2,632 research outputs found
Spectral Classification of Galaxies
We investigate the integrated spectra of a sample of 24 normal galaxies. A
principal component analysis suggests that most of the variance present in the
spectra is due to the differences in morphology of the galaxies in the sample.
We show that spectroscopic parameters extracted from the spectra, like the
amplitude of the 4000 \AA~ break or of the CN band, correlate well with Hubble
types and are useful for quantitative classification.Comment: 7 pages uuencoded compressed PostScript file. To appear in Vistas in
Astronomy, special issue on Artificial Neural Networks in Astronom
Geographies of the Sea: Negotiating Human–Fish Interactions in the Waterscapes of Colombia’s Pacific Coast
The realities of many coastal dwellers have been shaped by their interactions with fish and water along the world’s waterscapes. However, human and cultural geographers have largely overlooked how waterscapes influence coastal people’s behaviors and social interactions. Studies of geographies of the sea have acknowledged the importance of human–nonhuman interactions in the context of fluid ocean spaces and political economies. Critically engaging capitalist, industrialized perspectives of oceans, our article contributes to this literature to study how Afro-descendant small-scale fishers in the Gulf of Tribugá respond to intensifying neoliberal fishing regimes in Colombia’s Pacific coast. We do so by examining how fishers negotiate diverse representations of fish and how these influence their behaviors and practices over time and space. We bring the sea to the center of inquiry to investigate how the sociomaterial character of fish intersects with political, economic, and cultural forces and how they influence perceptions, access, and use of oceans. We argue that the scarcity induced by industrial fisheries overexploitation has changed people’s access to and control over fish and enabled biodiversity conservation discourses to marketize and transform fishing practices. This process has added value to fish through the creation of marine protected areas and the rebranding of fish in terms of traceability and “valued-added” sustainability. In this context, however, we highlight how fishers and their practices have endured through situated institutional practices despite being wrapped up in the complex power dynamics that have marginalized Afro-descendant people in Colombia since colonial times. Key Words: assemblage, Colombia, geographies of the sea, institutions, neoliberalism
Structure and spatial distribution of Ge nanocrystals subjected to fast neutron irradiation
The influence of fast neutron irradiation on the structure and spatial
distribution of Ge nanocrystals (NC) embedded in an amorphous SiO2 matrix has
been studied. The investigation was conducted by means of laser Raman
Scattering (RS), High Resolution Transmission Electron Microscopy (HR-TEM) and
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The irradiation of NC-Ge samples by a
high dose of fast neutrons lead to a partial destruction of the nanocrystals.
Full reconstruction of crystallinity was achieved after annealing the radiation
damage at 800 deg. C, which resulted in full restoration of the RS spectrum.
HR-TEM images show, however, that the spatial distributions of NC-Ge changed as
a result of irradiation and annealing. A sharp decrease in NC distribution
towards the SiO2 surface has been observed. This was accompanied by XPS
detection of Ge oxides and elemental Ge within both the surface and subsurface
region
Galaxy Harassment and the Evolution of Clusters of Galaxies
Disturbed spiral galaxies with high rates of star formation pervaded clusters
of galaxies just a few billion years ago, but nearby clusters exclude spirals
in favor of ellipticals. ``Galaxy harassment" (frequent high speed galaxy
encounters) drives the morphological transformation of galaxies in clusters,
provides fuel for quasars in subluminous hosts and leaves detectable debris
arcs. Simulated images of harassed galaxies are strikingly similar to the
distorted spirals in clusters at observed by the Hubble Space
Telescope.Comment: Submitted to Nature. Latex file, 7 pages, 10 photographs in gif and
jpeg format included. 10 compressed postscript figures and text available
using anonymous ftp from ftp://ftp-hpcc.astro.washington.edu/pub/hpcc/moore/
(mget *) Also available at http://www-hpcc.astro.washington.edu/papers
A Lensed Arc in the Low Redshift Cluster Abell 2124
We report the discovery of an arc-like object 27" from the center of the cD
galaxy in the redshift cluster A2124. Observations with the Keck II
telescope reveal that the object is a background galaxy at ,
apparently lensed into an arc of length \sim 8 \farcs5 and total R magnitude
. The width of the arc is resolved; we estimate it to be
0\farcs6 after correcting for seeing. A lens model of the A2124 core mass
distribution consistent with the cluster galaxy velocity dispersion reproduces
the observed arc geometry and indicates a magnification factor \gta 9. With
this magnification, the strength of the [OII] \lambda 3727 line implies a
star-formation rate of SFR \sim 0.4 h^{-2}\msun yr^{-1}$. A2124 thus appears to
be the lowest redshift cluster known to exhibit strong lensing of a distant
background galaxy.Comment: 6 pages using emulateapj.sty; 4 Postscript figures; Figure 4 uses
color. Accepted for publication, but ApJ Letters' new policy of counting data
