2,848 research outputs found
The survival of gas clouds in the Circumgalactic Medium of Milky Way-like galaxies
Observational evidence shows that low-redshift galaxies are surrounded by
extended haloes of multiphase gas, the so-called 'circumgalactic medium' (CGM).
To study the survival of relatively cool gas (T < 10^5 K) in the CGM, we
performed a set of hydrodynamical simulations of cold (T = 10^4 K) neutral gas
clouds travelling through a hot (T = 2x10^6 K) and low-density (n = 10^-4
cm^-3) coronal medium, typical of Milky Way-like galaxies at large
galactocentric distances (~ 50-150 kpc). We explored the effects of different
initial values of relative velocity and radius of the clouds. Our simulations
were performed on a two-dimensional grid with constant mesh size (2 pc) and
they include radiative cooling, photoionization heating and thermal conduction.
We found that for large clouds (radii larger than 250 pc) the cool gas survives
for very long time (larger than 250 Myr): despite that they are partially
destroyed and fragmented into smaller cloudlets during their trajectory, the
total mass of cool gas decreases at very low rates. We found that thermal
conduction plays a significant role: its effect is to hinder formation of
hydrodynamical instabilities at the cloud-corona interface, keeping the cloud
compact and therefore more difficult to destroy. The distribution of column
densities extracted from our simulations are compatible with those observed for
low-temperature ions (e.g. SiII and SiIII) and for high-temperature ions (OVI)
once we take into account that OVI covers much more extended regions than the
cool gas and, therefore, it is more likely to be detected along a generic line
of sight.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
A design approach for integrated CMOS LC-tank oscillators using bifurcation analysis
Electrical oscillators play a decisive role in integrated transceivers for wired and wireless communication systems. In this context the study of fully integrated differential VCOs has received attention. In this paper formulas for investigations of the stability as well as the amplitude of CMOS LC tank oscillators are derived, where an overall model of nonlinear gain elements is used. By means of these results we are able to present an improved design approach which gives a deeper insight into the functionality of LC tank VCOs
Probing the IGM/Galaxy Connection IV: The LCO/WFCCD Galaxy Survey of 20 Fields Surrounding UV Bright Quasars
We publish the survey for galaxies in 20 fields containing ultraviolet bright
quasars (with z_em 0.1 to 0.5) that can be used to study the association
between galaxies and absorption systems from the low-z intergalactic medium
(IGM). The survey is magnitude limited (R~19.5 mag) and highly complete out to
10' from the quasar in each field. It was designed to detect dwarf galaxies (L
~ 0.1 L*) at an impact parameter rho 1Mpc (z=0.1) from a quasar. The complete
sample (all 20 fields) includes R-band photometry for 84718 sources and
confirmed redshifts for 2800 sources. This includes 1198 galaxies with 0.005 <
z < (z_em - 0.01) at a median redshift of 0.18, which may associated with IGM
absorption lines. All of the imaging was acquired with cameras on the Swope 40"
telescope and the spectra were obtained via slitmask observations using the
WFCCD spectrograph on the Dupont 100" telescope at Las Campanas Observatory
(LCO). This paper describes the data reduction, imaging analysis, photometry,
and spectral analysis of the survey. We tabulate the principal measurements for
all sources in each field and provide the spectroscopic dataset online.Comment: Accepted to the Astrophysical Journal Supplements; 20 pages, only 6
figures shown in this version. See
http://www.ucolick.org/~xavier/WFCCDOVI/index.html for a full-length
manuscript and other supportive materia
Commercial Fishing Port Development in North Florida
The author has identified the following significant results. Seven major counties were examined: Escambia, Bay, Gulf, Franklin, Wakulla, Nassau, and Duval. Population and economic activity were reviewed, along with commercial fishing and port facilities. Recommendations for five northwest Florida counties were based on interpretation of aerial photographs, satellite imagery, an aerial survey site visit, and published data. Major needs in Pensacola included docking, ice supply, and net and engine repair services. Costs for additional docks, an ice plant, and gear storage were estimated at 2,860,000. Added docking, gear storage, and ice supply, as well as gear electronics and diesel repair were needed in Port St. Joe. Costs were calculated at 1,107,000 for docks and gear storage, Eastpoint - 2,824,100 for docks, gear storage, and ice plant)
The C IV Mass Density of the Universe at Redshift 5
In order to search for metals in the Lyman alpha forest at redshifts z > 4,
we have obtained spectra of high S/N and resolution of three QSOs at z > 5.4
discovered by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. These data allow us to probe to
metal enrichment of the intergalactic medium at early times with higher
sensitivity than previous studies. We find 16 C IV absorption systems with
column densities log N(C IV) = 12.50 - 13.98 over a total redshift path Delta X
= 3.29. In the redshift interval z = 4.5-5.0, where our statistics are most
reliable, we deduce a comoving mass density of C IV ions Omega(C IV) = (4.3 +/-
2.5) x 10(-8) (90% confidence limits) for absorption systems with log N(C IV) >
13.0 (for an Einstein-de Sitter cosmology with h = 0.65). This value of Omega(C
IV) is entirely consistent with those measured at z < 4; we confirm the earlier
