761 research outputs found
First phylogenetic analyses of galaxy evolution
The Hubble tuning fork diagram, based on morphology, has always been the
preferred scheme for classification of galaxies and is still the only one
originally built from historical/evolutionary relationships. At the opposite,
biologists have long taken into account the parenthood links of living entities
for classification purposes. Assuming branching evolution of galaxies as a
"descent with modification", we show that the concepts and tools of
phylogenetic systematics widely used in biology can be heuristically transposed
to the case of galaxies. This approach that we call "astrocladistics" has been
first applied to Dwarf Galaxies of the Local Group and provides the first
evolutionary galaxy tree. The cladogram is sufficiently solid to support the
existence of a hierarchical organization in the diversity of galaxies, making
it possible to track ancestral types of galaxies. We also find that morphology
is a summary of more fundamental properties. Astrocladistics applied to
cosmology simulated galaxies can, unsurprisingly, reconstruct the correct
"genealogy". It reveals evolutionary lineages, divergences from common
ancestors, character evolution behaviours and shows how mergers organize galaxy
diversity. Application to real normal galaxies is in progress. Astrocladistics
opens a new way to analyse galaxy evolution and a path towards a new
systematics of galaxies
Image selection system
An image selection (ISS) was developed for the NASA-Ames Research Center Earth Resources Aircraft Project. The ISS is an interactive, graphics oriented, computer retrieval system for aerial imagery. An analysis of user coverage requests and retrieval strategies is presented, followed by a complete system description. Data base structure, retrieval processors, command language, interactive display options, file structures, and the system's capability to manage sets of selected imagery are described. A detailed example of an area coverage request is graphically presented
Submarine landslides on the upper southeast Australian passive continental margin – preliminary findings
The southeast Australian passive continental margin is narrow, steep and sediment-deficient, and characterized by relatively low rates of modern sedimentation. Upper slope (\u3c1200m) sediments comprise mixtures of calcareous and terrigenous sand and mud. Three of twelve sediment cores recovered from geologically-recent, submarine landslides located offshore New South Wales/Queensland (NSW/QLD) are interpreted to have sampled failure surfaces at depths of between 85 cm and 220 cm below the present-day seabed. Differences in sediment physical properties are recorded above and below the three slide-plane boundaries. Sediment taken directly above the inferred submarine landslide failure surfaces and presumed to be post-landslide, returned radiocarbon ages of 15.8 ka, 20.7 ka and 20.1 ka. The last two ages correspond to adjacent slide features, which are inferred to be consistent with their being triggered by a single event such as an earthquake. Slope stability models based on classical soil mechanics and measured sediment shearstrengths indicate that the upper slope sediments should be stable. However, multibeam sonar data reveal that many upper slope landslides occur across the margin and that submarine landsliding is a common process. We infer from these results that: a) an unidentified mechanism regularly acts to reduce the shear resistance of these sediments to the very low values required to enable slope failure, and/or b) the margin experiences seismic events that act to destabilise the slope sediments
Towards a Phylogenetic Analysis of Galaxy Evolution : a Case Study with the Dwarf Galaxies of the Local Group
Context: The Hubble tuning fork diagram has always been the preferred scheme
for classification of galaxies. It is based on morphology only. At the
opposite, biologists have long taken into account the genealogical relatedness
of living entities for classification purposes. Aims: Assuming branching
evolution of galaxies as a 'descent with modification', we show here that the
concepts and tools of phylogenetic systematics widely used in biology can be
heuristically transposed to the case of galaxies. Methods: This approach that
we call "astrocladistics" is applied to Dwarf Galaxies of the Local Group and
provides the first evolutionary tree for real galaxies. Results: The trees that
we present here are sufficiently solid to support the existence of a
hierarchical organization in the diversity of dwarf galaxies of the Local
Group. This also shows that these galaxies all derive from a common ancestral
kind of objects. We find that some kinds of dIrrs are progenitors of both dSphs
and other kinds of dIrrs.We also identify three evolutionary groups, each one
having its own characteristics and own evolution. Conclusions: The present work
