2,175 research outputs found
Research on the design of adaptive control systems, volume 1 Final report
Adaptive control systems - combined optimization and adaptive control, analysis-synthesis and passive adaptive systems, learning systems, and measurement adaptive system
Sudbury project (University of Muenster-Ontario Geological Survey): Field studies 1984-1989 - summary of results
In cooperation between the Ontario Geological Survey and the Institute of Geology and Institute of Planetology, geological, petrological, and geochemical studies were carried out on impact-related phenomena of the Sudbury structure during the last decade. The main results of the field studies are briefly reviewed. Footwall rocks, sublayer, and lower sections of the Sudbury Igneous Complex (SIC) were mainly mapped and sampled in the northern (Levack Township) and western (Trillabelle and Sultana Properties) parts of the north range. Within these mapping areas Sudbury Breccias (SB) and Footwall Breccias (FB) were studied; SB were also investigated along extended profiles beyond the north and south ranges up to 55 km from the SIC. The Onaping Formation (OF) and the upper section of the SIC were studied both in the north range (Morgan and Dowling Townships) and in the southern east range (Capreol and McLennan Townships)
The SBF Survey of Galaxy Distances. I. Sample Selection, Photometric Calibration, and the Hubble Constant
We describe a program of surface brightness fluctuation (SBF) measurements
for determining galaxy distances. This paper presents the photometric
calibration of our sample and of SBF in general. Basing our zero point on
observations of Cepheid variable stars, we find that the absolute SBF magnitude
in the Kron-Cousins I band correlates well with the mean (V-I)o color of a
galaxy according to
M_Ibar = (-1.74 +/- 0.07) + (4.5 +/- 0.25) [ (V-I)o - 1.15 ]
for 1.0 < (V-I) < 1.3. This agrees well with theoretical estimates from
stellar population models. Comparisons between SBF distances and a variety of
other estimators, including Cepheid variable stars, the Planetary Nebula
Luminosity Function (PNLF), Tully-Fisher (TF), Dn-sigma, SNII, and SNIa,
demonstrate that the calibration of SBF is universally valid and that SBF error
estimates are accurate. The zero point given by Cepheids, PNLF, TF (both
calibrated using Cepheids), and SNII is in units of Mpc; the zero point given
by TF (referenced to a distant frame), Dn-sigma and SNIa is in terms of a
Hubble expansion velocity expressed in km/s. Tying together these two zero
points yields a Hubble constant of H_0 = 81 +/- 6 km/s/Mpc. As part of this
analysis, we present SBF distances to 12 nearby groups of galaxies where
Cepheids, SNII, and SNIa have been observed.Comment: 29 pages plus 8 figures; LaTeX (AASTeX) uses aaspp4.sty (included);
To appear in The Astrophysical Journal, 1997 February 1 issue; Compressed
PostScript available from ftp://mars.tuc.noao.edu/sbf
The Origin of [OII] in Post-Starburst and Red-Sequence Galaxies in High-Redshift Clusters
We present the first results from a near-IR spectroscopic campaign of the
Cl1604 supercluster at z~0.9 and the cluster RX J1821.6+6827 at z~0.82 to
investigate the nature of [OII] 3727A emission in cluster galaxies at high
redshift. Of the 401 members in the two systems, 131 galaxies have detectable
[OII] emission with no other signs of current star-formation, as well as strong
absorption features indicative of a well-established older stellar population.
