9,791 research outputs found
CII* Absorption in Damped Lyman Alpha Systems: (II) A New Window on the Star Formation History of the Universe
Starting from the SFR per unit physical area, determined for DLAs using the C
II* method, we obtain the SFR per unit comoving volume at 3, and
find that it agrees with that for the Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs). Though the
mass of produced stars indicated by the SFRs is consistent with the current
densities of known stellar populations, the mass of metals produced by =2.5
is 30 times larger than detected in absorption in DLAs. The most likely
solutions to this ``missing metals'' problem is that star formation occurs in
compact bulge regions. We search for evidence of feedback and find no
correlations between the SFR per unit area and N(H I), but possible
correlations between SFR per unit area and low-ion velocity width and SFR per
unit area and metal abundance. We show that (a) the correlation between cooling
rate and dust-to-gas ratio is positive evidence for grain photoelectric
heating, (b) the CMB does not significantly populate the C II excited
fine-structure states, and (c) the ratio of CII* to resonance-line optical
depths is a sensitive probe of the multi-phase structure of the DLA gas. We
address recent arguments that DLAs are comprised only of WNM gas, and show them
to be inconclusive. Despite the rough agreement between SFR per unit comoving
volume for DLAs and LBGs, current evidence indicates these are distinct
populations
Quantitative relationships between benthic diatom assemblages and water chemistry in Macquarie Island lakes and their potential for reconstructing past environmental changes
This study is the first published survey of diatom-environment relationships Oil sub-Antarctic Macquarie Island. Fifty-eight sites in 50 coastal and inland lakes were sampled for benthic diatoms and water chemistry. 208 diatom species from 34 genera were identified. Multivariate analyses indicated that the lakes were distributed along nutrient and conductivity gradients. Conductivity, pH, phosphate (SRP), silicate and temperature all explained independent portions of the variance in the diatom data. Transfer functions provide a quantitative basis for palaeolimnological studies of past climate change and human impacts, and can be used to establish baseline conditions for assessing the impacts of recent climate change and the introduction of non-native plants and animals. Statistically robust diatom transfer functions for conductivity, phosphate and silicate were developed, while pH and temperature transfer functions performed less well. The lower predictive abilities of the pH and temperature transfer functions probably reflect the broad pH tolerance range of diatoms on Macquarie Island and uneven distribution of lakes along the temperature gradient. This study contributes to understanding the current ecological distribution of Macquarie Island diatoms and provides transfer functions that will be applied in studies of diatoms in lake sediment cores to quantitatively reconstruct past environmental changes
Dynamics of the spontaneous breakdown of superhydrophobicity
Drops deposited on rough and hydrophobic surfaces can stay suspended with gas
pockets underneath the liquid, then showing very low hydrodynamic resistance.
When this superhydrophobic state breaks down, the subsequent wetting process
can show different dynamical properties. A suitable choice of the geometry can
make the wetting front propagate in a stepwise manner leading to {\it
square-shaped} wetted area: the front propagation is slow and the patterned
surface fills by rows through a {\it zipping} mechanism. The multiple time
scale scenario of this wetting process is experimentally characterized and
compared to numerical simulations.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
XMM-Newton and Swift observations prove GRB 090709A to be a distant, standard, long GRB
GRB 090709A is a long gamma-ray burst (GRB) discovered by Swift, featuring a
bright X-ray afterglow as well as a faint infrared transient with very red and
peculiar colors. The burst attracted a large interest because of a possible
quasi-periodicity at P=8.1 s in the prompt emission, suggesting that it could
have a different origin with respect to standard, long GRBs. In order to
understand the nature of this burst, we obtained a target of opportunity
observation with XMM-Newton. X-ray spectroscopy, based on XMM-Newton and Swift
data, allowed us to model the significant excess in photoelectric absorption
with respect to the Galactic value as due to a large column density (about
6.5E+22 cm^-2) in the GRB host, located at z=4.2. Such a picture is also
consistent with the infrared transient's properties. Re-analysis of the prompt
emission, based on INTEGRAL and on Swift data, excludes any significant
modulation at P=8.1 s. Thus, we conclude that GRB 090709A is a distant,
standard, long GRB.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables; MNRAS, in press. (V3: minor changes to
match the final version.
