317 research outputs found
The Ratio of Ortho- to Para-H2 in Photodissociation Regions
We discuss the ratio of ortho- to para-H2 in photodissociation regions
(PDRs). We draw attention to an apparent confusion in the literature between
the ortho-to-para ratio of molecules in FUV-pumped vibrationally excited
states, and the H2 ortho-to-para abundance ratio. These ratios are not the same
because the process of FUV-pumping of fluorescent H2 emission in PDRs occurs
via optically thick absorption lines. Thus, gas with an equilibrium ratio of
ortho- to para-H2 equal to 3 will yield FUV-pumped vibrationally excited
ortho-to-para ratios smaller than 3, because the ortho-H2 pumping rates are
preferentially reduced by optical depth effects. Indeed, if the ortho and para
pumping lines are on the ``square root'' part of the curve-of-growth, then the
expected ratio of ortho and para vibrational line strengths is the square root
of 3, ~ 1.7, close to the typically observed value. Thus, contrary to what has
sometimes been stated in the literature, most previous measurements of the
ratio of ortho- to para-H2 in vibrationally excited states are entirely
consistent with a total ortho-to-para ratio of 3, the equilibrium value for
temperatures greater than 200 K. We present an analysis and several detailed
models which illustrate the relationship between the total ratios of ortho- to
para-H2 and the vibrationally excited ortho-to-para ratios in PDRs. Recent
Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) measurements of pure rotational and
vibrational H2 emissions from the PDR in the star-forming region S140 provide
strong observational support for our conclusions.Comment: 23 pages (including 5 figures), LaTeX, uses aaspp4.sty, accepted for
publication in Ap
High Resolution Millimeter-Wave Mapping of Linearly Polarized Dust Emission: Magnetic Field Structure in Orion
We present 1.3 and 3.3 mm polarization maps of Orion-KL obtained with the
BIMA array at approximately 4 arcsec resolution. Thermal emission from
magnetically aligned dust grains produces the polarization. Along the Orion
``ridge'' the polarization position angle varies smoothly from about 10 degrees
to 40 degrees, in agreement with previous lower resolution maps. In a small
region south of the Orion ``hot core,'' however, the position angle changes by
90 degrees. This abrupt change in polarization direction is not necessarily the
signpost of a twisted magnetic field. Rather, in this localized region
processes other than the usual Davis-Greenstein mechanism might align the dust
grains with their long axes parallel with the field, orthogonal to their normal
orientation.Comment: AAS preprint:14 pages, 2 figures (3mm.eps and 1mm.eps); requires
aaspp4.sty To be published in Astrophysical Journal Letter
UV Circular Polarisation in Star Formation Regions : The Origin of Homochirality?
Ultraviolet circularly polarised light has been suggested as the initial cause of the homochirality of organic molecules in terrestrial organisms, via enantiomeric selection of prebiotic molecules by asymmetric photolysis. We present a theoretical investigation of mechanisms by which ultraviolet circular polarisation may be produced in star formation regions. In the scenarios considered here, light scattering produces only a small percentage of net circular polarisation at any point in space, due to the forward throwing nature of the phase function in the ultraviolet. By contrast, dichroic extinction can produce a fairly high percentage of net circular polarisation (âŒ10%) and may therefore play a key role in producing an enantiomeric excessPeer reviewe
Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS Polarization Measurements of OMC-1
We present 2micron polarization measurements of positions in the BN region of
the Orion Molecular Cloud (OMC-1) made with NICMOS Camera 2 (0.2'' resolution)
on HST. Our results are as follows: BN is sim 29% polarized by dichroic
absorption and appears to be the illuminating source for most of the nebulosity
to its north and up to sim 5'' to its south. Although the stars are probably
all polarized by dichroic absorption, there are a number of compact, but
non-point-source, objects that could be polarized by a combination of both
dichroic absorption and local scattering of star light. We identify several
candidate YSOs, including an approximately edge-on bipolar YSO 8.7'' east of
BN, and a deeply-embedded variable star. Additional strongly polarized sources
are IRc2-B, IRc2-D, and IRc7, all of which are obviously self-luminous at
mid-infrared wavelengths and may be YSOs. None of these is a reflection nebula
illuminated by a star located near radio source I, as was previously suggested.
