618 research outputs found
Assessing larval connectivity for marine spatial planning in the Adriatic
publisher: Elsevier articletitle: Assessing larval connectivity for marine spatial planning in the Adriatic journaltitle: Marine Environmental Research articlelink: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2017.01.006 content_type: article copyright: © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Temperature and salinity variability in the Greek Seas based on POSEIDON stations time series: preliminary results
Temperature and salinity time series provided by three POSEIDON monitoring stations (buoys) are examined in order to study the seasonal and interannual variability of the water mass characteristics. The sites at Athos (North Aegean Sea), E1M3A (Central Cretan Sea) and Pylos (Eastern Ionian Sea) were chosen, as these buoys provide measurements at various depths, while they represent 3 major basins respectively. The study of the T and S characteristics reveals important seasonal changes and highlights the particular characteristics of each basin. Dense water production in the Northern Aegean is found to be hindered by the presence of the surface Black Sea Water (BSW) mass. On the other hand, the intermediate water mass in the Cretan Sea is shown to be ventilated during the winter season. A significant temperature and salinity increase has been monitored over both the Central Cretan and Eastern Ionian Seas starting from the middle of 2008 and 2009 respectively. This could possibly be attributed to changes in the intermediate water masses of the Eastern Mediterranean, without ruling out the possibility of water mass exchanges between the two basins
The Slitmask Alignment Tool: robust, efficient, and astronomer-friendly software for aligning multi-object slitmasks
Multi-object spectroscopy via custom slitmasks is a key capability on three instruments at the W. M. Keck Observatory. Before observers can acquire spectra they must complete a complex procedure to align each slit with its corresponding science target. We developed the Slitmask Alignment Tool (SAT), to replace a complex, inefficient, and error-prone slitmask alignment process that often resulted in lost sky time for novice and experienced observers alike. The SAT accomplishes rapid initial mask alignment, prevents field misidentification, accurately predicts alignment box image locations, corrects for flexure-induced image displacement, verifies the instrument and exposure configuration, and accommodates both rectangular and trapezoidal alignment box shapes. The SAT is designed to lead observers through the alignment process and coordinate image acquisition with instrument and telescope moves to improve efficiencies. By simplifying the process to just a few mouse clicks, the SAT enables even novice observers to achieve robust, efficient, and accurate alignment of slitmasks on all three Keck instruments supporting multislit spectroscopy, saving substantial observing time
Spectral classification of the brightest objects in the galactic star forming region W40
We present high S/N, moderate resolution near-infrared spectra, as well as 10
micron imaging, for the brightest members of the central stellar cluster in the
W40 HII region, obtained using the SpeX and MIRSI instruments at NASA's
Infrared Telescope Facility. Using these observations combined with archival
Spitzer Space Telescope data, we have determined the spectral classifications,
extinction, distances, and spectral energy distributions for the brightest
members of the cluster. Of the eight objects observed, we identify four main
sequence (MS) OB stars, two Herbig Ae/Be stars, and two low-mass young stellar
objects. Strong HeI absorption at 1.083 micron in the MS star spectra strongly
suggests that at least some of these sources are in fact close binaries. Two
out of the four MS stars also show significant infrared excesses typical of
circumstellar disks. Extinctions and distances were determined for each MS star
by fitting model stellar atmospheres to the SEDs. We estimate a distance to the
cluster of between 455 and 535 pc, which agrees well with earlier (but far less
precise) distance estimates. We conclude that the late-O star we identify is
the dominant source of LyC luminosity needed to power the W40 HII region and is
the likely source of the stellar wind that has blown a large (~4 pc)
pinched-waist bubble observed in wide field mid-IR images. We also suggest that
3.6 cm radio emission observed from some of the sources in the cluster is
likely not due to emission from ultra-compact HII regions, as suggested in
other work, due to size constraints based on our derived distance to the
cluster. Finally, we also present a discussion of the curious source IRS 3A,
which has a very strong mid-IR excess (despite its B3 MS classification) and
appears to be embedded in a dusty envelope roughly 2700 AU in size.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal. 29 pages, 10
figure
Dust Emission from Evolved and Unevolved HII Regions in the Large Magellanic Cloud
