139 research outputs found
Pod set and Pollen Viability Studies in Yard Long Bean (Vigna unguiculata sub sp. sesquipedalis)
A study was conducted in a yard long bean (Vigna unguiculata sup/ssp. sesquipedalis) hybrid VS 50 (Kakkamoola Local) x VS 26 (Vellayani Jyothika) to assess the percentage fruit set at two time intervals and to identify the best time interval for pollination in yard long bean hybrids. Hand pollination was done using VS 50 as female parent and VS 26 as male parent for seven consecutive days at two time intervals, 6.30 â 7.30 am and 7.30 â 8.30 am. Higher percentage of fruit set (36.8 %) was observed between 6:30 â 7:30 a.m. as compared to the time interval 7:30 â 8:30 am. (23.8%). Pollen viability was determined for the parents VS 50 (Kakkamoola Local) and VS 26 (Vellayani Jyothika) at 6.30, 7.30 and 8.30 am. Highest pollen viability for both the parents VS 50 and VS 26 was observed during 7.30 am. The present study shows that the best time interval for crossing in yard long bean is 6.30- 7.30 a.m
The Luminosities of Protostars in the Spitzer c2d and Gould Belt Legacy Clouds
Motivated by the long-standing "luminosity problem" in low-mass star
formation whereby protostars are underluminous compared to theoretical
expectations, we identify 230 protostars in 18 molecular clouds observed by two
Spitzer Space Telescope Legacy surveys of nearby star-forming regions. We
compile complete spectral energy distributions, calculate Lbol for each source,
and study the protostellar luminosity distribution. This distribution extends
over three orders of magnitude, from 0.01 Lsun - 69 Lsun, and has a mean and
median of 4.3 Lsun and 1.3 Lsun, respectively. The distributions are very
similar for Class 0 and Class I sources except for an excess of low luminosity
(Lbol < 0.5 Lsun) Class I sources compared to Class 0. 100 out of the 230
protostars (43%) lack any available data in the far-infrared and submillimeter
(70 um < wavelength < 850 um) and have Lbol underestimated by factors of 2.5 on
average, and up to factors of 8-10 in extreme cases. Correcting these
underestimates for each source individually once additional data becomes
available will likely increase both the mean and median of the sample by 35% -
40%. We discuss and compare our results to several recent theoretical studies
of protostellar luminosities and show that our new results do not invalidate
the conclusions of any of these studies. As these studies demonstrate that
there is more than one plausible accretion scenario that can match
observations, future attention is clearly needed. The better statistics
provided by our increased dataset should aid such future work.Comment: Accepted for publication in AJ. 21 pages, 10 figures, 4 table
The Rapid Outbursting Star GM Cep: An EX-or in Tr 37?
We present optical, IR and millimeter observations of the solar-type star
13-277, also known as GM Cep, in the 4 Myr-old cluster Tr 37. GM Cep
experiences rapid magnitude variations of more than 2 mag at optical
wavelengths. We explore the causes of the variability, which seem to be
dominated by strong increases in the accretion, being similar to EX-or
episodes. The star shows high, variable accretion rates (up to ~10
Msun/yr), signs of powerful winds, and it is a very fast rotator (Vsini~43
km/s). Its strong mid-IR excesses reveal a very flared disk and/or a remnant
envelope, most likely out of hydrostatic equilibrium. The 1.3 millimeter fluxes
suggest a relatively massive disk (Mdisk~0.1 Msun). Nevertheless, the
millimeter mass is not enough to sustain increased accretion episodes over
large timescales, unless the mass is underestimated due to significant grain
growth. We finally explore the possibility of GM Cep having a binary companion,
which could trigger disk instabilities producing the enhanced accretion
episodes.Comment: 43 pages, including 10 figures, ApJ in pres
The Spitzer c2d legacy results: Star-formation rates and efficiencies; evolution and lifetimes
The c2d Spitzer Legacy project obtained images and photometry with both IRAC and MIPS instruments for five large, nearby molecular clouds. Three of the clouds were also mapped in dust continuum emission at 1.1 mm, and optical spectroscopy has been obtained for some clouds. This paper combines information drawn from studies of individual clouds into a combined and updated statistical analysis of star-formation rates and efficiencies, numbers and lifetimes for spectral energy distribution (SED) classes, and clustering properties. Current star-formation efficiencies range from 3% to 6%; if star formation continues at current rates for 10 Myr, efficiencies could reach 15-30%. Star-formation rates and rates per unit area vary from cloud to cloud; taken together, the five clouds are producing about 260 M â of stars per Myr. The star-formation surface density is more than an order of magnitude larger than would be predicted from the Kennicutt relation used in extragalactic studies, reflecting the fact that those