745 research outputs found
Organic Livestock Production- A Bibliometric Review
Due to the increasing interest in organic farming, an overview of this research area is provided through a bibliometric analysis conducted between April and May 2019. A total of 320 documents were published up until 2018 on organic livestock farming, with an annual growth rate of 9.33% and a clear increase since 2005; 268 documents have been published in 111 journals. Germany is the country with the largest number of published papers (56 documents). Authors\u2019 top keywords (excluding keywords used for running the search) included: animal welfare (29 times), animal health (22 times), cattle (15 times), grazing (10 times), and sheep (10 times). This could indicate that more research has been done on cattle because of the importance of this species in Germany. Moreover, the prevalence of the terms \u2018animal welfare\u2019 and \u2018animal health\u2019 may indicate that the research on organic livestock production has been focused on these two areas. The bibliometric analysis indicates that: i) countries focused the organic livestock production research on their main production, and ii) more research in species other than cattle and sheep is needed
HST measures of Mass Accretion Rates in the Orion Nebula Cluster
The present observational understanding of the evolution of the mass
accretion rates (Macc) in pre-main sequence stars is limited by the lack of
accurate measurements of Macc over homogeneous and large statistical samples of
young stars. Such observational effort is needed to properly constrain the
theory of star formation and disk evolution. Based on HST/WFPC2 observations,
we present a study of Macc for a sample of \sim 700 sources in the Orion Nebula
Cluster, ranging from the Hydrogen-burning limit to M\ast \sim 2M\odot. We
derive Macc from both the U-band excess and the H{\alpha} luminosity
(LH{\alpha}), after determining empirically both the shape of the typical
accretion spectrum across the Balmer jump and the relation between the
accretion luminosity (Lacc) and LH{\alpha}, that is Lacc/L\odot =
(1.31\pm0.03)\cdotLH{\alpha}/L\odot + (2.63\pm 0.13). Given our large
statistical sample, we are able to accurately investigate relations between
Macc and the parameters of the central star such as mass and age. We clearly
find Macc to increase with stellar mass, and decrease over evolutionary time,
but we also find strong evidence that the decay of Macc with stellar age occurs
over longer timescales for more massive PMS stars. Our best fit relation
between these parameters is given by: log(Macc/M\odot\cdotyr)=(-5.12 \pm 0.86)
-(0.46 \pm 0.13) \cdot log(t/yr) -(5.75 \pm 1.47)\cdot log(M\ast/M\odot) +
(1.17 \pm 0.23)\cdot log(t/yr) \cdot log(M\ast/M\odot). These results also
suggest that the similarity solution model could be revised for sources with
M\ast > 0.5M\odot. Finally, we do not find a clear trend indicating
environmental effects on the accretion properties of the sources.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Clues to the star formation in NGC 346 across time and space
We have studied the properties of the stellar populations in the field of the
NGC 346 cluster in the Small Magellanic Cloud, using the results of a novel
self-consistent method that provides a reliable identification of pre-main
sequence (PMS) objects actively undergoing mass accretion, regardless of their
age. The 680 identified bona-fide PMS stars show a bimodal age distribution,
with two roughly equally numerous populations peaked respectively at ~1 Myr,
and ~20 Myr. We use the age and other physical properties of these PMS stars to
study how star formation has proceeded across time and space in NGC 346. We
find no correlation between the locations of young and old PMS stars, nor do we
find a correspondence between the positions of young PMS stars and those of
massive OB stars of similar age. Furthermore, the mass distribution of stars
with similar age shows large variations throughout the region. We conclude
that, while on a global scale it makes sense to talk about an initial mass
function, this concept is not meaningful for individual star-forming regions.
An interesting implication of the separation between regions where massive
stars and low-mass objects appear to form is that high-mass stars might not be
"perfect" indicators of star formation and hence a large number of low-mass
stars formed elsewhere might have so far remained unnoticed. For certain low
surface density galaxies this way of preferential low-mass star formation may
be the predominant mechanism, with the consequence that their total mass as
derived from the luminosity may be severely underestimated and that their
evolution is not correctly understood.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
The tidal tails of NGC 2298
We present an implementation of the matched-filter technique to detect tidal
tails of globular clusters. The method was tested using SDSS data for the
globular cluster Palomar 5 revealing its well known tidal tails. We also ran a
simulation of a globular cluster with a tidal tail where we successfully
recover the tails for a cluster at the same position and with the same
characteristics of NGC 2298. Based on the simulation we estimate that the
matched-filter increases the contrast of the tail relative to the background of
stars by a factor of 2.5 for the case of NGC 2298. We also present the
photometry of the globular cluster NGC 2298 using the MOSAIC2 camera installed
on the CTIO 4m telescope. The photometry covers ~ 3deg2 reaching V ~ 23. A fit
of a King profile to the radial density profile of NGC 2298 shows that this
cluster has a tidal radius of 15.91' \pm 1.07' which is twice as in the
literature. The application of the matched-filter to NGC 2298 reveals several
extra-tidal structures, including a leading and trailing tail. We also find
that NGC 2298 has extra-tidal structures stretching towards and against the
Galactic disk, suggesting strong tidal interaction. Finally, we assess how the
matched-filter performs when applied to a globular cluster with and without
mass segregation taken into account. We find that disregarding the effects of
mass segregation may significantly reduce the detection limit of the
matched-filter.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication on MNRAS main
journa
The Initial Mass Function of the Orion Nebula Cluster across the H-burning limit
We present a new census of the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC) over a large field
of view (>30'x30'), significantly increasing the known population of stellar
