291 research outputs found
A Method of Producing Artificial Calculus on Typodont Teeth
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/141501/1/jper0290.pd
The effect of brainstem transection on blood pressure in the dog
Blood pressure was compared before and after midpontine pretrigeminal brainstem transection in the dog. Statistically significant decreases in blood pressure were observed 1/2, 1, and 1-1/2 hours after brainstem transection. It is suggested that portions of the central nervous system above the midpontine level are active in maintaining blood pressure at the level recorded before transection.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/33010/1/0000394.pd
Action of nicotine on the ascending reticular activating system
Synchronization of the electroencephalogram was produced by midpontine brainstem transection in the rabbit, cat and dog, and by high pontine transection in the monkey. After transection, i.v. injections of 10-20 [mu]g/kg of nicotine produced EEG activation responses in all four species. The mechanism and site of action of the EEG activation effect of nicotine was explored in the dog. It has been shown that peripheral nerve receptors are not essentially involved in nicotine induced EEG activation. Furthermore, the EEG activation effect of nicotine does not appear related to fluctuations in blood pressure, or to increases in circulating levels of epinephrine, norepinephrine, 5-hydroxytryptamine, or vasopressin. Studies in reserpine-pretreated dogs suggest nicotine does not owe its EEG activation effect to the release of central stores of catechol amines of 5-hydroxytryptamine. No evidence was obtained, however, which denies the possibility that nicotine produced EEG activation by a cholinergic mechanism. It is tentatively concluded that a likely mechanism by which nicotine produces EEG activation is by mimicking, or possibly releasing, acetylcholine in the central nervous system. Because nicotine did not produce EEG activation in prepontine or postmammillary dogs, but altered electrical activity of the dog reticular slab, a ponto-mesencephalic site of action for the EEG activation effect of nicotine is proposed.Although nicotine induced EEG activation does not appear to be mediated by an increase in circulating levels of vasopressin, attention is drawn to the possibility that the release of vasopressin may be involved in the central nervous system pharmacology of nicotine, perhaps in regard to the development of acute tolerance to certain central actions of nicotine.It is noted that in all four species studied, the 10-20 [mu]g/kg EEG activation dose of nicotine corresponds to blood levels of nicotine which are commonly achieved in the habitual use of tobacco by man. Study of the central effects of nicotine analogs, particularly non-quarternary analogs, is suggested.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/32281/1/0000343.pd
Continuum and Emission-Line Properties of Broad Absorption Line Quasars
We investigate the continuum and emission-line properties of 224 broad
absorption line quasars (BALQSOs) with 0.9<z<4.4 drawn from the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (SDSS) Early Data Release (EDR), which contains 3814 bona fide
quasars. We find that low-ionization BALQSOs (LoBALs) are significantly
reddened as compared to normal quasars, in agreement with previous work.
High-ionization BALQSOs (HiBALs) are also more reddened than the average
nonBALQSO. Assuming SMC-like dust reddening at the quasar redshift, the amount
of reddening needed to explain HiBALs is E(B-V)~0.023 and LoBALs is
E(B-V)~0.077 (compared to the ensemble average of the entire quasar sample). We
find that there are differences in the emission-line properties between the
average HiBAL, LoBAL, and nonBAL quasar. These differences, along with
differences in the absorption line troughs, may be related to intrinsic quasar
properties such as the slope of the intrinsic (unreddened) continuum; more
extreme absorption properties are correlated with bluer intrinsic continua.
Despite the differences among BALQSO sub-types and nonBALQSOs, BALQSOs appear
to be drawn from the same parent population as nonBALQSOs when both are
selected by their UV/optical properties. We find that the overall fraction of
traditionally defined BALQSOs, after correcting for color-dependent selection
effects due to different SEDs of BALQSO and nonBALQSOs, is 13.4+/-1.2% and
shows no significant redshift dependence for 1.7<z<3.45. After a rough
completeness correction for the effects of dust extinction, we find that
approximately one in every six quasars is a BALQSO.Comment: 35 pages, 11 figures (1 color), 1 table; accepted by A
Spectroscopy of Quasar Candidates from SDSS Commissioning Data
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey has obtained images in five broad-band colors
for several hundred square degrees. We present color-color diagrams for stellar
objects, and demonstrate that quasars are easily distinguished from stars by
their distinctive colors. Follow-up spectroscopy in less than ten nights of
telescope time has yielded 22 new quasars, 9 of them at , and one with
, the second highest-redshift quasar yet known. Roughly 80% of the
high-redshift quasar candidates selected by color indeed turn out to be
high-redshift quasars.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of "After the Dark
Ages: When Galaxies were Young (the Universe at 2<z<5)", 9th Annual October
Astrophysics Conference in Marylan
NYU-VAGC: a galaxy catalog based on new public surveys
Here we present the New York University Value-Added Galaxy Catalog
(NYU-VAGC), a catalog of local galaxies (mostly below a redshift of about 0.3)
based on a set of publicly-released surveys (including the 2dFGRS, 2MASS, PSCz,
FIRST, and RC3) matched to the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 2.
Excluding areas masked by bright stars, the photometric sample covers 3514
square degrees and the spectroscopic sample covers 2627 square degrees (with
about 85% completeness). Earlier, proprietary versions of this catalog have
formed the basis of many SDSS investigations of the power spectrum, correlation
function, and luminosity function of galaxies. We calculate and compile derived
quantities (for example, K-corrections and structural parameters for galaxies).
