9,609 research outputs found
Star Formation and the Interstellar Medium In Nearby Tidal Streams (SAINTS): Spitzer Mid-infrared Spectroscopy and Imaging of Intergalactic Star-forming Objects
A spectroscopic analysis of 10 intergalactic star forming objects (ISFOs) and
a photometric analysis of 67 ISFOs in a sample of 14 interacting systems is
presented. The majority of the ISFOs have relative polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbon (PAH) band strengths similar to those of nearby spiral and
starburst galaxies. In contrast to what is observed in blue compact dwarfs
(BCDs) and local giant HII regions in the Milky Way (NGC 3603) and the
Magellanic Clouds (30 Doradus and N 66), the relative PAH band strengths in
ISFOs correspond to models with a significant PAH ion fraction (<50%) and
bright emission from large PAHs (~100 carbon atoms). The [NeIII]/[NeII] and
[SIV]/[SIII] line flux ratios indicate moderate levels of excitation with an
interstellar radiation field that is harder than the majority of the Spitzer
Infrared Nearby Galaxies Survey and starburst galaxies, but softer than BCDs
and local giant HII regions. The ISFO neon line flux ratios are consistent with
a burst of star formation < 6 million years ago. Most of the ISFOs have
~million solar masses of warm molecular hydrogen with a likely origin in
photo-dissociation regions (PDRs). Infrared Array Camera photometry shows the
ISFOs to be bright at 8 um, with one third having [4.5] - [8.0] > 3.7, i.e.,
enhanced non-stellar emission, most likely due to PAHs, relative to normal
spirals, dwarf irregulars and BCD galaxies. The relative strength of the 8 um
emission compared to that at 3.6 um or 24 um separates ISFOs from dwarf
galaxies in Spitzer two color diagrams. The infrared power in two thirds of the
ISFOs is dominated by emission from grains in a diffuse interstellar medium.
One in six ISFOs have significant emission from PDRs, contributing ~30 % - 60 %
of the total power. ISFOs are young knots of intense star formation.Comment: Accepted in ApJ. 49 pages 9 figure
Some Useful Coding Techniques for Binary Communication Systems
An introduction to coding theory and a discussion of specific coding techniques are given as applied to digital communication systems. The place of coding in a communication system is illustrated and the various approaches to coding are discussed. The information theory concepts required are presented along with the First and Second Fundamental Theorems of Shannon, The relation between Shannon’s theorems and coding for the noisy and noiseless channel is discussed. For the noiseless channel the techniques of Shannon, Fano, Huffman, Gilbert-More, Karp and others are discussed. For the noisy channel, the techniques of Hamming, Slepian, Elias, Cowell, Bose-Chaudhuri, Reed-Muller, Fire, and Wozencraft are presented. The relationships between the various codes are given and the advantages and disadvantages of each indicated. Numerous examples illustrating the use of the codes are given and areas of further research outlined
Inelastic X-ray scattering from valence electrons near absorption edges of FeTe and TiSe
We study resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) peaks corresponding to
low energy particle-hole excited states of metallic FeTe and semi-metallic
TiSe for photon incident energy tuned near the absorption edge of
Fe and Ti respectively. We show that the cross section amplitudes are well
described within a renormalization group theory where the effect of the core
electrons is captured by effective dielectric functions expressed in terms of
the the atomic scattering parameters of Fe and Ti. This method can be
used to extract the dynamical structure factor from experimental RIXS spectra
in metallic systems.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Explicit soliton-black hole correspondence for static configurations
We construct an explicit map that transforms static, generalized sine-Gordon
metrics to black hole type metrics. This, in particular, provides for a further
description of the Cadoni correspondence (which extends the
Gegenberg-Kunstatter correspondence) of soliton solutions and extremal black
hole solutions in 2D dilaton gravity.Comment: Submitted to Phys Rev D, 7 pages, no figure
Demonstration of Bunch Triple Splitting in the CERN PS
A technique for splitting bunches into three has recently been proposed as an alternative to debunching-rebunching in a synchrotron[1]. The preservation of longitudinal emittance and the possibility of maintaining a gap in the bunch train are key features expected from this new process. A proof of principle has been established experimentally at the CERN PS in 1999. This showed that the nominal longitudinal characteristics of the proton beam for the LHC could be achieved at the exit of the PS with the help of triple splitting. The method is described and experimental results presented. Other possible applications are sketched
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