8,427 research outputs found
Strong irradiation of protostellar cores in Corona Australis
The importance of the physical environment in the evolution of newly formed
low-mass stars remains an open question. In particular, radiation from nearby
more massive stars may affect both the physical and chemical structure of these
kinds of young stars. Aims: To constrain the physical characteristics of a
group of embedded low-mass protostars in Corona Australis in the vicinity of
the young luminous Herbig Be star R CrA. Methods: Millimetre wavelength maps of
molecular line and continuum emission towards the low-mass star forming region
IRS7 near R CrA from the SMA and APEX are presented. The maps show the
distribution of 18 lines from 7 species (H2CO, CH3OH, HC3N, c-C3H2, HCN, CN and
SiO) on scales from 3" to 60" (400-8000 AU). Using a set of H2CO lines, we
estimate the temperatures and column densities in the region using LTE and
non-LTE methods. The results are compared with 1-D radiative transfer modelling
of the protostellar cores. These models constrain which properties of the
central source, envelope, and environment can give rise to the observed line
and continuum emission. Results: Most of the H2CO emission from the regions
emerges from two elongated narrow ridges dominating the emission picked up in
both interferometric and single-dish measurements. The temperatures inferred
from the H2CO lines are no less than ~30 K and more likely 50-60 K, and the
line emission peaks are offset by ~2500 AU from the location of the embedded
protostars. The temperatures can not be explained by the heating from the young
stellar objects themselves. Irradiation by the nearby Herbig Be star R CrA
could, however, explain the high temperatures. The elevated temperatures can in
turn impact the physical and chemical characteristics of protostars and lead to
enhanced abundances of typical tracers of photon dominated regions seen in
single-dish line surveys of embedded protostars in the region.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A; 21 pages, 28 figures; Added footnote
in Section 2.
On C*-algebras generated by pairs of q-commuting isometries
We consider the C*-algebras O_2^q and A_2^q generated, respectively, by
isometries s_1, s_2 satisfying the relation s_1^* s_2 = q s_2 s_1^* with |q| <
1 (the deformed Cuntz relation), and by isometries s_1, s_2 satisfying the
relation s_2 s_1 = q s_1 s_2 with |q| = 1. We show that O_2^q is isomorphic to
the Cuntz-Toeplitz C*-algebra O_2^0 for any |q| < 1. We further prove that
A_2^{q_1} is isomorphic to A_2^{q_2} if and only if either q_1 = q_2 or q_1 =
complex conjugate of q_2. In the second part of our paper, we discuss the
complexity of the representation theory of A_2^q. We show that A_2^q is *-wild
for any q in the circle |q| = 1, and hence that A_2^q is not nuclear for any q
in the circle.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX2e "article" document class; submitted. V2 clarifies
the relationships between the various deformation systems treate
Labour supply and retirement policy in an overlapping generations model with stochastic fertility
Using a stochastic general equilibrium model with overlapping generations, this paper studies a policy rule for the retirement age aiming at offsetting the effects on the supply of labour following fertility changes. We find that the retirement age should increase more than proportionally to the direct fall in the labour supply caused by a fall in fertility. The robustness of this result is checked against alternative model specifications and parameter values. The efficacy of the policy rule depends crucially on the link between the preference for leisure and the response of the intensive margin of labour supply to changes in the statutory retirement age.Labour supply; fertility; retirement age; overlapping generations; method of undetermined coefficients
Screening of organically based fungicides for apple scab (Venturia inaequalis) control and a histopathological study of the mode of action of a resistance inducer.
A range of possible substitutes for copper-based fungicides for control of apple scab (Venturia inaequalis) in organic growing were tested in laboratory and growth chamber experiments in the Danish project StopScab (2002-2004). Eighteen crude plant extracts, 19 commercial plant-based products and 6 miscellaneous compounds were tested for their ability to reduce scab symptoms on apple seedlings. Most of the compounds were also tested for their effect on conidium germination on glass slides. Fourteen of the crude plant extracts, 13 of the commercial plant products and 5 of the miscellaneous compounds showed promising control efficacies when used either preventively or curatively in the plant assay. A histopathological study was carried out on the mode of action of the resistance inducer, acibenzolar-S-methyl (ASM), which reduced scab severity and sporulation on apple seedlings in several plant assays when applied as preventive treatment. The effect of the inducer on key pre- and post-penetration events of V. inaequalis was studied and compared to these events in water-treated control leaves. The histopathological study showed that the inducer had its strongest effect on post-penetration events indicated by delayed infection and reduced stroma development. In addition, a small but significant inhibition of conidial germination and a stimulation of germ tube length were observed. This investigation provides new histopathological evidence for the mode of action of ASM against V. inaequalis and serves as a model for evaluation of the mechanisms by which the organically based fungicides reduce infection of V. inaequalis
The effect of a strong external radiation field on protostellar envelopes in Orion
We discuss the effects of an enhanced interstellar radiation field (ISRF) on
the observables of protostellar cores in the Orion cloud region. Dust radiative
transfer is used to constrain the envelope physical structure by reproducing
SCUBA 850 micron emission. Previously reported 13CO, C17O and H2CO line
observations are reproduced through detailed Monte Carlo line radiative
transfer models. It is found that the 13CO line emission is marginally
optically thick and sensitive to the physical conditions in the outer envelope.
