631 research outputs found
A Near-Solar Metallicity, Nitrogen-Deficient Lyman Limit Absorber Associated with two S0 Galaxies
From UV spectra of the bright quasar PHL 1811 recorded by FUSE and the E140M
configuration on STIS, we have determined the abundances of various atomic
species in a Lyman limit system at z = 0.0809 with log N(H I) = 17.98.
Considerably more hydrogen may be in ionized form, since the abundances of C
II, Si II, S II and Fe II are very large compared to that of O I, when compared
to their respective solar abundance ratios. Our determination [O/H] = -0.19 in
the H I-bearing gas indicates that the chemical enrichment of the gas is
unusually high for an extragalactic QSO absorption system. However, this same
material has an unusually low abundance of nitrogen, [N/O] < -0.59, indicating
that there may not have been enough time during this enrichment for secondary
nitrogen to arise from low and intermediate mass stars. In an earlier
investigation we found two galaxies at nearly the same redshift as this
absorption system and displaced by 34 and 87 kpc from the line of sight. An
r-band image recorded by the ACS on HST indicates these are S0 galaxies. One or
both of these galaxies may be the source of the gas, which might have been
expelled in a fast wind, by tidal stripping, or by ram-pressure stripping.
Subtraction of the ACS point-spread function from the image of the QSO reveals
the presence of a face-on spiral galaxy under the glare of the quasar; although
it is possible that this galaxy may be responsible for the Lyman limit
absorption, the exact alignment of the QSO with the center of the galaxy
suggests that the spiral is the quasar host.Comment: 74 pages, 14 figures; to be published in the Astrophysical Journal
(Part 1) May 1, 2005 issue. A version of the paper with figures of better
quality may be found at http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~ebj/PHL1811_paper.ps
(postscript) or http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~ebj/PHL1811_paper.pdf (pdf
Meeting report : Ocean âomics science, technology and cyberinfrastructure : current challenges and future requirements (August 20-23, 2013)
© The Author(s), 2014. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Standards in Genomic Sciences 9 (2014): 1251-1258, doi:10.4056/sigs.5749944.The National Science Foundationâs EarthCube End User Workshop was held at USCâs Wrigley Marine Science Center on Catalina Island, California in August 2013. The workshop was designed to explore and characterise the needs and tools available to the community focusing on microbial and physical oceanography research with a particular focus on âomic research. The assembled researchers outlined the existing concerns regarding the vast data resources that are being generated, and how we will deal with these resources as their volume and diversity increases. Particular attention was focused on the tools for handling and analysing the existing data, and on the need for the construction and curation of diverse federated databases, as well as development of shared interoperable, âbig-data capableâ analytical tools. The key outputs from this workshop include (i) critical scientific challenges and cyberinfrastructure constraints, (ii) the current and future ocean âomics science grand challenges and questions, and (iii) data management, analytical and associated and cyber-infrastructure capabilities required to meet critical current and future scientific challenges. The main thrust of the meeting and the outcome of this report is a definition of the âomics tools, technologies and infrastructures that facilitate continued advance in ocean science biology, marine biogeochemistry, and biological oceanography.We gratefully acknowledge support for the Ocean âOmics EarthCube end-user workshop by the Geo-sciences Division of the U.S. National Science Foundation
Long-lived space observatories for astronomy and astrophysics
NASA's plan to build and launch a fleet of long-lived space observatories that include the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), the Gamma Ray Observatory (GRO), the Advanced X Ray Astrophysics Observatory (AXAF), and the Space Infrared Telescope Facility (SIRTF) are discussed. These facilities are expected to have a profound impact on the sciences of astronomy and astrophysics. The long-lived observatories will provide new insights about astronomical and astrophysical problems that range from the presence of planets orbiting nearby stars to the large-scale distribution and evolution of matter in the universe. An important concern to NASA and the scientific community is the operation and maintenance cost of the four observatories described above. The HST cost about 160 million (1986 dollars) a year to operate and maintain. If HST is operated for 20 years, the accumulated costs will be considerably more than those required for its construction. Therefore, it is essential to plan carefully for observatory operations and maintenance before a long-lived facility is constructed. The primary goal of this report is to help NASA develop guidelines for the operations and management of these future observatories so as to achieve the best possible scientific results for the resources available. Eight recommendations are given
