1,241 research outputs found
Bi(OTf)3-, TfOH-, and TMSOTf-Mediated, One-Pot Epoxide Rearrangement, Addition, and Intramolecular Silyl-Modified Sakurai (ISMS) Cascade toward Dihydropyrans: Comparison of Catalysts and Role of Bi(OTf)3
Catalytic quantities of bismuth(III) triflate efficiently initiate the rearrangement of epoxides to aldehydes, which subsequently react with (Z)-ÎŽ-hydroxyalkenylsilanes to afford 2,6-disubstituted 3,6-dihydro-2H-pyrans. Isolated yields of desired products using Bi(OTf)3 were compared with yields obtained when the reactions were run with TfOH and TMSOTf in the presence and absence of several additives. These studies, as well as NMR spectroscopic analyses, indicate an initial Lewis acid/base interaction between Bi(OTf)3 and substrates providing TfOH in situ
Infrared High-Resolution Spectroscopy of Post-AGB Circumstellar Disks. I. HR 4049 - The Winnowing Flow Observed?
High-resolution infrared spectroscopy in the 2.3-4.6 micron region is
reported for the peculiar A supergiant, single-lined spectroscopic binary HR
4049. Lines from the CO fundamental and first overtone, OH fundamental, and
several H2O vibration-rotation transitions have been observed in the
near-infrared spectrum. The spectrum of HR 4049 appears principally in emission
through the 3 and 4.6 micron region and in absorption in the 2 micron region.
The 4.6 micron spectrum shows a rich 'forest' of emission lines. All the
spectral lines observed in the 2.3-4.6 micron spectrum are shown to be
circumbinary in origin. The presence of OH and H2O lines confirm the
oxygen-rich nature of the circumbinary gas which is in contrast to the
previously detected carbon-rich material. The emission and absorption line
profiles show that the circumbinary gas is located in a thin, rotating layer
near the dust disk. The properties of the dust and gas circumbinary disk and
the spectroscopic orbit yield masses for the individual stars, M_AI~0.58 Msolar
and M_MV~0.34 Msolar. Gas in the disk also has an outward flow with a velocity
of 1 km/s. The severe depletion of refractory elements but near-solar
abundances of volatile elements observed in HR 4049 results from abundance
winnowing. The separation of the volatiles from the grains in the disk and the
subsequent accretion by the star are discussed. Contrary to prior reports, the
HR 4049 carbon and oxygen isotopic abundances are typical AGB values:
12C/13C=6^{+9}_{-4} and 16O/17O>200.Comment: 42 pages, 14 figures, Accepted by Ap
The 'Forbidden' Abundance of Oxygen in the Sun
We reexamine closely the solar photospheric line at 6300 A, which is
attributed to a forbidden line of neutral oxygen, and is widely used in
analyses of other late-type stars.
We use a three-dimensional time-dependent hydrodynamical model solar
atmosphere which has been tested successfully against observed granulation
patterns and an array of absorption lines. We show that the solar line is a
blend with a Ni I line, as previously suggested but oftentimes neglected.
Thanks to accurate atomic data on the [O I] and Ni I lines we are able to
derive an accurate oxygen abundance for the Sun: log epsilon (O) = 8.69 +/-
0.05 dex, a value at the lower end of the distribution of previously published
abundances, but in good agreement with estimates for the local interstellar
medium and hot stars in the solar neighborhood. We conclude by discussing the
implication of the Ni I blend on oxygen abundances derived from the [O I] 6300
A line in disk and halo stars.Comment: 16 pages, 3 eps figures included; a more compact PostScript version
created using emulateapj.sty is available from
http://hebe.as.utexas.edu/recent_publi.html; to appear in ApJ
The origin of the split red clump in the Galactic bulge of the Milky Way
Near the minor axis of the Galactic bulge, at latitudes b < -5 degrees, the
red giant clump stars are split into two components along the line of sight. We
investigate this split using the three fields from the ARGOS survey that lie on
the minor axis at (l,b) = (0,-5), (0,-7.5), (0,-10) degrees. The separation is
evident for stars with [Fe/H] > -0.5 in the two higher-latitude fields, but not
in the field at b = -5 degrees. Stars with [Fe/H] < -0.5 do not show the split.
