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Measurements of I/SVOCs in biomass-burning smoke using solid-phase extraction disks and two-dimensional gas chromatography
Biomass-burning organic-aerosol (OA) emissions are known to exhibit semi-volatile behavior that impacts OA loading during plume transport. Because such semi-volatile behavior depends in part on OA composition, improved speciation of intermediate and semi-volatile organic compounds (I/SVOCs) emitted during fires is needed to assess the competing effects of primary OA volatilization and secondary OA production. In this study, 18 laboratory fires were sampled in which a range of fuel types were burned. Emitted I/SVOCs were collected onto Teflon filters and solid-phase extraction (SPE) disks to qualitatively characterize particulate and gaseous I/SVOCs, respectively. Derivatized filter extracts were analyzed using comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography with time-of-flight mass spectrometry (GC×GC-TOFMS). Quality control tests were performed using biomass-burning relevant standards and demonstrate the utility of SPE disks for untargeted analysis of air samples. The observed chromatographic profiles of I/SVOCs in coniferous fuel-derived smoke samples were well correlated with each other, but poorly correlated with other fuel types (e.g., herbaceous and chaparral fuels). Emissions of benzenediol isomers were also shown to be fuel dependent. The combined Teflon and SPE filter data captured differences in gas-particle partitioning of the benzenediol isomers, with hydroquinone having a significantly higher particle-phase fraction than catechol due to its lower volatility. Additionally, the speciated volatility distribution of I/SVOCs in smoke from a rotten-log fire was estimated to evaluate the composition of potentially volatilized primary OA, which was entirely attributed to oxygenated (or other heteroatomic) compounds. The isomer-dependent partitioning and the speciated volatility distributions both suggest the need for better understanding of gas-phase and heterogenous reaction pathways of biomass-burning-derived I/SVOCs in order to represent the atmospheric chemistry of smoke in models
A galaxy populations study of a radio-selected protocluster at z~3.1
We present a population study of several types of galaxies within the
protocluster surrounding the radio galaxy MRC0316-257 at z~3.1. In addition to
the known population of Ly_alpha emitters (LAEs) and [OIII] emitters, we use
colour selection techniques to identify protocluster candidates that are Lyman
break galaxies (LBG) and Balmer break galaxies (BBGs). The radio galaxy field
contains an excess of LBG candidates, with a surface density 1.6\pm0.3 times
larger than found for comparable blank fields. This surface overdensity
corresponds to an LBG volume overdensity of ~8\pm4. The BBG photometric
redshift distribution peaks at the protocluster's redshift, but we detect no
significant surface overdensity of BBG. This is not surprising because a volume
overdensity similar to the LBGs would have resulted in a surface density of
~1.2 that found in the blank field. This could not have been detected in our
sample. Masses and star formation rates of the candidate protocluster galaxies
are determined using SED fitting. These properties are not significantly
different from those of field galaxies. The galaxies with the highest masses
and star formation rates are located near the radio galaxy, indicating that the
protocluster environment influences galaxy evolution at z~3. We conclude that
the protocluster around MRC0316-257 is still in the early stages of formation.Comment: 19 pages, 20 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
H-alpha emitters in z~2 proto-clusters: evidence for faster evolution in dense environments
This is a study of H-alpha emitters in two dense galaxy proto-clusters
surrounding radio galaxies at z~2. We show that the proto-cluster surrounding
MRC 1138-262 contains 14+/-2 times more H-alpha candidates than the average
field (9 sigma significance), and the z=2.35 radio galaxy 4C+10.48 is
surrounded by 12+/-2 times more emitters than the field (5 sigma), so it is
also likely to reside in a dense proto-cluster environment. We compared these
H-alpha emitters, situated in dense environments, to a control field sample
selected from 3 separate fields forming a total area of 172 arcmin^2. We
constructed and compared H-alpha and rest-frame R continuum luminosity
functions of the emitters in both environments. The star formation density is
on average 13 times greater in the proto-clusters than the field at z~2, so the
total star formation rate within the central 1.5Mpc of the proto-clusters
exceeds 3000Msun/yr. However, we found no significant difference in the shape
of the H-alpha luminosity functions, implying that environment does not
substantially affect the strength of the H-alpha line from strongly star
forming galaxies. The proto-cluster emitters are typically 0.8mag brighter in
rest-frame R continuum than field emitters, implying they are twice as massive
as their field counterparts at the same redshift. We also show the
proto-cluster galaxies have lower specific star formation rates than field
galaxies, meaning the emitters in the dense environments formed more of their
stars earlier than the field galaxies. We conclude that galaxy growth in the
early Universe was accelerated in dense environments, and that cluster galaxies
differed from field galaxies even before the cluster had fully formed.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
High pressure phases in highly piezoelectric Pb(Zr0.52Ti0.48)O3
Two novel room-temperature phase transitions are observed, via synchrotron
x-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy, in the Pb(Zr0.52Ti0.48)O3 alloy under
hydrostatic pressures up to 16 GPa. A monoclinic (M)-to-rhombohedral (R1) phase
transition takes place around 2-3 GPa, while this R1 phase transforms into
another rhombohedral phase, R2, at about 6-7 GPa. First-principles calculations
assign the R3m and R3c symmetry to R1 and R2, respectively, and reveal that R2
acts as a pressure-induced structural bridge between the polar R3m and a
predicted antiferrodistortive R-3c phase.Comment: REVTeX, 4 pages with 3 figures embedded. Figs 1 and 3 in colo
Satellite content and quenching of star formation in galaxy groups at z ~ 1.8
