998 research outputs found
Remote sensing in the mixing zone
Characteristics of dispersion and diffusion as the mechanisms by which pollutants are transported in natural river courses were studied with the view of providing additional data for the establishment of water quality guidelines and effluent outfall design protocols. Work has been divided into four basic categories which are directed at the basic goal of developing relationships which will permit the estimation of the nature and extent of the mixing zone as a function of those variables which characterize the outfall structure, the effluent, and the river, as well as climatological conditions. The four basic categories of effort are: (1) the development of mathematical models; (2) laboratory studies of physical models; (3) field surveys involving ground and aerial sensing; and (4) correlation between aerial photographic imagery and mixing zone characteristics
Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer Observations of a Supernova Remnant in the Line of Sight to HD 5980 in the Small Magellanic Cloud
We report a detection of far ultraviolet absorption from the supernova
remnant SNR 0057 - 7226 in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). The absorption is
seen in the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) spectrum of the
LBV/WR star HD 5980. Absorption from O VI 1032 and C III 977 is seen at a
velocity of +300 km/s with respect to the Galactic absorption lines, +170 km/s
with respect to the SMC absorption. The O VI 1038 line is contaminated by H_2
absorption, but is present. These lines are not seen in the FUSE spectrum of
Sk80, only ~1' (~17 pc) away from HD 5980. No blue-shifted O VI 1032 absorption
from the SNR is seen in the FUSE spectrum. The O VI 1032 line in the SNR is
well described by a Gaussian with FWHM=75 km/s. We find log N(O
VI)=14.33-14.43, which is roughly 50% of the rest of the O VI column in the SMC
(excluding the SNR) and greater than the O VI column in the Milky Way halo
along this sight line. The N(C IV)/N(O VI) ratio for the SNR absorption is in
the range of 0.12-0.17, similar to the value seen in the Milky Way disk, and
lower than the halo value, supporting models in which SNRs produce the highly
ionized gas close to the plane of the Galaxy, while other mechanisms occur in
the halo. The N(C IV)/N(O VI) ratio is also lower than the SMC ratio along this
sight line, suggesting that other mechanisms contribute to the creation of the
global hot ionized medium in the SMC. The O VI, C IV, and Si IV apparent column
density profiles suggest the presence of a multi-phase shell followed by a
region of higher temperature gas.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, uses emulateapj5.sty. Accepted for
publication in ApJ Letter
Stellar abundances and molecular hydrogen in high-redshift galaxies -the far-ultraviolet view
FUSE spectra of star-forming regions in nearby galaxies are compared to
composite spectra of Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs), binned by strength of Lyman
alpha emission and by mid-UV luminosity. Several far-UV spectral features,
including lines dominated by stellar wind and by photospheric components, are
very sensitive to stellar abundances. Their measurement in Lyman-break galaxies
is compromised by the strong interstellar absorption features, allowing in some
cases only upper limits. The derived C and N abundances in the LBGs are no
higher than half solar (scaled to oxygen abundance for comparison with
emission-line analyses), independent of the strength of Lyman alpha emission. P
V absorption indicates abundances as low as 0.1 solar, with an upper limit near
0.4 solar in the reddest and weakest-emission galaxies. Unresolved interstellar
absorption components would further lower the derived abundances. Trends of
line strength, and derived abundances, are stronger with mid-UV luminosity than
with Lyman-alpha strength. H2 absorption in the Lyman and Werner bands is very
weak in the LBGs. Template H2 absorption spectra convolved to appropriate
resolution show that strict upper limits N(H2)< 10^18 cm^-2 apply in all cases,
with more stringent values appropriate for the stronger-emission composites and
for mixes of H2 level populations like those on Milky Way sight lines. Since
the UV-bright regions are likely to be widespread in these galaxies, these
results rule out massive diffuse reservoirs of H2, and suggest that the
dust/gas ratio is already fairly large at z~3.Comment: Astron J., in press (June 2006
Safety of the Excimer Laser in LASIK and PRK for Patients with Implantable Cardiac Devices: Our Clinical Experience in the Past Two Decades
This is a Letter to the Editor and does not have an abstrac
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