19,965 research outputs found
Internal kinematic and physical properties in a BCD galaxy: Haro 15 in detail
We present a detailed study of the kinematic and physical properties of the
ionized gas in multiple knots of the blue compact dwarf galaxy Haro 15. Using
echelle and long slit spectroscopy data, obtained with different instruments at
Las Campanas Observatory, we study the internal kinematic and physical
conditions (electron density and temperature), ionic and total chemical
abundances of several atoms, reddening and ionization structure. Applying
direct and empirical methods for abundance determination, we perform a
comparative analysis between these regions and in their different components.
On the other hand, our echelle spectra show complex kinematics in several
conspicuous knots within the galaxy. To perform an in-depth 2D spectroscopic
study we complete this work with high spatial and spectral resolution
spectroscopy using the Integral Field Unit mode on the Gemini Multi-Object
Spectrograph instrument at the Gemini South telescope. With these data we are
able to resolve the complex kinematical structure within star forming knots in
Haro 15 galaxy.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, IX Scientific Meeting of the Spanish Astronomical
Society held on September 13-17, 2010, in Madrid, Spai
Near-barrier Fusion Induced by Stable Weakly Bound and Exotic Halo Light Nuclei
The effect of breakup is investigated for the medium weight
Li+Co system in the vicinity of the Coulomb barrier. The strong
coupling of breakup/transfer channels to fusion is discussed within a
comparison of predictions of the Continuum Discretized Coupled-Channels model
which is also applied to He+Co a reaction induced by the borromean
halo nucleus He.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. A talk given at the FUSION06: International
Conference on Reaction Mechanisms and Nuclear Structure at the Coulomb
barrier, March 19-23, 2006, San Servolo, Venezia, Ital
Correlations between reflected and transmitted intensity patterns emerging from opaque disordered media
The propagation of monochromatic light through a scattering medium produces
speckle patterns in reflection and transmission, and the apparent randomness of
these patterns prevents direct imaging through thick turbid media. Yet, since
elastic multiple scattering is fundamentally a linear and deterministic
process, information is not lost but distributed among many degrees of freedom
that can be resolved and manipulated. Here we demonstrate experimentally that
the reflected and transmitted speckle patterns are correlated, even for opaque
media with thickness much larger than the transport mean free path, proving
that information survives the multiple scattering process and can be recovered.
The existence of mutual information between the two sides of a scattering
medium opens up new possibilities for the control of transmitted light without
any feedback from the target side, but using only information gathered from the
reflected speckle.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Effects of weak anchoring on C1 and C2 chevron structures
We present a theoretical study of the effect of weak anchoring on the transition between C1 and C2 chevron structures in smectic C liquid crystals. We employ a continuum theory which allows for variable cone, azimuthal and layer tilt angles. Equilibrium profiles for the director cone and azimuthal angles in the C1 and C2 states are calculated from the standard Euler-Lagrange minimisation of the total energy of the system. By comparing the total energies of the C1 and C2 states we can determine the globally stable chevron profile and calculate the critical temperature for the C1-C2 transition, which depends on anchoring strength and pretilt angle variations
Surface abundances of ON stars
Massive stars burn hydrogen through the CNO cycle during most of their
evolution. When mixing is efficient, or when mass transfer in binary systems
happens, chemically processed material is observed at the surface of O and B
stars. ON stars show stronger lines of nitrogen than morphologically normal
counterparts. Whether this corresponds to the presence of material processed
through the CNO cycle or not is not known. Our goal is to answer this question.
