48,498 research outputs found
Blind Detections of CO J = 1–0 in 11 H-ATLAS Galaxies at z = 2.1–3.5 with the GBT/Zpectrometer
We report measurements of the carbon monoxide ground state rotational transition (^(12)C^(16)O J = 1-0) with the Zpectrometer ultrawideband spectrometer on the 100 m diameter Green Bank Telescope. The sample comprises 11 galaxies with redshifts between z = 2.1 and 3.5 from a total sample of 24 targets identified by Herschel-ATLAS photometric colors from the SPIRE instrument. Nine of the CO measurements are new redshift determinations, substantially adding to the number of detections of galaxies with rest-frame peak submillimeter emission near 100 μm. The CO detections confirm the existence of massive gas reservoirs within these luminous dusty star-forming galaxies (DSFGs). The CO redshift distribution of the 350 μm selected galaxies is strikingly similar to the optical redshifts of 850 μm-selected submillimeter galaxies in 2.1 ≤ z ≤ 3.5. Spectroscopic redshifts break a temperature-redshift degeneracy; optically thin dust models fit to the far-infrared photometry indicate characteristic dust temperatures near 34 K for most of the galaxies we detect in CO. Detections of two warmer galaxies, and statistically significant nondetections, hint at warmer or molecule-poor DSFGs with redshifts that are difficult to determine from Herschel-SPIRE photometric colors alone. Many of the galaxies identified by H-ATLAS photometry are expected to be amplified by foreground gravitational lenses. Analysis of CO linewidths and luminosities provides a method for finding approximate gravitational lens magnifications μ from spectroscopic data alone, yielding μ ~ 3-20. Corrected for magnification, most galaxy luminosities are consistent with an ultraluminous infrared galaxy classification, but three are candidate hyper-LIRGs with luminosities greater than 10^(13) L_☉
The Cytoscan (TM) model E-II, a new reflectance microscope for intravital microscopy: Comparison with the standard fluorescence method
The Cytoscan(TM) Model E-II (Cytometrics Inc., Philadelphia, Pa., USA) is a newly developed instrument which functions as an intravital microscope and is small and easily portable. Through the use of orthogonal polarization spectral (OPS) imaging, the Cytoscan Model E-II delivers images of the microcirculation which are comparable to those achieved with intravital fluorescence videomicroscopy (IFM), but without the use of fluorescent dyes. The purpose of this study was to validate the Cytoscan Model E-II instrument against IFM. The experiments were carried out on striated muscle in the dorsal skinfold chamber of the awake Syrian hamster. The following parameters were measured in identical regions of interest in the same animal under baseline conditions and 0.5 and 2 h after a 4-hour period of pressure-induced ischemia: arteriolar diameter, venular diameter and venular red blood cell velocity. Bland-Altman plots showed good agreement between the two techniques for venular red blood cell velocity. As expected, arteriolar and venular diameters as measured by the Cytoscan were on average 5 mum smaller than the values from IFM, since the Cytoscan measures the red blood cell column width and IFM measures luminal diameter. Thus, OPS imaging can be used to make valid measurements of microvascular diameter and red blood cell velocity in tissues. Copyright (C) 2000 S. Karger AG, Basel
Co-ordinating retinal histogenesis: early cell cycle exit enhances early cell fate determination in the Xenopus retina
The laminar arrays of distinct cell types in the vertebrate retina are built by a histogenic process in which cell fate is correlated with birth order. To explore this co-ordination mechanistically, we altered the relative timing of cell cycle exit in the developing Xenopus retina and asked whether this affected the activity of neural determinants. We found that Xath5, a bHLH proneural gene that promotes retinal ganglion cell (RGC) fate, ( Kanekar, S., Perron, M., Dorsky, R., Harris, W. A., Jan, L. Y., Jan, Y. N. and Vetter, M. L. (1997) Neuron 19, 981-994), does not cause these cells to be born prematurely. To drive cells out of the cell cycle early, therefore, we misexpressed the cyclin kinase inhibitor, p27Xic1. We found that early cell cycle exit potentiates the ability of Xath5 to promote RGC fate. Conversely, the cell cycle activator, cyclin E1, which inhibits cell cycle exit, biases Xath5-expressing cells toward later neuronal fates. We found that Notch activation in this system caused cells to exit the cell cycle prematuely, and when it is misexpressed with Xath5, it also potentiates the induction of RGCs. The potentiation is counteracted by co-expression of cyclin E1. These results suggest a model of histogenesis in which the activity of factors that promote early cell cycle exit enhances the activity of factors that promote early cellular fates
