257 research outputs found
Abundances of Baade's Window Giants from Keck/HIRES Spectra: I. Stellar Parameters and [Fe/H] Values
We present the first results of a new abundance survey of the Milky Way bulge
based on Keck/HIRES spectra of 27 K-giants in the Baade's Window (, ) field. The spectral data used in this study are of much higher resolution
and signal-to-noise than previous optical studies of Galactic bulge stars. The
[Fe/H] values of our stars, which range between -1.29 and , were used to
recalibrate large low resolution surveys of bulge stars. Our best value for the
mean [Fe/H] of the bulge is . This mean value is similar to the
mean metallicity of the local disk and indicates that there cannot be a strong
metallicity gradient inside the solar circle. The metallicity distribution of
stars confirms that the bulge does not suffer from the so-called ``G-dwarf''
problem. This paper also details the new abundance techniques necessary to
analyze very metal-rich K-giants, including a new Fe line list and regions of
low blanketing for continuum identification.Comment: Accepted for publication in January 2006 Astrophysical Journal. Long
tables 3--6 withheld to save space (electronic tables in journal paper). 53
pages, 10 figures, 9 table
Abundances and Kinematics of Field Halo and Disk Stars I: Observational Data and Abundance Analysis
We describe observations and abundance analysis of a high-resolution,
high-S/N survey of 168 stars, most of which are metal-poor dwarfs. We follow a
self-consistent LTE analysis technique to determine the stellar parameters and
abundances, and estimate the effects of random and systematic uncertainties on
the resulting abundances. Element-to-iron ratios are derived for key alpha,
odd, Fe-peak, r- and s-process elements. Effects of Non-LTE on the analysis of
Fe I lines are shown to be very small on the average. Spectroscopically
determined surface gravities are derived that are generally close to those
obtained from Hipparcos parallaxes.Comment: 41 pages, 7 Postscript figures. Accepted for publication in the A
Improved Color-Temperature Relations and Bolometric Corrections for Cool Stars
We present new grids of colors and bolometric corrections for F-K stars
having 4000 K < Teff < 6500 K, 0.0 < log g < 4.5 and -3.0 < [Fe/H] < 0.0. A
companion paper extends these calculations into the M giant regime. Colors are
tabulated for Johnson U-V and B-V; Cousins V-R and V-I; Johnson-Glass V-K, J-K
and H-K; and CIT/CTIO V-K, J-K, H-K and CO. We have developed these
color-temperature (CT) relations by convolving synthetic spectra with
photometric filter-transmission-profiles. The synthetic spectra have been
computed with the SSG spectral synthesis code using MARCS stellar atmosphere
models as input. Both of these codes have been improved substantially,
especially at low temperatures, through the incorporation of new opacity data.
The resulting synthetic colors have been put onto the observational systems by
applying color calibrations derived from models and photometry of field stars
which have Teffs determined by the infrared-flux method. The color calibrations
have zero points and slopes which change most of the original synthetic colors
by less than 0.02 mag and 5%, respectively. The adopted Teff scale (Bell &
Gustafsson 1989) is confirmed by the extraordinary agreement between the
predicted and observed angular diameters of the field stars. We have also
derived empirical CT relations from the field-star photometry. Except for the
coolest dwarfs (Teff < 5000 K), our calibrated, solar-metallicity model colors
are found to match these and other empirical relations quite well. Our
calibrated, 4 Gyr, solar-metallicity isochrone also provides a good match to
color-magnitude diagrams of M67. We regard this as evidence that our calibrated
colors can be applied to many astrophysical problems, including modelling the
integrated light of galaxies. (abridged)Comment: To appear in the March 2000 issue of the Astronomical Journal. 72
pages including 16 embedded postscript figures (one page each) and 6 embedded
postscript tables (18 pages total
Quantum Smoluchowski equation: Escape from a metastable state
We develop a quantum Smoluchowski equation in terms of a true probability
distribution function to describe quantum Brownian motion in configuration
space in large friction limit at arbitrary temperature and derive the rate of
barrier crossing and tunneling within an unified scheme. The present treatment
is independent of path integral formalism and is based on canonical
quantization procedure.Comment: 10 pages, To appear in the Proceedings of Statphys - Kolkata I
Analyzing models of work addiction: single factor and bi-factor models of the Bergen Work Addiction Scale
Work addiction ('workaholism') has become an increasingly studied topic in the behavioral addictions literature and had led to the development of a number of instruments to assess it. One such instrument is the Bergen Work Addiction Scale (BWAS - Andreassen et al. 2012 Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 53, 265-272). However, the BWAS has never been investigated in Eastern-European countries. The goal of the present study was to examine the factor structure, the reliability and cut-off scores of the BWAS in a comprehensive Hungarian sample. This study is a direct extension of the original validation of BWAS by providing results on the basis of representative data and the development of appropriate cut-off scores The study utilized an online questionnaire with a Hungarian representative sample including 500 respondents (F = 251; M age = 35.05 years) who completed the BWAS. A series of confirmatory factor analyses were carried out leading to a short, 7-item first-order factor structure and a longer 14-item seven-factor nested structure. Despite the good validity of the longer version, its reliability was not as high as it could have been. One-fifth (20.6 %) of the Hungarians who used the internet at least weekly were categorized as work addicts using the BWAS. It is recommended that researchers use the original seven items from the Norwegian scale in order to facilitate and stimulate cross-national research on addiction to work
Metal enrichment processes
There are many processes that can transport gas from the galaxies to their
environment and enrich the environment in this way with metals. These metal
enrichment processes have a large influence on the evolution of both the
galaxies and their environment. Various processes can contribute to the gas
transfer: ram-pressure stripping, galactic winds, AGN outflows, galaxy-galaxy
interactions and others. We review their observational evidence, corresponding
simulations, their efficiencies, and their time scales as far as they are known
to date. It seems that all processes can contribute to the enrichment. There is
not a single process that always dominates the enrichment, because the
efficiencies of the processes vary strongly with galaxy and environmental
properties.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Space Science
Reviews, special issue "Clusters of galaxies: beyond the thermal view",
Editor J.S. Kaastra, Chapter 17; work done by an international team at the
International Space Science Institute (ISSI), Bern, organised by J.S.
