226 research outputs found
GMRT Detection of HI 21 cm-line Absorption from the Peculiar Galaxy in Abell 2125
Using the recently completed Giant Meterwave Radio Telescope, we have
detected the HI 21 cm-line absorption from the peculiar galaxy C153 in the
galaxy cluster Abell 2125. The HI absorption is at a redshift of 0.2533, with a
peak optical depth of 0.36. The full width at half minimum of the absorption
line is 100 km/s. The estimated column density of atomic Hydrogen is
0.7e22(Ts/100K) per sq. cm. The HI absorption is redshifted by ~ 400 km/s
compared to the [OIII] emission line from this system. We attribute this to an
in-falling cold gas, or to an out-flowing ionised gas, or to a combination of
both as a consequence of tidal interactions of C153 with either a cluster
galaxy or the cluster potential.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, uses jaa.sty (included
Identifying Implementation Bugs in Machine Learning based Image Classifiers using Metamorphic Testing
We have recently witnessed tremendous success of Machine Learning (ML) in
practical applications. Computer vision, speech recognition and language
translation have all seen a near human level performance. We expect, in the
near future, most business applications will have some form of ML. However,
testing such applications is extremely challenging and would be very expensive
if we follow today's methodologies. In this work, we present an articulation of
the challenges in testing ML based applications. We then present our solution
approach, based on the concept of Metamorphic Testing, which aims to identify
implementation bugs in ML based image classifiers. We have developed
metamorphic relations for an application based on Support Vector Machine and a
Deep Learning based application. Empirical validation showed that our approach
was able to catch 71% of the implementation bugs in the ML applications.Comment: Published at 27th ACM SIGSOFT International Symposium on Software
Testing and Analysis (ISSTA 2018
Detection of HI 21 cm-line absorption in the Warm Neutral Medium and in the Outer Arm of the Galaxy
Using the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope, we have detected HI 21
cm-line absorption in the Warm Neutral Medium of the Galaxy toward the
extragalactic source 3C147. This absorption, at an LSR velocity of -29+/-4 km/s
with a full width at half maximum of 53+/-6 km/s, is associated with the
Perseus Arm of the Galaxy. The observed optical depth is (1.9+/-0.2)*10**(-3).
The estimated spin temperature of the gas is 3600+/-360 K. The volume density
is 0.4 per cc assuming pressure equilibrium. Toward two other sources, 3C273
and 3C295, no wide HI 21 cm-line absorption was detected. The highest of the
3sigma lower limits on the spin temperature of the Warm Neutral Medium is 2600
K. In addition, we have also detected HI 21 cm-line absorption from high
velocity clouds in the Outer Arm toward 3C147 and 3C380 at LSR velocities of
-117.3, -124.5 and -113.7 km/s respectively. We find two distinct temperature
components in the high velocity clouds with spin temperatures of greater than
1000 K and less than 200 K, respectively.Comment: 21 pages inclusive of 7 figures and 2 table
ATLBS Extended Source Sample: The evolution in radio source morphology with flux density
Based on the ATLBS survey we present a sample of extended radio sources and
derive morphological properties of faint radio sources. 119 radio galaxies form
the ATLBS-Extended Source Sample (ATLBS-ESS) consisting of all sources
exceeding 30" in extent and integrated flux densities exceeding 1 mJy. We give
structural details along with information on galaxy identifications and source
classifications. The ATLBS-ESS, unlike samples with higher flux-density limits,
has almost equal fractions of FR-I and FR-II radio galaxies with a large
fraction of the FR-I population exhibiting 3C31-type structures. Significant
asymmetry in lobe extents appears to be a common occurrence in the ATLBS-ESS
FR-I sources compared to FR-II sources. We present a sample of 22 FR-Is at
z>0.5 with good structural information. The detection of several giant radio
sources, with size exceeding 0.7 Mpc, at z>1 suggests that giant radio sources
are not less common at high redshifts. The ESS also includes a sample of 28
restarted radio galaxies. The relative abundance of dying and restarting
sources is indicative of a model where radio sources undergo episodic activity
in which an active phase is followed by a brief dying phase that terminates
with restarting of the central activity; in any massive elliptical a few such
activity cycles wherein adjacent events blend may constitute the lifetime of a
radio source and such bursts of blended activity cycles may be repeated over
the age of the host. The ATLBS-ESS includes a 2-Mpc giant radio galaxy with the
lowest surface brightness lobes known to date.Comment: 69 pages, 119 figures, 4 tables, to appear in ApJ
A Highly Ordered Faraday-Rotation Structure in the Interstellar Medium
We describe a Faraday-rotation structure in the Interstellar Medium detected
through polarimetric imaging at 1420 MHz from the Canadian Galactic Plane
Survey (CGPS). The structure, at l=91.8, b=-2.5, has an extent of ~2 degree,
within which polarization angle varies smoothly over a range of ~100 degree.
