453 research outputs found
Tracking atmospheric and riverine terrigenous supplies variability during the last glacial and the Holocene in central Mediterranean
International audienceA multiproxy study coupling mineralogical, grain size and geochemical approaches was used to tentatively retrace eolian and fluvial contributions to sedimentation in the Sicilian Tunisian Strait since the last glacial. The eolian supply is dominant over the whole interval, excepted during the sapropel Si when riverine contribution apparently became significant. Saharan contribution increased during the B011ing Allerod, evidencing the persistence of aridity over North Africa although the northern Mediterranean already experienced moister and warmer conditions. The Younger Dryas is marked by proximal dust inputs, highlighting intense regional eolian activity. A southward migration of dust provenance toward Sahel occurred at the onset of the Holocene, likely resulting from a southward position of the Inter Tropical Convergence Zone that was probably associated with a large-scale atmospheric reorganization. Finally, a peculiar high terrigenous flux associated with drastic modifications of the mineralogical and geochemical sediment signature occurred during the sapropel 51, suggesting the propagation of fine particles derived from major floodings of the Nile River resulting from enhanced rainfall on northeastern Africa and their transportation across the Sicilian Tunisian Strait by intermediate water masses
Building the cosmic distance scale: from Hipparcos to Gaia
Hipparcos, the first ever experiment of global astrometry, was launched by
ESA in 1989 and its results published in 1997 (Perryman et al., Astron.
Astrophys. 323, L49, 1997; Perryman & ESA (eds), The Hipparcos and Tycho
catalogues, ESA SP-1200, 1997). A new reduction was later performed using an
improved satellite attitude reconstruction leading to an improved accuracy for
stars brighter than 9th magnitude (van Leeuwen & Fantino, Astron. Astrophys.
439, 791, 2005; van Leeuwen, Astron. Astrophys. 474, 653, 2007).
The Hipparcos Catalogue provided an extended dataset of very accurate
astrometric data (positions, trigonometric parallaxes and proper motions),
enlarging by two orders of magnitude the quantity and quality of distance
determinations and luminosity calibrations. The availability of more than 20000
stars with a trigonometric parallax known to better than 10% opened the way to
a drastic revision of our 3-D knowledge of the solar neighbourhood and to a
renewal of the calibration of many distance indicators and age estimations. The
prospects opened by Gaia, the next ESA cornerstone, planned for launch in June
2013 (Perryman et al., Astron. Astrophys. 369, 339, 2001), are still much more
dramatic: a billion objects with systematic and quasi simultaneous astrometric,
spectrophotometric and spectroscopic observations, about 150 million stars with
expected distances to better than 10%, all over the Galaxy. All stellar
distance indicators, in very large numbers, will be directly measured,
providing a direct calibration of their luminosity and making possible detailed
studies of the impacts of various effects linked to chemical element
abundances, age or cluster membership. With the help of simulations of the data
expected from Gaia, obtained from the mission simulator developed by DPAC, we
will illustrate what Gaia can provide with some selected examples.Comment: 16 pages, 16 figures, Conference "The Fundamental Cosmic Distance
scale: State of the Art and the Gaia perspective, 3-6 May 2011, INAF,
Osservatorio Astronomico di Capodimonte, Naples. Accepted for publication in
Astrophysics & Space Scienc
Deglacial and Holocene vegetation and climatic changes in the southern Central Mediterranean from a direct land–sea correlation
International audienceDespite a large number of studies, the long-term and millennial to centennial-scale climatic variability in the Mediterranean region during the last deglaciation and the Holocene is still debated, including in the southern Central Mediterranean. In this paper, we present a new marine pollen sequence (core MD04-2797CQ) from the Siculo-Tunisian Strait documenting the regional vegetation and climatic changes in the southern Central Mediterranean during the last deglaciation and the Holocene. The MD04-2797CQ marine pollen sequence shows that semi-desert plants dominated the vegetal cover in the southern Central Mediterranean between 18.2 and 12.3 ka cal BP, indicating prevailing dry conditions during the deglaciation, even during the Greenland Interstadial (GI)-1. Across the transition Greenland Stadial (GS)-1 -Holocene, Asteraceae-Poaceae steppe became dominant till 10.1 ka cal BP. This record underlines with no chronological ambiguity that even though temperatures increased, deficiency in moisture availability persisted into the early Holocene. Temperate trees and shrubs with heath underbrush or maquis expanded between 10.1 and 6.6 ka, corresponding to Sapropel 1 (S1) interval, while Mediterranean plants only developed from 6.6 ka onwards. These changes in vegetal cover show that the regional climate in southern Central Mediterranean was wetter during S1 and became drier during the mid-to late Holocene. Wetter conditions during S1 were likely due to increased winter precipitation while summers remained dry. We suggest, in agreement with published modeling experiments, that the early Holocene increased melting of the Laurentide Ice Sheet in conjunction with weak winter insolation played a major role in the development of winter precipitation maxima in the Mediterranean region in controlling the strength and position of the North Atlantic storm track. Finally, our data provide evidence for centennial-scale vegetation and climatic changes in the southern Central Mediterranean. During the wet early Holocene, alkenone-derived cooling episodes are synchronous with herbaceous composition changes that indicate muted changes in precipitation. In contrast, enhanced aridity episodes, as detected by strong reduction in trees and shrubs, are recorded during the mid-to late Holocene. We show that the impact of the Holocene cooling events on the Mediterranean hydroclimate depend on baseline climate states, i.e. insolation and ice sheet extent, shaping the response of the mid-latitude atmospheric circulation