Kaastra, A.M. Bykov, S. Schindler & J.A.M. Bleeke
Workshop for Development of Sustainable Practices for Marine Cage Culture Operations in the U.S. Caribbean.
Social Participation and Disaster Risk Reduction Behaviors in Tsunami Prone Areas
This paper examines the relationships between social participation and disaster risk reduction actions. A survey of 557 households in tsunami prone areas in Phang Nga, Thailand was conducted following the 2012 Indian Ocean earthquakes. We use a multivariate probit model to jointly estimate the likelihood of undertaking three responses to earthquake and tsunami hazards (namely, (1) following disaster-related news closely, (2) preparing emergency kits and/or having a family emergency plan, and (3) having an intention to migrate) and community participation.We find that those who experienced losses from the 2004 tsunami are more likely to participate in community activities and respond to earthquake hazards. Compared to men, women are more likely to prepare emergency kits and/or have an emergency plan and have a greater intention to migrate. Living in a community with a higher proportion of women with tertiary education increases the probability of engaging in community activities and carrying out disaster risk reduction measures. Individuals who participate in village-based activities are 5.2% more likely to undertake all three risk reduction actions compared to those not engaging in community activities. This implies that encouraging participation in community activities can have positive externalities in disaster mitigation
Chemical Abundances Of Three Metal-Poor Globular Clusters (NGC 6287, NGC 6293, And NGC 6541) In The Inner Halo
We present a chemical abundance study of three inner old halo clusters NGC
6287, NGC 6293, and NGC 6541, finding [Fe/H] = -2.01 +/- 0.05, -1.99 +/- 0.02,
and -1.76 +/- 0.02, respectively, and our metallicity measurements are in good
agreement with previous estimates. The mean alpha-element abundances of our
program clusters are in good agreement with other globular clusters, confirming
previous results. However, the individual alpha-elements appear to follow
different trends. The silicon abundances of the inner halo clusters appear to
be enhanced and the titanium abundances appear to be depleted compared to the
intermediate halo clusters. Our results also appear to oppose to those of
metal-rich bulge giants studied by McWilliam and Rich, who found that bulge
giants are titanium enhanced and silicon deficient. In particular, [Si/Ti]
ratios appear to be related to Galactocentric distances,in the sense that
[Si/Ti] ratios decrease with Galactocentric distance. We propose that
contributions from different masses of the SNe II progenitors that enriched
proto-globular cluster clouds' elemental abundances and the different initial
physical environments surrounding the proto-globular clusters clouds are
responsible for this gradient in [Si/Ti] ratios versus Galactocentric distances
of the "old halo" globular clusters. On the other hand, our program clusters'
enhanced s-process elemental abundances suggest that the formation timescale of
our program clusters might be as short as a few times 10^8 yr after the star
formation is initiated in the Galaxy's central regions, if the s-process site
is intermediate mass AGB stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in AJ (Sept. 2002
Stellar Archaeology: a Keck Pilot Program on Extremely Metal- Poor Stars From the Hamburg/ESO Survey. III. The Lead (Pb) Star HE 0024-2523
We present a detailed abundance analysis, including spectral syntheses, of a
very metal-poor ([Fe/H]= -2.7), peculiar main sequence star, HE0024-2523
detected during the course of the Keck Pilot Program. Radial velocities of this
star were obtained during four different observing runs over a time span of 1.1
years, and demonstrate that it is clearly a short period spectroscopic binary.
An orbital solution was obtained, and orbital parameters were determined with
high precision. The rotational velocity was also measured (vsin i=9.71.5
kms); rotation appears likely to be synchronous with the orbit. The abundance
analysis and spectral syntheses indicate that the object is a CH star
characterized by extreme s-process enrichment, likely due to mass accretion
from an evolved companion which has now probably become a white dwarf. The lead
(Pb) abundance of HE0024-2523 is very high, the same as that of the recently
discovered lead-rich metal-poor star CS 29526-110, [Pb/Fe]=+3.3. The abundance
ratio of the heavy-s to light-s elements, as characterized by Pb and Ba,
[Pb/Ba]=+1.9, is the highest yet found for any metal-poor star, and is about
0.7 dex higher than that of CS29526-110. On the basis of the measured isotopic
ratio of carbon (12C/13C about 6) we argue that the mass donor must have had an
original mass of at least 3 Msun. The unusually short period of this CH star
suggests that it underwent a past common-envelope phase with its evolved
companion. Our results are compared to the latest available models for AGB
yields and s-process nucleosynthesis. We also discuss the possible connection
between HE0024-2523 the lithium depletion of halo stars, and halo blue
straggler formation.Comment: 55 pages, 17 color figures included; Accepted for publication in the
February 2003 issue of the Astronomical Journa
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