14,335 research outputs found
Performance Pressure and Resource Allocation in Washington
Based on interviews with state, district, and school officials, explores how performance pressures have changed resource allocation decisions. Examines reform goals and how Washington's finance system impedes efforts to link resources to student learning
Study of an electro-optic modulator capable of generating simultaneous amplitude and phase modulations
We report on the analysis and prototype-characterization of a dual-electrode
electro-optic modulator that can generate both amplitude and phase modulations
with a selectable relative phase, termed a universally tunable modulator (UTM).
All modulation states can be reached by tuning only the electrical inputs,
facilitating real-time tuning, and the device is shown to have good suppression
and stability properties. A mathematical analysis is presented, including the
development of a geometric phase representation for modulation. The
experimental characterization of the device shows that relative suppressions of
38 dB, 39 dB and 30 dB for phase, single-sideband and carrier-suppressed
modulations, respectively, can be obtained, as well as showing the device is
well-behaved when scanning continuously through the parameter space of
modulations. Uses for the device are discussed, including the tuning of lock
points in optical locking schemes, single sideband applications, modulation
fast-switching applications, and applications requiring combined modulations.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, 1 tabl
Ca II and Na I Quasar Absorption-Line Systems in an Emission-Selected Sample of SDSS DR7 Galaxy/Quasar Projections: I. Sample Selection
The aim of this project is to identify low-redshift host galaxies of quasar
absorption-line systems by selecting galaxies which are seen in projection onto
quasar sightlines. To this end, we use the Seventh Data Release of the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-DR7) to construct a parent sample of 97489
galaxy/quasar projections at impact parameters of up to 100 kpc to the
foreground galaxy. We then search the quasar spectra for absorption line
systems of Ca II and Na I within +- 500 km/s of the galaxy's velocity. This
yields 92 Ca II and 16 Na I absorption systems. We find that most of the Ca II
and Na I systems are sightlines through the Galactic disk, through High
Velocity Cloud complexes in our halo, or Virgo cluster sightlines. Placing
constraints on the absorption line rest equivalent width significance (>=3.0
sigma), the Local Standard of Rest velocity along the sightline (>= 345 km/s),
and the ratio of the impact parameter to the galaxy optical radius (<=5.0), we
identify 4 absorption line systems that are associated with low-redshift
galaxies at high confidence, consisting of two Ca II systems (one of which also
shows Na I), and two Na I systems. These 4 systems arise in blue, L_r^*
galaxies. Tables of the 108 absorption systems are provided to facilitate
future follow up.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, 6 tables; online data included in electronic
version as 1 FITS table and 2 machine readable tables; to be published in The
Astronomical Journa
The MgII Cross-section of Luminous Red Galaxies
We describe a search for MgII(2796,2803) absorption lines in Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (SDSS) spectra of QSOs whose lines of sight pass within impact
parameters of 200 kpc of galaxies with photometric redshifts of z=0.46-0.6 and
redshift errors Delta z~0.05. The galaxies selected have the same colors and
luminosities as the Luminous Red Galaxy (LRG) population previously selected
from the SDSS. A search for Mg II lines within a redshift interval of +/-0.1 of
a galaxy's photometric redshift shows that absorption by these galaxies is
rare: the covering fraction is ~ 10-15% between 20 and 100 kpc, for Mg II lines
with rest equivalent widths of Wr >= 0.6{\AA}, falling to zero at larger
separations. There is no evidence that Wr correlates with impact parameter or
galaxy luminosity. Our results are consistent with existing scenarios in which
cool Mg II-absorbing clouds may be absent near LRGs because of the environment
of the galaxies: if LRGs reside in high-mass groups and clusters, either their
halos are too hot to retain or accrete cool gas, or the galaxies themselves -
which have passively-evolving old stellar populations - do not produce the
rates of star formation and outflows of gas necessary to fill their halos with
Mg II absorbing clouds. In the rarer cases where Mg II is detected, however,
the origin of the absorption is less clear. Absorption may arise from the
little cool gas able to reach into cluster halos from the intergalactic medium,
or from the few star-forming and/or AGN-like LRGs that are known to exist.Comment: Accepted by ApJ; minor correction
Middle and Late Pleistocene environmental history of the Marsworth area, south-central England
To elucidate the Middle and Late Pleistocene environmental history of south-central England, we report the stratigraphy, sedimentology, palaeoecology and geochronology of some deposits near the foot of the Chiltern Hills scarp at Marsworth, Buckinghamshire. The Marsworth site is important because its sedimentary sequences contain a rich record of warm stages and cold stages, and it lies close to the Anglian glacial limit. Critical to its history are the origin and age of a brown pebbly silty clay (diamicton) previously interpreted as weathered till.