Autonomic nervous system assessment in critically ill patients undergoing a cognitive rehabilitation therapy
Recent clinical and electrophysiological studies reveal a high incidence of autonomic nervous system (ANS) dysfunction in patients treated in Intensive Care Units (ICUs). Cognitive rehabilitation (CR) is a behavioral therapy that has proven to be effective improving cognitive deficits in clinical populations with abnormalities in brain activation patterns. A total of 17 critically ill patients received CR aimed to improve the ANS status, which was quantified in terms of HRV. The CR included cognitive exercises aimed to improve prefrontal activation. HRV was obtained during pre-CR, CR and post-CR. Power in the low (PLF) and high (PHF) frequency bands related to sympathetic and parasympathetic systems was computed. PHF was obtained within a band centered at respiratory rate. Comparing with baseline values, 7 patients showed an increased PHF in post-CR, suggesting an increase of parasympathetic activity
Mid-Infrared interferometry of dust around massive evolved stars
We report long-baseline interferometric measurements of circumstellar dust
around massive evolved stars with the MIDI instrument on the Very Large
Telescope Interferometer and provide spectrally dispersed visibilities in the
8-13 micron wavelength band. We also present diffraction-limited observations
at 10.7 micron on the Keck Telescope with baselines up to 8.7 m which explore
larger scale structure. We have resolved the dust shells around the late type
WC stars WR 106 and WR 95, and the enigmatic NaSt1 (formerly WR 122), suspected
to have recently evolved from a Luminous Blue Variable (LBV) stage. For AG Car,
the protoypical LBV in our sample, we marginally resolve structure close to the
star, distinct from the well-studied detached nebula. The dust shells around
the two WC stars show fairly constant size in the 8-13 micron MIDI band, with
gaussian half-widths of ~ 25 to 40 mas. The compact dust we detect around NaSt1
and AG Car favors recent or ongoing dust formation.
Using the measured visibilities, we build spherically symmetric radiative
transfer models of the WC dust shells which enable detailed comparison with
existing SED-based models. Our results indicate that the inner radii of the
shells are within a few tens of AU from the stars. In addition, our models
favor grain size distributions with large (~ 1 micron) dust grains. This
proximity of the inner dust to the hot central star emphasizes the difficulty
faced by current theories in forming dust in the hostile environment around WR
stars. Although we detect no direct evidence for binarity for these objects,
dust production in a colliding-wind interface in a binary system is a feasible
mechanism in WR systems under these conditions.Comment: 21 pages, 4 tables, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
Detection of an inner gaseous component in a Herbig Be star accretion disk: Near- and mid-infrared spectro-interferometry and radiative transfer modeling of MWC 147
We study the geometry and the physical conditions in the inner (AU-scale)
circumstellar region around the young Herbig Be star MWC 147 using
long-baseline spectro-interferometry in the near-infrared (NIR K-band,
VLTI/AMBER observations and PTI archive data) as well as the mid-infrared (MIR
N-band, VLTI/MIDIobservations). The emission from MWC 147 is clearly resolved
and has a characteristic physical size of approx. 1.3 AU and 9 AU at 2.2 micron
and 11 micron respectively (Gaussian diameter). The spectrally dispersed AMBER
and MIDI interferograms both show a strong increase in the characteristic size
towards longer wavelengths, much steeper than predicted by analytic disk models
assuming power-law radial temperature distributions. We model the
interferometric data and the spectral energy distribution of MWC 147 with 2-D,
frequency-dependent radiation transfer simulations. This analysis shows that
models of spherical envelopes or passive irradiated Keplerian disks (with
vertical or curved puffed-up inner rim) can easily fit the SED, but predict
much lower visibilities than observed; the angular size predicted by such
models is 2 to 4 times larger than the size derived from the interferometric
data, so these models can clearly be ruled out. Models of a Keplerian disk with
optically thick gas emission from an active gaseous disk (inside the dust
sublimation zone), however, yield a good fit of the SED and simultaneously
reproduce the absolute level and the spectral dependence of the NIR and MIR
visibilities. We conclude that the NIR continuum emission from MWC 147 is
dominated by accretion luminosity emerging from an optically thick inner
gaseous disk, while the MIR emission also contains contributions from the
outer, irradiated dust disk.Comment: 44 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journal. The quality of the figures was slightly reduced in order to comply
with the astro-ph file-size restrictions. You can find a high-quality version
of the paper at http://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/staff/skraus/papers/mwc147.pd
The HARPS search for southern extra-solar planets XIX. Characterization and dynamics of the GJ876 planetary system
Precise radial-velocity measurements for data acquired with the HARPS
spectrograph infer that three planets orbit the M4 dwarf star GJ876. In
particular, we confirm the existence of planet "d", which orbits every 1.93785
days. We find that its orbit may have significant eccentricity (e=0.14), and
deduce a more accurate estimate of its minimum mass of 6.3 Earth masses.
