15 research outputs found
Exile Vol. XLV No. 2
43rd Year
Title Page 3
Epigraph by Ezra Pound 5
Table of Contents 7
Contributors Notes 74-75
Editorial Board 76
INTERVIEWS
The Art of Hearing: Interview with Stanley Plumly by Alison Stine \u2700 23-27
ART
Self-Portrait by Angela Bliss \u2799 8
For a Living by Angela Bliss \u2799 12
Untitled by Frazier Taylor \u2702 22
Untitled by Amy Deaner \u2799 29
Perfect Knee by David Tulkin \u2701 34
Untitled by Amy Deaner \u2799 43
Still Light by Angela Bliss \u2799 62
Hiding Nature by Amy Deaner \u2799 64
Self-Portrait A by Sarah Leyrer \u2701 73
POETRY
Bolted Back by Michelle Grindstaff \u2702 9
Squall by Georgia Riepe \u2702 10
Loaves and Fishes by Maeghan Demmons \u2701 11
World Cafe by Katie Kroner \u2701 28
Gurney Surfer by Tom Hankinson \u2702 31
Japanese Beetles by Alison Stine \u2700 32-33
Shoveling by Bekah Taylor \u2700 40
Tobacco Country by K. Moore \u2701 41
Winton Place by Rachel Colina \u2702 42
Bottom of the Ninth by Michelle Grindstaff \u2702 61
Fall Burning by Alison Stine \u2700 63
rocking by Bekah Taylor \u2700 71
The Armor of the Beach by Georgia Riepe \u2702 72
PROSE
In the Aisles of the Night by Tom Dussel \u2701 13-21
From Those Uninvolved by Justin Walker \u2799 30
Frame by Paul Durica \u2700 35-39
The Rose by Rachel Bolton \u2799 44-60
Stop at the Soldier by Hillary Campbell \u2700 65-70
All submissions are reviewed on an anonymous basis, and all editorial decisions are shared equally among the members of the Editorial Board. -76
Cover Art Untitled by Kris Lewis \u2799 / Back Cover Art Figure 25 by Todd Gys \u2799 -76
Printed by Printing Arts Press -7
Exile Vol. XLVIII
46th Year
Title Page 3
Epigraph by Ezra Pound 5
Table of Contents 7
Contributors\u27 Notes 59-60
Editorial Board 61
ART
Connected by Christin Faison \u2704 8
Marcya by Harper Leich \u2704 12
Untitled by Derek Mong \u2704 19
Epistemological Torment by Matthew Sove \u2704 21
Consummatum Est I by Matthew Sove \u2704 27
Consummatum Est III by Matthew Sove \u2704 29
The Sheraton by Harper Leich \u2704 39
Untitled by Roman Sehling \u2703 43
My War by Matthew Sove \u2704 53
POETRY
Chores, Then and Now by Dan Rohrer \u2704 9
Heaven by Chris Million \u2702 10-11
Loving her in Balinese by Ginna Fuselier \u2703 20
The Shower Room by Derek Mong \u2704 28
The Wailua by Jenny Silva \u2702 40-41
Good to the Last Drop by Chrissy Swinko \u2703 42
PROSE
The House of Spider Webs by Dianna Craig \u2703 13-18
The Golem by Owen McGrann \u2703 22-26
All the String in Cincinnati by Rachel Colina \u2702 30-38
Passing by Matthew Martz \u2702 44-52
True War Story by Dianna Craig \u2703 54-58
All submissions are reviewed on an anonymous basis, and all editorial decisions are shared equally among the members of the Editorial Board. -61
Cover Art Out to Dry by Thomas DeCarlo \u2705 / Back Cover Art Untitled by Thomas DeCarlo \u2705 -61
Printing by Printing Arts Press -6
Differences between CO- and calcium triplet-derived velocity dispersions in spiral galaxies: evidence for central star formation?
We examine the stellar velocity dispersions (sigma) of a sample of 48
galaxies, 35 of which are spirals, from the Palomar nearby galaxy survey. It is
known that for ultra-luminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) and merger remnants
thesigma derived from the near-infrared CO band-heads is smaller than that
measured from optical lines, while no discrepancy between these measurements is
found for early-type galaxies. No such studies are available for spiral
galaxies - the subject of this paper. We used cross-dispersed spectroscopic
data obtained with the Gemini Near-Infrared Spectrograph (GNIRS), with spectral
coverage from 0.85 to 2.5um, to obtain sigma measurements from the 2.29 m
CO band-heads (sigma_{CO}), and the 0.85 um calcium triplet (sigma_{CaT}). For
the spiral galaxies in the sample, we found that sigma_{CO} is smaller than
sigma_{CaT}, with a mean fractional difference of 14.3%. The best fit to the
data is given by sigma_{opt} = (46.0+/-18.1) + (0.85+/-0.12)sigma_{CO}. This
"sigma discrepancy" may be related to the presence of warm dust, as suggested
by a slight correlation between the discrepancy and the infrared luminosity.