The SDSS catalog presented here is photometrically recalibrated, reducing
systematic calibration errors across the sky from about 2% to about 1%. We
include an explicit description of the geometry of the catalog, including all
imaging and targeting information as a function of sky position. Finally, we
have performed eyeball quality checks on a large number of objects in the
catalog in order to flag deblending and other errors. This catalog is
complementary to the SDSS Archive Servers, in that NYU-VAGC's calibration,
geometrical description, and conveniently small size are specifically designed
for studying galaxy properties and large-scale structure statistics using the
SDSS spectroscopic catalog.Comment: accepted by AJ; full resolution version available at
http://sdss.physics.nyu.edu/vagc/va_paper.ps; data files available at
http://sdss.physics.nyu.edu/vagc
Additional Ultracool White Dwarfs Found in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We identify seven new ultracool white dwarfs discovered in the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (SDSS). The SDSS photometry, spectra, and proper motions are
presented, and additional BVRI data are given for these and other previously
discovered ultracool white dwarfs. The observed colors span a remarkably wide
range, qualitatively similar to colors predicted by models for very cool white
dwarfs. One of the new stars (SDSS J1251+44) exhibits strong collision-induced
absorption (CIA) in its spectra, while the spectra and colors of the other six
are consistent with mild CIA. Another of the new discoveries (SDSS J2239+00A)
is part of a binary system -- its companion is also a cool white dwarf, and
other data indicate that the companion exhibits an infrared flux deficiency,
making this the first binary system composed of two CIA white dwarfs. A third
discovery (SDSS J0310-00) has weak Balmer emission lines. The proper motions of
all seven stars are consistent with membership in the disk or thick disk.Comment: Accepted for Astrophysical Journal. 16 pages (includes 3 figures
Five High-Redshift Quasars Discovered in Commissioning Imaging Data of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We report the discovery of five quasars with redshifts of 4.67 - 5.27 and
z'-band magnitudes of 19.5-20.7 M_B ~ -27. All were originally selected as
distant quasar candidates in optical/near-infrared photometry from the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), and most were confirmed as probable high-redshift
quasars by supplementing the SDSS data with J and K measurements. The quasars
possess strong, broad Lyman-alpha emission lines, with the characteristic sharp
cutoff on the blue side produced by Lyman-alpha forest absorption. Three
quasars contain strong, broad absorption features, and one of them exhibits
very strong N V emission. The amount of absorption produced by the Lyman-alpha
forest increases toward higher redshift, and that in the z=5.27 object (D_A ~
0.7) is consistent with a smooth extrapolation of the absorption seen in lower
redshift quasars. The high luminosity of these objects relative to most other
known objects at z >~ 5 makes them potentially valuable as probes of early
quasar properties and of the intervening intergalactic medium.Comment: 13 pages in LaTex format, two postscirpt figures. Submitted to the
Astronomical Journa
SDSS Standard Star Catalog for Stripe 82: the Dawn of Industrial 1% Optical Photometry
We describe a standard star catalog constructed using multiple SDSS
photometric observations (at least four per band, with a median of ten) in the
system. The catalog includes 1.01 million non-variable unresolved
objects from the equatorial stripe 82 ( 1.266) in
the RA range 20h 34m to 4h 00m, and with the corresponding band
(approximately Johnson V band) magnitudes in the range 14--22. The
distributions of measurements for individual sources demonstrate that the
photometric pipeline correctly estimates random photometric errors, which are
below 0.01 mag for stars brighter than (19.5, 20.5, 20.5, 20, 18.5) in ,
respectively (about twice as good as for individual SDSS runs). Several
independent tests of the internal consistency suggest that the spatial
variation of photometric zeropoints is not larger than 0.01 mag (rms). In
addition to being the largest available dataset with optical photometry
internally consistent at the 1% level, this catalog provides practical
definition of the SDSS photometric system. Using this catalog, we show that
photometric zeropoints for SDSS observing runs can be calibrated within nominal
uncertainty of 2% even for data obtained through 1 mag thick clouds, and
demonstrate the existence of He and H white dwarf sequences using photometric
data alone. Based on the properties of this catalog, we conclude that upcoming
large-scale optical surveys such as the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope will be
capable of delivering robust 1% photometry for billions of sources.Comment: 63 pages, 24 figures, submitted to AJ, version with correct figures
and catalog available from
http://www.astro.washington.edu/ivezic/sdss/catalogs/stripe82.htm
A Survey of z>5.7 Quasars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey II: Discovery of Three Additional Quasars at z>6
We present the discovery of three new quasars at z>6 in 1300 deg^2 of SDSS
imaging data, J114816.64+525150.3 (z=6.43), J104845.05+463718.3 (z=6.23) and
J163033.90+401209.6 (z=6.05). The first two objects have weak Ly alpha emission
lines; their redshifts are determined from the positions of the Lyman break.
They are only accurate to 0.05 and could be affected by the presence of broad
absorption line systems. The last object has a Ly alpha strength more typical
of lower redshift quasars. Based on a sample of six quasars at z>5.7 that cover
2870 deg^2 presented in this paper and in Paper I, we estimate the comoving
density of luminous quasars at z 6 and M_{1450} < -26.8 to be (8 +/-
3)x10^{-10} Mpc^{-3} (for H_0 = 50 km/s/Mpc, Omega = 1). HST imaging of two
z>5.7 quasars and high-resolution ground-based images (seeing 0.4'') of three
additional z>5.7 quasars show that none of them is gravitationally lensed. The
luminosity distribution of the high-redshfit quasar sample suggests the bright
end slope of the quasar luminosity function at z 6 is shallower than Psi
L^{-3.5} (2-sigma), consistent with the absence of strongly lensed objects.Comment: AJ in press (Apr 2003), 26 pages, 9 figure
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