364 research outputs found
The Hera orebody: a complex distal (AuâZnâPbâAgâCu) skarn in the Cobar Basin of central New South Wales, Australia
The Hera AuâPbâZnâAg deposit in the southeastern Cobar Basin of central New South Wales preserves calc-silicate veins and remnant sandstone/carbonate-hosted skarn within a reduced anchizonal Siluro-Devonian turbidite sequence. The skarn orebody distribution is controlled by a long-lived, basin margin fault system, that has intersected a sedimentary horizon dominated by siliciclastic turbidite, with lesser gritstone and thick sandstone intervals, and rare carbonate-bearing stratigraphy. Foliation (S1) envelopes the orebody and is crosscut by a series of late-stage eastâwest and northâsouth trending faults. Skarn at Hera displays mineralogical zonation along strike, from southern spessartineâgrossularâbiotiteâactinolite-rich associations, to central diopside-richâzoisiteâactinolite/tremoliteâgrossular-bearing associations, through to the northern most tremoliteâanorthite-rich (garnet-absent) association in remnant carbonate-bearing lithologies and sandstone horizons; the northern lodes also display zonation down dip to garnet present associations. High-T, prograde skarn assemblages rich in pyroxene and garnet are pervasively replaced by actinolite/tremoliteâbiotite-rich retrograde skarn which coincides with the main pulse of sulfide mineralization. The dominant sulfides are high-FeâMn sphaleriteâgalenaânon-magnetic high-Fe pyrrhotiteâchalcopyrite; pyrite, arsenopyrite; scheelite (low Mo) is locally abundant. The distribution of metals in part mimics the changing gangue mineralogy, with Au concentrated in the southern and lower northern lode systems and broadly inverse concentrations for AgâPbâZn. Stable isotope data (OâHâS) from skarn amphiboles and associated sulfides are consistent with magmatic (or metamorphic) water and sulfur input during the retrograde skarn phase, while hydrosilicates and sulfides from the wall rocks display comparatively elevated ÎŽD and mixed ÎŽ34S consistent with progressive mixing or dilution of original magmatic (or metamorphic) waters within the Hera deposit by unexchanged waters typical of low latitude (tropical) meteoritic waters. High precision titanite (UâPb) and biotite (ArâAr) geochronology reveals a manifold orebody commencing with high-T skarn and retrograde PbâZn-rich skarn formation at â„403 Ma, Auâlow-Fe sphalerite mineralization at 403.4 ± 1.1 Ma, foliation development remobilization or new mineralization at 390 ± 0.2 Ma followed by thrusting, orebody dismemberment at 384.8 ± 1.1 Ma and remobilization or new mineralization at 381.0 ± 2.2 Ma. The polymetallic nature of the Hera orebody is a result of multiple mineralization events during extension and compression and involving both magmatic and likely formational metal sources
Spherical Infall in G10.6-0.4: Accretion Through an Ultracompact HII Region
We present high resolution (0.''12 x 0.''079) observations of the
ultracompact HII region G10.6-0.4 in 23 GHz radio continuum and the NH3(3,3)
line. Our data show that the infall in the molecular material is largely
spherical, and does not flatten into a molecular disk at radii as small as 0.03
pc. The spherical infall in the molecular gas matches in location and velocity
the infall seen in the ionized gas. We use a non-detection to place a stringent
upper limit on the mass of an expanding molecular shell associated with
pressure driven expansion of the HII region. These data support a scenario in
which the molecular accretion flow passes through an ionization front and
becomes an ionized accretion flow onto one or more main sequence stars, not the
classical pressure-driven expansion scenario. In the continuum emission we see
evidence for externally ionized clumps of molecular gas, and cavities evacuated
by an outflow from the central source.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letter
Direct Observations of the Ionizing Star in the UC HII Region G29.96-0.02: A Strong Constraint on the Stellar Birth Line for Massive Stars
We have observed the ultracompact HII region G29.96-0.02 in the near infrared
J, H, and K bands and in the Br-gamma line. By comparison with radio
observations, we determine that the extinction to the nebula is AK = 2.14 with
a 3 sigma uncertainty of 0.25. We identify the ionizing star and determine its
intrinsic K magnitude. The star does not have an infrared excess and so appears
to be no longer accreting. The K magnitude and the bolometric luminosity allow
us to place limits on the location of the ionizing star in the HR diagram. The
3 sigma upper limit on the effective temperature of the ionizing star is 42500
