434 research outputs found
The Interstellar Rubidium Isotope Ratio toward Rho Ophiuchi A
The isotope ratio, 85Rb/87Rb, places constraints on models of the
nucleosynthesis of heavy elements, but there is no precise determination of the
ratio for material beyond the Solar System. We report the first measurement of
the interstellar Rb isotope ratio. Our measurement of the Rb I line at 7800 A
for the diffuse gas toward rho Oph A yields a value of 1.21 +/- 0.30 (1-sigma)
that differs significantly from the meteoritic value of 2.59. The Rb/K
elemental abundance ratio for the cloud also is lower than that seen in
meteorites. Comparison of the 85Rb/K and 87Rb/K ratios with meteoritic values
indicates that the interstellar 85Rb abundance in this direction is lower than
the Solar System abundance. We attribute the lower abundance to a reduced
contribution from the r-process. Interstellar abundances for Kr, Cd, and Sn are
consistent with much less r-process synthesis for the solar neighborhood
compared to the amount inferred for the Solar System.Comment: 12 pages with 2 figures and 1 table; will appear in ApJ Letter
Oscillator Strengths for B-X, C-X, and E-X Transitions in Carbon Monoxide
Band oscillator strengths for electronic transitions in CO were obtained at
the Synchrotron Radiation Center of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Our
focus was on transitions that are observed in interstellar spectra with the Far
Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer; these transitions are also important in
studies of selective isotope photodissociation where fractionation among
isotopomers can occur. Absorption from the ground state (X ^1Sigma^+ v'' = 0)
to A ^1Pi (v'= 5), B ^1Sigma^+ (v' = 0, 1), C ^1Sigma^+ (v' = 0, 1), and E ^1Pi
(v' = 0) was measured. Fits to the A - X (5, 0) band, whose oscillator strength
is well known, yielded the necessary column density and excitation temperature.
These parameters were used in a least-squares fit of the observed profiles for
the transitions of interest to extract their band oscillator strengths. Our
oscillator strengths are in excellent agreement with results from recent
experiments using a variety of techniques. This agreement provides the basis
for a self-consistent set of f-values at far ultraviolet wavelengths for
studies of interstellar (and stellar) CO.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figures, ApJS (in press
Potential Variations in the Interstellar N I Abundance
We present Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) and Space Telescope
Imaging Spectrograph observations of the weak interstellar N I doublet at 1160
Angstroms toward 17 high-density sight lines [N(Htot)>=10^21 cm^-2]. When
combined with published data, our results reveal variations in the fractional N
I abundance showing a systematic deficiency at large N(Htot). At the FUSE
resolution (~20 km s^-1), the effects of unresolved saturation cannot be
conclusively ruled out, although O I at 1356 Angstroms shows little evidence of
saturation. We investigated the possibility that the N I variability is due to
the formation of N_2 in our mostly dense regions. The 0-0 band of the c'_4
^1Sigma^+_u - X ^1Sigma^+_g transition of N_2 at 958 Angstroms should be easily
detected in our FUSE data; for 10 of the denser sight lines, N_2 is not
observed at a sensitivity level of a few times 10^14 cm^-2. The observed N I
variations are suggestive of an incomplete understanding of nitrogen chemistry.
Based on observations made with the NASA-CNES-CSA Far Ultraviolet
Spectroscopic Explorer, which is operated for NASA by the Johns Hopkins
University under NASA contract NAS 5-32985, and the NASA/ESA Hubble Space
Telescope, obtained from the Multimission Archive at the Space Telescope
Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universities for
Research in Astronomy, Inc., under the NASA contract NAS 5-26555.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
An Ultra-High-Resolution Survey of the Interstellar ^7Li-to-^6Li Isotope Ratio in the Solar Neighborhood
In an effort to probe the extent of variations in the interstellar ^7Li/^6Li
ratio seen previously, ultra-high-resolution (R ~ 360,000), high
signal-to-noise spectra of stars in the Perseus OB2 and Scorpius OB2
Associations were obtained. These measurements confirm our earlier findings of
an interstellar ^7Li/^6Li ratio of about 2 toward o Per, the value predicted
from models of Galactic cosmic ray spallation reactions. Observations of other
nearby stars yield limits consistent with the isotopic ratio ~ 12 seen in
carbonaceous chondrite meteorites. If this ratio originally represented the gas
toward o Per, then to decrease the original isotope ratio to its current value
an order of magnitude increase in the Li abundance is expected, but is not
seen. The elemental K/Li ratio is not unusual, although Li and K are formed via
different nucleosynthetic pathways. Several proposals to account for the low
^7Li/^6Li ratio were considered, but none seems satisfactory.
Analysis of the Li and K abundances from our survey highlighted two sight
lines where depletion effects are prevalent. There is evidence for enhanced
depletion toward X Per, since both abundances are lower by a factor of 4 when
compared to other sight lines. Moreover, a smaller Li/H abundance is observed
toward 20 Aql, but the K/H abundance is normal, suggesting enhanced Li
depletion (relative to K) in this direction. Our results suggest that the
^7Li/^6Li ratio has not changed significantly during the last 4.5 billion years
and that a ratio ~ 12 represents most gas in the solar neighborhood. In
addition, there appears to be a constant stellar contribution of ^7Li,
indicating that one or two processes dominate its production in the Galaxy.Comment: 54 pages, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
Molecular tracers of PDR-dominated galaxies
Photon-dominated regions (PDRs) are powerful molecular line emitters in
external galaxies. They are expected in galaxies with high rates of massive
star formation due to either starburst (SB) events or starburst coupled with
active galactic nuclei (AGN) events. We have explored the PDR chemistry for a
range of physical conditions representing a variety of galaxy types. Our main
result is a demonstration of the sensitivity of the chemistry to changes in the
physical conditions. We adopt crude estimates of relevant physical parameters
for several galaxy types and use our models to predict suitable molecular
tracers of those conditions. The set of recommended molecular tracers differs
from that which we recommended for use in galaxies with embedded massive stars.