Nest Carbon Dioxide Masks GABA-Dependent Seizure Susceptibility in the Naked Mole-Rat
African naked mole-rats were likely the first mammals to evolve eusociality, and thus required adaptations to conserve energy and tolerate the low oxygen (O-2) and high carbon dioxide (CO2) of a densely populated fossorial nest. As hypercapnia is known to suppress neuronal activity, we studied whether naked mole-rats might demonstrate energy savings in GABAergic inhibition. Using whole-colony behavioral monitoring of captive naked mole-rats, we found a durable nest, characterized by high CO2 levels, where all colony members spent the majority of their time. Analysis of the naked mole-rat genome revealed, uniquely among mammals, a histidine point variation in the neuronal potassium-chloride cotransporter 2 (KCC2). A histidine missense substitution mutation at this locus in the human ortholog of KCC2, found previously in patients with febrile seizures and epilepsy, has been demonstrated to diminish neuronal Cl- extrusion capacity, and thus impairs GABAergic inhibition. Seizures were observed, without pharmacological intervention, in adult naked mole-rats exposed to a simulated hyperthermic surface environment, causing systemic hypocapnic alkalosis. Consistent with the diminished function of KCC2, adult naked mole-rats demonstrate a reduced efficacy of inhibition that manifests as triggering of seizures at room temperature by the GABA(A) receptor (GABA(A)R) positive allosteric modulator diazepam. These seizures are blocked in the presence of nest-like levels of CO2 and likely to be mediated through GABA(A)R activity, based on in vitro recordings. Thus, altered GABAergic inhibition adds to a growing list of adaptations in the naked mole-rat and provides a plausible proximate mechanism for nesting behavior, where a return to the colony nest restores GABA-mediated inhibition.Peer reviewe
Kepler Mission Stellar and Instrument Noise Properties
Kepler Mission results are rapidly contributing to fundamentally new
discoveries in both the exoplanet and asteroseismology fields. The data
returned from Kepler are unique in terms of the number of stars observed,
precision of photometry for time series observations, and the temporal extent
of high duty cycle observations. As the first mission to provide extensive time
series measurements on thousands of stars over months to years at a level
hitherto possible only for the Sun, the results from Kepler will vastly
increase our knowledge of stellar variability for quiet solar-type stars. Here
we report on the stellar noise inferred on the timescale of a few hours of most
interest for detection of exoplanets via transits. By design the data from
moderately bright Kepler stars are expected to have roughly comparable levels
of noise intrinsic to the stars and arising from a combination of fundamental
limitations such as Poisson statistics and any instrument noise. The noise
levels attained by Kepler on-orbit exceed by some 50% the target levels for
solar-type, quiet stars. We provide a decomposition of observed noise for an
ensemble of 12th magnitude stars arising from fundamental terms (Poisson and
readout noise), added noise due to the instrument and that intrinsic to the
stars. The largest factor in the modestly higher than anticipated noise follows
from intrinsic stellar noise. We show that using stellar parameters from
galactic stellar synthesis models, and projections to stellar rotation,
activity and hence noise levels reproduces the primary intrinsic stellar noise
features.Comment: Accepted by ApJ; 26 pages, 20 figure
UV Absorption Lines from High-Velocity Gas in the Vela Supernova Remnant: New insights from STIS Echelle Observations of HD72089
The star HD72089 is located behind the Vela supernova remnant and shows a
complex array of high and low velocity interstellar absorption features arising
from shocked clouds. A spectrum of this star was recorded over the wavelength
range 1196.4 to 1397.2 Angstroms at a resolving power lambda/Delta lambda =
110,000 and signal-to-noise ratio of 32 by STIS on the Hubble Space Telescope.
We have identified 7 narrow components of C I and have measured their relative
populations in excited fine-structure levels. Broader features at heliocentric
velocities ranging from -70 to +130 km/s are seen in C II, N I, O I, Si II, S
II and Ni II. In the high-velocity components, the unusually low abundances of
N I and O I, relative to S II and Si II, suggest that these elements may be
preferentially ionized to higher stages by radiation from hot gas immediately
behind the shock fronts.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, Latex. Submitted for the special HST ERO issue
of the Astrophysical Journal Letter
Kepler Observations of Transiting Hot Compact Objects
Kepler photometry has revealed two unusual transiting companions orbiting an
early A-star and a late B-star. In both cases the occultation of the companion
is deeper than the transit. The occultation and transit with follow-up optical
spectroscopy reveal a 9400 K early A-star, KOI-74 (KIC 6889235), with a
companion in a 5.2 day orbit with a radius of 0.08 Rsun and a 10000 K late
B-star KOI-81 (KIC 8823868) that has a companion in a 24 day orbit with a
radius of 0.2 Rsun. We infer a temperature of 12250 K for KOI-74b and 13500 K
for KOI-81b.
