2,613 research outputs found
Ca impurity in small mixed He-He clusters
The structure of small mixed helium clusters doped with one calcium atom has
been determined within the diffusion Monte Carlo framework. The results show
that the calcium atom sits at the He-He interface. This is in agreement
with previous studies, both experimental and theoretical, performed for large
clusters. A comparison between the results obtained for the largest cluster we
have considered for each isotope shows a clear tendency of the Ca atom to
reside in a deep dimple at the surface of the cluster for He clusters, and
to become fully solvated for He clusters. We have calculated the absorption
spectrum of Ca around the transition and have found that
it is blue-shifted from that of the free-atom transition by an amount that
depends on the size and composition of the cluster.Comment: 24 pages, 11 figures. Accepted on Journal of Chemical Physic
Analysis of colour-magnitude diagrams of rich LMC clusters: NGC 1831
We present the analysis of a deep colour-magnitude diagram (CMD) of NGC 1831,
a rich star cluster in the LMC. The data were obtained with HST/WFPC2 in the
F555W (~V) and F814W (~I) filters, reaching m_555 ~ 25. We discuss and apply a
method of correcting the CMD for sampling incompleteness and field star
contamination. Efficient use of the CMD data was made by means of direct
comparisons of the observed to model CMDs. The model CMDs are built by an
algorithm that generates artificial stars from a single stellar population,
characterized by an age, a metallicity, a distance, a reddening value, a
present day mass function and a fraction of unresolved binaries. Photometric
uncertainties are empirically determined from the data and incorporated into
the models as well. Statistical techniques are presented and applied as an
objective method to assess the compatibility between the model and data CMDs.
By modelling the CMD of the central region in NGC 1831 we infer a metallicity Z
= 0.012, 8.75 < log(tau) < 8.80, 18.54 < (m-M)_0 < 18.68 and 0.00 < E(B-V) <
0.03. For the position dependent PDMF slope (alpha = -dlog(Phi(M))/dlog(M)), we
clearly observe the effect of mass segregation in the system: for projected
distances R < 30 arcsec, alpha ~ 1.7, whereas 2.2 < alpha < 2.5 in the outer
regions of NGC 1831.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figure
Using globular clusters to test gravity in the weak acceleration regime
We have carried out a study of the velocity dispersion of the stars in the
outskirts of the globular cluster Omega Centauri, finding that the velocity
dispersion remains constant at large radii rather than decrease monotonically.
The dispersion starts to be constant for an acceleration of gravity of a =
2.1e-8 cm/s/s. A similar result is obtained reanalyzing existing data for the
globular cluster M15 where the profile flattens out for a = 1.7e-8 cm/s/s. In
both cases the acceleration is comparable to that at which the effect of dark
matter becomes relevant in galaxies. Explanations for this result within
Newtonian dynamics exist (e.g. cluster evaporation, tidal effects, presence of
dark matter) but require ad hoc tuning of the relevant parameters in order to
make in both clusters the dispersion profile flat starting exactly at the same
acceleration. We suggest that this result, together with a similar one for
Palomar 13 and the anomalous behavior of spacecrafts outside the solar system,
may indicate a breakdown of Newton's law in the weak acceleration regime.
Although not conclusive, these data prompt for the accurate determination of
the internal dynamics of as many GCs as possible.Comment: Accepted for publication on A&A Letters. Four pages + 2 figure
Nationwide outbreak of Salmonella enterica serotype Kedougou infection in infants linked to infant formula milk, Spain, 2008
On 5 August 2008, the National Reference Laboratory of Salmonella (NRLS) noted an increase in the number of isolates of Salmonella enterica serotype Kedougou. As of 22 August, 29 isolates have been reported during 2008, which is ten times more than the average number of isolates identified by the NRLS during 2002-2007. All isolates have a typical, indistinguishable Pulse Field pattern (SALKEDXB-1, Spanish code) and are fully sensitive to the standard suite of antimicrobials.S
Body composition and somatotype in professional men's handball according to playing positions
Se realizó un estudio descriptivo transversal en 19 jugadores profesionales
del Club Balonmano Valladolid. Las mediciones antropométricas fueron
realizadas según el protocolo estándar. Se estimaron la masa grasa y ósea, se
calculó el somatotipo y se analizaron las diferencias entre las variables en
función de la posición.
