luminous AGN and starburst phase of a
galaxy is ~100 Myr, we conclude that these sources were likely triggered in
rapid succession by environmental factors, or, alternatively, the duration of
these cosmologically rare phenomena is much longer than prior direct
measurements suggest. The stellar mass already built up in the structure is
and we estimate that the cluster mass will exceed that
of the Coma supercluster at . The filamentary structure is in line
with hierarchical growth simulations which predict that the peak of cluster
activity occurs rapidly at z > 2.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, accepted in ApJL (small revisions from
previous version
AEGIS: Extinction and Star Formation Tracers from Line Emission
Strong nebular emission lines are a sensitive probe of star formation and
extinction in galaxies, and the [O II] line detects star forming populations
out to z>1. However, star formation rates from emission lines depend on
calibration of extinction and the [O II]/H-alpha line ratio, and separating
star formation from AGN emission. We use calibrated line luminosities from the
DEEP2 survey and Palomar K magnitudes to show that the behavior of emission
line ratios depends on galaxy magnitude and color. For galaxies on the blue
side of the color bimodality, the vast majority show emission signatures of
star formation, and there are strong correlations of extinction and [O
II]/H-alpha with restframe H magnitude. The conversion of [O II] to
extinction-corrected H-alpha and thus to star formation rate has a significant
slope with M_H, 0.23 dex/mag. Red galaxies with emission lines have a much
higher scatter in their line ratios, and more than half show AGN signatures. We
use 24 micron fluxes from Spitzer/MIPS to demonstrate the differing populations
probed by nebular emission and by mid-IR luminosity. Although extinction is
correlated with luminosity, 98% of IR-luminous galaxies at z~1 are still
detected in the [O II] line. Mid-IR detected galaxies are mostly bright and
intermediate color, while fainter, bluer galaxies with high [O II] luminosity
are rarely detected at 24 microns.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters AEGIS
special editio
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