The combination of these features suggests that the primary source of [OII]
emission in these galaxies is not the result of star-formation, but rather due
to the presence of a LINER or Seyfert component. Using the NIRSPEC spectrograph
on the Keck II 10-m telescope, 19 such galaxies were targeted, as well as six
additional [OII]-emitting cluster members that exhibited other signs of ongoing
star-formation. Nearly half (~47%) of the 19 [OII]-emitting, absorption-line
dominated galaxies exhibit [OII] to Ha equivalent width ratios higher than
unity, the typical value for star-forming galaxies. A majority (~68%) of these
19 galaxies are classified as LINER/Seyfert based on the emission-line ratio of
[NII] and Ha, increasing to ~85% for red [OII]-emitting, absorption-line
dominated galaxies. The LINER/Seyfert galaxies exhibit L([OII])/L(Ha) ratios
significantly higher than that observed in populations of star-forming
galaxies, suggesting that [OII] is a poor indicator of star-formation in a
large fraction of high-redshift cluster members. We estimate that at least ~20%
of galaxies in high-redshift clusters contain a LINER/Seyfert component that
can be revealed with line ratios. We also investigate the effect this
population has on the star formation rate of cluster galaxies and the
post-starburst fraction, concluding that LINER/Seyferts must be accounted for
if these quantities are to be meaningful.Comment: 33 pages, 17 figures, to appear in Ap
RR Lyrae Variables in Two Fields in the Spheroid of M31
We present Hubble Space Telescope observations taken with the Advanced Camera for Surveys Wide Field Channel of two fields near M32—between 4 and 6 kpc from the center of M31. The data cover a time baseline sufficient for the identification and characterization of 681 RR Lyrae variables of which 555 are ab-type and 126 are c-type. The mean magnitude of these stars is = 25.29 ± 0.05, where the uncertainty combines both the random and systematic errors. The location of the stars in the Bailey diagram and the ratio of c-type RR Lyraes to all types are both closer to RR Lyraes in Oosterhoff type I globular clusters in the Milky Way as compared with Oosterhoff II clusters. The mean periods of the ab-type and c-type RR Lyraes are = 0.557 ± 0.003 and = 0.327 ± 0.003, respectively, where the uncertainties in each case represent the standard error of the mean. When the periods and amplitudes of the ab-type RR Lyraes in our sample are interpreted in terms of metallicity, we find the metallicity distribution function to be indistinguishable from a Gaussian with a peak at = –1.50 ± 0.02, where the quoted uncertainty is the standard error of the mean. Using a relation between RR Lyrae luminosity and metallicity along with a reddening of E(B – V) = 0.08 ± 0.03, we find a distance modulus of (m – M)_0 = 24.46 ± 0.11 for M31. We examine the radial metallicity gradient in the environs of M31 using published values for the bulge and halo of M31 as well as the abundances of its dwarf spheroidal companions and globular clusters. In this context, we conclude that the RR Lyraes in our two fields are more likely to be halo objects rather than associated with the bulge or disk of M31, in spite of the fact that they are located at 4-6 kpc in projected distance from the center
The Ages and Abundances of the M87 Globular Clusters
A subset of 150 globular clusters in M87 has been selected on the basis of
S/N ratio for abundance and age determinations from the sample of Paper I.
Indices measuring the strength of the strongest spectral features were
determined for the M87 GCs and from new data for twelve galactic GCs. Combining
the new and existing data for the galactic GCs and comparing the colors
and the line indices gives qualitative indications for the ages and abundances
of the GCs. Quantitative results are obtained by applying the Worthey (1994)
models for the integrated light of stellar systems of a single age, calibrated
by observations of galactic GCs, to deduce abundances and ages for the objects
in our sample.
We find that the M87 GCs span a wide range in metallicity, from very metal
poor to somewhat above solar metallicity. The mean [Fe/H] of -0.95 dex is
higher than that of the galactic GC system, and there is a metal rich tail that
reaches to higher [Fe/H] than one finds among the galactic GCs. The mean
metallicity of the M87 GC system is about a factor of four lower than that of
the M87 stellar halo at a fixed projected radius . The metallicity inferred
from the X-ray studies is similar to that of the M87 stellar halo, not to that
of GCs. We infer the relative abundances of Na, Mg, and Fe in the M87 GCs from
the strength of their spectral features. The behavior of these elements between
the metal rich and metal poor M87 GCs is similar to that shown by the galactic
GCs and by halo stars in the Galaxy. The pattern of chemical evolution in these
disparate old stellar systems is indistinguishable. We obtain a median age for
the M87 GC system of 13 Gyr, similar to that of the galactic GCs, with a small
dispersion about this value.Comment: 56 pages with included postscript figures; added derived M87 GC
metallicities to Table 2, a statistical analysis of possible bimodality, an
appendix on the metallicity calibration of U-R and the Washington system, and
other smaller changes. Accepted for publication in ApJ. (See paper for
complete version of the Abstract.