Como resultados, se obtuvo que los pivotes fueron los jugadores más
pesados (con mayor porcentaje de masa grasa); los extremos, los más ligeros y
los laterales, junto con los pivotes, los más altos. No se observaron diferencias
en el IMC en los grupos. En la somatocarta los centrales y laterales se situaron
en la zona central; los extremos y los pivotes en la endomorfa-mesomorfa y los
porteros en la ecto-endomorfa.
Así se evidenció que las variables antropométricas, los datos de
composición corporal y la somatocarta de los deportistas confirman las
características morfológicas básicas de los jugadores para la posición para la
que son más aptosA cross-sectional descriptive study was accomplished in 19 professional players
from Valladolid Handball Club. Anthropometric measurements were performed
according to standard protocol. Body fat and bone mass were estimated, and
the somatotype was calculated.
As results, the line players were significantly the heaviest players; the wings
were lightest and the backs, with the line players, the tallest. Nevertheless, no
significant differences in BMI were observed. Regarding the body composition,
the line players showed the highest values of fat-mass. No differences in BMI
were observed in the groups. With respect to the somatochart, the center backs
and backs were in the central area; wings and line players showed an
endomorph-mesomorph development, and goalkeepers were in the ectoendomorph
area.
As conclusions, anthropometric variables, body composition data and the
somatochart of the athletes evaluated confirm the basic morphological
characteristics of the players for the position for which they are best suite
Stellar luminosity functions of rich star clusters in the Large Magellanic Cloud
We show the results of deep V and I HST photometry of 6 rich star clusters in
the Large Magellanic Cloud with different ages and metallicities. The number of
stars with measured magnitudes in each cluster varies from about 3000 to 10000.
We build stellar density and surface brightness profiles for the clusters and
extract half-light radii and other structural parameters for each. We also
obtain luminosity functions, Phi (Mv), down to Mv ~ 6 (m/msun > 0.6), and
investigate their dependence with distance from the cluster centre well beyond
their half-light radius. In all clusters we find a systematic increase in the
luminosity function slope with radial distance from the centre. Among the
clusters displaying significant mass segregation are the two youngest in the
sample: NGC 1805 and NGC 1818. For these two clusters we obtain present-day
mass functions. The NGC 1818 mass function is in excellent agreement with that
derived by other authors, also using HST data. They young cluster mass function
slopes differ, that of NCG 1805 being systematically steeper than NGC 1818.
Since these are very young stellar systems (age < 40 Myrs), these variations
may reflect the initial conditions rather than evolution due to internal
dynamics.Comment: 10 pages, 24 figure
The Blue Straggler Population in Dwarf Galaxies
In this chapter I review the recent developments regarding the study of Blue
Stragglers (BSS) in dwarf galaxies. The loose density environment of dwarf
galaxies resembles that of the Galactic Halo, hence it is natural to compare
their common BSS properties. At the same time, it is unescapable to compare
with the BSS properties in Galactic Globular clusters, which constitute the
reference point for BSS studies. Admittedly, the literature on BSS in dwarf
galaxies is not plentiful. The limitation is mostly due to the large distance
to even the closest dwarf galaxies. Nevertheless, recent studies have allowed a
deeper insight on the BSS photometric properties that are worth examining.Comment: Chapter 6, in Ecology of Blue Straggler Stars, H.M.J. Boffin, G.