K. We favor a luminosity appropriate for star with a mass in excess of about 60
solar masses. The limit on the temperature and luminosity exclude stars on the
ZAMS and stars within 10^6 yr of the ZAMS. Since the age of the UC HII region
is estimated to be only about 10^5 yr, we suggest that this is direct evidence
that the stellar birth line for massive stars at twice solar metallicity must
be significantly redder than the ZAMS.Comment: 42 pages; LaTex; 11 Postscript figures; accepted for publication in
Ap
A massive cluster of Red Supergiants at the base of the Scutum-Crux arm
We report on the unprecedented Red Supergiant (RSG) population of a massive
young cluster, located at the base of the Scutum-Crux Galactic arm. We identify
candidate cluster RSGs based on {\it 2MASS} photometry and medium resolution
spectroscopy. With follow-up high-resolution spectroscopy, we use CO-bandhead
equivalent width and high-precision radial velocity measurements to identify a
core grouping of 26 physically-associated RSGs -- the largest such cluster
known to-date. Using the stars' velocity dispersion, and their inferred
luminosities in conjuction with evolutionary models, we argue that the cluster
has an initial mass of 40,000\msun, and is therefore among the most
massive in the galaxy. Further, the cluster is only a few hundred parsecs away
from the cluster of 14 RSGs recently reported by Figer et al (2006). These two
RSG clusters represent 20% of all known RSGs in the Galaxy, and now offer the
unique opportunity to study the pre-supernova evolution of massive stars, and
the Blue- to Red-Supergiant ratio at uniform metallicity. We use GLIMPSE,
MIPSGAL and MAGPIS survey data to identify several objects in the field of the
larger cluster which seem to be indicative of recent region-wide starburst
activity at the point where the Scutum-Crux arm intercepts the Galactic bulge.
Future abundance studies of these clusters will therefore permit the study of
the chemical evolution and metallicity gradient of the Galaxy in the region
where the disk meets the bulge.Comment: 49 pages, 22 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ. Version with
hi-res figures can be found at http://www.cis.rit.edu/~bxdpci/RSGC2.pd
The TSC1-2 tumor suppressor controls insulinâPI3K signaling via regulation of IRS proteins
Insulin-like growth factors elicit many responses through activation of phosphoinositide 3-OH kinase (PI3K). The tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC1-2) suppresses cell growth by negatively regulating a protein kinase, p70S6K (S6K1), which generally requires PI3K signals for its activation. Here, we show that TSC1-2 is required for insulin signaling to PI3K. TSC1-2 maintains insulin signaling to PI3K by restraining the activity of S6K, which when activated inactivates insulin receptor substrate (IRS) function, via repression of IRS-1 gene expression and via direct phosphorylation of IRS-1. Our results argue that the low malignant potential of tumors arising from TSC1-2 dysfunction may be explained by the failure of TSC mutant cells to activate PI3K and its downstream effectors
The Unusual Infrared Object HDF-N J123656.3+621322
We describe an object in the Hubble Deep Field North with very unusual
near-infrared properties. It is readily visible in Hubble Space Telescope
NICMOS images at 1.6um and from the ground at 2.2um, but is undetected (with
signal-to-noise <~ 2) in very deep WFPC2 and NICMOS data from 0.3 to 1.1um. The
f_nu flux density drops by a factor >~ 8.3 (97.7% confidence) from 1.6 to
1.1um. The object is compact but may be slightly resolved in the NICMOS 1.6um
image. In a low-resolution, near-infrared spectrogram, we find a possible
emission line at 1.643um, but a reobservation at higher spectral resolution
failed to confirm the line, leaving its reality in doubt. We consider various
hypotheses for the nature of this object. Its colors are unlike those of known
galactic stars, except perhaps the most extreme carbon stars or Mira variables
with thick circumstellar dust shells. It does not appear to be possible to
explain its spectral energy distribution as that of a normal galaxy at any
redshift without additional opacity from either dust or intergalactic neutral
hydrogen. The colors can be matched by those of a dusty galaxy at z >~ 2, by a
maximally old elliptical galaxy at z >~ 3 (perhaps with some additional
reddening), or by an object at z >~ 10 whose optical and 1.1um light have been
suppressed by the intergalactic medium. Under the latter hypothesis, if the
luminosity results from stars and not an AGN, the object would resemble a
classical, unobscured protogalaxy, with a star formation rate >~ 100 M_sun/yr.
