133 research outputs found
HST/ACS Observations of RR Lyrae Stars in Six Ultra-Deep Fields of M31
We present HST/ACS observations of RR Lyrae variable stars in six ultra deep fields of the Andromeda galaxy (M31), including parts of the halo, disk, and giant stellar stream. Past work on the RR Lyrae stars in M31 has focused on various aspects of the stellar populations that make up the galaxy s halo, including their distances and metallicities. This study builds upon this previous work by increasing the spatial coverage (something that has been lacking in previous studies) and by searching for these variable stars in constituents of the galaxy not yet explored. Besides the 55 RR Lyrae stars we found in our initial field located 11kpc from the galactic nucleus, we find additional RR Lyrae stars in four of the remaining five ultra deep fields as follows: 21 in the disk, 24 in the giant stellar stream, 3 in the halo field 21kpc from the galactic nucleus, and 5 in one of the halo fields at 35kpc. No RR Lyrae were found in the second halo field at 35kpc. The RR Lyrae populations of these fields appear to mostly be of Oosterhoff I type, although the 11kpc field appears to be intermediate or mixed. We will discuss the properties of these stars including period and reddening distributions. We calculate metallicities and distances for the stars in each of these fields using different methods and compare the results, to an extent that has not yet been done. We compare these methods not just on RR Lyrae in our M31 fields, but also on a data set of Milky Way field RR Lyrae stars
Life on Jackson Creek, Smith County, Texas: Archeological Investigations of a 14th Century Caddo Domicile at the Leaning Rock Site (41SM325)
The 14th century Caddo Leaning Rock site was initially discovered in the Fall of 2004. It was located during reconnaissance to search out a location for the survey portion of the Texas Archeologica! Society\u27s Academy IO I held in Tyler in February 2005. This was not a formal survey with transect lines. nor one using regularly spaced shovel tests. but was rather more of a windshield \u27 type survey, consisting of driving across pasture lands looking at gopher mounds and checking fore, evidence of archeological deposits on likely looking landforms.
!n this area. landform and soil type seem to be the major determining factors in locating Caddo sites. The sandy soils in the scattered gopher mounds appeared almost white. especially in droughty conditions that prevailed at the time. causing an area with darker mounds of soil to catch my attention. Pocket gophers (G. breviceps) can play havoc with buried archeological deposits but can also be useful in bringing buried soils along with archeological materials to the surface from their underground tunnel system. While this dark area could have been the result of past historic land clearing and burning activities. a closer inspection revealed burned bone. mussel she!L and Caddo sherds mixed in the dark brown soils in the scattered gopher mounds.
The next step was to record the site with the State of Texas, obtaining the trinomial 41SM325. It is common practice to also gin: sites informal names and after recording several hundred sites, selecting a name becomes a challenge. One large sandstone slab, pan of the R-horizon that is exposed around the margins of Leaning Rock. was unearthed during prior landclearing activities and pushed up against a lonely pine tree on the northern margins of the site: consequently the nom de plume Leaning Rock
Gravitational settling in pulsating subdwarf B stars and their progenitors
Diffusion of atoms can be important during quiescent phases of stellar
evolution. Particularly in the very thin inert envelopes of subdwarf B stars,
diffusive movements will considerably change the envelope structure and the
surface abundances on a short timescale. Also, the subdwarfs will inherit the
effects of diffusion in their direct progenitors, namely giants near the tip of
the red giant branch. This will influence the global evolution and the
pulsational properties of subdwarf B stars. We investigate the impact of
gravitational settling, thermal diffusion and concentration diffusion on the
evolution and pulsations of subdwarf B stars. Our diffusive stellar models are
compared with models evolved without diffusion. We constructed subdwarf B
models with a mass of 0.465 Msun from a 1 and 3 Msun ZAMS progenitor. The low
mass star ignited helium in an energetic flash, while the intermediate mass
star started helium fusion gently. For each progenitor type we computed series
with and without atomic diffusion. Atomic diffusion in red giants causes the
helium core mass at the onset of helium ignition to be larger. We find an
increase of 0.0015 Msun for the 1 Msun model and 0.0036 Msun for the 3 Msun
model. The effects on the red giant surface abundances are small after the
first dredge up. The evolutionary tracks of the diffusive subdwarf B models are
shifted to lower surface gravities and effective temperatures due to outward
diffusion of hydrogen. This affects both the frequencies of the excited modes
and the overall frequency spectrum. Especially the structure and pulsations of
the post-non-degenerate sdB star are drastically altered, proving that atomic
diffusion cannot be ignored in these stars.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Hot subdwarfs from the ESO Supernova Ia Progenitor Survey: II. Atmospheric parameters of subdwarf O stars
We address the origin and evolutionary status of hot subdwarf stars by
studying the optical spectral properties of 58 subdwarf O (sdO) stars.