An increased temperature in this region is needed in order to reproduce the
13CO line strengths and it is suggested to be caused by a strong heating from
the exterior, corresponding to an ISRF in Orion 10^3 times stronger than the
"standard" ISRF. The typical temperatures in the outer envelope are higher than
the desorption temperature for CO. The C17O emission is less sensitive to this
increased temperature but rather traces the bulk envelope material. The data
are only fit by a model where CO is depleted, except in the inner and outermost
regions where the temperature increases above 30-40 K. The fact that the
temperatures do not drop below approximately 25 K in any of the envelopes
whereas a significant fraction of CO is frozen-out suggest that the
interstellar radiation field has changed through the evolution of the cores.
The H2CO lines are successfully reproduced in the model of an increased ISRF
with constant abundances of 3-5x10^{-10}.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Subarcsecond resolution observations of warm water towards three deeply embedded low-mass protostars
Water is present during all stages of star formation: as ice in the cold
outer parts of protostellar envelopes and dense inner regions of circumstellar
disks, and as gas in the envelopes close to the protostars, in the upper layers
of circumstellar disks and in regions of powerful outflows and shocks. In this
paper we probe the mechanism regulating the warm gas-phase water abundance in
the innermost hundred AU of deeply embedded (Class~0) low-mass protostars, and
investigate its chemical relationship to other molecular species during these
stages. Millimeter wavelength thermal emission from the para-H2-18O
3(1,3)-2(2,0) (Eu=203.7 K) line is imaged at high angular resolution (0.75";
190 AU) with the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer towards the deeply
embedded low-mass protostars NGC 1333-IRAS2A and NGC 1333-IRAS4A. Compact
H2-18O emission is detected towards IRAS2A and one of the components in the
IRAS4A binary; in addition CH3OCH3, C2H5CN, and SO2 are detected. Extended
water emission is seen towards IRAS2A, possibly associated with the outflow.
The detections in all systems suggests that the presence of water on <100 AU
scales is a common phenomenon in embedded protostars. We present a scenario in
which the origin of the emission from warm water is in a flattened disk-like
structure dominated by inward motions rather than rotation. The gas-phase water
abundance varies between the sources, but is generally much lower than a
canonical abundance of 10^-4, suggesting that most water (>96 %) is frozen out
on dust grains at these scales. The derived abundances of CH3OCH3 and SO2
relative to H2-18O are comparable for all sources pointing towards similar
chemical processes at work. In contrast, the C2H5CN abundance relative to
H2-18O is significantly lower in IRAS2A, which could be due to different
chemistry in the sources.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
An interferometric study of the low-mass protostar IRAS 16293-2422: small scale organic chemistry
Aims: To investigate the chemical relations between complex organics based on
their spatial distributions and excitation conditions in the low-mass young
stellar objects IRAS 16293-2422 A and B. Methods: Interferometric observations
with the Submillimeter Array have been performed at 5''x3'' resolution
revealing emission lines of HNCO, CH3CN, CH2CO, CH3CHO and C2H5OH. Rotational
temperatures are determined from rotational diagrams when a sufficient number
of lines are detected. Results: Compact emission is detected for all species
studied here. For HNCO and CH3CN it mostly arises from source A, CH2CO and
C2H5OH have comparable strength for both sources and CH3CHO arises exclusively
from source B. HNCO, CH3CN and CH3CHO have rotational temperatures >200 K. The
(u,v)-visibility data reveal that HNCO also has extended cold emission.
Conclusions: The abundances of the molecules studied here are very similar
within factors of a few to those found in high-mass YSOs. Thus the chemistry
between high- and low-mass objects appears to be independent of luminosity and
cloud mass. Bigger abundance differences are seen between the A and B source.
The HNCO abundance relative to CH3OH is ~4 times higher toward A, which may be
due to a higher initial OCN- ice abundances in source A compared to B.
Furthermore, not all oxygen-bearing species are co-existent. The different
spatial behavior of CH2CO and C2H5OH compared with CH3CHO suggests that
hydrogenation reactions on grain-surfaces are not sufficient to explain the
observed gas phase abundances. Selective destruction of CH3CHO may result in
the anti-coincidence of these species in source A. These results illustrate the
power of interferometric compared with single dish data in terms of testing
chemical models.Comment: 11 pages, 15 figures, accepeted by A&
The deuterium fractionation of water on solar-system scales in deeply-embedded low-mass protostars
(Abridged) The water deuterium fractionation (HDO/HO abundance ratio) has
traditionally been used to infer the amount of water brought to Earth by
comets. Measuring this ratio in deeply-embedded low-mass protostars makes it
possible to probe the critical stage when water is transported from clouds to
disks in which icy bodies are formed. We present sub-arcsecond resolution
observations of HDO in combination with HO from the PdBI toward the
three low-mass protostars NGC 1333-IRAS 2A, IRAS 4A-NW, and IRAS 4B. The
resulting HDO/HO ratio is for IRAS 2A,
for IRAS 4A-NW, and for IRAS
4B. Derived ratios agree with radiative transfer models within a factor of 2-4
depending on the source. Our HDO/HO ratios for the inner regions (where
K) of four young protostars are only a factor of 2 higher than those
found for pristine, solar system comets. These small differences suggest that
little processing of water occurs between the deeply embedded stage and the
formation of planetesimals and comets.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
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