The deposits described infill a river channel incised into chalk bedrock. They comprise clayey, silty and gravelly sediments, many containing locally derived chalk and some with molluscan, ostracod and vertebrate remains. Most of the deposits are readily attributed to periglacial and fluvial processes, and some are dated by optically stimulated luminescence to Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 6. Although our sedimentological data do not discriminate between a glacial or periglacial interpretation of the diamicton, amino-acid dating of three molluscan taxa from beneath it indicates that it is younger than MIS 9 and older than MIS 5e. This makes a glacial interpretation unlikely, and we interpret the diamicton as a periglacial slope deposit.
The Pleistocene history reconstructed for Marsworth identifies four key elements: (1) Anglian glaciation during MIS 12 closely approached Marsworth, introducing far-travelled pebbles such as Rhaxella chert and possibly some fine sand minerals into the area. (2) Interglacial environments inferred from fluvial sediments during MIS 7 varied from fully interglacial conditions during sub-stages 7e and 7c, cool temperate conditions during sub-stage 7b or 7a, temperate conditions similar to those today in central England towards the end of the interglacial, and cool temperate conditions during sub-stage 7a. (3) Periglacial activity during MIS 6 involved thermal contraction cracking, permafrost development, fracturing of chalk bedrock, fluvial activity, slopewash, mass movement and deposition of loess and coversand. (4) Fully interglacial conditions during sub-stage 5e led to renewed fluvial activity, soil formation and acidic weathering
System Parameters for the Eclipsing B-Star Binary HD 42401
I present results from an optical spectroscopic investigation of the binary
system HD 42401 (V1388 Ori; B2.5 IV-V + B3 V). A combined analysis of V-band
photometry and radial velocities indicates that the system has an orbital
period of 2.18706 +/- 0.00005 days and an inclination of 75.5 +/- 0.2 degrees.
This solution yields masses and radii of M1 = 7.42 +/- 0.08 Solar Masses and R1
= 5.60 +/- 0.04 Solar Radii for the primary and M2 = 5.16 +/- 0.03 Solar Masses
and R2 = 3.76 +/- 0.03 Solar Radii for the secondary. Based on the position of
the two stars plotted on a theoretical H-R diagram, I find that the age of the
system is > 25 Myr and that both stars appear overluminous for their masses
compared to single star evolutionary tracks. A fit of the spectral energy
distribution based on photometry from the literature yields a distance to HD
42401 of 832 +/- 89 parsecs.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, Added and modified figures and text. Accepted to
A
Evanescent field optical readout of graphene mechanical motion at room temperature
Graphene mechanical resonators have recently attracted considerable attention
for use in precision force and mass sensing applications. To date, readout of
their oscillatory motion has typically required cryogenic conditions to achieve
high sensitivity, restricting their range of applications. Here we report the
first demonstration of evanescent optical readout of graphene motion, using a
scheme which does not require cryogenic conditions and exhibits enhanced
sensitivity and bandwidth at room temperature. We utilise a high
microsphere to enable evanescent readout of a 70 m diameter graphene drum
resonator with a signal-to-noise ratio of greater than 25 dB, corresponding to
a transduction sensitivity of 2.6 m
. The sensitivity of force measurements using this
resonator is limited by the thermal noise driving the resonator, corresponding
to a force sensitivity of N
with a bandwidth of 35 kHz at room temperature (T = 300
K). Measurements on a 30 m graphene drum had sufficient sensitivity to
resolve the lowest three thermally driven mechanical resonances.Comment: Fixed formatting errors in bibliograph
Quantum limited particle sensing in optical tweezers
Particle sensing in optical tweezers systems provides information on the
position, velocity and force of the specimen particles. The conventional
quadrant detection scheme is applied ubiquitously in optical tweezers