finding by Songaila (2001) that neither the column density distribution of C IV
absorbers nor its integral show significant redshift evolution over a period of
time which stretches from 1.25 to 4.5 Gyr after the big bang. This somewhat
surprising conclusion may be an indication that the intergalactic medium was
enriched in metals at redshifts much greater than 5, perhaps by the sources
responsible for its reionization. Alternatively, the C IV systems we see may be
associated with outflows from massive star-forming galaxies at later times,
while the truly intergalactic metals may reside in regions of the Lyman alpha
forest of lower density than those probed up to now.Comment: 24 pages including 5 figures. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journal (September 10, 2003 issue
Star formation rate and metallicity of damped Lyman-alpha absorbers in cosmological SPH simulations
We study the distribution of the star formation rate and metallicity of
damped Lyman-alpha absorbers using cosmological SPH simulations of the Lambda
cold dark matter model in the redshift range z=0-4.5. Our approach includes a
phenomenological model of galactic wind. We find that there is a positive
correlation between the projected stellar mass density and the neutral hydrogen
column density (NHI) of DLAs for high NHI systems, and that there is a good
correspondence in the spatial distribution of stars and DLAs in the
simulations. The evolution of typical star-to-gas mass ratios in DLAs can be
characterised by an increase from about 2 at z=4.5 to 3 at z=3, to 10 at z=1,
and finally to 20 at z=0. We also find that the projected SFR density in DLAs
follows the Kennicutt law well at all redshifts, and the simulated values are
consistent with the recent observational estimates of this quantity by Wolfe et
al. (2003a,b). The rate of evolution in the mean metallicity of simulated DLAs
as a function of redshift is mild, and is consistent with the rate estimated
from observations. The predicted metallicity of DLAs is generally sub-solar in
our simulations, and there is a significant scatter in the distribution of DLA
metallicity for a given NHI. However, we find that the median metallicity of
simulated DLAs is close to that of Lyman-break galaxies, which is higher than
the values typically observed for DLAs by nearly an order of magnitude. This
discrepancy with observations could be due to an inadequate treatment of SN
feedback in our current simulations, perhaps indicating that metals are not
expelled efficiently enough from DLAs by outflows. Alternatively, the current
observations might be missing the majority of the high metallicity DLAs due to
selection effects. (abridged)Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures. Accepted to MNRAS. More visual presentations
and the version with high resolution figures are available at
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~knagamine/DLA-pics
A Budget and Accounting of Metals at z~0: Results from the COS-Halos Survey
We present a budget and accounting of metals in and around star-forming
galaxies at . We combine empirically derived star formation histories
with updated supernova and AGB yields and rates to estimate the total mass of
metals produced by galaxies with present-day stellar mass of
--. On the accounting side of the ledger, we
show that a surprisingly constant 20--25% mass fraction of produced metals
remain in galaxies' stars, interstellar gas and interstellar dust, with little
dependence of this fraction on the galaxy stellar mass (omitting those metals
immediately locked up in remnants). Thus, the bulk of metals are outside of
galaxies, produced in the progenitors of today's galaxies. The COS-Halos
survey is uniquely able to measure the mass of metals in the circumgalactic
medium (to impact parameters of kpc) of low-redshift
galaxies. Using these data, we map the distribution of CGM metals as traced by
both the highly ionized OVI ion and a suite of low-ionization species; combined
with constraints on circumgalactic dust and hotter X-ray emitting gas out to
similar impact parameters, we show that % of metals produced by
galaxies can be easily accounted for out to
150 kpc. With the current data, we cannot rule out a constant mass of metals
within this fixed physical radius. This census provides a crucial boundary
condition for the eventual fate of metals in galaxy evolution models.Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures, 2 tables. ApJ, in pres
Constraints on Early Nucleosynthesis from the Abundance Pattern of a Damped Ly-alpha System at z = 2.626
We have investigated chemical evolution in the young universe by analysing
the detailed chemical enrichment pattern of a metal-rich galaxy at high
redshift. The recent detection of over 20 elements in the gas-phase of a damped
Lyman-alpha absorber (DLA) at z = 2.626 represents an exciting new avenue for
exploring early nucleosynthesis. Given a strict upper age of ~2.5 Gyr and a
gas-phase metallicity about one third solar, we have shown the DLA abundance
pattern to be consistent with the predictions of a chemical evolution model in
which the interstellar enrichment is dominated by massive stars with a small
contribution from Type Ia supernovae. Discrepancies between the empirical data
and the models are used to highlight outstanding issues in nucleosynthesis
theory, including a tendency for Type II supernovae models to overestimate the
magnitude of the "odd-even" effect at subsolar metallicities. Our results
suggest a possible need for supplemental sources of magnesium and zinc, beyond
that provided by massive stars.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figs. Accepted for publication in ApJ (The Astrophysical
Journal
- …