10 research outputs found
Observation of interstellar lithium in the low-metallicity Small Magellanic Cloud
The primordial abundances of light elements produced in the standard theory
of Big Bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) depend only on the cosmic ratio of baryons to
photons, a quantity inferred from observations of the microwave background. The
predicted primordial 7Li abundance is four times that measured in the
atmospheres of Galactic halo stars. This discrepancy could be caused by
modification of surface lithium abundances during the stars' lifetimes or by
physics beyond the Standard Model that affects early nucleosynthesis. The
lithium abundance of low-metallicity gas provides an alternative constraint on
the primordial abundance and cosmic evolution of lithium that is not
susceptible to the in situ modifications that may affect stellar atmospheres.
Here we report observations of interstellar 7Li in the low-metallicity gas of
the Small Magellanic Cloud, a nearby galaxy with a quarter the Sun's
metallicity. The present-day 7Li abundance of the Small Magellanic Cloud is
nearly equal to the BBN predictions, severely constraining the amount of
possible subsequent enrichment of the gas by stellar and cosmic-ray
nucleosynthesis. Our measurements can be reconciled with standard BBN with an
extremely fine-tuned depletion of stellar Li with metallicity. They are also
consistent with non-standard BBN.Comment: Published in Nature. Includes main text and Supplementary
Information. Replaced with final title and abstrac
Interstellar Dust Close to the Sun
The low density interstellar medium (ISM) close to the Sun and inside of the
heliosphere provides a unique laboratory for studying interstellar dust grains.
Grain characteristics in the nearby ISM are obtained from observations of
interstellar gas and dust inside of the heliosphere and the interstellar gas
towards nearby stars. Comparison between the gas composition and solar
abundances suggests that grains are dominated by olivines and possibly some
form of iron oxide. Measurements of the interstellar Ne/O ratio by the
Interstellar Boundary Explorer spacecraft indicate that a high fraction of
interstellar oxygen in the ISM must be depleted onto dust grains. Local
interstellar abundances are consistent with grain destruction in ~150 km/s
interstellar shocks, provided that the carbonaceous component is hydrogenated
amorphous carbon and carbon abundances are correct. Variations in relative
abundances of refractories in gas suggest variations in the history of grain
destruction in nearby ISM. The large observed grains, > 1 micron, may indicate
a nearby reservoir of denser ISM. Theoretical three-dimensional models of the
interaction between interstellar dust grains and the solar wind predict that
plumes of about 0.18 micron dust grains form around the heliosphere.Comment: 2011 AGOS Taiwan meeting; accepted for publication in Earth, Planets
and Spac
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Probing O VI Emission in the Halos of Edge-on Spiral Galaxies
We have used the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer to search for O VI λλ1031.926, 1037.617 emission in the halos of the edge-on spiral galaxies NGC 4631 and NGC 891. In NGC 4631, we detected O VI in emission toward a soft X-ray bubble above a region containing numerous Hα arcs and filaments. The line-of-sight component of the motion of the O VI gas appears to match the underlying disk rotation. The observed O VI luminosities can account for 0.2%-2% of the total energy input from supernovae (assuming a full O VI- emitting halo) and yield mass flux cooling rates between 0.48 and 2.8 M yr-1 depending on the model used in the derivations. On the basis of these findings, we believe it is likely that we are seeing cooling, galactic fountain gas. No emission was detected from the halo of NGC 891, a galaxy in a direction with considerably high foreground Galactic extinction