Thus, molecular observations can in principle be used to distinguish between
excitation by starburst and by SB+AGN in distant galaxies. Our recommendations
are intended to be useful in preparing Herschel and ALMA proposals to identify
sources of excitation in galaxies.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, Accepted in Ap
Deuterium Toward Two Milky Way Disk Stars: Probing Extended Sight Lines with the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer
We have carried out an investigation of the abundance of deuterium along two
extended sight lines through the interstellar medium (ISM) of the Galactic
disk. The data include Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE)
observations of HD 195965 (B1Ib) and HD 191877 (B0V), as well as Space
Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) observations of HD 195965. The distances
to HD 195965 and HD 191877, derived from spectroscopic parallax, are 794+/-200
pc and 2200+/-550 pc, respectively, making these the longest Galactic disk
sight lines in which deuterium has been investigated with FUSE. The higher
Lyman lines clearly show the presence of deuterium. We use a combination of
curve of growth analyses and line profile fitting to determine the DI abundance
toward each object. We also present column densities for OI and NI toward both
stars, and HI measured from Ly-alpha absorption in the STIS spectrum of HD
195965. The D/H ratios along these sight lines are lower than the average value
found with FUSE for the local interstellar medium (37 to 179 pc from the Sun).
These observations lend support to earlier detections of variation in D/H over
distances greater than a few hundred pc. The D/H and O/H values measured along
these sight lines support the expectation that the ISM is not well mixed on
distances of ~1000 pc.Comment: 32 pages, 18 figures. Abridged abstract. Accepted for publication in
ApJ. Uses emulateapj5.st
ParaDIME: Parallel Distributed Infrastructure for Minimization of Energy for data centers
Dramatic environmental and economic impact of the ever increasing power and energy consumption of modern computing devices in data centers is now a critical challenge. On the one hand, designers use technology scaling as one of the methods to face the phenomenon called dark silicon (only segments of a chip function concurrently due to power restrictions). On the other hand, designers use extreme-scale systems such as teradevices to meet the performance needs of their applications which in turn increases the power consumption of the platform. In order to overcome these challenges, we need novel computing paradigms that address energy efficiency. One of the promising solutions is to incorporate parallel distributed methodologies at different abstraction levels. The FP7 project ParaDIME focuses on this objective to provide different distributed methodologies (software-hardware techniques) at different abstraction levels to attack the power-wall problem. In particular, the ParaDIME framework will utilize: circuit and architecture operation below safe voltage limits for drastic energy savings, specialized energy-aware computing accelerators, heterogeneous computing, energy-aware runtime, approximate computing and power-aware message passing. The major outcome of the project will be a noval processor architecture for a heterogeneous distributed system that utilizes future device characteristics, runtime and programming model for drastic energy savings of data centers. Wherever possible, ParaDIME will adopt multidisciplinary techniques, such as hardware support for message passing, runtime energy optimization utilizing new hardware energy performance counters, use of accelerators for error recovery from sub-safe voltage operation, and approximate computing through annotated code. Furthermore, we will establish and investigate the theoretical limits of energy savings at the device, circuit, architecture, runtime and programming model levels of the computing stack, as well as quantify the actual energy savings achieved by the ParaDIME approach for the complete computing stack with the real environment
Origin and evolution of the light nuclides
After a short historical (and highly subjective) introduction to the field, I
discuss our current understanding of the origin and evolution of the light
nuclides D, He-3, He-4, Li-6, Li-7, Be-9, B-10 and B-11. Despite considerable
observational and theoretical progress, important uncertainties still persist
for each and every one of those nuclides. The present-day abundance of D in the
local interstellar medium is currently uncertain, making it difficult to infer
the recent chemical evolution of the solar neighborhood. To account for the
observed quasi-constancy of He-3 abundance from the Big Bang to our days, the
stellar production of that nuclide must be negligible; however, the scarce
observations of its abundance in planetary nebulae seem to contradict this
idea. The observed Be and B evolution as primaries suggests that the source
composition of cosmic rays has remained quasi-constant since the early days of
the Galaxy, a suggestion with far reaching implications for the origin of
cosmic rays; however, the main idea proposed to account for that constancy,
namely that superbubbles are at the source of cosmic rays, encounters some
serious difficulties. The best explanation for the mismatch between primordial
Li and the observed "Spite-plateau" in halo stars appears to be depletion of Li
in stellar envelopes, by some yet poorly understood mechanism. But this
explanation impacts on the level of the recently discovered early ``Li-6
plateau'', which (if confirmed), seriously challenges current ideas of cosmic
ray nucleosynthesis.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figs. Invited Review in "Symposium on the Composition of
Matter", honoring Johannes Geiss on the occasion of his 80th birthday
(Grindelwald, Switzerland, Sept. 2006), to be published in Space Science
Series of ISS
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