relations apply to larger scales, where more diffuse matter is included in the gas surface density. Measured against the dense gas probed by the maps of dust continuum emission, the efficiencies are much higher, with stellar masses similar to masses of dense gas, and the current stock of dense cores would be exhausted in 1.8 Myr on average. Nonetheless, star formation is still slow compared to that expected in a free-fall time, even in the dense cores. The derived lifetime for the Class I phase is 0.54 Myr, considerably longer than some estimates. Similarly, the lifetime for the Class 0 SED class, 0.16 Myr, with the notable exception of the Ophiuchus cloud, is longer than early estimates. If photometry is corrected for estimated extinction before calculating class indicators, the lifetimes drop to 0.44 Myr for Class I and to 0.10 for Class 0. These lifetimes assume a continuous flow through the Class II phase and should be considered median lifetimes or half-lives. Star formation is highly concentrated to regions of high extinction, and the youngest objects are very strongly associated with dense cores. The great majority (90%) of young stars lie within loose clusters with at least 35 members and a stellar density of 1 M â pcâ3. Accretion at the sound speed from an isothermal sphere over the lifetime derived for the Class I phase could build a star of about 0.25 M â, given an efficiency of 0.3. Building larger mass stars by using higher mass accretion rates could be problematic, as our data confirm and aggravate the "luminosity problem" for protostars. At a given T bol, the values for L bol are mostly less than predicted by standard infall models and scatter over several orders of magnitude. These results strongly suggest that accretion is time variable, with prolonged periods of very low accretion. Based on a very simple model and this sample of sources, half the mass of a star would be accreted during only 7% of the Class I lifetime, as represented by the eight most luminous objects
The Spitzer c2d Survey of Large, Nearby, Interstellar Clouds: VI. Perseus Observed with MIPS
We present observations of 10.6 square degrees of the Perseus molecular cloud
at 24, 70, and 160 microns with the Spitzer Space Telescope Multiband Imaging
Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS). The image mosaics show prominent, complex
extended emission dominated by illuminating B stars on the East side of the
cloud, and by cold filaments of 160 micron emission on the West side. Of 3950
point sources identified at 24 microns, 1141 have 2MASS counterparts. A quarter
of these populate regions of the Ks vs. Ks-[24] diagram that are distinct from
stellar photospheres and background galaxies, and thus are likely to be cloud
members with infrared excess. Nearly half (46%) of these 24 micron excess
sources are distributed outside the IC 348 and NGC 1333 clusters. NGC 1333
shows the highest fraction of stars with flat or rising spectral energy
distributions (28%), while Class II SEDs are most common in IC 348. These
results are consistent with previous relative age determinations for the two
clusters.
The intercluster region contains several tightly clumped (r~0.1 pc) young
stellar aggregates whose members exhibit a wide variety of infrared spectral
energy distributions characteristic of different circumstellar environments.
One possible explanation is a significant age spread among the aggregate
members, such that some have had time to evolve more than others.
Alternatively, if the aggregate members all formed at roughly the same time,
then remarkably rapid circumstellar evolution would be required to account for
the association of Class I and Class III sources at ages <~1 Myr.
We highlight important results for several other objects as well (full
abstract in the paper).Comment: 82 pages, 32 figures, accepted to ApJS; ALL figures (even line
drawings) had to be degraded to be accepted by the system here; the full-res
figures are available in the version linked from the 'publications' area
available at http://peggysue.as.utexas.edu/SIRTF
Visual attention and autistic behavior in infants with fragile X syndrome
Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is the leading known inherited cause of intellectual disability and the most common known biological cause of autism. Approximately 25% to 50% of males with FXS meet full diagnostic criteria for autism. Despite the high comorbidity between FXS and autism and the ability to diagnose FXS prenatally or at birth, no studies have examined indicators of autism in infants with FXS. The current study focused on indices of visual attention, one of the earliest and most robust behavioral indicators of autism in idiopathic (non-FXS) autism. Analyses revealed lower HR variability, shallower HR decelerations, and prolonged look durations in 12-month old infants with FXS that were correlated with severity of autistic behavior but not mental age
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