The Globular Cluster Systems in the Coma Ellipticals. III: The Unique Case of IC 4051
Using archival \hst WFPC2 data, we derive the metallicity distribution,
luminosity function, and spatial structure of the globular cluster system
around IC 4051, a giant E galaxy on the outskirts of the Coma cluster core. The
metallicity distribution derived from the (V-I) colors has a mean [Fe/H] =
-0.3, a near-complete lack of metal-poor clusters, and only a small metallicity
gradient with radius; it may, however, have two roughly equal metallicity
subcomponents, centered at [Fe/H] ~ 0.0 and -1.0. The luminosity distribution
(GCLF) has the Gaussian-like form observed in all other giant E galaxies, with
a peak (turnover) at V = 27.8, consistent with a Coma distance of 100 Mpc. The
radial profiles of both the GCS and the halo light show an unusually steep
falloff which may indicate that the halo of this galaxy has been tidally
truncated. Lastly, the specific frequency of the GCS is remarkably large: we
find S_N = 11 +- 2, resembling the central cD-type galaxies even though IC 4051
is not a cD or brightest cluster elliptical. A formation model consistent with
most of the observations would be that this galaxy was subjected to removal of
a large fraction of its protogalactic gas shortly after its main phase of
globular cluster formation, probably by its first passage through the Coma
core. Since then, no significant additions due to accretions or mergers have
taken place.Comment: 24 pp. plus 13 Figures. Postscript file for the complete paper can
also be downloaded from http://www.physun.mcmaster.ca/~harris/WEHarris.html.
Astron.J., in pres
Enhancement of Kerr nonlinearity via multi-photon coherence
We propose a new method of resonant enhancement of optical Kerr nonlinearity
using multi-level atomic coherence. The enhancement is accompanied by
suppression of the other linear and nonlinear susceptibility terms of the
medium. We show that the effect results in a modification of the nonlinear
Faraday rotation of light propagating in an Rb87 vapor cell by changing the
ellipticity of the light.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures Submitted to Optics Letter
X-ray Images of Hot Accretion Flows
We consider the X-ray emission due to bremsstrahlung processes from hot, low
radiative-efficiency accretion flows around supermassive and galactic black
holes. We calculate surface brightness profiles and Michelson visibility
functions for a range of density profiles, rho ~ r^(-3/2+p), with 0 < p < 1, to
allow for the presence of outflows. We find that although the 1 keV emitting
region in these flows can always extend up to 10^6 Schwarzschild radii (R_S),
their surface brightness profiles and visibility functions are strongly
affected by the specific density profile. The advection-dominated solutions
with no outflows (p=0) lead to centrally peaked profiles with characteristic
sizes of only a few tens of R_S. Solutions with strong outflows (p~1) lead to
flat intensity profiles with significantly larger characteristic sizes of up to
10^6 R_S. This implies that low luminosity galactic nuclei, such as M87, may
appear as extended X-ray sources when observed with current X-ray imaging
instruments. We show that X-ray brightness profiles and their associated
visibility functions may be powerful probes for determining the relevant mode
of accretion and, in turn, the properties of hot accretion flows. We discuss
the implications of our results for observations with the Chandra X-ray
Observatory and the planned X-ray interferometer MAXIM.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, accepted by The Astrophysical Journal, minor
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