Other IRc sources are clearly reflection nebulae: IRc3 appears to be
illuminated by IRc2-B or a combination of the IRc2 sources, and IRc4 and IRc5
appear to be illuminated by an unseen star in the vicinity of radio source I,
or by Star n or IRc2-A. Trends in the magnetic field direction are inferred
from the polarization of the 26 stars that are bright enough to be seen as
NICMOS point sources. The most polarized star has a polarization position angle
different from its neighbors by sim 40^o, but in agreement with the grain
alignment inferred from millimeter polarization measurements of the cold dust
cloud in the southern part of OMC-1.Comment: 41 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables, to appear in The Astrophysical Journa
Frustratingly simple pretraining alternatives to masked language modeling
Masked language modeling (MLM), a self-supervised pretraining objective, is widely used in natural language processing for learning text representations. MLM trains a model to predict a random sample of input tokens that have been replaced by a [MASK] placeholder in a multi-class setting over the entire vocabulary. When pretraining, it is common to use alongside MLM other auxiliary objectives on the token or sequence level to improve downstream performance (e.g. next sentence prediction). However, no previous work so far has attempted in examining whether other simpler linguistically intuitive or not objectives can be used standalone as main pretraining objectives. In this paper, we explore five simple pretraining objectives based on token-level classification tasks as replacements of MLM. Empirical results on GLUE and SQuAD show that our proposed methods achieve comparable or better performance to MLM using a BERT-BASE architecture. We further validate our methods using smaller models, showing that pretraining a model with 41% of the BERT-BASE's parameters, BERT-MEDIUM results in only a 1% drop in GLUE scores with our best objective
Near-Infrared Spectroscopy of Molecular Filaments in the Reflection Nebula NGC 7023
We present near-infrared spectroscopy of fluorescent molecular hydrogen (H_2)
emission from molecular filaments in the reflection nebula NGC 7023. We derive
the relative column densities of H_2 rotational-vibrational states from the
measured line emission and compare these results with several model
photodissociation regions covering a range of densities, incident UV-fields,
and excitation mechanisms. Our best-fit models for one filament suggest, but do
not require, either a combination of different densities, suggesting clumps of
10^6 cm^{-3} in a 10^4 - 10^5 cm^{-3} filament, or a combination of fluorescent
excitation and thermally-excited gas, perhaps due to a shock from a bipolar
outflow. We derive densities and UV fields for these molecular filaments that
are in agreement with previous determinations.Comment: ApJ accepted, 26 pages including 5 embedded figures, uses AASTEX.
Also available at http://www-astronomy.mps.ohio-state.edu/~martini/pubs.htm
Star Formation and Young Population of the HII Complex Sh2-294
The Sh2-294 HII region ionized by a single B0V star features several infrared
excess sources, a photodissociation region, and also a group of reddened stars
at its border. The star formation scenario in the region seems to be quite
complex. In this paper, we present follow-up results of Sh2-294 HII region at
3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8.0 microns observed with the Spitzer Space Telescope
Infrared Array Camera (IRAC), coupled with H2 (2.12 microns) observation, to
characterize the young population of the region and to understand its star
formation history. We identified 36 young stellar object (YSO, Class I, Class
II and Class I/II) candidates using IRAC color-color diagrams. It is found that
Class I sources are preferentially located at the outskirts of the HII region
and associated with enhanced H2 emission; none of them are located near the
central cluster. Combining the optical to mid-infrared (MIR) photometry of the
YSO candidates and using the spectral energy distribution fitting models, we
constrained stellar parameters and the evolutionary status of 33 YSO
candidates. Most of them are interpreted by the model as low-mass (< 4 solar
masses) YSOs; however, we also detected a massive YSO (~9 solar masses) of
Class I nature, embedded in a cloud of visual extinction of ~24 mag. Present
analysis suggests that the Class I sources are indeed younger population of the
region relative to Class II sources (age ~ 4.5 x 10^6 yr). We suggest that the
majority of the Class I sources, including the massive YSOs, are
second-generation stars of the region whose formation is possibly induced by
the expansion of the HII region powered by a ~ 4 x 10^6 yr B0 main-sequence
star.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journa
A multiwavelength study of Galactic HII region Sh2-294
We present the observational results of Galactic HII region S294, using
optical photometry, narrow-band imaging and radio continuum mapping at 1280
MHz, together with archival data from 2MASS, MSX and IRAS surveys. The stellar
surface density profile indicates that the radius of the cluster associated
with the S294 region is ~ 2.3 arcmin. We found an anomalous reddening law for
the dust inside the cluster region and the ratio of total-to-selective
extinction is found to be 3.8+-0.1. We estimate the minimum reddening E (B-V) =
1.35 mag and distance of 4.8+-0.2 kpc to the region from optical CC and CM
diagrams. We identified the ionizing source of the HII region, and spectral
type estimates are consistent with a star of spectral type ~ B0 V. The 2MASS
JHKs images reveal a partially embedded cluster associated with the ionizing
source along with a small cluster towards the eastern border of S294. The
ionization front seen along the direction of small cluster in radio continuum
and Halpha images, might be due to the interaction of ionizing sources with the
nearby molecular cloud. We found an arc shaped diffuse molecular hydrogen
emission at 2.12 micron and a half ring of MSX dust emission which surrounds
the ionized gas in the direction of the ionization front. Self consistent
radiative transfer model of mid- to far-infrared continuum emission detected
near small cluster is in good agreement with the observed spectral energy
distribution of a B1.5 ZAMS star. The morphological correlation between the
ionised and molecular gas, along with probable time scale involved between the
ionising star, evolution of HII region and small cluster, indicates that the
star-formation activity observed at the border is probably triggered by the
expansion of HII region.Comment: 50 pages, 21 figures: Accepted by The Astrophysical Journal; Also
available at http://www.tifr.res.in/~ojha/S294.pd
The status of cones in the rhodopsin mutant P23H-3 retina: Light-regulated damage and repair in parallel with rods
PURPOSE. This study tests whether cones in the rhodopsinmutant transgenic P23H-3 retina are damaged by ambient light and whether subsequent light restriction allows repair of damaged cones
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