2,994 research outputs found
Rhythmic stomach fullness in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) and the influencing variables
A repeatable pattern of rhythmic stomach fullness was established for Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar L. held in freshwater throughout the year. Seasonal differences in rhythmic stomach fullness were recorded and were observed to fluctuate during summer, autumn and spring with a peak of fullness during these seasons occurring at ISOOh. Stomach fullness in winter remained relatively constant, whilst food levels were minimal.
Gut fullness levels of postsmolts held in sea cages during the summer were monitored and a pattern similar to that in the summer in freshwater was observed. Tide and temperature had little influence whilst light levels showed a mirroring rhythmic pattern to that of gut fullness levels.
Under controlled environmental conditions stomach fullness was rhythmic whilst temperature and light changed. A correlation between temperature and foregut fullness was recorded. Simulated ambient photoperiod (i.e. the correct number of hours of daylight, but once on, unchanging) however, appeared to be insufficient to synchronise feeding peaks. Rhythmic stomach fullness was monitored under three different light regimes to establish the influence of fluctuating light levels. Only under simulated ambient light and photoperiod was a mirror pattern, of gut fullness and peaks in foregut fullness, to that of ambient light and photoperiod recorded. Under simulated ambient photoperiod a rhythm was observed but dissimilar to that found under ambient environmental conditions. Changing light levels as opposed to specific light intensities are important in synchronizing the timing of feeding peaks. Temperature was thought to be of secondary importance in the presence of fluctuating light levels.
Postsmolts held in sea cages were found to consume a larger meal size when fed a single meal in afternoon compared to the morning. When fed a meal both morning and afternoon the afternoon meal was again larger, thus indicating regardless of previous dietary history, the time of the day influences the amount of food taken. It is hoped that the establishment of rhythmic stomach fullness will be useful in designing feeding regimes for both research and commercial use
Rotation of the pre-stellar core L1689B
The search for the onset of star formation in pre-stellar cores has focussed
on the identification of an infall signature in the molecular line profiles of
tracer species. The classic infall signature is a double peaked line profile
with an asymmetry in the strength of the peaks such that the blue peak is
stronger. L1689B is a pre-stellar core and infall candidate but new JCMT HCO+
line profile data, presented here, confirms that both blue and red asymmetric
line profiles are present in this source. Moreover, a dividing line can be
drawn between the locations where each type of profile is found. It is argued
that it is unlikely that the line profiles can be interpreted with simple
models of infall or outflow and that rotation of the inner regions is the most
likely explanation. A rotational model is developed in detail with a new 3D
molecular line transport code and it is found that the best type of model is
one in which the rotational velocity profile is in between solid body and
Keplerian. It is firstly shown that red and blue asymmetric line profiles can
be generated with a rotation model entirely in the absence of any infall
motion. The model is then quantitively compared with the JCMT data and an
iteration over a range of parameters is performed to minmize the difference
between the data and model. The results indicate that rotation can dominate the
line profile shape even before the onset of infall.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS, 7 pages, 4 figure
Radio-optical alignments in a low radio luminosity sample
We present an optically-based study of the alignment between the radio axes
and the optical major axes of eight z~0.7 radio galaxies in a 7C sample. The
radio galaxies in this sample are ~20-times less radio luminous than 3C
galaxies at the same redshift, and are significantly less radio-luminous than
any other well-defined samples studied to date. Using Nordic Optical Telescope
images taken in good seeing conditions at rest-frame wavelengths just longward
of the 4000A break, we find a statistically significant alignment effect in the
7C sample. Furthermore, in two cases where the aligned components are well
separated from the host we have been able to confirm spectroscopically that
they are indeed at the same redshift as the radio galaxy. However, a
quantitative analysis of the alignment in this sample and in a corresponding 3C
sample from HST archival data indicates that the percentage of aligned flux may
be lower and of smaller spatial scale in the 7C sample. Our study suggests that
alignments on the 50-kpc scale are probably closely related to the radio
luminosity, whereas those on the 15 kpc scale are not. We discuss these results
in the context of popular models for the alignment effect.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures. Accepted by MNRA
Low-power radio galaxy environments in the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field at z~0.5
We present multi-object spectroscopy of galaxies in the immediate (Mpc-scale)
environments of four low-power (L_1.4 GHz < 10^25 W/Hz) radio galaxies at
z~0.5, selected from the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field. We use the spectra to
calculate velocity dispersions and central redshifts of the groups the radio
galaxies inhabit, and combined with XMM-Newton (0.3-10 keV) X-ray observations
investigate the L_X--sigma_v and T_X--sigma_v scaling relationships. All the
radio galaxies reside in moderately rich groups -- intermediate environments
