1,020 research outputs found
Upper limits on K-band polarization in three high-redshift radio galaxies: LBDS 53W091, 3C 441 and MRC 0156-252
We present the results of K-band imaging polarimetry of three radio galaxies,
including the very red and apparently old z=1.55 galaxy 53W091. We find weak
evidence for polarization in components of 3C 441 and in the south-east
companion of 53W091, but no evidence of significant polarization in 53W091
itself. We also find strong evidence that MRC 0156-252 is unpolarised. We
present upper limits for the K-band polarization of all three sources. For
53W091, the lack of significant K-band polarization provides further confidence
that its red R-K colour can be attributed to a mature stellar population,
consistent with the detailed analyses of its ultraviolet spectral-energy
distribution which indicate a minimum age of 2-3.5 Gyr.Comment: 7 pages, 3 postscript figures. In press at MNRA
TRADE POLICY UNDER IMPERFECT COMPETITION: AN ASSESSMENT OF THE TRQ ON LAMB MEAT
The United States imposed a tariff-rate quota (TRQ) on lamb meat in July 1999. Early analysis suggested the possibility that lamb growers could lose welfare via the creation of packer market power. This paper considers how subsequent events modify that analysis. Observed prices suggest reduced pass-through. Lamb prices are unchanged and more stable. Using an annual quota instead of a quarterly quota reduces the opportunity for market conduct switching. Early termination of the TRQ to comply with the WTO rulings magnifies any welfare loss. Assistance payments prevent welfare losses to growers with little impact on the market.International Relations/Trade, Livestock Production/Industries,
The Canada-UK Deep Submillimetre Survey: First Submillimetre Images, the Source Counts, and Resolution of the Background
We present the first results of a deep unbiased submillimetre survey carried
out at 450 and 850 microns. We detected 12 sources at 850 microns, giving a
surface density of sources with 850-micron flux densities > 2.8mJy of of
0.49+-0.16 per square arcmin. The sources constitute 20-30% of the background
radiation at 850 microns and thus a significant fraction of the entire
background radiation produced by stars. This implies, through the connection
between metallicity and background radiation, that a significant fraction of
all the stars that have ever been formed were formed in objects like those
detected here. The combination of their large contribution to the background
radiation and their extreme bolometric luminosities make these objects
excellent candidates for being proto-ellipticals. Optical astronomers have
recently shown that the UV-luminosity density of the universe increases by a
factor of about 10 between z=0 and z=1 and then decreases again at higher
redshifts. Using the results of a parallel submillimetre survey of the local
universe, we show that both the submillimetre source density and background can
be explained if the submillimetre luminosity density evolves in a similar way
to the UV-luminosity density. Thus, if these sources are ellipticals in the
process of formation, they may be forming at relatively modest redshifts.Comment: 8 pages (LATEX), 6 postscript figures, submitted to ApJ Letter
K-band polarimetry of seven high-redshift radio galaxies
We present the results of K-band imaging polarimetry of seven 3CR radio galaxies at redshifts (z) between 0.7 and 1.2. We find strong evidence for polarization in three sources: 3C 22, 3C 41 and 3C 114. Of these, 3C 41 shows strong evidence of having a quasar core whose infrared light is scattered by dust. We also find some evidence for polarization in 3C 54 and in 3C 356. The two pointlike sources (3C 22 and 3C 41) and the barely-elongated 3C 54 appear to have of order ten per cent of their K-band flux contributed by scattered light from the active nucleus. We conclude that scattered nuclear light can form a significant component of the near-infrared light emitted by high-redshift radio galaxies,and discuss models in which the scattering particles are electrons and dust-grains
The Canada-UK Deep Submillimetre Survey: The Survey of the 14-hour field
We have used SCUBA to survey an area of 50 square arcmin, detecting 19
sources down to a 3sigma sensitivity limit of 3.5 mJy at 850 microns. We have
used Monte-Carlo simulations to assess the effect of source confusion and noise
on the SCUBA fluxes and positions, finding that the fluxes of sources in the
SCUBA surveys are significantly biased upwards and that the fraction of the 850
micron background that has been resolved by SCUBA has been overestimated. The
radio/submillmetre flux ratios imply that the dust in these galaxies is being
heated by young stars rather than AGN. We have used simple evolution models
based on our parallel SCUBA survey of the local universe to address the major
questions about the SCUBA sources: (1) what fraction of the star formation at
high redshift is hidden by dust? (2) Does the submillimetre luminosity density
reach a maximum at some redshift? (3) If the SCUBA sources are
proto-ellipticals, when exactly did ellipticals form? However, we show that the
observations are not yet good enough for definitive answers to these questions.
There are, for example, acceptable models in which 10 times as much
high-redshift star formation is hidden by dust as is seen at optical
wavelengths, but also acceptable ones in which the amount of hidden star
formation is less than that seen optically. There are acceptable models in
which very little star formation occurred before a redshift of three (as might
be expected in models of hierarchical galaxy formation), but also ones in which
30% of the stars have formed by this redshift. The key to answering these
questions are measurements of the dust temperatures and redshifts of the SCUBA
sources.Comment: 41 pages (latex), 17 postscript figures, to appear in the November
issue of the Astronomical Journa
The SCUBA Local Universe Galaxy Survey I: First Measurements of the Submillimetre Luminosity and Dust Mass Functions
We have used SCUBA to observe a complete sample of 104 galaxies selected at
60 microns from the IRAS BGS and we present here the 850 micron measurements.
Fitting the 60,100 and 850 micron fluxes with a single temperature dust model
gives the sample mean temperature T=36 K and beta = 1.3. We do not rule out the
possibility of dust which is colder than this, if a 20 K component was present
then our dust masses would increase by factor 1.5-3. We present the first
measurements of the luminosity and dust mass functions, which were well fitted
by Schechter functions (unlike those 60 microns). We have correlated many
global galaxy properties with the submillimetre and find that there is a
tendancy for less optically luminous galaxies to contain warmer dust and have
greater star formation efficiencies (cf. Young 1999). The average gas-to-dust
ratio for the sample is 581 +/- 43 (using both atomic and molecular hydrogen),
significantly higher than the Galactic value of 160. We believe this
discrepancy is due to a cold dust component at T < 20 K. There is a suprisingly
tight correlation between dust mass and the mass of molecular hydrogen as
estimated from CO measurements, with an intrinsic scatter of ~50%.Comment: 24 pages, 15 figures, 8 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
Cosmology with redshift surveys of radio sources
We use the K-z relation for radio galaxies to illustrate why it has proved
difficult to obtain definitive cosmological results from studies based entirely
on catalogues of the brightest radio sources, e.g. 3C. To improve on this
situation we have been undertaking redshift surveys of complete samples drawn
from the fainter 6C and 7C radio catalogues. We describe these surveys, and
illustrate the new studies they are allowing. We also discuss our `filtered' 6C
redshift surveys: these have led to the discovery of a radio galaxy at z=4.4,
and are sensitive to similar objects at higher redshift provided the space
density of these objects is not declining too rapidly with z. There is
currently no direct evidence for a sharp decline in the space density of radio
galaxies for z > 4, a result only barely consistent with the observed decline
of flat-spectrum radio quasars.Comment: 8 pages Latex, To appear in the "Cosmology with the New Radio
Surveys" Conference - Tenerife 13-15 January 199
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