12,735 research outputs found
High Gain Amplifier with Enhanced Cascoded Compensation
A two-stage CMOS operational amplifier with both, gain-boosting and indirect current feedback frequency compensation performed by means of regulated cascode amplifiers, is presented. By using quasi-floating-gate transistors (QFGT) the supply requirements, the number of capacitors and the size of the compensation capacitors respect to other Miller schemes are reduced. A prototype was fabricated using a 0.5 μm technology, resulting, for a load of 45 pF and supply voltage of 1.65 V, in open-loop-gain of 129 dB, 23 MHz of gain-bandwidth product, 60o phase margin, 675 μW power consumption and 1% settling time of 28 ns
Typing Supernova Remnants Using X-ray Line Emission Morphologies
We present a new observational method to type the explosions of young
supernova remnants (SNRs). By measuring the morphology of the Chandra X-ray
line emission in seventeen Galactic and Large Magellanic Cloud SNRs with a
multipole expansion analysis (using power ratios), we find that the
core-collapse SNRs are statistically more asymmetric than the Type Ia SNRs. We
show that the two classes of supernovae can be separated naturally using this
technique because X-ray line morphologies reflect the distinct explosion
mechanisms and structure of the circumstellar material. These findings are
consistent with recent spectropolarimetry results showing that core-collapse
SNe are intrinsically more asymmetric.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in ApJ
Chemical abundances of damped Lyman alpha systems in the XQ-100 survey
The XQ-100 survey has provided high signal-noise spectra of 100 redshift
3-4.5 quasars with the X-Shooter spectrograph. The metal abundances for 13
elements in the 41 damped Lyman alpha systems (DLAs) identified in the XQ-100
sample are presented, and an investigation into abundances of a variety of DLA
classes is conducted. The XQ-100 DLA sample contains five DLAs within 5000 km/s
of their host quasar (proximate DLAs; PDLAs) as well as three sightlines which
contain two DLAs within 10,000 km/s of each other along the same line-of-sight
(multiple DLAs; MDLAs). Combined with previous observations in the literature,
we demonstrate that PDLAs with logN(HI)<21.0 show lower [S/H] and [Fe/H]
(relative to intervening systems with similar redshift and N(HI)), whilst
higher [S/H] and [Si/H] are seen in PDLAs with logN(HI)>21.0. These abundance
discrepancies are independent of their line-of-sight velocity separation from
the host quasar, and the velocity width of the metal lines (v90). Contrary to
previous studies, MDLAs show no difference in [alpha/Fe] relative to single
DLAs matched in metallicity and redshift. In addition, we present follow-up
UVES data of J0034+1639, a sightline containing three DLAs, including a
metal-poor DLA with [Fe/H]=-2.82 (the third lowest [Fe/H] in DLAs identified to
date) at z=4.25. Lastly we study the dust-corrected [Zn/Fe], emphasizing that
near-IR coverage of X-Shooter provides unprecedented access to MgII, CaII and
TiII lines (at redshifts 3-4) to provide additional evidence for subsolar
[Zn/Fe] ratio in DLAs.Comment: Accepted to MNRAS. 19 pages plus Appendix material (102 pages total
Near-Infrared Polarimetric Adaptive Optics Observations of NGC 1068: A torus created by a hydromagnetic outflow wind
We present J' and K' imaging linear polarimetric adaptive optics observations
of NGC 1068 using MMT-Pol on the 6.5-m MMT. These observations allow us to
study the torus from a magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) framework. In a 0.5" (30 pc)
aperture at K', we find that polarisation arising from the passage of radiation
from the inner edge of the torus through magnetically aligned dust grains in
the clumps is the dominant polarisation mechanism, with an intrinsic
polarisation of 7.0%2.2%. This result yields a torus magnetic field
strength in the range of 482 mG through paramagnetic alignment, and
139 mG through the Chandrasekhar-Fermi method. The measured
position angle (P.A.) of polarisation at K is found to be similar to the
P.A. of the obscuring dusty component at few parsec scales using infrared
interferometric techniques. We show that the constant component of the magnetic
field is responsible for the alignment of the dust grains, and aligned with the
torus axis onto the plane of the sky. Adopting this magnetic field
configuration and the physical conditions of the clumps in the MHD outflow wind
model, we estimate a mass outflow rate 0.17 M yr at 0.4
pc from the central engine for those clumps showing near-infrared dichroism.