Extremely Red Objects from the NICMOS/HST Parallel Imaging Survey
We present a catalog of extremely red objects discovered using the NICMOS/HST
parallel imaging database and ground-based optical follow-up observations.
Within an area of 16 square arc-minutes, we detect 15 objects with and . We have also obtained K-band photometry for
a subset of the 15 EROs. All of the selected EROs imaged at
K-band have . Our objects have colors in the
range of 1.3 - 2.1, redder than the cluster ellipticals at and
nearly 1 magnitude redder than the average population selected from the F160W
images at the same depth. In addition, among only 22 NICMOS pointings, we
detected two groups or clusters in two fields, each contains 3 or more EROs,
suggesting that extremely red galaxies may be strongly clustered. At bright
magnitudes with , the ERO surface density is similar to what
has been measured by other surveys. At the limit of our sample, F160W = 21.5,
our measured surface density is 0.94 arcmin^{-2}. Excluding the two
possible groups/clusters and the one apparently stellar object, reduces the
surface density to 0.38 arcmin^{-2}.Comment: To appear in the AJ August issue. Replaced with the published versio
Galaxy Harassment and the Evolution of Clusters of Galaxies
Disturbed spiral galaxies with high rates of star formation pervaded clusters
of galaxies just a few billion years ago, but nearby clusters exclude spirals
in favor of ellipticals. ``Galaxy harassment" (frequent high speed galaxy
encounters) drives the morphological transformation of galaxies in clusters,
provides fuel for quasars in subluminous hosts and leaves detectable debris
arcs. Simulated images of harassed galaxies are strikingly similar to the
distorted spirals in clusters at observed by the Hubble Space
Telescope.Comment: Submitted to Nature. Latex file, 7 pages, 10 photographs in gif and
jpeg format included. 10 compressed postscript figures and text available
using anonymous ftp from ftp://ftp-hpcc.astro.washington.edu/pub/hpcc/moore/
(mget *) Also available at http://www-hpcc.astro.washington.edu/papers
Elemental analysis of wines from South America and their classification according to country
Elementos majoritários, minoritários e traço em vinhos provenientes de países produtores na América do Sul (Argentina, Brasil, Chile e Uruguai) foram determinados. A espectrometria de emissão óptica com plasma indutivamente acoplado (ICP OES) e a espectrometria de massa com plasma indutivamente acoplado (ICP-MS) em conjunto com nebulização pneumática e/ou nebulização ultra-sônica foram utilizadas. Foram determinados 45 elementos (Al, Ag, As, Ba, Be, Bi, Ca, Cd, Ce, Co, Cr, Cu, Dy, Er, Eu, Fe, Gd, Ho, K, La, Li, Lu, Mg, Mn, Mo, Na, Nd, Ni, P, Pb, Pr, Rb, Sb, Sn, Se, Sm, Sr, Tb, Ti, Tl, Tm, U, V, Yb e Zn) em 53 vinhos tintos. Mediante análise multivariada, os vinhos puderam ser discriminados de acordo com o país de origem, independentemente do tipo da uva. Os elementos discriminantes foram Tl, U, Li, Rb e Mg.Major, minor and trace elements in wines from wine-producing countries in South America (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Uruguay) were determined. Inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP OES) and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) combined with pneumatic and/or ultrasonic nebulization were used. The concentrations of 45 elements (Al, Ag, As, Ba, Be, Bi, Ca, Cd, Ce, Co, Cr, Cu, Dy, Er, Eu, Fe, Gd, Ho, K, La, Li, Lu, Mg, Mn, Mo, Na, Nd, Ni, P, Pb, Pr, Rb, Sb, Sn, Se, Sm, Sr, Tb, Ti, Tl, Tm, U, V, Yb, and Zn) in 53 red wines were determined. By means of multivariate analysis, the wines could be discriminated according to the country of origin, regardless of the type of grape. The discriminant elements were Tl, U, Li, Rb, and Mg
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