285 research outputs found
Evolutionary phases of gas-rich galaxies in a galaxy cluster at z=1.46
We report a survey of molecular gas in galaxies in the XMMXCS J2215.9-1738
cluster at . We have detected emission lines from 17 galaxies within a
radius of from the cluster center, in Band 3 data of the Atacama
Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) with a coverage of 93 -- 95 GHz in
frequency and 2.33 arcmin in spatial direction. The lines are all
identified as CO =2--1 emission lines from cluster members at by
their redshifts and the colors of their optical and near-infrared (NIR)
counterparts. The line luminosities reach down to K km s pc. The spatial distribution of
galaxies with a detection of CO(2--1) suggests that they disappear from the
very center of the cluster. The phase-space diagram showing relative velocity
versus cluster-centric distance indicates that the gas-rich galaxies have
entered the cluster more recently than the gas-poor star-forming galaxies and
passive galaxies located in the virialized region of this cluster. The results
imply that the galaxies have experienced ram-pressure stripping and/or
strangulation during the course of infall towards the cluster center and then
the molecular gas in the galaxies at the cluster center is depleted by star
formation.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in the ApJ
Letter
Human-Like Guide Robot that Proactively Explains Exhibits
We developed an autonomous human-like guide robot for a science museum. Its identifies individuals, estimates the exhibits at which visitors are looking, and proactively approaches them to provide explanations with gaze autonomously, using our new approach called speak-and-retreat interaction. The robot also performs such relation-building behaviors as greeting visitors by their names and expressing a friendlier attitude to repeat visitors. We conducted a field study in a science museum at which our system basically operated autonomously and the visitors responded quite positively. First-time visitors on average interacted with the robot for about 9 min, and 94.74% expressed a desire to interact with it again in the future. Repeat visitors noticed its relation-building capability and perceived a closer relationship with it
A Search for Molecular Gas toward a BzK-selected Star-forming Galaxy at z = 2.044
We present a search for CO(3-2) emission in SDF-26821, a BzK-selected
star-forming galaxy (sBzK) at z = 2.044, using the 45-m telescope of the
Nobeyama Radio Observatory and the Nobeyama Millimeter Array. We do not detect
significant emission and derive 2 \sigma limits: the CO luminosity of L'CO <
3.1 x 10^10 K km s^{-1} pc^{-2}, the ratio of far-infrared luminosity to CO
luminosity of L_FIR/L'CO > 57 Lsun (K km s^{-1} pc^{-2})^{-1}, and the
molecular gas mass of M_H2 < 2.5 x 10^10 Msun, assuming a velocity width of 200
km s^{-1} and a CO-to-H2 conversion factor of alpha_CO=0.8 Msun (K km s^{-1}
pc^{-2})^{-1}. The ratio of L_FIR/L'CO, a measure of star formation efficiency
(SFE), is comparable to or higher than the two z ~ 1.5 sBzKs detected in
CO(2-1) previously, suggesting that sBzKs can have a wide range of SFEs.
Comparisons of far-infrared luminosity, gas mass, and stellar mass among the
sBzKs suggest that SDF-26821 is at an earlier stage of forming stars with a
similar SFE and/or more efficiently forming stars than the two z ~ 1.5 sBzKs.
The higher SFEs and specific star formation rates of the sBzKs compared to
local spirals are indicative of the difference in star formation modes between
these systems, suggesting that sBzKs are not just scaled-up versions of local
spirals.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, Accepted for publication in PAS
PEG-ポリアミノ酸ブロック共重合体を用いたsiRNA最小単位会合体の調製とその機能評価
学位の種別: 課程博士審査委員会委員 : (主査)東京大学教授 片岡 一則, 東京大学教授 津本 浩平, 東京大学准教授 CABRAL Horacio, 東京大学准教授 宮田 完二郎, 東京大学教授 吉田 亮University of Tokyo(東京大学
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