656 research outputs found
NGC1333/IRAS4: A multiple star formation laboratory
We present SCUBA observations of the protomultiple system NGC1333/IRAS4 at
450um and 850um. The 850um map shows significant extended emission which is
most probably a remnant of the initial cloud core. At 450um, the component 4A
is seen to have an elongated shape suggestive of a disk. Also we confirm that
in addition to the 4A and 4B system, there exists another component 4C, which
appears to lie out of the plane of the system and of the extended emission.
Deconvolution of the beam reveals a binary companion to IRAS4B. Simple
considerations of binary dynamics suggest that this triple 4A-4BI-4BII system
is unstable and will probably not survive in its current form. Thus IRAS4
provides evidence that systems can evolve from higher to lower multiplicity as
they move towards the main sequence. We construct a map of spectral index from
the two wavelengths, and comment on the implications of this for dust evolution
and temperature differences across the map. There is evidence that in the
region of component 4A the dust has evolved, probably by coagulating into
larger or more complex grains. Furthermore, there is evidence from the spectral
index maps that dust from this object is being entrained in its associated
outflow.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures. To appear in MNRAS. Uses mn.sty. Also available
at http://www.astro.phys.ethz.ch/papers/smith/smith_p_m.htm
Extinction correction and on-sky calibration of SCUBA-2
Commissioning of SCUBA-2 included a program of skydips and observations of
calibration sources intended to be folded into regular observing as standard
methods of source flux calibration and to monitor the atmospheric opacity and
stability. During commissioning, it was found that these methods could also be
utilised to characterise the fundamental instrument response to sky noise and
astronomical signals. Novel techniques for analysing on-sky performance and
atmospheric conditions are presented, along with results from the calibration
observations and skydips.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Towards the automated reduction and calibration of SCUBA data from the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope
The Submillimetre Common User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) instrument has been
operating on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) since 1997. The data
archive is now sufficiently large that it can be used to investigate
instrumental properties and the variability of astronomical sources. This paper
describes the automated calibration and reduction scheme used to process the
archive data with particular emphasis on `jiggle-map' observations of compact
sources. We demonstrate the validity of our automated approach at both 850- and
450-microns and apply it to several of the JCMT secondary flux calibrators. We
determine light curves for the variable sources IRC+10216 and OH231.8. This
automation is made possible by using the ORAC-DR data reduction pipeline, a
flexible and extensible data reduction pipeline that is used on UKIRT and the
JCMT.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of
the Royal Astronomical Societ
NGC 1333/IRAS 4: a multiple star formation laboratory
We present SCUBA observations of the protomultiple system NGC 1333/IRAS 4 at 450 and 850 ÎĽm. The 850-ÎĽm map shows significant extended emission which is most probably a remnant of the initial cloud core. At 450 ÎĽm, the component 4A is seen to have an elongated shape suggestive of a disc. Also we confirm that, in addition to the 4A and 4B system, there exists another component 4C, which appears to lie out of the plane of the system and of the extended emission. Deconvolution of the beam reveals a binary companion to IRAS 4B. Simple considerations of binary dynamics suggest that this triple 4A-4BI-4BII system is unstable and will probably not survive in its current form. Thus IRAS 4 provides evidence that systems can evolve from higher to lower multiplicity as they move towards the main sequence. We construct a map of spectral index from the two wavelengths, and comment on the implications of this for dust evolution and temperature differences across the map. There is evidence that in the region of component 4A the dust has evolved, probably by coagulating into larger or more complex grains. Furthermore, there is evidence from the spectral index maps that dust from this object is being entrained in its associated outflo
The Submillimeter Properties of the 1 Ms Chandra Deep Field North X-ray Sample
We present submillimeter observations for 136 of the 370 X-ray sources
detected in the 1 Ms exposure of the Chandra Deep Field North. Ten of the X-ray
sources are significantly detected in the submillimeter. The average X-ray
source in the sample has a significant 850 micron flux of 1.69+/-0.27 mJy. This
value shows little dependence on the 2-8 keV flux from 5e-16 erg/cm^2/s to
1e-14 erg/cm^2/s. The ensemble of X-ray sources contribute about 10% of the
extragalactic background light at 850 microns. The submillimeter excess is
found to be strongest in the optically faint X-ray sources that are also seen
at 20 cm, which is consistent with these X-ray sources being obscured and at
high redshift (z>1).Comment: 5 pages, submitted to The Astrophysical Journal Letter
Resolving the Submillimeter Background: the 850-micron Galaxy Counts
Recent deep blank field submillimeter surveys have revealed a population of
luminous high redshift galaxies that emit most of their energy in the
submillimeter. The results suggest that much of the star formation at high
redshift may be hidden to optical observations. In this paper we present
wide-area 850-micron SCUBA data on the Hawaii Survey Fields SSA13, SSA17, and
