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DEMOGRAPHIC RESEARCH
Background: Mexican women in the United States (US) have higher rates of fertility compared to other ethnic groups and women in Mexico. Whether variation in women’s access to family planning services or patterns of contraceptive use contributes to this higher fertility has received little attention. Objective: We explore Mexican women’s contraceptive use, taking into account women’s place in the reproductive life course. Methods: Using nationally representative samples from the US (National Survey of Family Growth) and Mexico (Encuesta National de la Dinámica Demográfica), we compared the parity-specific frequency of contraceptive use and fertility intentions for non-migrant women, foreign-born Mexicans in the US, US-born Mexicans, and whites. Results: Mexican women in the US were less likely to use IUDs and more likely to use hormonal contraception than women in Mexico. Female sterilization was the most common method among higher parity women in both the US and Mexico, however, foreign-born Mexicans were less likely to be sterilized, and the least likely to use any permanent contraceptive method. Although foreign-born Mexicans were slightly less likely to report that they did not want more children, differences in method use remained after controlling for women’s fertility intentionsPopulation Research Cente
X-ray Binaries and Globular Clusters in Elliptical Galaxies
The X-ray emission from normal elliptical galaxies has two major components:
soft emission from diffuse gas and harder emission from populations of
accreting (low-mass) stellar X-ray binaries (LMXB). If LMXB populations are
tied to the field stellar populations in galaxies, their total X-ray
luminosities should be proportional to the optical luminosities of galaxies.
However, recent ASCA and Chandra X-ray observations show that the global
luminosities of LMXB components in ellipticals exhibit significant scatter at a
given optical luminosity. This scatter may reflect a range of evolutionary
stages among LMXB populations in ellipticals of different ages. If so, the
ratio of the global LMXB X-ray luminosity to the galactic optical luminosity,
L_LMXB/L_opt, may be used to determine when the bulk of stars were formed in
individual ellipticals. To test this, we compare variations in L_LMXB/L_opt for
LMXB populations in ellipticals to optically-derived estimates of stellar ages
in the same galaxies. We find no correlation, implying that L_LMXB/L_opt
variations are not good age indicators for ellipticals. Alternatively, LMXBs
may be formed primarily in globular clusters (through stellar tidal
interactions), rather than in the stellar fields of galaxies. Since elliptical
galaxies exhibit a wide range of globular cluster populations for a given
galaxian luminosity, this may induce a dispersion in the LMXB populations of
ellipticals with similar optical luminosities. Indeed, we find that
L_LMXB/L_opt ratios for LMXB populations are strongly correlated with the
specific globular cluster frequencies in elliptical galaxies. This suggests
that most LMXBs were formed in globular clusters.Comment: 5 pages, emulateapj5 style, 2 embedded EPS figures, to appear in ApJ
Letter
Accounting for the dispersion in the x ray properties of early-type galaxies
The x ray luminosities of early-type galaxies are correlated with their optical (e.g., blue) luminosities (L sub X approx. L sub B exp 1.6), but the x ray luminosities exhibit considerable scatter for a given optical luminosity L sub B. This dispersion in x ray luminosity is much greater than the dispersion of other properties of early-type galaxies (for a given L sub B), such as luminosity scale-length, velocity dispersion, color, and metallicity. Here, researchers consider several possible sources for the dispersion in x ray luminosity. Some of the scatter in x ray luminosity may result from stellar population variations between galaxies with similar L sub B. Since the x ray emitting gas is from accumulated stellar mass loss, the L sub X dispersion may be due to variations in integrated stellar mass loss rates. Another possible cause of the L sub X dispersion may be variations in the amount of cool material in the galaxies; cool gas may act as an energy sink for the hot gas. Infrared emission may be used to trace such cool material, so researchers look for a correlation between the infrared emission and the x ray emission of early-type galaxies at fixed L sub B. Velocity dispersion variations between galaxies of similar L sub B may also contribute to the L sub X dispersion. The most likely a priori source of the dispersion in L sub X is probably the varying amount of ram-pressure stripping in a range of galaxy environments. The hot gaseous halos of early-type galaxies can be stripped in encounters with other galaxies or with ambient cluster gas if the intracluster gas is sufficiently dense. Researchers find that the most likely cause of dispersion in the x ray properties of early type galaxies is probably the ram-pressure stripping of gaseous halos from galaxies. For a sample of 81 early-type galaxies with x ray luminosities or upper limits derived from Einstein Observatory observations (CFT) researchers calculated the cumulative distribution of angular distances between the x ray sample members and bright galaxies from the Revised Shapley - Ames catalog. Collectively, galaxies with low x ray luminosities (for a given L sub B) tend to be in denser environments than galaxies with higher x ray luminosities
Gravity darkening and brightening in binaries
We apply a von Zeipel gravity darkening model to corotating binaries to
obtain a simple, analytical expression for the emergent radiative flux from a
tidally distorted primary orbiting a point-mass secondary. We adopt a simple
Roche model to determine the envelope structure of the primary, assumed massive
and centrally condensed, and use the results to calculate the flux. As for
single rotating stars, gravity darkening reduces the flux along the stellar
equator of the primary, but, unlike for rotating stars, we find that gravity
brightening enhances the flux in a region around the stellar poles. We identify
a critical limiting separation beyond which hydrostatic equilibrium no longer
is possible, whereby the flux vanishes at the point on the stellar equator of
the primary facing the companion. For equal-mass binaries, the total luminosity
is reduced by about 13 % when this limiting separation is reached.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, matches version published in Astrophysical
Journa
The discovery of 12min X-ray pulsations from 1WGA J1958.2+3232
During a systematic search for periodic signals in a sample of ROSAT PSPC
(0.1-2.4 keV) light curves, we discovered 12min large amplitude X-ray
pulsations in 1WGA J1958.2+3232, an X-ray source which lies close to the
galactic plane. The energy spectrum is well fit by a power law with a photon
index of 0.8, corresponding to an X-ray flux of about 10E-12 ergs cmE-2 sE-1.
The source is probably a long period, low luminosity X-ray pulsar, similar to X
Per, or an intermediate polar.Comment: 5 pages (figures included). Accepted for publication on MNRA
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