289 research outputs found
Abundance and Sizes of Bay Scallops in Heterogeneous Habitats Along the Gulf Coast of Florida
Southern bay scallops (Argopecten irradians concentricus) form the basis of a recreational fishery along Florida\u27s Gulf Coast. Recent declines in scallop abundances have led to significant harvest restrictions. As a way to gain insight into influences on scallop abundances and size, surveys of bay scallops and coastal habitats were conducted in two relatively undisturbed, shallow estuaries along the north-central Gulf Coast of Florida. Scallop abundances did not vary significantly between years or between locations kilometers apart. Shell heights did vary significantly between years at locations kilometers apart; however, these differences were not consistently related to differences in chlorophyll concentrations in the water column or distributions of benthic habitat classes. At the 100-m scale within locations, scallops were not proportionally distributed across the major habitat classes (i.e., Syringodium filiforme, Thalassia testudinum, mixed seagrass assemblage, other seagrasses, and areas of no/low seagrass cover). In general, proportionately more scallops were observed in association with S. filiforme, T. testudinum, and mixed seagrass habitats. Bay scallops collected from S. filiforme and areas of no/low grass cover were consistently 1-3 mm larger than those collected from T. testudinum and mixed seagrass assemblages. These results suggest the importance of S. filiforme and T. testudinum as habitats for bay scallops. The results also point to the need for further investigation into possible functional differences among seagrass species that may influence the ecology of bay scallops at a small spatial scale and the need for closer examination of scallop movement that may allow for active habitat selection. The work presented here, plus further efforts to elucidate the drivers of small-scale differences in scallop abundances and sizes, will benefit managers who seek to enhance scallop fisheries or protect and restore coastal habitats
The Scale Dependence of the Molecular Gas Depletion Time in M33
We study the Local Group spiral galaxy M33 to investigate how the observed
scaling between the (kpc-averaged) surface density of molecular gas (\Sigma_H2)
and recent star formation rate (\Sigma_SFR) relates to individual star-forming
regions. To do this, we measure the ratio of CO emission to
extinction-corrected Halpha emission in apertures of varying sizes centered
both on peaks of CO and Halpha emission. We parameterize this ratio as a
molecular gas (H_2) depletion time (\tau_dep). On large (kpc) scales, our
results are consistent with a molecular star formation law (Sigma_SFR \sim
Sigma_H2^b) with b \sim 1.1 - 1.5 and a median \tau_dep \sim 1 Gyr, with no
dependence on type of region targeted. Below these scales, \tau_dep is a strong
function of adopted angular scale and the type of region that is targeted.
Small (\lesssim 300pc) apertures centered on CO peaks have very long \tau_dep
(i.e., high CO-to-Halpha flux ratio) and small apertures targeted toward Halpha
peaks have very short \tau_dep. This implies that the star formation law
observed on kpc scales breaks down once one reaches aperture sizes of \lesssim
300pc. For our smallest apertures (75pc), the difference in \tau_dep between
the two types of regions is more than one order of magnitude. This scale
behavior emerges from averaging over star-forming regions with a wide range of
CO-to-Halpha ratios with the natural consequence that the breakdown in the star
formation law is a function of the surface density of the regions studied. We
consider the evolution of individual regions the most likely driver for
region-to-region differences in \tau_dep (and thus the CO-to-Halpha ratio).Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal, 9 pages, 5
figure
A multiwavelength analysis of the clumpy FIR-bright sources in M33
We present a multiwavelength study of a sample of far-infrared (FIR) sources detected on the Herschel broad-band maps of the nearby galaxy M33. We perform source photometry on the FIR maps as well as mid-infrared (MIR), Halpha, far-ultraviolet and integrated H I and CO line emission maps. By fitting MIR/FIR dust emission spectra, the source dust masses, temperatures and luminosities are inferred. The sources are classified based on their Halpha morphology (sub-structured versus not-substructured) and on whether they have a significant CO detection (S/N > 3sigma). We find that the sources have dust masses in the range 102-104 M&sun; and that they present significant differences in their inferred dust/star formation/gas parameters depending on their Halpha morphology and CO detection classification. The results suggests differences in the evolutionary states or in the number of embedded H II regions between the sub-samples. The source background-subtracted dust emission seems to be predominantly powered by local star formation, as indicated by a strong correlation between the dust luminosity and the dust-corrected Halpha luminosity and the fact that the extrapolated young stellar luminosity is high enough to account for the observed dust emission. Finally, we do not find a strong correlation between the dust-corrected Halpha luminosity and the dust mass of the sources, consistent with previous results on the breakdown of simple scaling relations at sub-kpc scales. However, the scatter in the relation is significantly reduced by correcting the Halpha luminosity for the age of the young stellar populations in the star-forming regions
Study of star formation in NGC 1084
We present UBVRI broad band, H narrow band photometry of the star
forming complexes in the infra-red bright galaxy NGC 1084. Results of medium
resolution spectroscopy of some of the brighter complexes are also discussed.