between poor groups and rich clusters, with remarkably similar X-ray
properties. We concentrate our discussion on our best statistical example that
we interpret as a low-power (FRI) source triggered within a sub-group, which in
turn is interacting with a nearby group of galaxies, containing the bulk of the
X-ray emission for the system -- a basic scenario which can be compared to more
powerful radio sources at both high (z>4) and low (z<0.1) redshifts. This
suggests that galaxy-galaxy interactions triggered by group mergers may play an
important role in the life-cycle of radio galaxies at all epochs and
luminosities.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. High
resolution version available upon reques
Near-Infrared Observations of Powerful High-Redshift Radio Galaxies: 4C 40.36 and 4C 39.37
We present near-infrared imaging and spectroscopic observations of two FR II
high-redshift radio galaxies (HzRGs), 4C 40.36 (z=2.3) and 4C 39.37 (z=3.2),
obtained with the Hubble, Keck, and Hale Telescopes. High resolution images
were taken with filters both in and out of strong emission lines, and together
with the spectroscopic data, the properties of the line and continuum emissions
were carefully analyzed. Our analysis of 4C 40.36 and 4C 39.37 shows that
strong emission lines (e.g., [O III] 5007 A and H alpha+[N II]) contribute to
the broad-band fluxes much more significantly than previously estimated (80%
vs. 20-40%), and that when the continuum sources are imaged through line-free
filters, they show an extremely compact morphology with a high surface
brightness. If we use the R^1/4-law parametrization, their effective radii
(r(e)) are only 2-3 kpc while their restframe B-band surface brightnesses at
r(e) are I(B) ~ 18 mag/arcsec^2. Compared with z ~ 1 3CR radio galaxies, the
former is x3-5 smaller, while the latter is 1-1.5 mag brighter than what is
predicted from the I(B)-r(e) correlation. Although exponential profiles produce
equally good fits for 4C 40.36 and 4C 39.37, this clearly indicates that with
respect to the z~1 3CR radio galaxies, the light distribution of these two
HzRGs is much more centrally concentrated. Spectroscopically, 4C 40.36 shows a
flat (fnu=const) continuum while 4C 39.37 shows a spectrum as red as that of a
local giant elliptical galaxy. Although this difference may be explained in
terms of a varying degree of star formation, the similarities of their surface
brightness profiles and the submillimeter detection of 4C 39.37 might suggest
that the intrinsic spectra is equally blue (young stars or an AGN), and that
the difference is the amount of reddening.Comment: 30 pages, 6 tables, 10 figures; Accepted for publication in
Astronomical Journa
Optical spectroscopy of two overlapping, flux-density-limited samples of radio sources in the North Ecliptic Cap, selected at 38 MHz and 151 MHz
We present the results of optical spectroscopy of two flux-density-limited
samples of radio sources selected at frequencies of 38 and 151 MHz in the same
region around the North Ecliptic Cap, the 8C-NEC and 7C-III samples
respectively. Both samples are selected at flux density levels ~20 times
fainter than samples based on the 3C catalogue. They are amongst the first
low-frequency selected samples with no spectral or angular size selection for
which almost complete redshift information has been obtained and they will
therefore provide a valuable resource for understanding the cosmic evolution of
radio sources and their hosts and environments. The 151-MHz 7C-III sample is
selected to have S_151 >=0.5 Jy and is the more spectroscopically complete; out
of 54 radio sources fairly reliable redshifts have been obtained for 44
objects. The 8C sample has a flux limit of S_38 >=1.3 Jy and contains 58
sources of which 46 have fairly reliable redshifts. We discuss possible biases
in the observed redshift distribution, and some interesting individual objects.
Using the 8C-NEC and 7C-III samples in conjunction, we form the first sample
selected on low-frequency flux in the rest-frame of the source, rather than the
usual selection on flux density in the observed frame. This allows us to remove
the bias associated with an increasing rest-frame selection frequency with
redshift. We investigate the difference this selection makes to correlations of
radio source properties with redshift and luminosity. We show in particular
that flux-density-based selection leads to an overestimate of the steepness of
the correlation of radio source size with redshift. (abridged)Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures, accepted by MNRA
Optical spectroscopy of radio galaxies in the 7C Redshift Survey
We present optical spectroscopy of all 49 radio galaxies in the 7C-I and
7C-II regions of the 7C Redshift Survey (7CRS). The low-frequency (151 MHz)
selected 7CRS sample contains all sources with flux-densities S_151 > 0.5 Jy in
three regions of the sky; 7C-I and 7C-II were chosen to overlap with the 5C6
and 5C7 surveys respectively, and cover a total sky area of 0.013 sr. The
sample has been completely identified and spectroscopy of the quasars and
broad-lined radio galaxies has been presented in Willott et al. (1998). Only
seven of the radio galaxies do not have redshift determinations from the
spectroscopy, giving a redshift completeness for the sample of >90%. The median
redshift of the 7CRS is 1.1. We present a composite 0.2<z<0.8 7CRS radio galaxy
spectrum and investigate the strengths of the 4000 Angstrom breaks in these
radio galaxies. We find an anti-correlation between the 4000 Angstrom break
strength and emission line luminosity, indicating that departures from old
elliptical galaxy continuum shapes are most likely due to non-stellar emission
associated with the active nucleus.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS in pres
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