We perform a spectroscopic analysis of a sample of ON stars with atmosphere
models. We determine the fundamental parameters as well as the He, C, N, and O
surface abundances. We also measure the projected rotational velocities. We
compare the properties of the ON stars to those of normal O stars. We show that
ON stars are usually helium-rich. Their CNO surface abundances are fully
consistent with predictions of nucleosynthesis. ON stars are more chemically
evolved and rotate - on average - faster than normal O stars. Evolutionary
models including rotation cannot account for the extreme enrichment observed
among ON main sequence stars. Some ON stars are members of binary systems, but
others are single stars as indicated by stable radial velocities. Hence, mass
transfer is not a simple explanation for the observed chemical properties. We
conclude that ON stars show extreme chemical enrichment at their surface,
consistent with nucleosynthesis through the CNO cycle. Its origin is not clear
at present.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures (+ appendix). A&A accepte
Broad Line Emission in Low-Metallicity Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxies: Evidence for Stellar Wind, Supernova and Possible AGN Activity
We present spectra of a large sample of low-metallicity blue compact dwarf
galaxies which exhibit broad components in their strong emission lines, mainly
in Hbeta, [O III]4959, 5007 and Halpha. Twenty-three spectra have been obtained
with the MMT, 14 of which show broad emission. The remaining 21 spectra with
broad emission have been selected from the Data Release 5 of the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey. The most plausible origin of broad line emission is the evolution
of massive stars and their interaction with the circumstellar and interstellar
medium. The broad emission with the lowest H luminosities (10^36 -
10^39 erg/s) is likely produced in circumstellar envelopes around hot Ofp/WN9
and/or LBV stars. The broad emission with the highest Halpha luminosities
(10^40 - 10^42 erg/s) probably arises from type IIp or type IIn supernovae
(SNe). It can also come from active galactic nuclei (AGN) containing
intermediate-mass black holes, although we find no strong evidence for hard
non-thermal radiation in our sample galaxies. The oxygen abundance in the host
galaxies with SN candidates is low and varies in the range 12 + log O/H = 7.36
- 8.31. However, type IIn SN / AGN candidates are found only in galaxies with
12 + log O/H < 7.99. Spectroscopic monitoring of these type IIn SN / AGN
candidates over a time scale of several years is necessary to distinguish
between the two possibilities.Comment: 50 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
PPAK Wide-field Integral Field Spectroscopy of NGC 628: I. The largest spectroscopic mosaic on a single galaxy
We present a wide-field IFS survey on the nearby face-on Sbc galaxy NGC 628,
comprising 11094 individual spectra, covering a nearly circular field-of-view
of ~6 arcmin in diameter, with a sampling of ~2.7 arcsec per spectrum in the
optical wavelength range (3700--7000 AA). This galaxy is part of the PPAK IFS
Nearby Galaxies Survey, (PINGS, Rosales-Ortega et al. 2009). To our knowledge,
this is the widest spectroscopic survey ever made in a single nearby galaxy. A
detailed flux calibration was applied, granting a spectrophotometric accuracy
of \,0.2 mag.
The age of the stellar populations shows a negative gradient from the inner
(older) to the outer (younger) regions. We found an inversion of this gradient
in the central ~1 kpc region, where a somewhat younger stellar population is
present within a ring at this radius. This structure is associated with a
circumnuclear star-forming region at ~ 500 pc, also found in similar spiral
galaxies. From the study of the integrated and spatially resolved ionized gas
we found a moderate SFR of ~ 2.4 Msun yr. The oxygen abundance shows a a
clear gradient of higher metallicity values from the inner part to the outer
part of the galaxy, with a mean value of 12~+~log(O/H) ~ 8.7. At some specific
regions of the galaxy, the spatially resolved distribution of the physical
properties show some level of structure, suggesting real point-to-point
variations within an individual \hh region. Our results are consistent with an
inside-out growth scheme, with stronger star formation at the outer regions,
and with evolved stellar populations in the inner ones.Comment: 31 pages, 22 Figuras, Accepted for Publishing in MNRAS (corrected
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Measurement invariance testing of the patient health questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) across people with and without diabetes mellitus from the NHANES, EHMS and UK Biobank datasets
Background: The prevalence of depression is higher among those with diabetes than in the general population. The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) is commonly used to assess depression in people with diabetes, but measurement invariance of the PHQ-9 across groups of people with and without diabetes has not yet been investigated.
Methods: Data from three independent cohorts from the USA (n=1,886 with diabetes, n=4,153 without diabetes), Quebec, Canada (n= 800 with diabetes, n= 2,411 without diabetes), and the UK (n=4,981 with diabetes, n=145,570 without diabetes), were used to examine measurement invariance between adults with and without diabetes. A series of multiple group confirmatory factor analyses were performed, with increasingly stringent model constraints applied to assess configural, equal thresholds, and equal thresholds and loadings invariance, respectively. One-factor and two-factor (somatic and cognitive-affective items) models were examined.
Results: Results demonstrated that the most stringent models, testing equal loadings and thresholds, had satisfactory model fit in the three cohorts for one-factor models (RMSEA = .063 or below and CFI = .978 or above) and two-factor models (RMSEA = .042 or below and CFI = .989 or above).
Limitations: Data were from Western countries only and we could not distinguish between type of diabetes.
Conclusions: Results provide support for measurement invariance between groups of people with and without diabetes, using either a one-factor or a two-factor model. While the two-factor solution has a slightly better fit, the one-factor solution is more parsimonious. Depending on research or clinical needs, both factor structures can be used
Long Meg : rock art recording using 3D laser scanning
This article focuses on the results obtained from the laser scanning recording of the Long Meg standing stone (NY56933716, CCSMR6154, NMR 23663) (Cumbria). This recording is result of the project “Breaking through rock art recording: three dimensional laser scanning of megalithic rock art”, led by Margarita Díaz-Andreu and sponsored by the AHRC under the Innovation Awards scheme, aimed to explore the potential of this novel technique. In this article two different methods to visualise the rock art data are compared: one using freely available software, and the other one employing software especially developed for archaeology
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