A new constraint on cosmological variability of the proton-to-electron mass ratio
Exotic cosmologies predict variability of the fundamental physical constants
over the cosmic time. Using the VLT/UVES high resolution spectra of the quasar
Q0347-3819 and unblended electronic - vibrational - rotational lines of the H2
molecule identified at z = 3.025 we test possible changes in the proton - to -
electron mass ratio mu_0 = m_p/m_e over the period of 11 Gyr. We obtained a new
constraint on the time - averaged variation rate of mu_0 of |d mu /d t /mu_0| <
5 10^{-15} yr^{-1} (1 sigma c.l.). The estimated 1 sigma uncertainty interval
of the |Delta mu/mu_0| ratio of about 0.004% implies that since the time when
the H2 spectrum was formed at z = 3.025, mu_0 has not changed by more than a
few thousands of a percent.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, a revised version accepted by MNRA
Fluctuating brane in a dilatonic bulk
We consider a cosmological brane moving in a static five-dimensional bulk
spacetime endowed with a scalar field whose potential is exponential. After
studying various cosmological behaviours for the homogeneous background, we
investigate the fluctuations of the brane that leave spacetime unaffected. A
single mode embodies these fluctuations and obeys a wave equation which we
study for bouncing and ever-expanding branes.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, revte
Attention mechanisms in the CHREST cognitive architecture
In this paper, we describe the attention mechanisms in CHREST, a computational architecture of human visual expertise. CHREST organises information acquired by direct experience from the world in the form of chunks. These chunks are searched for, and verified, by a unique set of heuristics, comprising the attention mechanism. We explain how the attention mechanism combines bottom-up and top-down heuristics from internal and external sources of information. We describe some experimental evidence demonstrating the correspondence of CHREST’s perceptual mechanisms with those of human subjects. Finally, we discuss how visual attention can play an important role in actions carried out by human experts in domains such as chess
A search for damped Lyman-alpha systems towards radio-loud quasars I: The optical survey
We present the results from the optical component of a survey for damped
Lyman-alpha systems (DLAs) towards radio-loud quasars. Our quasar sample is
drawn from the Texas radio survey with the following primary selection
criteria: z_em > 2.4, optical magnitudes B < 22 and 365 MHz flux density S_365
> 400 mJy. We obtained spectra for a sample of 45 QSOs with the William
Herschel Telescope, Very Large Telescope and Gemini-North, resulting in a
survey redshift path Delta z = 38.79. We detect nine DLAs and one sub-DLA with
a mean absorption redshift = 2.44. The DLA number density is n(z) =
0.23^{+0.11}_{-0.07}, in good agreement with the value derived for DLAs
detected in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey at this redshift. The DLA number
density of our sample is also in good agreement with optically-complete
radio-selected samples, supporting previous claims that n(z) is not
significantly affected by dust obscuration bias. We present N(HI) column
density determinations and metal line equivalent width measurements for all our
DLAs. The low frequency flux density selection criterion used for the quasar
sample implies that all absorbers will be suitable for follow-up absorption
spectroscopy in the redshifted HI 21 cm line. A following paper (Kanekar et
al.) will present HI 21 cm absorption studies of, and spin temperature
determinations for, our DLA sample.Comment: Accepted for publication in the MNRA
Clues to the nature of damped Lyman alpha systems from chemical evolution models
The evolution of the metallicity of damped Lyman alpha systems (DLAs) is
investigated in order to understand the nature of these systems. The
observational data on chemical abundances of DLAs are analysed with robust
statistical methods, and the abundances are corrected for dust depletion. The
results of this analysis are compared to predictions of several classes of
chemical evolution models: one-zone dwarf galaxy models, multizone disk models,
and chemodynamical models representing dwarf galaxies. We compare the
observational data on the [alpha/Fe] and [N/alpha] ratios to the predictions
from the models. In DLAs, these ratios are only partially reproduced by the
dwarf galaxy one-zone model and by the disk model. On the other hand, the
chemodynamical model for dwarf galaxies reproduces the properties of nearly all
DLAs. We derive the formation epoch of dwarf galaxies, and we find that dwarf
galaxies make a significant contribution to the total neutral gas density in
DLAs, and that this contribution is more important at high redshifts (z > 2-3).
We propose a scenario in which the DLA population is dominated by dwarf
galaxies at high redshifts and by disks at lower redshifts. We also find that
Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) may constitute a sequence rather than present a
sharp dichotomy between the two populations. We also arise the possibility that
we could be missing a whole population of high HI density column objects, with
metallicities intermediate between those of DLAs and LBGs. Finally, we discuss
the possibility that relying only on the observations of DLAs could lead to an
underestimate of the metal content of the high redshift Universe.Comment: 23 pages, 19 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
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