Such UV-bright objects are evidently rare at 2 < z < 12.5, however, with a
space density several hundred times lower than that of present-day L* galaxies.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 27 pages,
LaTeX, with 7 figures (8 files); citations & references updated + minor
format change
The Radio Properties of Composite LINER/HII Galaxies
Arcsec-resolution VLA observations -- newly obtained as well as published --
of 40 nearby galaxies are discussed, completing a study of the radio properties
of a magnitude-limited sample of nearby galaxies of the composite LINER/HII
type. Our results reveal an overall detection rate of at least 25% AGN
candidates among these composite sources. The general properties of these AGN
candidates, as compared to non-AGN composite sources and HII galaxies, are
discussed.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
Molecules in G1.6-0.025 - 'Hot' Chemistry in the Absence of Star Formation at the Periphery of the Galactic Center Region
We present molecular line mapping of the Giant Molecular Cloud G1.6-0.025,
which is located at the high longitude end of the Central Molecular Zone of our
Galaxy. We assess the degree of star formation activity in that region using
several tracers and find very little. We made a large scale, medium (2')
resolution map in the J = 2-1 transition of SiO for which we find clumpy
emission over a ~0.8 x 0.3 degree-sized region stretching along the Galactic
plane. Toward selected positions we also took spectra in the easy to excite
J_k=2_k-1_k quartet of CH3OH and the CS 2-1 line. Throughout the cloud these
\meth lines are, remarkably, several times stronger than, both, the CS and the
SiO lines. The large widths of all the observed lines, similar to values
generally found in the Galactic center, indicate a high degree of turbulence.
Several high LSR velocity clumps that have 0-80 km/s higher velocities than the
bulk of the molecular cloud appear at the same projected position as "normal"
velocity material; this may indicate cloud-cloud collisions. Statistical
equilibrium modeling of the CH3OH lines observed by us and others yield
relatively high densities and moderate temperatures for a representative dual
velocity position. We find 8 10^4 cm-3/30 K for material in the G1.6-0.025
cloud and a higher temperature (190 K), but a 50% lower density in a high
velocity clump projected on the same location. Several scenarios are discussed
in which shock chemistry might enhance the CH3OH and SiO abundances in
G1.6-0.025 and elsewhere in the Central Molecular Zone.Comment: 51 pages incl. 9 figures and 6 Tables, ApJ (in press
The APOGEE-2 Survey of the Orion Star Forming Complex: I. Target Selection and Validation with early observations
The Orion Star Forming Complex (OSFC) is a central target for the APOGEE-2
Young Cluster Survey. Existing membership catalogs span limited portions of the
OSFC, reflecting the difficulty of selecting targets homogeneously across this
extended, highly structured region. We have used data from wide field
photometric surveys to produce a less biased parent sample of young stellar
objects (YSOs) with infrared (IR) excesses indicative of warm circumstellar
material or photometric variability at optical wavelengths across the full 420
square degrees extent of the OSFC. When restricted to YSO candidates with H <
12.4, to ensure S/N ~100 for a six visit source, this uniformly selected sample
includes 1307 IR excess sources selected using criteria vetted by Koenig &
Liesawitz and 990 optical variables identified in the Pan-STARRS1 3
survey: 319 sources exhibit both optical variability and evidence of
circumstellar disks through IR excess. Objects from this uniformly selected
sample received the highest priority for targeting, but required fewer than
half of the fibers on each APOGEE-2 plate. We fill the remaining fibers with
previously confirmed and new color-magnitude selected candidate OSFC members.
Radial velocity measurements from APOGEE-1 and new APOGEE-2 observations taken
in the survey's first year indicate that ~90% of the uniformly selected targets
have radial velocities consistent with Orion membership.The APOGEE-2 Orion
survey will include >1100 bona fide YSOs whose uniform selection function will
provide a robust sample for comparative analyses of the stellar populations and
properties across all sub-regions of Orion.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
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