We present a study of the dust properties of 12 classical and superbubble HII
regions in the Large Magellanic Cloud. We use infrared photometry from Spitzer
(8, 24, 70, and 160 \mum bands), obtained as part of the Surveying the Agents
of a Galaxy's Evolution (SAGE) program, along with archival spectroscopic
classifications of the ionizing stars to examine the role of stellar sources on
dust heating and processing. Our infrared observations show surprisingly little
correlation between the emission properties of the dust and the effective
temperatures or bolometric magnitudes of stars in the HII regions, suggesting
that the HII region evolutionary timescale is not on the order of the dust
processing timescale. We find that the infrared emission of superbubbles and
classical HII regions shows little differentiation between the two classes,
despite the significant differences in age and morphology. We do detect a
correlation of the 24 \mum emission from hot dust with the ratio of 70 to 160
\mum flux. This correlation can be modeled as a trend in the temperature of a
minority hot dust component, while a majority of the dust remains significantly
cooler.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures. Accepted to Ap
P-Element Homing Is Facilitated by engrailed Polycomb-Group Response Elements in Drosophila melanogaster
P-element vectors are commonly used to make transgenic Drosophila and generally insert in the genome in a nonselective manner. However, when specific fragments of regulatory DNA from a few Drosophila genes are incorporated into P-transposons, they cause the vectors to be inserted near the gene from which the DNA fragment was derived. This is called P-element homing. We mapped the minimal DNA fragment that could mediate homing to the engrailed/invected region of the genome. A 1.6 kb fragment of engrailed regulatory DNA that contains two Polycomb-group response elements (PREs) was sufficient for homing. We made flies that contain a 1.5kb deletion of engrailed DNA (enΔ1.5) in situ, including the PREs and the majority of the fragment that mediates homing. Remarkably, homing still occurs onto the enΔ1. 5 chromosome. In addition to homing to en, P[en] inserts near Polycomb group target genes at an increased frequency compared to P[EPgy2], a vector used to generate 18,214 insertions for the Drosophila gene disruption project. We suggest that homing is mediated by interactions between multiple proteins bound to the homing fragment and proteins bound to multiple areas of the engrailed/invected chromatin domain. Chromatin structure may also play a role in homing
Keck-I MOSFIRE spectroscopy of compact star-forming galaxies at z2: High velocity dispersions in progenitors of compact quiescent galaxies
We present Keck-I MOSFIRE near-infrared spectroscopy for a sample of 13
compact star-forming galaxies (SFGs) at redshift with star
formation rates of SFR100M y and masses of
log(M/M). Their high integrated gas velocity dispersions of
=230 km s, as measured from emission
lines of H and [OIII], and the resultant
M relation and MM all
match well to those of compact quiescent galaxies at , as measured from
stellar absorption lines. Since log(M/M)
dex, these compact SFGs appear to be dynamically relaxed and more evolved,
i.e., more depleted in gas and dark matter (13\%) than their
non-compact SFG counterparts at the same epoch. Without infusion of external
gas, depletion timescales are short, less than 300 Myr. This discovery
adds another link to our new dynamical chain of evidence that compact SFGs at
are already losing gas to become the immediate progenitors of
compact quiescent galaxies by .Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Ap
The Slitmask Alignment Tool: robust, efficient, and astronomer-friendly software for aligning multi-object slitmasks
Multi-object spectroscopy via custom slitmasks is a key capability on three instruments at the W. M. Keck Observatory. Before observers can acquire spectra they must complete a complex procedure to align each slit with its corresponding science target. We developed the Slitmask Alignment Tool (SAT), to replace a complex, inefficient, and error-prone slitmask alignment process that often resulted in lost sky time for novice and experienced observers alike. The SAT accomplishes rapid initial mask alignment, prevents field misidentification, accurately predicts alignment box image locations, corrects for flexure-induced image displacement, verifies the instrument and exposure configuration, and accommodates both rectangular and trapezoidal alignment box shapes. The SAT is designed to lead observers through the alignment process and coordinate image acquisition with instrument and telescope moves to improve efficiencies. By simplifying the process to just a few mouse clicks, the SAT enables even novice observers to achieve robust, efficient, and accurate alignment of slitmasks on all three Keck instruments supporting multislit spectroscopy, saving substantial observing time
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