7,340 research outputs found
The Carrington event not observed in most ice core nitrate records
The Carrington Event of 1859 is considered to be among the largest space weather events of the last 150 years. We show that only one out of 14 well-resolved ice core records from Greenland and Antarctica has a nitrate spike dated to 1859. No sharp spikes are observed in the Antarctic cores studied here. In Greenland numerous spikes are observed in the 40 years surrounding 1859, but where other chemistry was measured, all large spikes have the unequivocal signal, including co-located spikes in ammonium, formate, black carbon and vanillic acid, of biomass burning plumes. It seems certain that most spikes in an earlier core, including that claimed for 1859, are also due to biomass burning plumes, and not to solar energetic particle (SEP) events. We conclude that an event as large as the Carrington Event did not leave an observable, widespread imprint in nitrate in polar ice. Nitrate spikes cannot be used to derive the statistics of SEPs
Probing the cool ISM in galaxies via 21cm HI absorption
Recent targeted studies of associated HI absorption in radio galaxies are
starting to map out the location, and potential cosmological evolution, of the
cold gas in the host galaxies of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN). The observed 21
cm absorption profiles often show two distinct spectral-line components:
narrow, deep lines arising from cold gas in the extended disc of the galaxy,
and broad, shallow lines from cold gas close to the AGN (e.g. Morganti et al.
2011). Here, we present results from a targeted search for associated HI
absorption in the youngest and most recently-triggered radio AGN in the local
universe (Allison et al. 2012b). So far, by using the recently commissioned
Australia Telescope Compact Array Broadband Backend (CABB; Wilson et al. 2011),
we have detected two new absorbers and one previously-known system. While two
of these show both a broad, shallow component and a narrow, deep component (see
Fig. 1), one of the new detections has only a single broad, shallow component.
Interestingly, the host galaxies of the first two detections are classified as
gas-rich spirals, while the latter is an early-type galaxy. These detections
were obtained using a spectral-line finding method, based on Bayesian
inference, developed for future large-scale absorption surveys (Allison et al.
2012a).Comment: 1 page, 1 figure, published in Proceedings of IAU Symposium No. 29
Comment on “Low time resolution analysis of ice cores cannot detect impulsive nitrate events” by D. F. Smart et al.
Smart et al. (2014) suggested that the detection of nitrate spikes in polar ice cores from solar energetic particle (SEP) events could be achieved if an analytical system with sufficiently high resolution was used. Here we show that the spikes they associate with SEP events are not reliably recorded in cores from the same location, even when the resolution is clearly adequate. We explain the processes that limit the effective resolution of ice cores. Liquid conductivity data suggest that the observed spikes are associated with sodium or another nonacidic cation, making it likely that they result from deposition of sea salt or similar aerosol that has scavenged nitrate, rather than from a primary input of nitrate in the troposphere. We consider that there is no evidence at present to support the identification of any spikes in nitrate as representing SEP events. Although such events undoubtedly create nitrate in the atmosphere, we see no plausible route to using nitrate spikes to document the statistics of such events
Electrophysiological correlates of high-level perception during spatial navigation
We studied the electrophysiological basis of object recognition by recording scalp\ud
electroencephalograms while participants played a virtual-reality taxi driver game.\ud
Participants searched for passengers and stores during virtual navigation in simulated\ud
towns. We compared oscillatory brain activity in response to store views that were targets or\ud
nontargets (during store search) or neutral (during passenger search). Even though store\ud
category was solely defined by task context (rather than by sensory cues), frontal ...\ud
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Further Observational Evidence for a Critical Ionising Luminosity in Active Galaxies
We report the results of a survey for HI 21-cm absorption at redshifts of z >
2.6 in a new sample of radio sources with the Green Bank and Giant Metrewave
Radio Telescopes. From a total of 25 targets, we report zero detections in the
16 for which optical depth limits could be obtained. Based upon the detection
rate for z > 0.1 associated absorption, we would expect approximately four
detections. Of the 11 which have previously not been searched, there is
sufficient source-frame optical/ultra-violet photometry to determine the
ionising photon rate for four. Adding these to the literature, the hypothesis
that there is a critical rate of logQ = 56 ionising photons per second is now
significant at ~7 sigma. This reaffirms our assertion that searching z > 3
active galaxies for which optical redshifts are available selects sources in
which the ultra-violet luminosity is sufficient to ionise all of the neutral
gas in the host galaxy.Comment: Accepted by MNRA
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