Combining them with the results of our previously studied subdwarf B (sdB)
stars, we aim at investigating possible evolutionary links. We analyze
high-resolution ESO VLT UVES spectra from the ESO Supernova Ia Progenitor
Survey (SPY). Effective temperatures, gravities, and helium abundances are
determined simultaneously by fitting the profiles of H and He lines using
dedicated synthetic spectra in NLTE. Evidence for cool companions to 8 sdOs as
well as a binary consisting of two sdO stars is found. A correlation between He
abundances and the presence of carbon and/or nitrogen lines emerges: below
solar He abundance, no sdO shows C or N lines. In contrast, C and/or N lines
are present in ALL sdOs with super- solar He abundance. We thus use the solar
He abundance to divide our sample into He-deficient and He-enriched sdOs. While
He-deficient sdOs are scattered in a wide range of the Teff-log(g)-diagram,
most of the He-enriched sdOs cluster in a narrow region at Teff = 40,000 ...
50,000K and log(g)=5.5 ... 6.0. An evolu- tionary link between sdBs and sdOs
appears plausible only for the He-deficient sdOs indicating that they are the
likely successors to sdBs. The properties of He-enriched sdOs cannot be
explained with canonical single star evolutionary models. Alternative scenarios
(late hot flasher) as well as for binary evolution (white dwarf merger;
post-RGB evolution) are tested. While we regard the post-RGB scenario as
inappropriate, the white dwarf merger and the late hot flasher scenarios remain
viable to explain the origin of He-enriched sdOs.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, Astronomy & Astrophysics accepte
CANDELS Multi-wavelength Catalogs: Source Detection and Photometry in the GOODS-South Field
We present a UV-to-mid infrared multi-wavelength catalog in the
CANDELS/GOODS-S field, combining the newly obtained CANDELS HST/WFC3 F105W,
F125W, and F160W data with existing public data. The catalog is based on source
detection in the WFC3 F160W band. The F160W mosaic includes the data from
CANDELS deep and wide observations as well as previous ERS and HUDF09 programs.
The mosaic reaches a 5 limiting depth (within an aperture of radius
0.17 arcsec) of 27.4, 28.2, and 29.7 AB for CANDELS wide, deep, and HUDF
regions, respectively. The catalog contains 34930 sources with the
representative 50% completeness reaching 25.9, 26.6, and 28.1 AB in the F160W
band for the three regions. In addition to WFC3 bands, the catalog also
includes data from UV (U-band from both CTIO/MOSAIC and VLT/VIMOS), optical
(HST/ACS F435W, F606W, F775W, F814W, and F850LP), and infrared (HST/WFC3 F098M,
VLT/ISAAC Ks, VLT/HAWK-I Ks, and Spitzer/IRAC 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, 8.0 m)
observations. The catalog is validated via stellar colors, comparison with
other published catalogs, zeropoint offsets determined from the best-fit
templates of the spectral energy distribution of spectroscopically observed
objects, and the accuracy of photometric redshifts. The catalog is able to
detect unreddened star-forming (passive) galaxies with stellar mass of
10^{10}M_\odot at a 50% completeness level to z3.4 (2.8), 4.6 (3.2), and
7.0 (4.2) in the three regions. As an example of application, the catalog is
used to select both star-forming and passive galaxies at z2--4 via the
Balmer break. It is also used to study the color--magnitude diagram of galaxies
at 0<z<4.Comment: The full resolution article is now published in ApJS (2013, 207, 24).
