4,371 research outputs found
Sea breeze: Induced mesoscale systems and severe weather
Sea-breeze-deep convective interactions over the Florida peninsula were investigated using a cloud/mesoscale numerical model. The objective was to gain a better understanding of sea-breeze and deep convective interactions over the Florida peninsula using a high resolution convectively explicit model and to use these results to evaluate convective parameterization schemes. A 3-D numerical investigation of Florida convection was completed. The Kuo and Fritsch-Chappell parameterization schemes are summarized and evaluated
Representations of world coordinates in FITS
The initial descriptions of the FITS format provided a simplified method for
describing the physical coordinate values of the image pixels, but deliberately
did not specify any of the detailed conventions required to convey the
complexities of actual image coordinates. Building on conventions in wide use
within astronomy, this paper proposes general extensions to the original
methods for describing the world coordinates of FITS data. In subsequent
papers, we apply these general conventions to the methods by which spherical
coordinates may be projected onto a two-dimensional plane and to
frequency/wavelength/velocity coordinates.Comment: 15 Pages, 1 figure, LaTex with Astronomy & Astrophysics macro
package, submitted to A&A, related papers at
http://www.aoc.nrao.edu/~egreise
VLBI Observations of a Complete Sample of Radio Galaxies V. 3C346 and 4C31.04: two Unusual CSS Sources
We present observations at 1.7 and 8.4 GHz of two Compact Steep Spectrum
(CSS) sources from a complete sample of low-intermediate power radio galaxies.
3C346 shows an asymmetric structure with a one-sided ``jet'' and ``hot spot''.
Present observations suggest that the classification of this source as a CSS is
inappropriate, and that it is a common radio galaxy at a small angle to the
line of sight. Its properties are in agreement with the predictions of unified
schemes models. 4C31.04 shows more complex structure with the possibility of a
centrally located flat spectrum core in between two close lobes. We suggest
that this source could be a low redshift Compact Symmetric Object.Comment: 15 pages, LATEX, uuenconde ps figures To be published in the
Astrophysical Journal, October 20th issu
Representations of celestial coordinates in FITS
In Paper I, Greisen & Calabretta (2002) describe a generalized method for
assigning physical coordinates to FITS image pixels. This paper implements this
method for all spherical map projections likely to be of interest in astronomy.
The new methods encompass existing informal FITS spherical coordinate
conventions and translations from them are described. Detailed examples of
header interpretation and construction are given.Comment: Consequent to Paper I: "Representations of world coordinates in
FITS". 45 pages, 38 figures, 13 tables, aa macros v5.2 (2002/Jun). Both
papers submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics (2002/07/19). Replaced to try to
get figure and table placement right (no textual changes
B2 1144+35: A Giant Low Power Radio Galaxy with Superluminal Motion
We report on centimeter VLA and VLBI observations of the giant, low power
radio galaxy 1144+35. These observations are sensitive to structures on scales
from less than 1 parsec to greater than 1 megaparsec. Diffuse steep spectrum
lobes on the megaparsec scale are consistent with an age of 10
years. On the parsec scale, a complex jet component is seen to move away from
the center of activity with an apparent velocity 2.7 h c. It shows
a central spine -- shear layer morphology. A faint parsec scale counterjet is
detected and an intrinsic jet velocity of 0.95 c and angle to the line of sight
of 25 are derived, consistent with an intrinsically symmetric ejection.
The central spine in the parsec scale jet is expected to move at a higher
velocity and a Lorentz factor 15 has been estimated near the
core.The age of this inner VLBI structure is 300 years. Assuming a
constant angle to the line-of-sight, the jet velocity is found to decrease from
0.95 c at 20 mas (32 pc on the plane of the sky) to 0.02 c at 15 arcsec (24 kpc
on the plane of the sky). These findings lend credence to the claim that (1)
even the jets of low power radio galaxies start out relativistic; and (2) these
jets are decelerated to subrelativistic velocities by the time they reach
kiloparsec scales.Comment: 21 pages, 16 separated figures. A version with figures and table in
the text is available at: ftp://terra.bo.cnr.it/papers/journals - it is a ps
gzipped file, named giovannini_apr99.gz (792kb) - ApJ in pres
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