2,187 research outputs found

    IR Dust Bubbles: Probing the Detailed Structure and Young Massive Stellar Populations of Galactic HII Regions

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    We present an analysis of wind-blown, parsec-sized, mid-infrared bubbles and associated star-formation using GLIMPSE/IRAC, MIPSGAL/MIPS and MAGPIS/VLA surveys. Three bubbles from the Churchwell et al. (2006) catalog were selected. The relative distribution of the ionized gas (based on 20 cm emission), PAH emission (based on 8 um, 5.8 um and lack of 4.5 um emission) and hot dust (24 um emission) are compared. At the center of each bubble there is a region containing ionized gas and hot dust, surrounded by PAHs. We identify the likely source(s) of the stellar wind and ionizing flux producing each bubble based upon SED fitting to numerical hot stellar photosphere models. Candidate YSOs are also identified using SED fitting, including several sites of possible triggered star formation.Comment: 37 pages, 17 figure

    Ionization of clusters in intense laser pulses through collective electron dynamics

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    The motion of electrons and ions in medium-sized rare gas clusters (1000 atoms) exposed to intense laser pulses is studied microscopically by means of classical molecular dynamics using a hierarchical tree code. Pulse parameters for optimum ionization are found to be wavelength dependent. This resonant behavior is traced back to a collective electron oscillation inside the charged cluster. It is shown that this dynamics can be well described by a driven and damped harmonic oscillator allowing for a clear discrimination against other energy absorption mechanisms.Comment: 4 pages (4 figures

    A Branching Time Model of CSP

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    I present a branching time model of CSP that is finer than all other models of CSP proposed thus far. It is obtained by taking a semantic equivalence from the linear time - branching time spectrum, namely divergence-preserving coupled similarity, and showing that it is a congruence for the operators of CSP. This equivalence belongs to the bisimulation family of semantic equivalences, in the sense that on transition systems without internal actions it coincides with strong bisimilarity. Nevertheless, enough of the equational laws of CSP remain to obtain a complete axiomatisation for closed, recursion-free terms.Comment: Dedicated to Bill Roscoe, on the occasion of his 60th birthda

    The search for a permanent electric dipole moment using 129Xe and 3He

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    Time reversal and parity non‐invariant interactions within an atom naturally give rise to an atomic permanent electric dipole moment (PEDM). For noble gas atoms, the size of such a PEDM scales as Z2 and higher powers of Z depending on the actual manifestation of T non‐invariance, most importantly a distribution of electric dipole moment within the nucleus (Schiff Moment) and a T‐odd tensor interaction between the nucleus and atomic electrons. We have developed techniques to simultaneously measure the PEDMs of 129Xe and 3He in a single cell in order to mitigate systematic effects due to leakage currents and common mode problems such as magnetic field and time base noise. The philosophy of our approach is that PEDM of 3He is negligible compared to that of 129Xe and thus we use the 3He as a ‘‘magnetometer’’ and monitor of systematic effects. Sensitivity of ≊10−25 e‐cm per day has been demonstrated in preliminary work using a free‐induction decay technique.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/87703/2/73_1.pd

    Probing discs around massive young stellar objects with CO first overtone emission

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    We present high resolution (R~50,000) spectroastrometry over the CO 1st overtone bandhead of a sample of seven intermediate/massive young stellar objects. These are primarily drawn from the red MSX source (RMS) survey, a systematic search for young massive stars which has returned a large, well selected sample of such objects. The mean luminosity of the sample is approximately 5 times 10^4 L_\odot, indicating the objects typically have a mass of ~15 solar masses. We fit the observed bandhead profiles with a model of a circumstellar disc, and find good agreement between the models and observations for all but one object. We compare the high angular precision (0.2-0.8 mas) spectroastrometric data to the spatial distribution of the emitting material in the best-fitting models. No spatial signatures of discs are detected, which is entirely consistent with the properties of the best-fitting models. Therefore, the observations suggest that the CO bandhead emission of massive young stellar objects originates in small-scale disks, in agreement with previous work. This provides further evidence that massive stars form via disc accretion, as suggested by recent simulations.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA

    Near-infrared integral field spectroscopy of Massive Young Stellar Objects

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    We present medium resolution (R≈5300R\approx5300) KK-band integral field spectroscopy of six MYSOs. The targets are selected from the RMS survey, and we used the NIFS on the Gemini North telescope. The data show various spectral line features including BrÎł\gamma, CO, H2_2, and \mbox{He\,{\sc i}}. The BrÎł\gamma line is detected in emission in all objects with vFWHM∌100v_\mathrm{FWHM}\sim100 -- 200 kms−1^{-1}. V645 Cyg shows a high-velocity P-Cygni profile between -800 kms−1^{-1} and -300 kms−1^{-1}. We performed three-dimensional spectroastrometry to diagnose the circumstellar environment in the vicinity of the central stars using the BrÎł\gamma line. We measured the centroids of the velocity components with sub-mas precision. The centroids allow us to discriminate the blueshifted and redshifted components in a roughly east--west direction in both IRAS 18151--1208 and S106 in BrÎł\gamma. This lies almost perpendicular to observed larger scale outflows. We conclude, given the widths of the lines and the orientation of the spectroastrometric signature, that our results trace a disc wind in both IRAS 18151--1208 and S106. The CO Îœ=2−0\nu=2-0 absorption lines at low JJ transitions are detected in IRAS 18151--1208 and AFGL 2136. We analysed the velocity structure of the neutral gas discs. In IRAS 18151--1208, the absorption centroids of the blueshifted and redshifted components are separated in a direction of north-east to south-west, nearly perpendicular to that of the larger scale H2H_2 jet. The position-velocity relations of these objects can be reproduced with central masses of 30 M_{\sun} for IRAS 18151--1208 and 20 M_{\sun} for AFGL 2136. We also detect CO Îœ=2−0\nu=2-0 bandhead emission in IRAS 18151--1208, S106 and V645 Cyg. The results can be fitted reasonably with a Keplerian rotation model, with masses of 15, 20 and 20 M_{\sun} respectively.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, accepted by MNRA

    The search for a permanent electric dipole moment using 129Xe and 3He

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    Time reversal and parity non‐invariant interactions within an atom naturally give rise to an atomic permanent electric dipole moment (PEDM). For noble gas atoms, the size of such a PEDM scales as Z2 and higher powers of Z depending on the actual manifestation of T non‐invariance, most importantly a distribution of electric dipole moment within the nucleus (Schiff Moment) and a T‐odd tensor interaction between the nucleus and atomic electrons. We have developed techniques to simultaneously measure the PEDMs of 129Xe and 3He in a single cell in order to mitigate systematic effects due to leakage currents and common mode problems such as magnetic field and time base noise. The philosophy of our approach is that the PEDM of 3He is negligible compared to that of 129Xe and thus we use the 3He as a ‘‘magnetometer’’ and monitor of systematic effects. Sensitivity of ≊10−25 e‐cm per day has been demonstrated in preliminary work using a free induction decay technique.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/87730/2/84_1.pd

    Recovering Grammar Relationships for the Java Language Specification

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    Grammar convergence is a method that helps discovering relationships between different grammars of the same language or different language versions. The key element of the method is the operational, transformation-based representation of those relationships. Given input grammars for convergence, they are transformed until they are structurally equal. The transformations are composed from primitive operators; properties of these operators and the composed chains provide quantitative and qualitative insight into the relationships between the grammars at hand. We describe a refined method for grammar convergence, and we use it in a major study, where we recover the relationships between all the grammars that occur in the different versions of the Java Language Specification (JLS). The relationships are represented as grammar transformation chains that capture all accidental or intended differences between the JLS grammars. This method is mechanized and driven by nominal and structural differences between pairs of grammars that are subject to asymmetric, binary convergence steps. We present the underlying operator suite for grammar transformation in detail, and we illustrate the suite with many examples of transformations on the JLS grammars. We also describe the extraction effort, which was needed to make the JLS grammars amenable to automated processing. We include substantial metadata about the convergence process for the JLS so that the effort becomes reproducible and transparent

    An equatorial wind from the massive young stellar object S140 IRS 1

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    The discovery of the second equatorial ionized stellar wind from a massive young stellar object is reported. High resolution radio continuum maps of S140 IRS 1 reveal a highly elongated source that is perpendicular to the larger scale bipolar molecular outflow. This picture is confirmed by location of a small scale monopolar near-IR reflection nebula at the base of the blueshifted lobe. A second epoch of observations over a five year baseline show little ordered outward proper motion of clumps as would have been expected for a jet. A third epoch, taken only 50 days after the second, did show significant changes in the radio morphology. These radio properties can all be understood in the context of an equatorial wind driven by radiation pressure from the central star and inner disc acting on the gas in the surface layers of the disc as proposed by Drew et al. (1998). This equatorial wind system is briefly compared with the one in S106IR, and contrasted with other massive young stellar objects that drive ionized jets.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, accepted by ApJ, minor changes in light of referees repor
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