Carraro & G. Beccari (Eds), Astrophysics and Space Science Library, Springe
High-resolution imaging of compact high-velocity clouds (II)
We have imaged five compact high-velocity clouds in HI with arcmin angular-
and km/s spectral-resolution using the WSRT. Supplementary total-power data,
which is fully sensitive to both the cool and warm components of HI, is
available for comparison for all the sources, albeit with angular resolutions
that vary from 3' to 36'. The fractional HI flux in compact CNM components
varies from 4% to 16% in our sample. All objects have at least one local peak
in the CNM column which exceeds about 10^19 cm^-2 when observed with arcmin
resolution. It is plausible that a peak column density of 1-2x10^19 cm^-2 is a
prerequisite for the long-term survival of these sources. One object in our
sample, CHVC120-20-443 (Davies' cloud), lies in close projected proximity to
the disk of M31. This object is characterized by exceptionally broad linewidths
in its CNM concentrations (more than 5 times greater than the median value).
These CNM concentrations lie in an arc on the edge of the source facing the M31
disk, while the diffuse HI component of this source has a position offset in
the direction of the disk. All of these attributes suggest that CHVC120-20-443
is in a different evolutionary state than most of the other CHVCs which have
been studied. Similarly broad CNM linewidths have only been detected in one
other object, CHVC111-07-466, which also lies in the Local Group barycenter
direction and has the most extreme radial velocity known. A distinct
possibility for Davies' cloud seems to be physical interaction of some type
with M31. The most likely form of this interaction might be the ram-pressure or
tidal- stripping by either one of M31's visible dwarf companions, M32 or
NGC205, or else by a dark companion with an associated HI condensation.Comment: 12 pages, 11 (low res.) png figs, accepted for pub. in A&
The dark matter content of the blue compact dwarf NGC 2915
NGC 2915 is a nearby blue compact dwarf with the HI properties of a late-type
spiral. Its large, rotating HI disk (extending out to R ~ 22 B-band scale
lengths) and apparent lack of stars in the outer HI disk make it a useful
candidate for dark matter studies. New HI synthesis observations of NGC 2915
have been obtained using the Australian Telescope Compact Array. These data are
combined with high-quality 3.6 m imaging from the Spitzer Infrared Nearby
Galaxies Survey. The central regions of the HI disk are shown to consist of two
distinct HI concentrations with significantly non-Gaussian line profiles. We
fit a tilted ring model to the HI velocity field to derive a rotation curve.
This is used as input for mass models that determine the contributions from the
stellar and gas disks as well as the dark matter halo. The galaxy is
dark-matter-dominated at nearly all radii. At the last measured point of the
rotation curve, the total mass to blue light ratio is ~ 140 times solar, making
NGC 2915 one of the darkest galaxies known. We show that the stellar disk
cannot account for the steeply-rising portion of the observed rotation curve.
The best-fitting dark matter halo is a pseudo-isothermal sphere with a core
density \msun pc and a core radius kpc.Comment: MNRAS in press. 17 pages, 15 figure
Detection of an optical transient following the 13 March 2000 short/hard gamma-ray burst
We imaged the error box of a gamma-ray burst of the short (0.5 s), hard type
(GRB 000313), with the BOOTES-1 experiment in southern Spain, starting 4 min
after the gamma-ray event, in the I-band. A bright optical transient (OT
000313) with I = 9.4 +/- 0.1 was found in the BOOTES-1 image, close to the
error box (3-sigma) provided by BATSE. Late time VRIK'-band deep observations
failed to reveal an underlying host galaxy. If the OT 000313 is related to the
short, hard GRB 000313, this would be the first optical counterpart ever found
for this kind of events (all counterparts to date have been found for bursts of
the long, soft type). The fact that only prompt optical emission has been
detected (but no afterglow emission at all, as supported by theoretical models)
might explain why no optical counterparts have ever been found for short, hard
GRBs.This fact suggests that most short bursts might occur in a low-density
medium and favours the models that relate them to binary mergers in very
low-density enviroments.Comment: Revised version. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysics Letters, 5 pages, 3 figure
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