8,577 research outputs found
Cluster Winds Blow along Supercluster Axes
Within Abell galaxy clusters containing wide-angle tailed radio sources,
there is evidence of a ``prevailing wind'' which directs the WAT jets. We study
the alignment of WAT jets and nearby clusters to test the idea that this wind
may be a fossil of drainage along large-scale supercluster axes. We also test
this idea with a study of the alignment of WAT jets and supercluster axes.
Statistical test neighbours indicate no alignment of WAT jets towards nearest
clusters, but do indicate approximately 98% confidence in alignment with the
long axis of the supercluster in which the cluster lies. We find a preferred
scale for such superclusters of order 25 Mpc .Comment: Latex, 5 pages, with 5 postscript figures. To be published in MNRAS.
Slight revisions to coincide with journal text. Linked to color image at
http://kusmos.phsx.ukans.edu/~melott/images/A2634SUW.jp
Quantifying Operational Constraints of Low-Latency Telerobotics for Planetary Surface Operations
NASA's SLS and Orion crew vehicle will launch humans to cislunar space to
begin the new era of space exploration. NASA plans to use the Orion crew
vehicle to transport humans between Earth and cislunar space where there will
be a stationed habitat known as the Deep Space Gateway (DSG). The proximity to
the lunar surface allows for direct communication between the DSG and surface
assets, which enables low-latency telerobotic exploration. The operational
constraints for telerobotics must be fully explored on Earth before being
utilized on space exploration missions. We identified two constraints on space
exploration using low-latency surface telerobotics and attempts to quantify
these constraints. A constraint associated with low-latency surface
telerobotics is the bandwidth available between the orbiting command station
and the ground assets. The bandwidth available will vary during operation. As a
result, it is critical to quantify the operational video conditions required
for effective exploration. We designed an experiment to quantify the threshold
frame rate required for effective exploration. The experiment simulated
geological exploration via low-latency surface telerobotics using a COTS rover
in a lunar analog environment. The results from this experiment indicate that
humans should operate above a threshold frame rate of 5 frames per second. In a
separate, but similar experiment, we introduced a 2.6 second delay in the video
system. This delay recreated the latency conditions present when operating
rovers on the lunar farside from an Earth-based command station. This time
delay was compared to low-latency conditions for teleoperation at the DSG
(0.4 seconds). The results from this experiment show a 150% increase in
exploration time when the latency is increased to 2.6 seconds. This indicates
that such a delay significantly complicates real-time exploration strategies.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, Proceedings of the IEEE Aerospace Conference,
Big Sky, MT. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1706.0375
Substructure in clusters containing wide-angle tailed radio galaxies. I. New redshifts
We present new redshifts and positions for 635 galaxies in nine rich clusters
containing Wide-Angle Tailed (WAT) radio galaxies. Combined with existing data,
we now have a sample of 18 WAT-containing clusters with more than 10 redshifts.
This sample contains a substantial portion of the WAT clusters in the VLA 20 cm
survey of Abell clusters, including 75% of WAT clusters in the complete survey
(z0.09. It is a representative sample
which should not contain biases other than selection by radio morphology. We
graphically present the new data using histograms and sky maps. A
semi-automated procedure is used to search for emission lines in the spectra in
order to add and verify galaxy redshifts. We find that the average apparent
fraction of emission line galaxies is about 9% in both the clusters and the
field. We investigate the magnitude completeness of our redshift surveys with
CCD data for a test case, Abell 690. This case indicates that our galaxy target
lists are deeper than the detection limit of a typical MX exposure, and they
are 82% complete down to R=19.0. The importance of the uniformity of the
placement of fibers on targets is posited, and we evaluate this in our
datasets. We find some cases of non-uniformities which may influence dynamical
analyses. A second paper will use this database to look for correlations
between the WAT radio morphology and the cluster's dynamical state.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, 7 tables. To appear in the Astronomical Journa
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