opens a new way to analyze galaxy evolution and a path towards a new
systematics of galaxies. Work on other galaxies in the Universe is in progress.Comment: 13 pages 5 figures with 3 online onl
The Distance to the Cygnus Loop from Hubble Space Telescope Imaging of the Primary Shock Front
We present a Hubble Space Telescope/WFPC2 narrow-band H-alpha image of a
region on the northeastern limb of the Cygnus Loop supernova remnant. This
location provides a detailed example of where the primary blast wave first
encounters the surrounding interstellar medium. The filament structure is seen
in exquisite detail in this image, which was obtained primarily as an EARLY
ACQuisition image for a follow-up spectroscopic program. We compare the HST
image to a digitized version of the POSS-I red plate to measure the proper
motion of this filament. By combining this value for the proper motion with
previous measurements of the shock velocity at this position we find that the
distance to the Cygnus Loop is 440 (+130, -100) pc, considerably smaller than
the canonical value of 770 pc. We briefly discuss the ramifications of this new
distance estimate for our understanding of this prototypical supernova remnant.Comment: 18 pages, 3 Figures (2 JPEG and one Postscript
Classical Cosmological Tests for Galaxies of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field
Images of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field are analyzed to obtain a catalog of
galaxies for which the angular sizes, surface brightness, photometric
redshifts, and absolute magnitudes are found. The catalog contains a total of
about 4000 galaxies identified at a high signal-to-noise ratio, which allows
the cosmological relations angular size{redshift and surface
brightness-redshift to be analyzed. The parameters of the evolution of linear
sizes and surface brightness of distant galaxies in the redshift interval
0.5-6.5 are estimated in terms of a grid of cosmological models with different
density parameters. The distribution of photometric redshifts of galaxies is
analyzed and possible superlarge inhomogeneities in the radial distribution of
galaxies are found with scale lengths as large as 2000 Mpc.Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures, 1 tabl
A large-scale survey for variable stars in M33
We have started a survey of M 33 in order to find variable stars and Cepheids
in particular. We have obtained more than 30 epochs of g'r'i' data with the
CFHT and the one-square-degree camera MegaCam. We present first results from
this survey, including the search for variable objects and a basic
characterization of the various groups of variable stars.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the "Nonlinear stellar
hydrodynamics", conference in honor of Robert Buchler's 65th birthday, July
2007, Pari
Deep CFHT Photometric Survey of the Entire M33 Galaxy I: Catalogue of 36000 Variable Point Sources
We have conducted a variability survey of the local group galaxy M33 using
g', r', and i' observations from 27 nights spanning 17 months made with the
MegaPrime/MegaCam instrument on the 3.6 m CFHT telescope. We identify more than
36000 variable sources with g',r',i' < 24 out of approximately 2 million point
sources in a one square degree field of view. This increases the number of
known variables in this galaxy by more than a factor of 20. In this paper we
provide a brief description of the data and a general overview of the variable
star population which includes more than 800 candidate variable blue and red
supergiant stars, more than 2000 Cepheids, and more than 19000 long period
variable AGB and RGB stars.Comment: Submitted to MNRAS. 20 pages, 16 figures. Catalogue and light curves
are available at http://www.astro.livjm.ac.uk/~dfb/M33/ animations associated
with this paper are available at
http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~jhartman/M33_Movie.html a version of the paper
with full-resolution images is available at
http://www.astro.livjm.ac.uk/~dfb/M33/M33_fullres.ps.g
P6: Predictors of compliance with COVID-19 related non- pharmaceutical interventions amongst university students
College campuses have been an area where the novel coronavirus has spread rapidly, thus this study is focused on compliance with COVID-19 related non-pharmaceutical interventions among college students.We surveyed over 600 college students from across the United States and modeled predictors of compliance with non-pharmaceutical interventions. To determine how applicable nationwide modeling might be to individual local campuses we also administered this same survey to nearly 600 students at two large universities in Utah County (Brigham Young University and Utah Valley University). We then ran structural equation modeling (SEM) to determine what factors are related to student compliance with non-pharmaceutical interventions
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