and substellar cluster members with precisely determined properties. We develop
and exploit a technique to determine stellar effective temperatures from
optical colors, nearly doubling the previously available number of objects with
effective temperature determinations in this benchmark cluster. Our technique
utilizes colors from deep photometry in the I-band and in two medium-band
filters at lambda~753 and 770nm, which accurately measure the depth of a
molecular feature present in the spectra of cool stars. From these colors we
can derive effective temperatures with a precision corresponding to better than
one-half spectral subtype, and importantly this precision is independent of the
extinction to the individual stars. Also, because this technique utilizes only
photometry redward of 750nm, the results are only mildly sensitive to optical
veiling produced by accretion. Completing our census with previously available
data, we place some 1750 sources in the Hertzsprung-Russel diagram and assign
masses and ages down to 0.02 solar masses. At faint luminosities, we detect a
large population of background sources which is easily separated in our
photometry from the bona fide cluster members. The resulting initial mass
function of the cluster has good completeness well into the substellar mass
range, and we find that it declines steeply with decreasing mass. This suggests
a deficiency of newly formed brown dwarfs in the cluster compared to the
Galactic disk population.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Pre--Main-Sequence stellar populations across Shapley Constellation III. I. Photometric Analysis and Identification
We present our investigation of pre--main-sequence (PMS) stellar populations
in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) from imaging with Hubble Space Telescope
WFPC2 camera. Our targets of interest are four star-forming regions located at
the periphery of the super-giant shell LMC 4 (Shapley Constellation III). The
PMS stellar content of the regions is revealed through the differential Hess
diagrams and the observed color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs). Further statistical
analysis of stellar distributions along cross-sections of the faint part of the
CMDs allowed the quantitative assessment of the PMS stars census, and the
isolation of faint PMS stars as the true low-mass stellar members of the
regions. These distributions are found to be well represented by a double
Gaussian function, the first component of which represents the main-sequence
field stars and the second the native PMS stars of each region. Based on this
result, a cluster membership probability was assigned to each PMS star
according to its CMD position. The higher extinction in the region LH 88 did
not allow the unambiguous identification of its native stellar population. The
CMD distributions of the PMS stars with the highest membership probability in
the regions LH 60, LH 63 and LH 72 exhibit an extraordinary similarity among
the regions, suggesting that these stars share common characteristics, as well
as common recent star formation history. Considering that the regions are
located at different areas of the edge of LMC 4, this finding suggests that
star formation along the super-giant shell may have occurred almost
simultaneously.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 19 pages, 19
figures (three omitted due to size limitations, without affecting the
comprehension of the manuscript
A New Method for the Assessment of Age and Age-Spread of Pre-Main Sequence Stars in Young Stellar Associations of the Magellanic Clouds
We present a new method for the evaluation of the age and age-spread among
pre-main-sequence (PMS) stars in star-forming regions in the Magellanic Clouds,
accounting simultaneously for photometric errors, unresolved binarity,
differential extinction, stellar variability, accretion and crowding. The
application of the method is performed with the statistical construction of
synthetic color-magnitude diagrams using PMS evolutionary models. We convert
each isochrone into 2D probability distributions of artificial PMS stars in the
CMD by applying the aforementioned biases that dislocate these stars from their
original CMD positions. A maximum-likelihood technique is then applied to
derive the probability for each observed star to have a certain age, as well as
the best age for the entire cluster. We apply our method to the photometric
catalog of ~2000 PMS stars in the young association LH 95 in the LMC, based on
the deepest HST/ACS imaging ever performed toward this galaxy, with a detection
limit of V~28, corresponding to M~0.2 Msun. Our treatment shows that the age
determination is very sensitive to the considered grid of evolutionary models
and the assumed binary fraction. The age of LH 95 is found to vary from 2.8 Myr
to 4.4 Myr, depending on these factors. Our analysis allows us to disentangle a
real age-spread from the apparent CMD-broadening caused by the physical and
observational biases. We find that LH 95 hosts an age-spread well represented
by a gaussian distribution with a FWHM of the order of 2.8 Myr to 4.2 Myr
depending on the model and binary fraction. We detect a dependence of the
average age of the system with stellar mass. This dependence does not appear to
have any physical meaning, being rather due to imperfections of the PMS
evolutionary models, which tend to predict lower ages for the intermediate
masses, and higher ages for low-mass stars.Comment: 19 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication by the Astrophysical
Journa
O Desenvolvimento de Objetos de Aprendizagem no Museu Zoobotânico Augusto Ruschi
Este artigo tem como objetivo apresentar o processo de desenvolvimento de objetos de aprendizagem no Museu Zoobotânico Augusto Ruschi (Muzar). Os museus estão entre os espaços educacionais que contribuem para o crescimento de novas fontes eletrônicas de informações voltadas para a aprendizagem. De modo a disponibilizar tais informações ao público em geral, estão sendo desenvolvidos no Muzar objetos de aprendizagem na forma de multimÃdias e jogos educativos. Além de informativos e práticos, as multimÃdias e os jogos devem desenvolver o senso crÃtico, serem contextualizados e oferecer o máximo de interação ao visitante. As multimÃdias são contextualizadas com temas e demais atividades que o Muzar desenvolve. Os objetos de aprendizagem desenvolvidos nesta pesquisa serão depositados em um repositório, ondeserá permitida a consulta bilateral dos mesmos. Este ambiente está sendo desenvolvido em uma outra pesquisa complementar
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