We study the properties of satellites in the environment of massive star-forming galaxies at z ~ 1.8 in the COSMOS field, using a sample of 215 galaxies on the main sequence of star formation with an average mass of ~1011M⊙. At z> 1.5, these galaxies typically trace halos of mass ≳1013M⊙. We use optical-near-infrared photometry to estimate stellar masses and star formation rates (SFR) of centrals and satellites down to ~ 6 × 109M⊙. We stack data around 215 central galaxies to statistically detect their satellite halos, finding an average of ~3 galaxies in excess of the background density. We fit the radial profiles of satellites with simple β-models, and compare their integrated properties to model predictions. We find that the total stellar mass of satellites amounts to ~68% of the central galaxy, while spectral energy distribution modeling and far-infrared photometry consistently show their total SFR to be 25-35% of the central's rate. We also see significant variation in the specific SFR of satellites within the halo with, in particular, a sharp decrease at <100 kpc. After considering different potential explanations, we conclude that this is likely an environmental signature of the hot inner halo. This effect can be explained in the first order by a simple free-fall scenario, suggesting that these low-mass environments can shut down star formation in satellites on relatively short timescales of ~0.3 Gyr
A mature cluster with X-ray emission at z=2.07
We report evidence of a fully established galaxy cluster at z=2.07,
consisting of a ~20sigma overdensity of red, compact spheroidal galaxies
spatially coinciding with extended X-ray emission detected with XMM-Newton. We
use VLT VIMOS and FORS2 spectra and deep Subaru, VLT and Spitzer imaging to
estimate the redshift of the structure from a prominent z=2.07 spectroscopic
redshift spike of emission-line galaxies, concordant with the accurate 12-band
photometric redshifts of the red galaxies. Using NICMOS and Keck AO
observations, we find that the red galaxies have elliptical morphologies and
compact cores. While they do not form a tight red sequence, their colours are
consistent with that of a >1.3$~Gyr population observed at z~2.1. From an X-ray
luminosity of .2*10^43 erg s^-1 and the stellar mass content of the red galaxy
population, we estimate a halo mass of 5.3-8*10^13 Msun, comparable to the
nearby Virgo cluster. These properties imply that this structure could be the
most distant, mature cluster known to date and that X-ray luminous,
elliptical-dominated clusters are already forming at substantially earlier
epochs than previously known.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures; accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
The PEP survey: clustering of infrared-selected galaxies and structure formation at z~2 in the GOODS South
ABRIDGED-This paper presents the first direct estimate of the 3D clustering
properties of far-infrared sources up to z~3. This has been possible thanks to
the Pacs Evolutionary Probe (PEP) survey of the GOODS South field performed
with the PACS instrument onboard the Herschel Satellite. An analysis of the
two-point correlation function over the whole redshift range spanned by the
data reports for the correlation length, r_0~6.3 Mpc and r_0~6.7 Mpc,
respectively at 100um and 160um, corresponding to dark matter halo masses
M>~10^{12.4} M_sun. Objects at z~2 instead seem to be more strongly clustered,
with r_0~19 Mpc and r_0~17 Mpc in the two considered PACS channels. This
dramatic increase of the correlation length between z~1 and z~2 is connected
with the presence of a wide, M>~10^{14} M_sun, filamentary structure which
includes more than 50% of the sources detected at z~2. An investigation of the
properties of such sources indicates the possibility for boosted star-forming
activity in those which reside within the overdense environment with respect of
more isolated galaxies found in the same redshift range. Lastly, we also
present our results on the evolution of the relationship between luminous and
dark matter in star-forming galaxies between z~1 and z~2. We find that the
increase of (average) stellar mass in galaxies between z~1 and z~2 is
about a factor 10 lower than that of the dark matter haloes hosting such
objects ([z~1]/[z~2] ~ 0.4 vs M_{halo}[z~1]/M_{halo}[z~2] ~ 0.04). Our
findings agree with the evolutionary picture of downsizing whereby massive
galaxies at z~2 were more actively forming stars than their z~1 counterparts,
while at the same time contained a lower fraction of their mass in the form of
luminous matter.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, MNRAS accepte
Intrauterine exposures, pregnancy estrogens and breast cancer risk: where do we currently stand?
Since 1990, when a hypothesis on intrauterine influences on breast cancer risk was published, several studies have provided supportive, indirect evidence by documenting associations of birth weight and other correlates of the prenatal environment with breast cancer risk in offspring. Recent results from a unique cohort of women with documented exposure to diethylstilbestrol in utero have provided direct evidence in support of a potential role of pregnancy oestrogens on breast cancer risk in offspring
Profiling the transcriptome of Gracilaria changii (Rhodophyta) in response to light deprivation
Light regulates photosynthesis, growth and reproduction, yield and properties of phycocolloids, and starch contents in seaweeds. Despite its importance as an environmental cue that regulates many developmental, physiological, and biochemical processes, the network of genes involved during light deprivation are obscure. In this study, we profiled the transcriptome of Gracilaria changii at two different irradiance levels using a cDNA microarray containing more than 3,000 cDNA probes. Microarray analysis revealed that 93 and 105 genes were up- and down-regulated more than 3-fold under light deprivation, respectively. However, only 50% of the transcripts have significant matches to the nonredundant peptide sequences in the database. The transcripts that accumulated under light deprivation include vanadium chloroperoxidase, thioredoxin, ferredoxin component, and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide dehydrogenase. Among the genes that were down-regulated under light deprivation were genes encoding light harvesting protein, light harvesting complex I, phycobilisome 7.8 kDa linker polypeptide, low molecular weight early light-inducible protein, and vanadium bromoperoxidase. Our findings also provided important clues to the functions of many unknown sequences that could not be annotated using sequence comparison
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