images makes the manuscript too long; will appear in main journal. This final
version has minor correction
Electric properties of the baryon anti-decuplet in the SU(3) chiral quark-soliton model
We investigate the electric form factors and charge radii of the pentaquark
baryons within the framework of the chiral quark-soliton model. We consider the
rotational and linear corrections, assuming isospin symmetry and
employing the symmetry-conserving quantization. The flavor-decomposed charge
densities of the are presented. The electric form factors and charge
radii of the charged pentaquark baryons turn out to be very similar to those of
the corresponding octet baryons. The charge radii of the neutral pentaquark
baryons are obtained to be very tiny and positive. The strange electric form
factor of the pentaquark proton is shown to be larger than the corresponding
one of the proton by around 20%. We also present the charge radii of the baryon
decuplet for comparison.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Micro-Jy radio sources in the z=0.83 cluster MS1054-03
An extremely deep 5 GHz radio observation is presented of the rich cluster
MS1054-03 at redshift z=0.83. 34 radio sources are detected down to a 32
micro-Jy (6 sigma), compared to about 25 expected from previous blank field
radio source count determinations; the sources giving rise to these excess
counts lie within 2 arcmins (700 kpc) of the cluster centre. Existing imaging
and spectroscopy has provided optical identifications for 21 of the radio
sources and redshifts for 11, of which 8 are confirmed cluster members. 4 of
these 8 confirmed cluster sources are associated with close galaxy pairs (10-25
kpc projected offset) of similar magnitude, implying that the radio source may
be triggered by an interaction. However, although MS1054-03 has a very high
fraction (17%) of on-going mergers (separations <~ 10 kpc), no radio emission
is detected towards any of these merger events, setting a mean upper limit of
10 Msun/yr for any star formation associated with these mergers. This supports
a hypothesis that low luminosity radio sources may be onset by initial weak
interactions rather than direct mergers. The host galaxies of the other four
confirmed cluster radio sources are all isolated, and show a range of
morphologies from early-type to Sc. A comparison between the emission line and
radio luminosities suggests that two of these four radio sources are
low-luminosity AGN, whilst for at least one of the other two the radio emission
is associated with on-going star formation. All of the radio sources associated
with the galaxy pairs appear more likely AGN than starburst origin. The overall
proportion of radio sources associated with AGN in this cluster (>75%) is
higher than at these flux density levels in the field (40-50%).Comment: 19 pages LaTeX, including 8 figures. Accepted for publication in
MNRAS. Version with higher resolution figures available from
http://www.roe.ac.uk/~pnb/papers.htm
Detailed studies of the subpicosecond kinetics in the primary electron transfer of reaction centers of Rhodopseudomonas viridis
The primary, light-induced charge separation in reaction centers of Rhodopseudomonas viridis is investigated with femtosecond time resolution. The absorption changes after direct excitation of the primary donor P at 955 nm are investigated in the time range from 100 fs to 600 ps. The experimental data, taken at various probing wavelengths, reveal one subpicosecond and two picosecond time constants: 0.65 ± 0.2 ps, 3.5 ± 0.4 ps, and 200 ± 20 ps. The previously undetected 0.65 ps kinetics can be observed clearly in the spectral range of the Qx and Qy transitions of the monomeric bacteriochlorophylls. The experimental data support the idea that the accessory bacteriochlorophyll B A participates in the electron-transfer process.
Reference
The SBF Survey of Galaxy Distances. I. Sample Selection, Photometric Calibration, and the Hubble Constant
We describe a program of surface brightness fluctuation (SBF) measurements
for determining galaxy distances. This paper presents the photometric
calibration of our sample and of SBF in general. Basing our zero point on
observations of Cepheid variable stars, we find that the absolute SBF magnitude
in the Kron-Cousins I band correlates well with the mean (V-I)o color of a
galaxy according to
M_Ibar = (-1.74 +/- 0.07) + (4.5 +/- 0.25) [ (V-I)o - 1.15 ]
for 1.0 < (V-I) < 1.3. This agrees well with theoretical estimates from
stellar population models. Comparisons between SBF distances and a variety of
other estimators, including Cepheid variable stars, the Planetary Nebula
Luminosity Function (PNLF), Tully-Fisher (TF), Dn-sigma, SNII, and SNIa,
demonstrate that the calibration of SBF is universally valid and that SBF error
estimates are accurate. The zero point given by Cepheids, PNLF, TF (both
calibrated using Cepheids), and SNII is in units of Mpc; the zero point given
by TF (referenced to a distant frame), Dn-sigma and SNIa is in terms of a
Hubble expansion velocity expressed in km/s. Tying together these two zero
points yields a Hubble constant of H_0 = 81 +/- 6 km/s/Mpc. As part of this
analysis, we present SBF distances to 12 nearby groups of galaxies where
Cepheids, SNII, and SNIa have been observed.Comment: 29 pages plus 8 figures; LaTeX (AASTeX) uses aaspp4.sty (included);
To appear in The Astrophysical Journal, 1997 February 1 issue; Compressed
PostScript available from ftp://mars.tuc.noao.edu/sbf
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