5,813 research outputs found
Extinction toward the Compact HII Regions G-0.02-0.07
The four HII regions in the Sgr A East complex: A, B, C, and D, represent
evidence of recent massive star formation in the central ten parsecs. Using
Paschen-alpha images taken with HST and 8.4 GHz VLA data, we construct an
extinction map of A-D, and briefly discuss their morphology and location.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure. To be published in the Astronomical Society of the
Pacific Conference Series Proceedings of the Galactic Center Workshop 2009,
Shangha
HST Palpha Survey of the Galactic Center -- Searching the missing young stellar populations within the Galactic Center
We present preliminary results of our \hst Pa survey of the Galactic
Center (\gc), which maps the central 0.650.25 degrees around Sgr A*.
This survey provides us with a more complete inventory of massive stars within
the \gc, compared to previous observations. We find 157 Pa emitting
sources, which are evolved massive stars. Half of them are located outside of
three young massive star clusters near Sgr A*. The loosely spatial distribution
of these field sources suggests that they are within less massive star
clusters/groups, compared to the three massive ones. Our Pa mosaic not
only resolves previously well-known large-scale filaments into fine structures,
but also reveals many new extended objects, such as bow shocks and H II
regions. In particular, we find two regions with large-scale Pa diffuse
emission and tens of Pa emitting sources in the negative Galactic
longitude suggesting recent star formation activities, which were not known
previously. Furthermore, in our survey, we detect 0.6 million stars, most
of which are red giants or AGB stars. Comparisons of the magnitude distribution
in 1.90 m and those from the stellar evolutionary tracks with different
star formation histories suggest an episode of star formation process about 350
Myr ago in the \gc .Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, Proceedings of the Galactic Center Workshop
2009, Shangha
Two Loop Low Temperature Corrections to Electron Self Energy
We recalculate the two loop corrections in the background heat bath using
real time formalism. The procedure of the integrations of loop momenta with
dependence on finite temperature before the momenta without it, has been
followed. We determine the mass and wavefunction renormalization constants in
the low temperature limit of QED, for the first time with this preferred order
of integrations. The correction to electron mass and spinors in this limit is
important in the early universe at the time of primordial nucleosynthesis as
well as in astrophysics.Comment: 8 pages and 1 figure to appear in Chinese Physics
'The Brick' is not a brick : A comprehensive study of the structure and dynamics of the Central Molecular Zone cloud G0.253+0.016
© 2019 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society.In this paper we provide a comprehensive description of the internal dynamics of G0.253+0.016 (a.k.a. 'the Brick'); one of the most massive and dense molecular clouds in the Galaxy to lack signatures of widespread star formation. As a potential host to a future generation of high-mass stars, understanding largely quiescent molecular clouds like G0.253+0.016 is of critical importance. In this paper, we reanalyse Atacama Large Millimeter Array cycle 0 HNCO data at 3 mm, using two new pieces of software which we make available to the community. First, scousepy, a Python implementation of the spectral line fitting algorithm scouse. Secondly, acorns (Agglomerative Clustering for ORganising Nested Structures), a hierarchical n-dimensional clustering algorithm designed for use with discrete spectroscopic data. Together, these tools provide an unbiased measurement of the line of sight velocity dispersion in this cloud, kms, which is somewhat larger than predicted by velocity dispersion-size relations for the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ). The dispersion of centroid velocities in the plane of the sky are comparable, yielding . This isotropy may indicate that the line-of-sight extent of the cloud is approximately equivalent to that in the plane of the sky. Combining our kinematic decomposition with radiative transfer modelling we conclude that G0.253+0.016 is not a single, coherent, and centrally-condensed molecular cloud; 'the Brick' is not a \emph{brick}. Instead, G0.253+0.016 is a dynamically complex and hierarchically-structured molecular cloud whose morphology is consistent with the influence of the orbital dynamics and shear in the CMZ.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
The Molonglo Galactic Plane Survey: I. Overview and Images
The first epoch Molonglo Galactic Plane Survey (MGPS1) is a radio continuum
survey made using the Molonglo Observatory Synthesis Telescope (MOST) at 843
MHz with a resolution of 43" X 43" cosec |delta|. The region surveyed is 245
deg < l < 355 deg, |b| < 1.5 deg. The thirteen 9 deg X 3 deg mosaic images
presented here are the superposition of over 450 complete synthesis
observations, each taking 12 h and covering 70' X 70' cosec |delta|. The
root-mean-square sensitivity over much of the mosaiced survey is 1-2 mJy/beam
(1 sigma), and the positional accuracy is approximately 1" X 1" cosec |delta|
for sources brighter than 20 mJy. The dynamic range is no better than 250:1,
and this also constrains the sensitivity in some parts of the images. The