Polarized intensity also varies smoothly, showing a central peak within an
outer shell. This region is in sharp contrast to its surroundings, where
low-level chaotic polarization structure occurs on arcminute scales. The
Faraday-rotation structure has no counterpart in radio total intensity, and is
unrelated to known objects along the line of sight, which include a Lynds
Bright Nebula, LBN 416, and the star cluster M39 (NGC7092). It is interpreted
as a smooth enhancement of electron density. The absence of a counterpart,
either in optical emission or in total intensity, establishes a lower limit to
its distance. An upper limit is determined by the strong beam depolarization in
this direction. At a probable distance of 350 +/- 50 pc, the size of the object
is 10 pc, the enhancement of electron density is 1.7 cm-3, and the mass of
ionized gas is 23 M_sun. It has a very smooth internal magnetic field of
strength 3 microG, slightly enhanced above the ambient field. G91.8-2.5 is the
second such object to be discovered in the CGPS, and it seems likely that such
structures are common in the Magneto-Ionic Medium.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, ApJ accepte
Spatial and Kinematical Lopsidedness of Atomic Hydrogen in the Ursa Major Group of Galaxies
We have carried out the harmonic analysis of the atomic hydrogen (HI) surface
density maps and the velocity fields for 11 galaxies belonging to the Ursa
Major group, over a radial range of 4-6 disc scalelengths in each galaxy. This
analysis gives the radial variation of spatial lopsidedness, quantified by the
Fourier amplitude A of the m=1 component normalised to the average value.
The kinematical analysis gives a value for the elongation of the potential to
be . The mean amplitude of spatial lopsidedness is found to be
in the inner disc, similar to the field galaxies, and is smaller by
a factor of compared to the Eridanus group galaxies. It is also shown
that the the average value of A does not increase with the Hubble type,
contrary to what is seen in field galaxies. We argue that the physical origin
of lopsidedness in the Ursa Major group of galaxies is tidal interactions,
albeit weaker and less frequent than in Eridanus. Thus systematic studies of
lopsidedness in groups of galaxies can provide dynamical clues regarding the
interactions and evolution of galaxies in a group environment.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication by MNRA
Space VLBI at Low Frequencies
At sufficiently low frequencies, no ground-based radio array will be able to
produce high resolution images while looking through the ionosphere. A
space-based array will be needed to explore the objects and processes which
dominate the sky at the lowest radio frequencies. An imaging radio
interferometer based on a large number of small, inexpensive satellites would
be able to track solar radio bursts associated with coronal mass ejections out
to the distance of Earth, determine the frequency and duration of early epochs
of nonthermal activity in galaxies, and provide unique information about the
interstellar medium. This would be a "space-space" VLBI mission, as only
baselines between satellites would be used. Angular resolution would be limited
only by interstellar and interplanetary scattering.Comment: To appear in "Astrophysical Phenomena Revealed by Space VLBI", ed. H.
Hirabayashi, P. Edwards, and D. Murphy (ISAS, Japan
The Spectral Energy Distribution of Powerful Starburst Galaxies I: Modelling the Radio Continuum
We have acquired radio continuum data between 70\,MHz and 48\,GHz for a
sample of 19 southern starburst galaxies at moderate redshifts () with the aim of separating synchrotron and free-free emission
components. Using a Bayesian framework we find the radio continuum is rarely
characterised well by a single power law, instead often exhibiting low
frequency turnovers below 500\,MHz, steepening at mid-to-high frequencies, and
a flattening at high frequencies where free-free emission begins to dominate
over the synchrotron emission. These higher order curvature components may be
attributed to free-free absorption across multiple regions of star formation
with varying optical depths. The decomposed synchrotron and free-free emission
components in our sample of galaxies form strong correlations with the
total-infrared bolometric luminosities. Finally, we find that without
accounting for free-free absorption with turnovers between 90 to 500\,MHz the
radio-continuum at low frequency (\,MHz) could be overestimated by
upwards of a factor of twelve if a simple power law extrapolation is used from
higher frequencies. The mean synchrotron spectral index of our sample is
constrained to be , which is steeper then the canonical value of
for normal galaxies. We suggest this may be caused by an intrinsically
steeper cosmic ray distribution
Absolute Spectrophotometry of Northern Compact Planetary Nebulae
We present medium-dispersion spectra and narrowband images of six northern
compact planetary nebulae (PNe): BoBn 1, DdDm 1, IC 5117, M 1-5, M 1-71, and
NGC 6833. From broad-slit spectra, total absolute fluxes and equivalent widths
were measured for all observable emission lines. High signal-to noise emission
line fluxes of H-alpha, H-beta, [OIII], [NII], and HeI may serve as emission
line flux standards for northern hemisphere observers. From narrow-slit
spectra, we derive systemic radial velocities. For four PNe, available emission
line fluxes were measured with sufficient signal-to-noise to probe the physical
properties of their electron densities, temperatures, and chemical abundances.
BoBn 1 and DdDm 1, both type IV PNe, have an H-beta flux over three sigma away
from previous measurements. We report the first abundance measurements of M
1-71. NGC 6833 measured radial velocity and galactic coordinates suggest that
it is associated with the outer arm or possibly the galactic halo, and its low
abundance ([O/H]=1.3x10E-4) may be indicative of low metallicity within that
region.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure, accepted in A&A (03/14/2005
The Cross Section of 3He(3He,2p)4He measured at Solar Energies
We report on the results of the \hethet\ experiment at the underground
accelerator facility LUNA (Gran Sasso). For the first time the lowest
projectile energies utilized for the cross section measurement correspond to
energies below the center of the solar Gamow peak (=22 keV). The
data provide no evidence for the existence of a hypothetical resonance in the
energy range investigated. Although no extrapolation is needed anymore (except
for energies at the low-energy tail of the Gamow peak), the data must be
corrected for the effects of electron screening, clearly observed the first
time for the \hethet\ reaction. The effects are however larger than expected
and not understood, leading presently to the largest uncertainty on the quoted
value for bare nuclides (=5.40 MeV b).Comment: 18 pages, 10 postscript figures, Calculations concerning hypothetical
resonanz added, Submitted to Phys. Rev. C., available at this URL:
HTTP://www.lngs.infn.it/lngs/htexts/luna/luna.htm
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