We compare the spatial distribution and kinematics of the clump stars with
predictions from an evolutionary N-body model of a bulge that grew from a disk
via bar-related instabilities. The density distribution of the peanut-shaped
model is depressed near its minor axis. This produces a bimodal distribution of
stars along the line of sight through the bulge near its minor axis, very much
as seen in our observations. The observed and modelled kinematics of the two
groups of stars are also similar. We conclude that the split red clump of the
bulge is probably a generic feature of boxy/peanut bulges that grew from disks,
and that the disk from which the bulge grew had relatively few stars with
[Fe/H] < -0.5Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Ethnic In-Group Favoritism Among Minority and Majority Groups: Testing the Self-Esteem Hypothesis Among Preadolescents
The self-esteem hypothesis in intergroup relations, as proposed by social identity
theory (SIT), states that successful intergroup discrimination enhances momentary
collective self-esteem. This hypothesis is a source of continuing controversy. Furthermore,
although SIT is increasingly used to account for childrenâs group attitudes,
few studies have examined the hypothesis among children. In addition, the
hypothesisâs generality makes it important to study among children from different
ethnic groups. The present study, conducted among Dutch and Turkish preadolescents,
examined momentary collective self-feelings as a consequence of ethnic group
evaluations. The results tended to support the self-esteem hypothesis. In-group
favoritism was found to have a self-enhancing effect among participants high in
ethnic identification. This result was found for ethnic majority (Dutch) and minority
(Turkish) participants.
Psychological attachment to the group: Cross-cultural differences in organizational identification and subjective norms as predictors of workers' turnover intentions
Two studies wed the theory of reasoned action, social identity theory, and Ashforth and Mael's work on organizational identification to predict turnover intentions in Japanese and British commercial and academic organizations. In both studies and in both countries, the authors expected and found that identification with the organization substantially and significantly predicted turnover intentions. Attitudes predicted intentions only in Study 2, and subjective norms significantly predicted intentions across both studies. The authors hypothesized that subjective norms would be a significantly stronger predictor of turnover intentions in a collectivist setting. This prediction was supported. Although social identity is strongly associated with turnover intentions across both cultures, the subjective normative aspects of group membership are significantly more strongly associated in the Japanese organizations
Near-Infrared Classification Spectroscopy: H-band Spectra of Fundamental MK Standards
We present a catalogue of H-band spectra for 85 stars of approximately solar
abundance observed at a resolving power of 3000 with the KPNO Mayall 4m FTS.
The atlas covers spectral types O7-M5 and luminosity classes I-V as defined on
the MK system. We identify both atomic and molecular indices and line-ratios
which are temperature and luminosity sensitive allowing spectral classification
to be carried out in the H-band. The line ratios permit spectral classification
in the presence of continuum excess emission, which is commonly found in
pre-main sequence and evolved stars. We demonstrate that with spectra of R =
1000 obtained at SNR > 50 it is possible to derive spectral types within +- 2
subclasses for late-type stars. These data are available electronically through
the Astronomical Data Center in addition to being served on the World-Wide-Web.Comment: To appear in the November 20, 1998 issue of ApJ (Volume 508, #1
Numerical simulations of stellar SiO maser variability. Investigation of the effect of shocks
A stellar hydrodynamic pulsation model has been combined with a SiO maser
model in an attempt to calculate the temporal variability of SiO maser emission
in the circumstellar envelope (CE) of a model AGB star. This study investigates
whether the variations in local physical conditions brought about by shocks are
the predominant contributing factor to SiO maser variability because, in this
work, the radiative part of the pump is constant. We find that some aspects of
the variability are not consistent with a pump provided by shock-enhanced
collisions alone. In these simulations, gas parcels of relatively enhanced SiO
abundance are distributed in a model CE by a Monte Carlo method, at a single
epoch of the stellar cycle. From this epoch on, Lagrangian motions of
individual parcels are calculated according to the velocity fields encountered
in the model CE during the stellar pulsation cycle. The potentially masing gas
parcels therefore experience different densities and temperatures, and have
varying line-of-sight velocity gradients throughout the stellar cycle, which
may or may not be suitable to produce maser emission. At each epoch (separated
by 16.6 days), emission lines from the parcels are combined to produce
synthetic spectra and VLBI-type images. We report here the results for v=1,
J=1-0 (43-GHz) and J=2-1 (86-GHz) masers.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, accepted by A&
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