survey area of 330 sq deg contains well over 12,000 unresolved or barely
resolved objects, almost all of which are extra-galactic sources lying in the
Zone of Avoidance. In addition a significant fraction of this area is covered
by extended, diffuse emission associated with thermal complexes, discrete H II
regions, supernova remnants, and other structures in the Galactic interstellar
medium.Comment: Paper with 3 figures and 1 table + Table 2 + 7 jpg grayscales for Fig
4. Astrophysical Journal Supplement (in press) see also
http://www.astrop.physics.usyd.edu.au/MGP
The hidden sterile neutrino and the (2+2) sum rule
We discuss oscillations of atmospheric and solar neutrinos into sterile
neutrinos in the 2+2 scheme. A zeroth order sum rule requires equal
probabilities for oscillation into nu_s and nu_tau in the solar+atmospheric
data sample. Data does not favor this claim. Here we use scatter plots to
assess corrections of the zeroth order sum rule when (i) the 4 x 4 neutrino
mixing matrix assumes its full range of allowed values, and (ii) matter effects
are included. We also introduce a related "product rule". We find that the sum
rule is significantly relaxed, due to both the inclusion of the small mixing
angles (which provide a short-baseline contribution) and to matter effects. The
product rule is also dramatically altered. The observed relaxation of the sum
rule weakens the case against the 2+2 model and the sterile neutrino. To
invalidate the 2+2 model, a global fit to data with the small mixing angles
included seems to be required.Comment: 43 pages, 11 figures (same as v2, accidental replacement
Parallel Magnetic Field Induced Transition in Transport in the Dilute Two-Dimensional Hole System in GaAs
A magnetic field applied parallel to the two-dimensional hole system in the
GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure, which is metallic in the absence of an external
magnetic field, can drive the system into insulating at a finite field through
a well defined transition. The value of resistivity at the transition is found
to depend strongly on density
Properties of the Compact HII Region Complex G-0.02-0.07
We present new extinction maps and high-resolution Paschen alpha images of
G-0.02-0.07, a complex of compact HII regions located adjacent to the
M-0.02-0.07 giant molecular cloud, 6 parsecs in projection from the center of
the Galaxy. These HII regions, which lie in projection just outside the
boundary of the Sgr A East supernova remnant, represent one of the most recent
episodes of star formation in the central parsecs of the Galaxy. The 1.87
micron extinctions of regions A, B and C are almost identical, approximately
1.5 magnitudes. Region D, in contrast, has a peak 1.87 micron extinction of 2.3
magnitudes. Adopting the Nishiyama et al. (2008) extinction law, we find these
extinctions correspond to visual extinctions of A_V = 44.5 and A_V = 70,
respectively. The similar and uniform extinctions of regions A, B and C are
consistent with that expected for foreground extinction in the direction of the
Galactic center, suggesting that they lie at the front side of the M-0.02-0.07
molecular cloud. Region D is more compact, has a higher extinction and is thus
suspected to be younger and embedded in a dense core in a compressed ridge on
the western edge of this cloud.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, submitted to ApJ, comments welcom
Electron correlation effects and magnetic ordering at the Gd(0001) surface
Effects of electron correlation on the electronic structure and magnetic
properties of the Gd(0001) surface are investigated using of the full-potential
linearized augmented plane wave implementation of correlated band theory
("LDA+U"). The use of LDA+U instead of LDA (local density approximation) total
energy calculations produces the correct ferromagnetic ground state for both
bulk Gd and the Gd surface. Surface strain relaxation leads to an 90 %
enhancement of the interlayer surface-to-bulk effective exchange coupling.
Application of a Landau-Ginzburg type theory yields a 30 % enhancement of the
Curie temperature at the surface, in very good agreement with the experiment.Comment: revised version: minor typos correcte
G313.3+00.3: A New Planetary Nebula discovered by the Australia Telescope Compact Array and the Spitzer Space Telescope
We present a new planetary nebula, first identified in images from the
Australia Telescope Compact Array, although not recognized at that time. Recent
observations with the Spitzer Space Telescope during the GLIMPSE Legacy program
have rediscovered the object. The high-resolution radio and infrared images
enable the identification of the central star or its wind, the recognition of
the radio emission as thermal, and the probable presence of polycylic aromatic
hydrocarbons in and around the source. These lead to the conclusion that
G313.3+00.3 is a planetary nebula. This object is of particular interest
because it was discovered solely through radio and mid-infrared imaging,
without any optical (or near-infrared) confirmation, and acts as a proof of
concept for the discovery of many more highly extinguished planetary nebulae.
G313.3+00.3 is well-resolved by both the instruments with which it was
identified, and suffers extreme reddening due to its location in the
Scutum-Crux spiral arm.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX (aastex), incl. 8 PostScript (eps) figures and 1
table. Accepted by ApJ (Part 1
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