Dynamical modeling of the HARPS measurements combined with literature
velocities from the Keck Observatory strongly constrain the orbital
inclinations of the "b" and "c" planets. We find that i_b = 48.9 degrees and
i_c = 48.1 degrees, which infers the true planet masses of M_b = 2.64 Jupiter
masses and M_c = 0.83 Jupiter masses, respectively. Radial velocities alone, in
this favorable case, can therefore fully determine the orbital architecture of
a multi-planet system, without the input from astrometry or transits.
The orbits of the two giant planets are nearly coplanar, and their 2:1 mean
motion resonance ensures stability over at least 5 Gyr. The libration amplitude
is smaller than 2 degrees, suggesting that it was damped by some dissipative
process during planet formation. The system has space for a stable fourth
planet in a 4:1 mean motion resonance with planet "b", with a period around 15
days. The radial velocity measurements constrain the mass of this possible
additional planet to be at most that of the Earth.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
The OSACA Database and a Kinematic Analysis of Stars in the Solar Neighborhood
We transformed radial velocities compiled from more than 1400 published
sources, including the Geneva--Copenhagen survey of the solar neighborhood
(CORAVEL-CfA), into a uniform system based on the radial velocities of 854
standard stars in our list. This enabled us to calculate the average weighted
radial velocities for more than 25~000 HIPPARCOS stars located in the local
Galactic spiral arm (Orion arm) with a median error of +-1 km/s. We use these
radial velocities together with the stars' coordinates, parallaxes, and proper
motions to determine their Galactic coordinates and space velocities. These
quantities, along with other parameters of the stars, are available from the
continuously updated Orion Spiral Arm CAtalogue (OSACA) and the associated
database. We perform a kinematic analysis of the stars by applying an
Ogorodnikov-Milne model to the OSACA data. The kinematics of the nearest single
and multiple main-sequence stars differ substantially. We used distant
(r\approx 0.2 kpc) stars of mixed spectral composition to estimate the angular
velocity of the Galactic rotation -25.7+-1.2 km/s/kpc, and the vertex
deviation,l=13+-2 degrees, and detect a negative K effect. This negative K
effect is most conspicuous in the motion of A0-A5 giants, and is equal to
K=-13.1+-2.0 km/s/kpc.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
The EROS2 search for microlensing events towards the spiral arms: the complete seven season results
The EROS-2 project has been designed to search for microlensing events
towards any dense stellar field. The densest parts of the Galactic spiral arms
have been monitored to maximize the microlensing signal expected from the stars
of the Galactic disk and bulge. 12.9 million stars have been monitored during 7
seasons towards 4 directions in the Galactic plane, away from the Galactic
center. A total of 27 microlensing event candidates have been found. Estimates
of the optical depths from the 22 best events are provided. A first order
interpretation shows that simple Galactic models with a standard disk and an
elongated bulge are in agreement with our observations. We find that the
average microlensing optical depth towards the complete EROS-cataloged stars of
the spiral arms is , a number that is
stable when the selection criteria are moderately varied. As the EROS catalog
is almost complete up to , the optical depth estimated for the
sub-sample of bright target stars with () is easier to interpret. The set of microlensing events
that we have observed is consistent with a simple Galactic model. A more
precise interpretation would require either a better knowledge of the distance
distribution of the target stars, or a simulation based on a Galactic model.
For this purpose, we define and discuss the concept of optical depth for a
given catalog or for a limiting magnitude.Comment: 22 pages submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysic
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