We present 43 days of high duty cycle, 30 minute cadence photometry, with
models demonstrating the intriguing properties of these object, and speculate
on their nature.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, submitted to ApJL (updated to correct KOI74
lightcurve
Intermediate- and High-Velocity Ionized Gas toward zeta Orionis
We combine UV spectra obtained with the HST/GHRS echelle, IMAPS, and
Copernicus to study the abundances and physical conditions in the predominantly
ionized gas seen at high (-105 to -65 km/s) and intermediate velocities (-60 to
-10 km/s) toward zeta Ori. We have high resolution (FWHM ~ 3.3-4.5 km/s) and/or
high S/N spectra for at least two significant ions of C, N, Al, Si, S, and Fe
-- enabling accurate estimates for both the total N(H II) and the elemental
depletions. C, N, and S have essentially solar relative abundances; Al, Si, and
Fe appear to be depleted by about 0.8, 0.3-0.4, and 0.95 dex, respectively.
While various ion ratios would be consistent with collisional ionization
equilibrium (CIE) for T ~ 25,000-80,000 K, the widths of individual
high-velocity absorption components indicate that T ~ 9000 K -- so the gas is
not in CIE. Analysis of the C II fine-structure excitation equilibrium yields
estimated densities (n_e ~ n_H ~ 0.1-0.2 cm^{-3}), thermal pressures (2 n_H T ~
2000-4000 cm^{-3}K), and thicknesses (0.5-2.7 pc) for the individual clouds. We
compare the abundances and physical properties derived for these clouds with
those found for gas at similar velocities toward 23 Ori and tau CMa, and also
with several models for shocked gas. While the shock models can reproduce some
features of the observed line profiles and some of the observed ion ratios,
there are also significant differences. The measured depletions suggest that
\~10% of the Al, Si, and Fe originally locked in dust in the pre-shock medium
may have been returned to the gas phase, consistent with predictions for the
destruction of silicate dust in a 100 km/s shock. The near-solar gas phase
abundance of carbon, however, seems inconsistent with the predicted longer time
scales for the destruction of graphite grains.Comment: 50 pages, 9 figures; aastex; accepted by Ap
Processing CCD Images to Detect Transits of Earth-Sized Planets: Maximizing Sensitivity While Achieving Reasonable Downlink Requirements
We have performed end-to-end laboratory and numerical simulations to demonstrate the capability of differential photometry under realistic operating conditions to detect transits of Earth-sized planets orbiting solar-like stars. Data acquisition and processing were conducted using the same methods planned for the proposed Kepler Mission. These included performing aperture photometry on large-format CCD images of an artificial star fields obtained without a shutter at a readout rate of 1 megapixel/sec, detecting and removing cosmic rays from individual exposures and making the necessary corrections for nonlinearity and shutterless operation in the absence of darks. We will discuss the image processing tasks performed `on-board' the simulated spacecraft, which yielded raw photometry and ancillary data used to monitor and correct for systematic effects, and the data processing and analysis tasks conducted to obtain lightcurves from the raw data and characterize the detectability of transits. The laboratory results are discussed along with the results of a numerical simulation carried out in parallel with the laboratory simulation. These two simulations demonstrate that a system-level differential photometric precision of 10-5 on five- hour intervals can be achieved under realistic conditions
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Kepler-4B: A Hot Neptune-Like Planet of A G0 Star Near Main-Sequence Turnoff
Early time-series photometry from NASA's Kepler spacecraft has revealed a planet transiting the star we term Kepler-4, at R.A. = 19(h)02(m)27.(s)68, delta = +50 degrees 08'08 '' 7. The planet has an orbital period of 3.213 days and shows transits with a relative depth of 0.87 x 10(-3) and a duration of about 3.95 hr. Radial velocity (RV) measurements from the Keck High Resolution Echelle Spectrometer show a reflex Doppler signal of 9.3(-1.9)(+1.1) m s(-1), consistent with a low-eccentricity orbit with the phase expected from the transits. Various tests show no evidence for any companion star near enough to affect the light curve or the RVs for this system. From a transit-based estimate of the host star's mean density, combined with analysis of high-resolution spectra, we infer that the host star is near turnoff from the main sequence, with estimated mass and radius of 1.223(-0.091)(+0.053) M(circle dot) and 1.487(-0.084)(+0.071) R(circle dot).We estimate the planet mass and radius to be {M(P), R(P)} = {24.5 +/- 3.8 M(circle plus), 3.99 +/- 0.21 R(circle plus)}. The planet's density is near 1.9 g cm(-3); it is thus slightly denser and more massive than Neptune, but about the same size.W. M. Keck FoundationNASA's Science Mission DirectorateAstronom
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