SSA22. Combining these new data with our previous deep field data, we establish
the 850-micron galaxy counts from 2 mJy to 10 mJy with a >3-sigma detection
limit. The area coverage is 104 square arcmin to 8 mJy and 7.7 square arcmin to
2.3 mJy. The differential 850-micron counts are well described by the function
n(S)=N_0/(a+S^3.2), where S is the flux in mJy, N_0=3.0 x 10^4 per square
degree per mJy, and a=0.4-1.0 is chosen to match the 850-micron extragalactic
background light. Between 20 to 30 per cent of the 850-micron background
resides in sources brighter than 2 mJy. Using an empirical fit to our >2 mJy
data constrained by the EBL at lower fluxes, we argue that the bulk of the
850-micron extragalactic background light resides in sources with fluxes near 1
mJy. The submillimeter sources are plausible progenitors of the present-day
spheroidal population.Comment: 5 pages, accepted by The Astrophysical Journal Letter
CHIMPS: the <sup>13</sup>CO/C<sup>18</sup>O (<i>J</i> = 3 → 2) Heterodyne Inner Milky Way Plane Survey
We present the 13CO/C18O (J = 3 → 2) Heterodyne Inner Milky Way Plane Survey (CHIMPS) which has been carried out using the Heterodyne Array Receiver Program on the 15 m James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) in Hawaii. The high-resolution spectral survey currently covers |b| ≤ 0.5° and 28° ≲ l ≲ 46°, with an angular resolution of 15 arcsec in 0.5 km s-1 velocity channels. The spectra have a median rms of ˜0.6 K at this resolution, and for optically thin gas at an excitation temperature of 10 K, this sensitivity corresponds to column densities of NH2 ˜ 3 × 1020 cm-2 and NH2 ˜ 4 × 1021 cm-2 for 13CO and C18O, respectively. The molecular gas that CHIMPS traces is at higher column densities and is also more optically thin than in other publicly available CO surveys due to its rarer isotopologues, and thus more representative of the three-dimensional structure of the clouds. The critical density of the J = 3 → 2 transition of CO is ≳104 cm-3 at temperatures of ≤20 K, and so the higher density gas associated with star formation is well traced. These data complement other existing Galactic plane surveys, especially the JCMT Galactic Plane Survey which has similar spatial resolution and column density sensitivity, and the Herschel infrared Galactic Plane Survey. In this paper, we discuss the observations, data reduction and characteristics of the survey, presenting integrated-emission maps for the region covered. Position-velocity diagrams allow comparison with Galactic structure models of the Milky Way, and while we find good agreement with a particular four-arm model, there are some significant deviations
New light on the S235A-B star forming region
The S235A-B star forming region has been extensively observed in the past
from the radio to the near-IR, but what was happening in the immediate
surroundings of the water maser, placed in between the two nebulosities, was
still unclear because of insufficient resolution especially in the spectral
range from the Far-IR to the mm, even though there were sound indications that
new young stellar objects (YSOs) are being formed there. We present here new
high resolution maps at mm wavelengths in different molecules (HCO+, C34S,
H2CS, SO2 and CH3CN), as well as in the 1.2 and 3.3 mm continuum obtained with
the Plateau de Bure interferometer, and JCMT observations at 450 micron and 850
micron that unambiguously reveal the presence of new YSOs placed in between the
two HII regions S235A and S235B and associated with the water maser. A
molecular core and an unresolved source in the mm and in the sub-mm are centred
on the maser, with indication of mass infall onto the core. Two molecular
bipolar outflows and a jet originate from the same position. Weak evidence is
found for a molecular rotating disk perpendicular to the direction of the main
bipolar outflow. The derived parameters indicate that one of the YSOs is an
intermediate luminosity object (L~1000 Lsun) in a very early evolutionary
phase, embedded in a molecular core of ~100 Msun, with a temperature of 30 K.
The main source of energy for the YSO could come from gravitational infall,
thus making of this YSO a rare example of intermediate luminosity protostar
representing a link between the earliest evolutionary phases of massive stars
and low mass protostars of class 0-I.Comment: 19 pages, 22 figures, to be published in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Packing dry whole milk in inert gas
This archival publication may not reflect current scientific knowledge or recommendations.Minnesota Institute of Researc
HELLS and CDCA7 comprise a bipartite nucleosome remodeling complex defective in ICF syndrome
Mutations in CDCA7, the SNF2 family protein HELLS (LSH), or the DNA methyltransferase DNMT3b cause immunodeficiency–centro-meric instability–facial anomalies (ICF) syndrome. While it has been speculated that DNA methylation defects cause this disease, little is known about the molecular function of CDCA7 and its functional relationship to HELLS and DNMT3b. Systematic analysis of how the cell cycle, H3K9 methylation, and the mitotic kinase Aurora B affect proteomic profiles of chromatin in Xenopus egg extracts revealed that HELLS and CDCA7 form a stoichiometric complex on chromatin, in a manner sensitive to Aurora B. Although HELLS alone fails to remodel nucleosomes, we demonstrate that the HELLS–CDCA7 complex possesses nucleosome remodeling activity. Furthermore, CDCA7 is essential for loading HELLS onto chromatin, and CDCA7 harboring patient ICF mutations fails to recruit the complex to chromatin. Together, our study identifies a unique bipartite nucleosome remodeling complex where the functional remodeling activity is split between two proteins and thus delineates the defective pathway in ICF syndrome
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