3,416 research outputs found
Viking '75 spacecraft design and test summary. Volume 1: Lander design
The Viking Mars program is summarized. The design of the Viking lander spacecraft is described
Viking '75 spacecraft design and test summary. Volume 3: Engineering test summary
The engineering test program for the lander and the orbiter are presented. The engineering program was developed to achieve confidence that the design was adequate to survive the expected mission environments and to accomplish the mission objective
Anisotropic Distribution of SDSS Satellite Galaxies: Planar (not Polar) Alignment
The distribution of satellite galaxies relative to isolated host galaxies in
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) is investigated. Host-satellite systems are
selected using three different methods, yielding samples of ~3300, ~1600, and
\~950 satellites. In the plane of the sky, the distributions of all three
samples show highly significant deviations from circular symmetry (> 99.99%, >
99.99%, and 99.79% confidence levels, respectively), and the degree of
anisotropy is a strong function of the projected radius, r_p, at which the
satellites are found. For r_p < 100 kpc, the SDSS satellites are aligned
preferentially with the major axes of the hosts. This is in stark contrast to
the Holmberg effect, in which satellites are aligned with the minor axes of
host galaxies. The degree of anisotropy in the distribution of the SDSS
satellites decreases with r_p and is consistent with an isotropic distribution
at of order the 1-sigma level for 250 kpc < r_p < 500 kpc.Comment: ApJ Letters (in press); Discussion section substantially revised,
SDSS DR3 included in the analysis, no significant changes to the result
Viking '75 spacecraft design and test summary. Volume 2: Orbiter design
The design of the Viking orbiter spacecraft is described. System configuration, telecommunications, and guidance and control requirements are presented
Galactic Extinction from Colors and Counts of Field Galaxies in WFPC2 Frames: An Application to GRB 970228
We develop the ``simulated extinction method'' to measure average foreground
Galactic extinction from field galaxy number-counts and colors. The method
comprises simulating extinction in suitable reference fields by changing the
isophotal detection limit. This procedure takes into account selection effects,
in particular, the change in isophotal detection limit (and hence in isophotal
magnitude completeness limit) with extinction, and the galaxy color--magnitude
relation.
We present a first application of the method to the HST WFPC2 images of the
gamma-ray burster GRB 970228. Four different WFPC2 high-latitude fields,
including the HDF, are used as reference to measure the average extinction
towards the GRB in the F606W passband. From the counts, we derive an average
extinction of A_V = 0.5 mag, but the dispersion of 0.4 mag between the
estimates from the different reference fields is significantly larger than can
be accounted by Poisson plus clustering uncertainties. Although the counts
differ, the average colors of the field galaxies agree well. The extinction
implied by the average color difference between the GRB field and the reference
galaxies is A_V = 0.6 mag, with a dispersion in the estimated extinction from
the four reference fields of only 0.1 mag. All our estimates are in good
agreement with the value of 0.81\pm0.27 mag obtained by Burstein & Heiles, and
with the extinction of 0.78\pm0.12 measured by Schlegel et al. from maps of
dust IR emission. However, the discrepancy between the widely varying counts
and the very stable colors in these high-latitude fields is worth
investigating.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures; submitted to the Astrophysical Journa
Immunization and Aging: a Learning Process in the Immune Network
The immune system can be thought as a complex network of different
interacting elements. A cellular automaton, defined in shape-space, was
recently shown to exhibit self-regulation and complex behavior and is,
therefore, a good candidate to model the immune system. Using this model to
simulate a real immune system we find good agreement with recent experiments on
mice. The model exhibits the experimentally observed refractory behavior of the
immune system under multiple antigen presentations as well as loss of its
plasticity caused by aging.Comment: 4 latex pages, 3 postscript figures attached. To be published in
Physical Review Letters (Tentatively scheduled for 5th Oct. issue
On the Relation Between Peak Luminosity and Parent Population of Type Ia Supernovae: A New Tool for Probing the Ages of Distant Galaxies
We study the properties of Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) as functions of the
radial distance from their host galaxy centers. Using a sample of 62 SNe Ia
with reliable luminosity, reddening, and decline rate determinations, we find
no significant radial gradients of SNe Ia peak absolute magnitudes or decline
rates in elliptical+S0 galaxies, suggesting that the diversity of SN properties
is not related to the metallicity of their progenitors. We do find that the
range in brightness and light curve width of supernovae in spiral galaxies
extends to brighter, broader values. These results are interpreted as support
for an age, but not metallicity, related origin of the diversity in SNe Ia. If
confirmed with a larger and more accurate sample of data, the age-luminosity
relation would offer a new and powerful tool to probe the ages and age
gradients of stellar populations in galaxies at redshift as high as .
The absence of significant radial gradients in the peak and colors of SNe Ia supports the redding correction method of Phillips et
al (1999). We find no radial gradient in residuals from the SN Ia
luminosity-width relation, suggesting that the relation is not affected by
properties of the progenitor populations and supporting the reliability of
cosmological results based upon the use of SNe Ia as distance indicators.Comment: 19 pages, incl. 3 tables & 3 figures; to appear in Nov 2000 issue of
Ap
HST/STIS Imaging of the Host Galaxy of GRB980425/SN1998bw
We present HST/STIS observations of ESO 184-G82, the host galaxy of the
gamma-ray burst GRB 980425 associated with the peculiar Type Ic supernova
SN1998bw. ESO 184-G82 is found to be an actively star forming SBc sub-luminous
galaxy. We detect an object consistent with being a point source within the
astrometric uncertainty of 0.018 arcseconds of the position of the supernova.
The object is located inside a star-forming region and is at least one
magnitude brighter than expected for the supernova based on a simple
radioactive decay model. This implies either a significant flattening of the
light curve or a contribution from an underlying star cluster.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, AASTeX v5.02 accepted for publication in ApJ
Letter
Spatial and kinematic alignments between central and satellite halos
Based on a cosmological N-body simulation we analyze spatial and kinematic
alignments of satellite halos within six times the virial radius of group size
host halos (Rvir). We measure three different types of spatial alignment: halo
alignment between the orientation of the group central substructure (GCS) and
the distribution of its satellites, radial alignment between the orientation of
a satellite and the direction towards its GCS, and direct alignment between the
orientation of the GCS and that of its satellites. In analogy we use the
directions of satellite velocities and probe three further types of alignment:
the radial velocity alignment between the satellite velocity and connecting
line between satellite and GCS, the halo velocity alignment between the
orientation of the GCS and satellite velocities and the auto velocity alignment
between the satellites orientations and their velocities. We find that
satellites are preferentially located along the major axis of the GCS within at
least 6 Rvir (the range probed here). Furthermore, satellites preferentially
point towards the GCS. The most pronounced signal is detected on small scales
but a detectable signal extends out to 6 Rvir. The direct alignment signal is
weaker, however a systematic trend is visible at distances < 2 Rvir. All
velocity alignments are highly significant on small scales. Our results suggest
that the halo alignment reflects the filamentary large scale structure which
extends far beyond the virial radii of the groups. In contrast, the main
contribution to the radial alignment arises from the adjustment of the
satellite orientations in the group tidal field. The projected data reveal good
agreement with recent results derived from large galaxy surveys. (abridged)Comment: accepted for publication in Ap
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