22 pages, 21 figures, and 5 tables. The catalogue is available on the CANDELS
website: http://candels.ucolick.org/data_access/GOODS-S.html MAST:
http://archive.stsci.edu/prepds/candels and Rainbow Database:
https://arcoiris.ucolick.org/Rainbow_navigator_public and
https://rainbowx.fis.ucm.es/Rainbow_navigator_publi
Resolving fine-scale population structure and fishery exploitation using sequenced microsatellites in a northern fish
Funding Information Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) Strategic Project Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency and Department of Tourism, Culture, Industry and Innovation grants allocated to the Labrador Institute (MC) Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) Discovery Genomics Research and Development Initiative (GRDI) Weston Family AwardPeer reviewedPublisher PD
The Unseen Population of F to K-type Companions to Hot Subdwarf Stars
We present a method to select hot subdwarf stars with A to M-type companions
using photometric selection criteria. We cover a wide range in wavelength by
combining GALEX ultraviolet data, optical photometry from the SDSS and the
Carlsberg Meridian telescope, near-infrared data from 2MASS and UKIDSS. We
construct two complimentary samples, one by matching GALEX, CMC and 2MASS, as
well as a smaller, but deeper, sample using GALEX, SDSS and UKIDSS. In both
cases, a large number of composite subdwarf plus main-sequence star candidates
were found. We fit their spectral energy distributions with a composite model
in order to estimate the subdwarf and companion star effective temperatures
along with the distance to each system. The distribution of subdwarf effective
temperature was found to primarily lie in the 20,000 - 30,000 K regime, but we
also find cooler subdwarf candidates, making up ~5-10 per cent. The most
prevalent companion spectral types were seen to be main-sequence stars between
F0 and K0, while subdwarfs with M-type companions appear much rarer. This is
clear observational confirmation that a very efficient first stable Roche-lobe
overflow channel appears to produce a large number of subdwarfs with F to
K-type companions. Our samples thus support the importance of binary evolution
for subdwarf formation.Comment: 30 pages, 10 figures, 11 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Protection of Sinorhizobium against Host Cysteine-Rich Antimicrobial Peptides Is Critical for Symbiosis
A bacterial membrane protein, BacA, protects Sinorhizobium meliloti against the antimicrobial activity of host peptides, enabling the peptides to induce bacterial persistence rather than bacterial death
Toward an internally consistent astronomical distance scale
Accurate astronomical distance determination is crucial for all fields in
astrophysics, from Galactic to cosmological scales. Despite, or perhaps because
of, significant efforts to determine accurate distances, using a wide range of
methods, tracers, and techniques, an internally consistent astronomical
distance framework has not yet been established. We review current efforts to
homogenize the Local Group's distance framework, with particular emphasis on
the potential of RR Lyrae stars as distance indicators, and attempt to extend
this in an internally consistent manner to cosmological distances. Calibration
based on Type Ia supernovae and distance determinations based on gravitational
lensing represent particularly promising approaches. We provide a positive
outlook to improvements to the status quo expected from future surveys,
missions, and facilities. Astronomical distance determination has clearly
reached maturity and near-consistency.Comment: Review article, 59 pages (4 figures); Space Science Reviews, in press
(chapter 8 of a special collection resulting from the May 2016 ISSI-BJ
workshop on Astronomical Distance Determination in the Space Age
Estimating Dengue Transmission Intensity from Sero-Prevalence Surveys in Multiple Countries
BACKGROUND:Estimates of dengue transmission intensity remain ambiguous. Since the majority of infections are asymptomatic, surveillance systems substantially underestimate true rates of infection. With advances in the development of novel control measures, obtaining robust estimates of average dengue transmission intensity is key for assessing both the burden of disease from dengue and the likely impact of interventions. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:The force of infection (λ) and corresponding basic reproduction numbers (R0) for dengue were estimated from non-serotype (IgG) and serotype-specific (PRNT) age-stratified seroprevalence surveys identified from the literature. The majority of R0 estimates ranged from 1-4. Assuming that two heterologous infections result in complete immunity produced up to two-fold higher estimates of R0 than when tertiary and quaternary infections were included. λ estimated from IgG data were comparable to the sum of serotype-specific forces of infection derived from PRNT data, particularly when inter-serotype interactions were allowed for. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:Our analysis highlights the highly heterogeneous nature of dengue transmission. How underlying assumptions about serotype interactions and immunity affect the relationship between the force of infection and R0 will have implications for control planning. While PRNT data provides the maximum information, our study shows that even the much cheaper ELISA-based assays would provide comparable baseline estimates of overall transmission intensity which will be an important consideration in resource-constrained settings
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