33,767 research outputs found
A reusable prepositioned ATP reaction chamber
Luminescence biometer detects presence of life by means of light-emitting chemical reaction of luciferin and luciferase with adenosine triphosphate (ATP) that occurs in all living cells. Amount of light in reaction chamber is measured to determine presence and extent of life
Gas-rich dwarf galaxies in dense and sparse environments
Dwarf irregular galaxies (generically labelled Im for the present purposes) pose an enigma to students of galaxy evolution. In nearby groups and the Virgo cluster, Im galaxies are at least as abundant as spiral galaxies, and their low surface brightnesses and high gas-to-stars ratios suggest that (at least in the stochastic self-propagating star formation scenario) there should be significant numbers of HI clouds with masses approaching 10(exp 8) solar mass which have undergone very little or no star formation. To date, however, no clouds with so little star formation that they would not be recognized as Im galaxies on high-quality photographic plates have been identified. There have been suggestions that such dwarfs may be tidally disrupted in regions of high galactic density, but may be prevalent in low density regions. We offer data from three parallel programs relevant to this issue. (1) A large number of Im galaxies throughout the Local Supercluster have been mapped in the HI spectral line using the Arecibo Radiotelescope, and we can establish the frequency with which HI disks much more extended than their optically visible portions are found. (2) Our extensive mapping of spiral and dwarf galaxies in the Virgo cluster allows us to set stringent limits on the density of star-free Hi clouds in that cluster. (3) We have conducted a sampling of the void in the distribution of galaxies toward the super galactic pole, optimized for finding low-mass HI clouds at redshifts out to approximately 2000 km/s
Ethylenebisdithiocarbamates and ethylenethiourea: possible human health hazards.
Humans are exposed to ethylenebisdithiocarbamates (EBDCs) from environmental sources. Exposure to EBDCs is chronic for workers in a variety of industries, where EBDCs are used for their properties as slimicides, vulcanization accelerators, antioxidants, and scavengers in waste-water treatment. EBDCs, and particularly the EBDC metabolite ethylenethiourea, have clearly defined, important toxic effects in various animal species, and there is reason to suspect they are carcinogenic in humans. In the absence of definitive information regarding human risk, further studies need to be done. In the interim, regular surveillance of workers with high levels of exposure to EBDCs, with specific attention to markers of thyroid and hepatic pathology, should be considered
Correlation Statistics of Irregular and Spiral Galaxies Mapped in HI
Several measures of galaxy size and mass obtained from the neutral hydrogen
mapping of 70 dwarf irregular galaxies presented in Paper I (Hoffman et al.
1996) are compared statistically to those for the set of all available
HI-mapped dwarfs and HI-mapped spirals distributed within the same spatial
volume to investigate variations in Tully-Fisher relations and in surface
densities as functions of galaxy size and luminosity or mass. Some ambiguities
due to the ``non-commutativity'' of the correlations among the variables are
addressed and linear regressions of logarithms of blue luminosity, HI and
optical radii, velocity profile half-width incorporating rotation and random
motions, HI mass, and indicative dynamical mass are presented and analyzed. The
surface density of HI is almost constant along the sequence of
size/mass/luminosity while surface density of blue luminosity increases with
galaxy size. For quantities not involving HI we find no evidence for a
``break'' between dwarfs and spirals, but we do find some curvature in velocity
vs. radius and in the Tully-Fisher relation. There is an indication for a
difference in the correlations involving HI mass or radius between dwarfs alone
and spirals alone, in the sense that irregulars have somewhat more HI mass or
slightly larger HI radii than spirals at a given blue luminosity, optical
radius, or velocity profile width.Comment: AASTeX, to appear in ApJ, 26 pages + 3 tables + 12 figure
Light detection instrument Patent
Detection instrument for light emitted from ATP biochemical reactio
On Multiple Zeta Values of Even Arguments
For k <= n, let E(2n,k) be the sum of all multiple zeta values with even
arguments whose weight is 2n and whose depth is k. Of course E(2n,1) is the
value of the Riemann zeta function at 2n, and it is well known that E(2n,2) =
(3/4)E(2n,1). Recently Z. Shen and T. Cai gave formulas for E(2n,3) and
E(2n,4). We give two formulas form E(2n,k), both valid for arbitrary k <=n, one
of which generalizes the Shen-Cai results; by comparing the two we obtain a
Bernoulli-number identity. We also give explicit generating functions for the
numbers E(2n,k) and for the analogous numbers E*(2n,k) defined using multiple
zeta-star values of even arguments.Comment: DESY number added; misprints fixed; reference added. Second revision
(2016): New result on multiple zeta-star values adde
IGB grid: User's manual (A turbomachinery grid generation code)
A grid generation code called IGB is presented for use in computational investigations of turbomachinery flowfields. It contains a combination of algebraic and elliptic techniques coded for use on an interactive graphics workstation. The instructions for use and a test case are included
Entropy of gas and dark matter in galaxy clusters
On the basis of a large scale 'adiabatic', namely non-radiative and
non-dissipative, cosmological smooth particle hydrodynamic simulation we
compare the entropy profiles of the gas and the dark matter (DM) in galaxy
clusters. The quantity K_g = T_g \rho_g^{-2/3} provides a measure for the
entropy of the intra-cluster gas. By analogy with the thermodynamic variables
of the gas the velocity dispersion of the DM is associated with a formal
temperature and thereby K_DM = \sigma_DM^2 \rho_DM^{-2/3} is defined. This DM
entropy is related to the DM phase space density by K_DM \propto Q_DM^{-2/3}.
In accord with other studies the DM phase space density follows a power law
behaviour, Q_DM \propto r^{-1.82}, which corresponds to K_DM \propto r^{1.21}.
The simulated intra-cluster gas has a flat entropy core within (0.8 \pm 0.4)
R_s, where R_s is the NFW scale radius. The outer profile follows the DM
behaviour, K_g \propto r^{1.21}, in close agreement with X-ray observations.
Upon scaling the DM and gas densities by their mean cosmological values we find
that outside the entropy core a constant ratio of K_g / K_{DM} = 0.71 \pm 0.18
prevails. By extending the definition of the gas temperature to include also
the bulk kinetic energy the ratio of the DM and gas extended entropy is found
to be unity for r > 0.8 R_s. The constant ratio of the gas thermal entropy to
that of the DM implies that observations of the intra-cluster gas can provide
an almost direct probe of the DM.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS, web page of
the The Marenostrum Numerical Cosmology Project :
http://astro.ft.uam.es/~marenostrum
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