The models used were able to create the torus in a timescale of 10
yr with a rotational velocity of 1228 km s at 0.4 pc. We conclude
that the evolution, morphology and kinematics of the torus in NGC 1068 can be
explained within a MHD framework.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, Accepted by MNRA
The Burst Cluster: Dark Matter in a Cluster Merger Associated with the Short Gamma Ray Burst, GRB 050509B
We have identified a merging galaxy cluster with evidence of two distinct
sub-clusters. The X-ray and optical data suggest that the subclusters are
moving away from each other after closest approach. This cluster merger was
discovered from observations of the well localized short-duration gamma-ray
burst (GRB), GRB 050509B. The Swift/Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) source position
is coincident with a cluster of galaxies ZwCl 1234.0+02916. The subsequent
Swift/X-Ray Telescope (XRT) localization of the X-ray afterglow found the GRB
coincident with 2MASX J12361286+2858580, a giant red elliptical galaxy in the
cluster. Deep multi-epoch optical images were obtained to constrain the
evolution of the GRB afterglow, including a 27480s exposure in the F814W band
with Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS), among the
deepest imaging ever obtained towards a known galaxy cluster in a single
passband. We perform a weak gravitational lensing analysis, including mapping
the total mass distribution of the merger system. Combined with Chandra X-ray
Observatory and Swift/XRT observations, we investigate the dynamical state of
the merger to probe the nature of the dark matter component. Our weak
gravitational lensing measurements reveal a separation of the X-ray centroid of
the western subcluster from the center of the mass and galaxy light
distributions, similar to that of the famous "Bullet cluster". We conclude that
the "Burst cluster" is another candidate merger system for determining the
nature of dark matter and for studying the environment of short GRBs. We
discuss connections between the cluster dynamical state and/or matter
composition and compact object mergers, the leading model for the origin of
short GRBs. Finally, we present results from a weak lensing survey based on
archival Very Large Telescope (VLT) images in the areas of 5 other short GRBs.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, accepted by Ap
Temporal patterns in coral reef, seagrass and mangrove communities from Chengue bay CARICOMP site (Colombia): 1993-2008
Few monitoring programs have simultaneously assessed the dynamics of linked marine ecosystems (coral reefs, seagrass beds and mangroves) to document their temporal and spatial variability. Based on CARICOMP protocol we evaluated permanent stations in coral reefs, seagrass beds and mangroves from 1993 to 2008 in Chengue Bay at the Tayrona Natural Park, Colombian Caribbean. Overall, the studied ecosystems showed a remarkable stability pattern over the monitoring period. While there were annual variations in coral reefs (coral cover) and mangroves (litterfall) caused by hurricane Lenny in 1999, particular trends in seagrass (leaf area index and leaf productivity) appear to reflect the natural variability in this ecosystem. We suggest that monitoring sites at the three marine ecosystems had in general a healthy development in the last 16 years. Our results are critical to locally improve the management strategies (Tayrona Natural Park) and to understand the long-term dynamics of closely associated marine ecosystems in the Caribbean. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
Tools for Dissecting Supernova Remnants Observed with Chandra: Methods and Application to the Galactic Remnant W49B
We introduce methods to quantify the X-ray morphologies of supernova remnants
observed with the Chandra X-ray Telescope. These include a power-ratio
technique to measure morphological asymmetries, correlation-length analysis to
probe chemical segregation and distribution, and wavelet-transform analysis to
quantify X-ray substructure. We demonstrate the utility and accuracy of these
techniques on relevant synthetic data. Additionally, we show the methods'
capabilities by applying them to the 55-ks Chandra ACIS observation of the
galactic supernova remnant W49B. We analyze the images of prominent emission
lines in W49B and use the results to discern physical properties. We find that
the iron morphology is very distinct from the other elements: it is
statistically more asymmetric, more segregated, and has 25% larger emitting
substructures than the lighter ions. Comparatively, the silicon, sulfur, argon,
and calcium are well-mixed, more isotropic, and have smaller, equally-sized
emitting substructures. Based on fits of XMM-Newton spectra in regions
identified as iron rich and iron poor, we determine that the iron in W49B must
have been anisotropically ejected. We measure the abundance ratios in many
regions, and we find that large, local variations are persistent throughout the
