216 research outputs found
Significantly high polarization degree of the very low-albedo asteroid (152679) 1998 KU
We present a unique and significant polarimetric result regarding the
near-Earth asteroid (152679) 1998 KU , which has a very low
geometric albedo. From our observations, we find that the linear polarization
degrees of 1998 KU are 44.6 0.5\% in the R band
and 44.0 0.6\% in the V band at a solar phase angle of 81.0\degr. These
values are the highest of any known airless body in the solar system (i.e.,
high-polarization comets, asteroids, and planetary satellites) at similar phase
angles. This polarimetric observation is not only the first for primitive
asteroids at large phase angles, but also for low-albedo (< 0.1) airless
bodies.
Based on spectroscopic similarities and polarimetric measurements of
materials that have been sorted by size in previous studies, we conjecture that
1998 KU has a highly microporous regolith structure comprising
nano-sized carbon grains on the surface.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, and 3 tables, accepted for publication in A&
Successful closure of large blunt macular chorioretinal rupture: a case report
The authors present a rare case of large chorioretinal rupture caused by blunt traumatic injury of the globe. A 22-year-old woman sustained a blunt injury to her left eye. The best-corrected Snellen visual acuity was 2/20 in her left eye, and hyphema and vitreous hemorrhage were noted. The day after the injury occurred the vitreous hemorrhage had disappeared. Fundus examination revealed a crescent-shaped retinal rupture three disc diameters in size near the macula, and a choroidal rupture six disc diameters in size that was over the vascular arcade. Three days after the injury, vitrectomy with internal limiting membrane peeling was performed. Postoperative prone positioning was maintained for 4 days. Five days postoperatively, closure of the ruptured retina was confirmed. The visual acuity improved to 16/20 4 months after surgery and this was maintained over a 48-month period. In conclusion, early vitrectomy with internal limiting membrane peeling after injury was effective for a case involving severe blunt chorioretinal rupture with closed globe injury
AKARI Infrared Camera Survey of the Large Magellanic Cloud. I. Point Source Catalog
We present a near- to mid-infrared point source catalog of 5 photometric
bands at 3.2, 7, 11, 15 and 24 um for a 10 deg2 area of the Large Magellanic
Cloud (LMC) obtained with the Infrared Camera (IRC) onboard the AKARI
satellite. To cover the survey area the observations were carried out at 3
separate seasons from 2006 May to June, 2006 October to December, and 2007
March to July.
The 10-sigma limiting magnitudes of the present survey are 17.9, 13.8, 12.4,
9.9, and 8.6 mag at 3.2, 7, 11, 15 and 24 um, respectively. The photometric
accuracy is estimated to be about 0.1 mag at 3.2 um and 0.06--0.07 mag in the
other bands. The position accuracy is 0.3" at 3.2, 7 and 11um and 1.0" at 15
and 24 um. The sensitivities at 3.2, 7, and 24 um are roughly comparable to
those of the Spitzer SAGE LMC point source catalog, while the AKARI catalog
provides the data at 11 and 15 um, covering the mid-infrared spectral range
contiguously. Two types of catalog are provided: a Catalog and an Archive. The
Archive contains all the detected sources, while the Catalog only includes the
sources that have a counterpart in the Spitzer SAGE point source catalog. The
Archive contains about 650,000, 140,000, 97,000, 43,000, and 52,000 sources at
3.2, 7, 11, 15, and 24 um, respectively. Based on the catalog, we discuss the
luminosity functions at each band, the color-color diagram, and the
color-magnitude diagram using the 3.2, 7, and 11 um band data. Stars without
circumstellar envelopes, dusty C-rich and O-rich stars, young stellar objects,
and background galaxies are located at distinct regions in the diagrams,
suggesting that the present catalog is useful for the classification of objects
towards the LMC.Comment: 59 pages, 12 figures, accepted for the Astronomical Journa
- …