81,983 research outputs found
The use of high altitude remote sensing in determining existing vegetation and monitoring ecological stress
High altitude color and multispectral black and white photography was used to survey existing vegetation and soil conditions on the Empire Ranch where large scale development will soon begin. Utilizing stereo pairs of the high altitude color photography, four vegetation classifications were discernable as a function of topography and foliage characteristics. In contrast to the undeveloped Ranch, the same photography was used to detect environmental changes in the Tucson metropolitan area as a result of rapid urbanization. The most prevalent change related to development is the removal of vegetation in high density areas to allow for housing starts. Erosion then occurs where vegetation has been removed
Chemical abundances in Galactic planetary nebulae with Spitzer spectra
We present new low-resolution (R~800) optical spectra of 22 Galactic PNe with
Spitzer spectra. These data are combined with recent optical spectroscopic data
available in the literature to construct representative samples of compact (and
presumably young) Galactic disc and bulge PNe with Spitzer spectra. Attending
to the nature of the dust features seen in their Spitzer spectra, Galactic disc
and bulge PNe are classified according to four major dust types (oxygen
chemistry or OC, carbon chemistry or CC, double chemistry or DC, featureless or
F) and subtypes (amorphous and crystalline, and aliphatic and aromatic).
Nebular gas abundances of He, N, O, Ne, S, Cl, and Ar, as well as plasma
parameters (e.g. Ne, Te) are homogeneously derived and we study the median
chemical abundances and nebular properties in Galactic disc and bulge PNe
depending on their Spitzer dust types and subtypes. A comparison of the derived
median abundance patterns with AGB nucleosynthesis predictions show mainly that
i) DC PNe, both with amorphous and crystalline silicates, display
high-metallicity (solar/supra-solar) and the highest He abundances and N/O
ratios, suggesting relatively massive (~3-5 M_sun) hot bottom burning AGB stars
as progenitors; ii) PNe with O-rich and C-rich unevolved dust (amorphous and
aliphatic) seem to evolve from subsolar metallicity (z~0.008) and lower mass
(<3 M_sun) AGB stars; iii) a few O-rich PNe and a significant fraction of
C-rich PNe with more evolved dust (crystalline and aromatic, respectively)
display chemical abundances similar to DC PNe, suggesting that they are related
objects. A comparison of the derived nebular properties with predictions from
models combining the theoretical central star evolution with a simple nebular
model is also presented. Finally, a possible link between the Spitzer dust
properties, chemical abundances, and evolutionary status is discussed.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics (45 pages, 17
figures, and 14 tables); final version (language corrected
Symmetry breaking and singularity structure in Bose-Einstein condensates
We determine the trajectories of vortex singularities that arise after a
single vortex is broken by a discretely symmetric impulse in the context of
Bose-Einstein condensates in a harmonic trap. The dynamics of these
singularities are analyzed to determine the form of the imprinted motion. We
find that the symmetry-breaking process introduces two effective forces: a
repulsive harmonic force that causes the daughter trajectories to be ejected
from the parent singularity, and a Magnus force that introduces a torque about
the axis of symmetry. For the analytical non-interacting case we find that the
parent singularity is reconstructed from the daughter singularities after one
period of the trapping frequency. The interactions between singularities in the
weakly interacting system do not allow the parent vortex to be reconstructed.
Analytic trajectories were compared to the actual minima of the wavefunction,
showing less 0.5% error for impulse strength of (v=0.00005). We show that these
solutions are valid within the impulse regime for various impulse strengths
using numerical integration of the Gross-Pitaevskii equation. We also show that
the actual duration of the symmetry breaking potential does not significantly
change the dynamics of the system as long as the strength is below (v=0.0005).Comment: 14 pages, 10 figure
Renormalization of Optical Excitations in Molecules near a Metal Surface
The lowest electronic excitations of benzene and a set of donor-acceptor
molecular complexes are calculated for the gas phase and on the Al(111) surface
using the many-body Bethe-Salpeter equation (BSE). The energy of the
charge-transfer excitations obtained for the gas phase complexes are found to
be around 10% lower than the experimental values. When the molecules are placed
outside the surface, the enhanced screening from the metal reduces the exciton
binding energies by several eVs and the transition energies by up to 1 eV
depending on the size of the transition-generated dipole. As a striking
consequence we find that close to the metal surface the optical gap of benzene
can exceed its quasiparticle gap. A classical image charge model for the
screened Coulomb interaction can account for all these effects which, on the
other hand, are completely missed by standard time-dependent density functional
theory.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; revised versio
New insights on the dense molecular gas in NGC253 as traced by HCN and HCO+
We have imaged the central ~1kpc of the circumnuclear starburst disk in the
galaxy NGC253 in the HCN(1-0), HCO+(1-0), and CO(1-0) transitions at 60pc
resolution using the Owens Valley Radio Observatory Millimeter-Wavelength Array
(OVRO). We have also obtained Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX) observations
of the HCN(4-3) and the HCO+(4-3) lines of the starburst disk. We find that the
emission from the HCN(1-0) and HCO+(1-0) transitions, both indicators of dense
molecular gas, trace regions which are non-distinguishable within the
uncertainties of our observations. Even though the continuum flux varies by
more than a factor 10 across the starburst disk, the HCN/HCO+ ratio is constant
throughout the disk, and we derive an average ratio of 1.1+/-0.2. From an
excitation analysis we find that all lines from both molecules are subthermally
excited and that they are optically thick. This subthermal excitation implies
that the observed HCN/HCO+ line ratio is sensitive to the underlying chemistry.
The constant line ratio thus implies that there are no strong abundance
gradients across the starburst disk of NGC253. This finding may also explain
the variations in L'(HCN)/L'(HCO+) between different star forming galaxies both
nearby and at high redshifts.Comment: 9 pages, 12 figures, ApJ in press (volume 666 September
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