remnant. We compare the mean, global abundance ratios to those predicted by
spherical and bipolar core-collapse explosions; the results are consistent with
a bipolar origin from a 25 solar mass progenitor. We calculate the filling
factor of iron from the volume of its emitting substructures, enabling more
precise mass estimates than previous studies. Overall, this work is a first
step toward rigorously describing the physical properties of supernova remnants
for comparison within and between sources.Comment: 51 pages, 24 figures, accepted by ApJ. For full resolution figures,
see http://www.astro.ucsc.edu/~lopez/paper.html Fixed typo in URL; no other
change
ALMA Observations of Asteroid 3 Juno at 60 Kilometer Resolution
We present Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) 1.3 mm
continuum images of the asteroid 3 Juno obtained with an angular resolution of
0.042 arcseconds (60 km at 1.97 AU). The data were obtained over a single 4.4
hr interval, which covers 60% of the 7.2 hr rotation period, approximately
centered on local transit. A sequence of ten consecutive images reveals
continuous changes in the asteroid's profile and apparent shape, in good
agreement with the sky projection of the three-dimensional model of the
Database of Asteroid Models from Inversion Techniques. We measure a geometric
mean diameter of 259pm4 km, in good agreement with past estimates from a
variety of techniques and wavelengths. Due to the viewing angle and inclination
of the rotational pole, the southern hemisphere dominates all of the images.
The median peak brightness temperature is 215pm13 K, while the median over the
whole surface is 197pm15 K. With the unprecedented resolution of ALMA, we find
that the brightness temperature varies across the surface with higher values
correlated to the subsolar point and afternoon areas, and lower values beyond
the evening terminator. The dominance of the subsolar point is accentuated in
the final four images, suggesting a reduction in the thermal inertia of the
regolith at the corresponding longitudes, which are possibly correlated to the
location of the putative large impact crater. These results demonstrate ALMA's
potential to resolve thermal emission from the surface of main belt asteroids,
and to measure accurately their position, geometric shape, rotational period,
and soil characteristics.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journal Letter
ALMA Long Baseline Observations of the Strongly Lensed Submillimeter Galaxy HATLAS J090311.6+003906 at z=3.042
We present initial results of very high resolution Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations of the =3.042
gravitationally lensed galaxy HATLAS J090311.6+003906 (SDP.81). These
observations were carried out using a very extended configuration as part of
Science Verification for the 2014 ALMA Long Baseline Campaign, with baselines
of up to 15 km. We present continuum imaging at 151, 236 and 290 GHz, at
unprecedented angular resolutions as fine as 23 milliarcseconds (mas),
corresponding to an un-magnified spatial scale of ~180 pc at z=3.042. The ALMA
images clearly show two main gravitational arc components of an Einstein ring,
with emission tracing a radius of ~1.5". We also present imaging of CO(10-9),
CO(8-7), CO(5-4) and H2O line emission. The CO emission, at an angular
resolution of ~170 mas, is found to broadly trace the gravitational arc
structures but with differing morphologies between the CO transitions and
compared to the dust continuum. Our detection of H2O line emission, using only
the shortest baselines, provides the most resolved detection to date of thermal
H2O emission in an extragalactic source. The ALMA continuum and spectral line
fluxes are consistent with previous Plateau de Bure Interferometer and
Submillimeter Array observations despite the impressive increase in angular
resolution. Finally, we detect weak unresolved continuum emission from a
position that is spatially coincident with the center of the lens, with a
spectral index that is consistent with emission from the core of the foreground
lensing galaxy.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures and 3 tables, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journal Letter
Vector field as a quintessence partner
We derive generic equations for a vector field driving the evolution of flat
homogeneous isotropic universe and give a comparison with a scalar filed
dynamics in the cosmology. Two exact solutions are shown as examples, which can
serve to describe an inflation and a slow falling down of dynamical
``cosmological constant'' like it is given by the scalar quintessence. An
attractive feature of vector field description is a generation of ``induced
mass'' proportional to a Hubble constant, which results in a dynamical
suppression of actual cosmological constant during the evolution.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX file, iopart class, discussion extended, reference
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