5,583 research outputs found
Heat Capacity Mapping Mission (HCMM)
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Bostonia
Founded in 1900, Bostonia magazine is Boston University's main alumni publication, which covers alumni and student life, as well as university activities, events, and programs
Cosmic ray energy changes at the termination shock and in the heliosheath
Voyager 1 crossed the termination shock of the solar wind in December 2004 at 94 AU and currently measures the cosmic ray intensity in the heliosheath. To better understand this modulation region beyond the shock, where adiabatic energy changes should be small, we review the net effect of energy changes during the modulation process, including adiabatic deceleration in the solar wind, acceleration at the termination shock, and the possibility that stochastic acceleration in the heliosheath may also make a contribution
Spitzer bright, UltraVISTA faint sources in COSMOS: the contribution to the overall population of massive galaxies at z=3-7
We have analysed a sample of 574 Spitzer 4.5 micron-selected galaxies with
[4.5]24 (AB) over the UltraVISTA ultra-deep COSMOS field. Our
aim is to investigate whether these mid-IR bright, near-IR faint sources
contribute significantly to the overall population of massive galaxies at
redshifts z>=3. By performing a spectral energy distribution (SED) analysis
using up to 30 photometric bands, we have determined that the redshift
distribution of our sample peaks at redshifts z~2.5-3.0, and ~32% of the
galaxies lie at z>=3. We have studied the contribution of these sources to the
galaxy stellar mass function (GSMF) at high redshifts. We found that the
[4.5]24 galaxies produce a negligible change to the GSMF
previously determined for Ks_auto<24 sources at 3=<z<4, but their contribution
is more important at 4=~50% of the galaxies with stellar
masses Mst>~6 x 10^10 Msun. We also constrained the GSMF at the highest-mass
end (Mst>~2 x 10^11 Msun) at z>=5. From their presence at 5=<z<6, and virtual
absence at higher redshifts, we can pinpoint quite precisely the moment of
appearance of the first most massive galaxies as taking place in the ~0.2 Gyr
of elapsed time between z~6 and z~5. Alternatively, if very massive galaxies
existed earlier in cosmic time, they should have been significantly
dust-obscured to lie beyond the detection limits of current, large-area, deep
near-IR surveys.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures, 4 tables. Updated to match version in press at
the Ap
Cosmogenic Radionuclides as an Extension of the Neutron Monitor Era into the Past: Potential and Limitations
The cosmogenic radionuclides, 10Be, 14C and others, provide a record of the paleo-cosmic radiation that extends >10,000 years into the past. They are the only quantitative means at our disposal to study the heliosphere prior to the commencement of routine sunspot observations in the 17th century. The cosmogenic radionuclides are primarily produced by secondary neutrons generated by the galactic cosmic radiation, and can be regarded, in a sense, as providing an extrapolation of the neutron monitor era into the past. However, their characteristics are quite different from the man-made neutron monitor in several important respects: (1)they are sensitive to somewhat lower cosmic ray energies; (2)their temporal resolution is ∼1 to 2 years, being determined by the rapidity with which they are sequestered in ice, biological, or other archives; (3)the statistical precision for annual data is very poor (∼19%); however it is quite adequate (∼5% for 22-year averages) to study the large variations (±40%) that have occurred in the paleo-cosmic ray record in the past between grand solar minima and maxima. The data contains "noise” caused by local meteorological effects, and longer-term climate effects, and the use of principal component analysis to separate these "system” effects from production effects is outlined. The concentrations of 10Be decreased by a factor of two at the commencement of Holocene, the present-day "interglacial”, due to a 100% increase in the ice accumulation rates in polar regions. The use of the 10Be flux to study heliospheric properties during the last glacial is discussed briefl
XMM-Newton Surveys of the Canada-France Redshift Survey Fields - III: The Environments of X-ray Selected AGN at 0.4<z<0.6
The environmental properties of a sample of 31 hard X-ray selected AGN are
investigated, from scales of 500 kpc down to 30 kpc, and are compared to a
control sample of inactive galaxies. The AGN all lie in the redshift range
0.4<z<0.6. The accretion luminosity-density of the Universe peaks close to this
redshift range, and the AGN in the sample have X-ray luminosities close to the
knee in the hard X-ray luminosity function, making them representative of the
population which dominated this important phase of energy conversion.
Using both the spatial clustering amplitude and near neighbour counts it is
found that the AGN have environments that are indistinguishable from normal,
inactive galaxies over the same redshift range and with similar optical
properties. Typically, the environments are of sub-cluster richness, in
contrast to similar studies of high-z quasars, which are often found in
clusters with comparable richness to the Abell R>=0 clusters.
It is suggested that minor mergers with low mass companions is a likely
candidate for the mechanism by which these modest luminosity AGN are fuelled.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted by MNRA
Environment of MAMBO galaxies in the COSMOS field
Submillimeter galaxies (SMG) represent a dust-obscured high-redshift
population undergoing massive star formation activity. Their properties and
space density have suggested that they may evolve into spheroidal galaxies
residing in galaxy clusters. In this paper, we report the discovery of compact
(~10"-20") galaxy overdensities centered at the position of three SMGs detected
with the Max-Planck Millimeter Bolometer camera (MAMBO) in the COSMOS field.
These associations are statistically significant. The photometric redshifts of
galaxies in these structures are consistent with their associated SMGs; all of
them are between z=1.4-2.5, implying projected physical sizes of ~170 kpc for
the overdensities. Our results suggest that about 30% of the radio-identified
bright SMGs in that redshift range form in galaxy density peaks in the crucial
epoch when most stars formed.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Sub-millimeter galaxies as progenitors of compact quiescent galaxies
Three billion years after the big bang (at redshift z=2), half of the most
massive galaxies were already old, quiescent systems with little to no residual
star formation and extremely compact with stellar mass densities at least an
order of magnitude larger than in low redshift ellipticals, their descendants.
Little is known about how they formed, but their evolved, dense stellar
populations suggest formation within intense, compact starbursts 1-2 Gyr
earlier (at 3<z<6). Simulations show that gas-rich major mergers can give rise
to such starbursts which produce dense remnants. Sub-millimeter selected
galaxies (SMGs) are prime examples of intense, gas-rich, starbursts. With a
new, representative spectroscopic sample of compact quiescent galaxies at z=2
and a statistically well-understood sample of SMGs, we show that z=3-6 SMGs are
consistent with being the progenitors of z=2 quiescent galaxies, matching their
formation redshifts and their distributions of sizes, stellar masses and
internal velocities. Assuming an evolutionary connection, their space densities
also match if the mean duty cycle of SMG starbursts is 42 (+40/-29) Myr
(consistent with independent estimates), which indicates that the bulk of stars
in these massive galaxies were formed in a major, early surge of
star-formation. These results suggests a coherent picture of the formation
history of the most massive galaxies in the universe, from their initial burst
of violent star-formation through their appearance as high stellar-density
galaxy cores and to their ultimate fate as giant ellipticals.Comment: ApJ (in press
Bostonia: 1998-1999, no. 1, 3-4
Founded in 1900, Bostonia magazine is Boston University's main alumni publication, which covers alumni and student life, as well as university activities, events, and programs
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