This is consistent with studies that have found no sigma-discrepancy in
dust-poor early-type galaxies, and a much larger discrepancy in dusty merger
remnants and ULIRGs. That sigma_{CO}$ is lower than sigma_{opt} may also
indicate the presence of a dynamically cold stellar population component. This
would agree with the spatial correspondence between low sigma_{CO} and
young/intermediate-age stellar populations that has been observed in
spatially-resolved spectroscopy of a handful of galaxies.Comment: Published in MNRAS, 446, 282
Physical properties of Herschel selected galaxies in a semi-analytic galaxy formation model
[Abridged] We make use of a semi-analytic cosmological model that includes
simple prescriptions for dust attenuation and emission to make predictions for
the observable and physical properties of galaxies that may be detected by the
recently launched Herschel Space Observatory in deep fields such as
GOODS-Herschel. We compare our predictions for differential galaxy number
counts in the PACS (100 & 160) and SPIRE (250, 350, and 500 micron) bands with
available observations. We find very good agreement with the counts in the PACS
bands, for the overall counts and for galaxies binned by redshift at z< 2. At z
> 2 our model underpredicts the number of bright galaxies by a factor of ten.
The agreement is much worse for all three SPIRE bands, and becomes
progressively worse with increasing wavelength. We discuss a number of possible
reasons for these discrepancies, and hypothesize that the effect of blending on
the observational flux estimates is likely to be the dominant issue. We note
that the PACS number counts are relatively robust to changes in the dust
emission templates, while the predicted SPIRE number counts are more template
dependent. We present quantitative predictions for the relationship between the
observed PACS 160 and SPIRE 250 micron fluxes and physical quantities such as
halo mass, stellar mass, cold gas mass, star formation rate, and total infrared
(IR) luminosity, at different redshifts. We also present quantitative
predictions for the correlation between PACS 160 micron flux and the
probability that a galaxy has experienced a recent major or minor merger.
Although our models predict a strong correlation between these quantities, such
that more IR-luminous galaxies are more likely to be merger-driven, we find
that more than half of all high redshift IR-luminous galaxies detected by
Herschel are able to attain their high star formation rates without enhancement
by a merger.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
A Semi-Analytic Model for the Co-evolution of Galaxies, Black Holes, and Active Galactic Nuclei
We present a new semi-analytic model that self-consistently traces the growth
of supermassive black holes (BH) and their host galaxies within the context of
the LCDM cosmological framework. In our model, the energy emitted by accreting
black holes regulates the growth of the black holes themselves, drives galactic
scale winds that can remove cold gas from galaxies, and produces powerful jets
that heat the hot gas atmospheres surrounding groups and clusters. We present a
comprehensive comparison of our model predictions with observational
measurements of key physical properties of low-redshift galaxies, such as cold
gas fractions, stellar metallicities and ages, and specific star formation
rates. We find that our new models successfully reproduce the exponential
cutoff in the stellar mass function and the stellar and cold gas mass densities
at z~0, and predict that star formation should be largely, but not entirely,
quenched in massive galaxies at the present day. We also find that our model of
self-regulated BH growth naturally reproduces the observed relation between BH
mass and bulge mass. We explore the global formation history of galaxies in our
models, presenting predictions for the cosmic histories of star formation,
stellar mass assembly, cold gas, and metals. We find that models assuming the
"concordance" LCDM cosmology overproduce star formation and stellar mass at
high redshift (z>2). A model with less small-scale power predicts less star
formation at high redshift, and excellent agreement with the observed stellar
mass assembly history, but may have difficulty accounting for the cold gas in
quasar absorption systems at high redshift (z~3-4).Comment: MNRAS accepte
The James Webb Space Telescope Mission
Twenty-six years ago a small committee report, building on earlier studies,
expounded a compelling and poetic vision for the future of astronomy, calling
for an infrared-optimized space telescope with an aperture of at least .
With the support of their governments in the US, Europe, and Canada, 20,000
people realized that vision as the James Webb Space Telescope. A
generation of astronomers will celebrate their accomplishments for the life of
the mission, potentially as long as 20 years, and beyond. This report and the
scientific discoveries that follow are extended thank-you notes to the 20,000
team members. The telescope is working perfectly, with much better image
quality than expected. In this and accompanying papers, we give a brief
history, describe the observatory, outline its objectives and current observing
program, and discuss the inventions and people who made it possible. We cite
detailed reports on the design and the measured performance on orbit.Comment: Accepted by PASP for the special issue on The James Webb Space
Telescope Overview, 29 pages, 4 figure