Spectroscopic data is used to better estimate the internal reddening within the
galaxy which is found to be highly variable and to calculate metallicity which
is close to the solar value. Diagnostic diagram identifies the shocked regions
within this galaxy. The narrow band H flux and its equivalent width are
used to determine the star formation rates of the complexes and the
distribution of ages. Star formation rates for a few of the complexes are found
to be as high as 0.5 /year. The star forming complexes lie in the
age range 3 Myr to 6.5 Myr. U-B vs V-I colour-colour mixed population model
created using the Starburst99 model colours is used to estimate the ages of the
stellar populations present within these regions. Using this technique, it is
found that the star formation in NGC 1084 has taken place in a series of short
bursts over the last 40 Myr or so. It is proposed that the likely trigger for
enhanced star formation is merger with a gas rich dwarf galaxy.Comment: 9 figures and 6 tables, Accepted in MNRAS for publicatio
CARMA Survey Toward Infrared-bright Nearby Galaxies (STING): Molecular Gas Star Formation Law in NGC4254
This study explores the effects of different assumptions and systematics on
the determination of the local, spatially resolved star formation law. Using
four star formation rate (SFR) tracers (H\alpha with azimuthally averaged
extinction correction, mid-infrared 24 micron, combined H\alpha and
mid-infrared 24 micron, and combined far-ultraviolet and mid-infrared 24
micron), several fitting procedures, and different sampling strategies we probe
the relation between SFR and molecular gas at various spatial resolutions and
surface densities within the central 6.5 kpc in the disk of NGC4254. We find
that in the high surface brightness regions of NGC4254 the form of the
molecular gas star formation law is robustly determined and approximately
linear and independent of the assumed fraction of diffuse emission and the SFR
tracer employed. When the low surface brightness regions are included, the
slope of the star formation law depends primarily on the assumed fraction of
diffuse emission. In such case, results range from linear when the fraction of
diffuse emission in the SFR tracer is ~30% or less (or when diffuse emission is
removed in both the star formation and the molecular gas tracer), to
super-linear when the diffuse fraction is ~50% and above. We find that the
tightness of the correlation between gas and star formation varies with the
choice of star formation tracer. The 24 micron SFR tracer by itself shows the
tightest correlation with the molecular gas surface density, whereas the
H\alpha corrected for extinction using an azimuthally-averaged correction shows
the highest dispersion. We find that for R<0.5R_25 the local star formation
efficiency is constant and similar to that observed in other large spirals,
with a molecular gas depletion time ~2 Gyr.Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ, vol 729, March 10 2011 issue; 30
pages; 14 figures; revised version includes referee's comments; results
unchange
Cis and Trans Effects of Human Genomic Variants on Gene Expression
This work was funded by the Louis-Jeantet Foundation (http://www.jeantet.ch/), the European Research Council (Grant ID: 260927 http://erc.europa.eu/), the Swiss National Foundation (Grant ID: 130342 http://www.snf.ch), NCCR Frontiers In Genetics (http://www.frontiers-in-genetics.org), the UK Medical Research Council (http://www.mrc.ac.uk) and the Wellcome Trust (Grant ID: 092731).
X-ray emission line gas in the LINER galaxy M81
We present the soft X-ray spectrum of the LINER galaxy M81 derived from a
long observation with the XMM RGS. The spectrum is dominated by continuum
emission from the active nucleus, but also contains emission lines from Fe L,
and H-like and He-like N, O, and Ne. The emission lines are significantly
broader than the RGS point-source spectral resolution; in the cross dispersion
direction the emission lines are detected adjacent to, as well as coincident
with, the active nucleus. This implies that they originate in a region of a few
arc-minutes spatial extent (1 arc-minute ~ 1 kpc in M81). The flux ratios of
the OVII triplet suggest that collisional processes are responsible for the
line emission. A good fit to the whole RGS spectrum is obtained using a model
consisting of an absorbed power law from the active nucleus and a 3 temperature
optically thin thermal plasma. Two of the thermal plasma components have
temperatures of 0.18+-0.04 keV and 0.64+-0.04 keV, characteristic of the hot
interstellar medium produced by supernovae; the combined luminosity of the
plasma at these two temperatures accounts for all the unresolved bulge X-ray
emission seen in the Chandra observation by Tennant et al. (2001). The third
component has a higher temperature (~1.7 keV), and we argue that this, along
with some of the 0.64 keV emission, comes from X-ray binaries in the bulge of
M81.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The Political De-Determination of Legal Rules and the Contested Meaning of the ‘No Bailout’ Clause
Traditional debates on legal theory have devoted a great deal of attention to the question of the determinacy of legal rules. With the aid of social sciences and linguistics, this article suggests a way out of the ‘determinate-indeterminate’ dichotomy that has dominated the academic debate on the topic so far. Instead, a dynamic approach is proposed, in which rules are deemed to undergo processes of political ‘de-determination’ and ‘re-determination’. To illustrate this, the article uses the example of Art. 125 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, the ‘no bailout’ provision, which played a major role in the management of the Euro-crisis. As will be shown, with the start of the crisis, this provision, whose meaning was once scarcely controversial, became the object of intense interpretative disagreement. As it became politically relevant, the rule also became the site of interpretative competitions, until the intervention of the European Court of Justice disambiguated and redefined its meaning
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