experiments to quantify these parameters. In this paper we show that quadrant
detection is non-optimal for particle sensing in optical tweezers and propose
an alternative optimal particle sensing scheme based on spatial homodyne
detection. A formalism for particle sensing in terms of transverse spatial
modes is developed and numerical simulations of the efficacy of both quadrant
and spatial homodyne detection are shown. We demonstrate that an order of
magnitude improvement in particle sensing sensitivity can be achieved using
spatial homodyne over quadrant detection.Comment: Submitted to Biophys
Extinction Curves, Distances, and Clumpiness of Diffuse Interstellar Dust Clouds
We present CCD photometry in UBVRI of several thousand Galactic field stars
in four large (>1 degree^2) regions centered on diffuse interstellar dust
clouds, commonly referred to as ``cirrus'' clouds (with optical depth A_V less
than unity). Our goal in studying these stars is to investigate the properties
of the cirrus clouds. A comparison of the observed stellar surface density
between on-cloud and off-cloud regions as a function of apparent magnitude in
each of the five bands effectively yields a measure of the extinction through
each cloud. For two of the cirrus clouds, this method is used to derive UBVRI
star counts-based extinction curves, and U-band counts are used to place
constraints on the cloud distance. The color distribution of stars and their
location in (U-B, B-V) and (B-V, V-I) color-color space are analyzed in order
to determine the amount of selective extinction (reddening) caused by the
cirrus. The color excesses, A_lambda-A_V, derived from stellar color histogram
offsets for the four clouds, are better fit by a reddening law that rises
steeply towards short wavelengths [R_V==A_V/E(B-V)<=2] than by the standard law
(R_V=3.1). This may be indicative of a higher-than-average abundance of small
dust grains relative to larger grains in diffuse cirrus clouds. The shape of
the counts-based effective extinction curve and a comparison of different
estimates of the dust optical depth (extinction optical depth derived from
background star counts/colors; emission optical depth derived from far infrared
measurements), are used to measure the degree of clumpiness in clouds. The set
of techniques explored in this paper can be readily adapted to the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey data set in order to carry out a systematic, large-scale
study of cirrus clouds.Comment: 22 pages, 13 figures (postscript, gif, jpg). Accepted for publication
in the Astronomical Journal, scheduled for the May 1999 issue. Full
resolution postscript versions of all figures are available at
http://www.ucolick.org/~arpad
Spectroscopic detection of quasars in the 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey
The 100,000 spectra from the 2 degree Field Galaxy Redshift Survey (2dFGRS)
in the 100k Public Data Release represent the largest single compilation of
galaxy spectra available. By virtue of its sheer size and the properties of the
photometric catalogue that defines the sample, the 2dFGRS is expected to
contain a number of potentially interesting objects other than galaxies. A
search of the spectra in the 100k Data Release results in a census of 55
candidate high-redshift (z > 0.3) quasars. One additional 2dFGRS spectrum of a
low-redshift galaxy shows an apparent anomalous broad emission feature perhaps
indicating the presence of a gravitationally lensed quasar. These objects have
been identified primarily using two automated routines that we have developed
specifically for this task, one of which uses a matched filter and the other a
wavelet transform. A number of the quasar images possess complicated
morphologies, suggesting the presence of either diffuse foreground objects
along the line-of-sight or very nearby point sources. The quasar catalogue will
form a target list for future absorption and lensing studies, as well as
providing an assessment of the loss of quasars with non-stellar images from the
companion 2dF QSO Redshift Survey.Comment: Latex 13 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
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