354 research outputs found
Surveying the Inner Halo of the Galaxy with 2MASS-Selected Horizontal Branch Candidates
We use 2MASS photometry to select blue horizontal branch (BHB) candidates
covering the sky |b|>15 deg. A 12.5<J<15.5 sample of BHB stars traces the thick
disk and inner halo to d<9 kpc, with a density comparable to that of M giant
stars. We base our sample selection strategy on the Century Survey Galactic
Halo Project, a survey that provides a complete, spectroscopically-identified
sample of blue stars to a similar depth as the 2MASS catalog. We show that a
-0.20<(J-H)_0<0.10, -0.10<(H-K)_0<0.10 color-selected sample of stars is 65%
complete for BHB stars, and is composed of 47% BHB stars. We apply this
photometric selection to the full 2MASS catalog, and see no spatial
overdensities of BHB candidates at high Galactic latitude |b|>50 deg. We insert
simulated star streams into the data and conclude that the high Galactic
latitude BHB candidates are consistent with having no ~5 deg wide star stream
with density greater than 0.33 objects deg^-2 at the 95% confidence level. The
absence of structure suggests there have been no major accretion events in the
inner halo in the last few Gyr. However, at low Galactic latitudes a two-point
angular correlation analysis reveals structure on angular scales <1 deg. This
structure is apparently associated with stars in the thick disk, and has a
physical scale of 10-100 pc. Interestingly, such structures are expected by
cosmological simulations that predict the majority of the thick disk may arise
from accretion and disruption of satellite mergers.Comment: 11 pages, including figures. Accepted by AJ with minor revision
Myocardial Infarction in a Young Female with Palindromic Rheumatism: A Consequence of Negative Remodeling
Palindromic rheumatism is a rare disease associated with systemic inflammation. Negative or constrictive coronary artery remodeling is typically not seen until the 7th or 8th decade of life. We report a case of a young female with palindromic rheumatism who suffered a non-ST segment elevation myocardial infarction secondary to a flow-limiting lesion that demonstrated negative remodeling by intravascular ultrasound (IVUS)
The Century Survey Galactic Halo Project II: Global Properties and the Luminosity Function of Field Blue Horizontal Branch Stars
We discuss a 175 deg^2 spectroscopic survey for blue horizontal branch (BHB)
stars in the Galactic halo. We use the Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS) and
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to select BHB candidates, and find that the
2MASS and SDSS color-selection is 38% and 50% efficient, respectively, for BHB
stars. Our samples include one likely run-away B7 star 6 kpc below the Galactic
plane. The global properties of the BHB samples are consistent with membership
in the halo population: the median metallicity is [Fe/H]=-1.7, the velocity
dispersion is 108 km/s, and the mean Galactic rotation of the BHB stars
3<|z|<15 kpc is -4 +- 30 km/s. We discuss the theoretical basis of the Preston,
Shectman & Beers M_V-color relation for BHB stars, and conclude that intrinsic
shape of the BHB M_V-color relation results from the physics of stars on the
horizontal branch. We calculate the luminosity function for the field BHB star
samples using the Efstathiou, Ellis, & Peterson maximum-likelihood method which
is unbiased by density variations. The field BHB luminosity function exhibits a
steep rise at bright luminosities, a peak between 0.8 < M_V < 1.0, and a tail
at faint luminosities. We compare the field BHB luminosity functions with the
luminosity functions derived from sixteen different globular cluster BHBs.
Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests suggest that field BHB stars and BHB stars in globular
clusters share a common distribution of luminosities, with the exception of
globular clusters with extended BHBs.Comment: 14 pages, including 16 figures, accepted for publication in A
Systemic Embolization from an Unusual Intracardiac Mass in the Left Ventricular Outflow Tract
Endocarditis can affect any endocardial surface; in the vast majority of cases, the cardiac valves are involved. It is exceedingly rare to develop infective endocarditis on the endocardium of the left ventricular outflow tract due to the high velocity of blood that traverses this area. Herein, we present a rare case of left ventricular outflow tract endocarditis that likely occurred secondary to damage to the aortic valve leaflets (from healed prior aortic valve endocarditis) causing a high velocity aortic valve regurgitant jet that impinged upon the interventricular septum which damaged the endocardium and resulted in a fibrotic âjet lesion.â This fibrous jet lesion served as a nidus for bacterial proliferation and vegetation formation. The high shear stress (due to high blood flow velocity through the left ventricular outflow tract) likely promoted the multiple embolic events observed in this case. Our patient was successfully treated with aortic valve replacement, vegetation resection, and antibiotics
Kinematics of Metal-Poor Stars in the Galaxy. III. Formation of the Stellar Halo and Thick Disk as Revealed from a Large Sample of Non-Kinematically Selected Stars
(Abbreviated) We present a detailed analysis of the space motions of 1203
solar-neighborhood stars with metal abundances [Fe/H] <= -0.6, on the basis of
a recently revised and supplemented catalog of metal-poor stars selected
without kinematic bias (Beers et al. 2000). This sample, having available
proper motions, radial velocities, and distance estimates for stars with a wide
range of metal abundances, is by far the largest such catalog to be assembled
to date. Unlike essentially all previous kinematically selected catalogs, the
metal-poor stars in our sample exhibit a diverse distribution of orbital
eccentricities, e, with no apparent correlation between [Fe/H] and e. This
demonstrates, clearly and convincingly, that the evidence offered by Eggen,
Lynden-Bell, and Sandage (1962) for a rapid collapse of the Galaxy, an apparent
correlation between the orbital eccentricity of halo stars with metallicity, is
basically the result of their proper-motion selection bias. However, even in
our non-kinematically selected sample, we have identified a small concentration
of high-e stars at [Fe/H] = -1.7, which may originate, in part, from infalling
gas during the early formation of the Galaxy. The implications of our results
for the formation of the Galaxy are also discussed, in particular in the
context of the currently favored CDM theory of hierarchical galaxy formation.Comment: 51 pages, including 17 figures, to appear in AJ (June 2000), full
paper with all figures embedded available at
http://pluto.mtk.nao.ac.jp/people/chiba/preprint/halo5
Recommended from our members
Remote Welding, NDE and Repair of DOE Standardized Canisters
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) created the National Spent Nuclear Fuel Program (NSNFP) to manage DOEâs spent nuclear fuel (SNF). One of the NSNFPâs tasks is to prepare spent nuclear fuel for storage, transportation, and disposal at the national repository. As part of this effort, the NSNFP developed a standardized canister for interim storage and transportation of SNF. These canisters will be built and sealed to American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Section III, Division 3 requirements. Packaging SNF usually is a three-step process: canister loading, closure welding, and closure weld verification. After loading SNF into the canisters, the canisters must be seal welded and the welds verified using a combination of visual, surface eddy current, and ultrasonic inspection or examination techniques. If unacceptable defects in the weld are detected, the defective sections of weld must be removed, re-welded, and re-inspected. Due to the high contamination and/or radiation fields involved with this process, all of these functions must be performed remotely in a hot cell. The prototype apparatus to perform these functions is a floor-mounted carousel that encircles the loaded canister; three stations perform the functions of welding, inspecting, and repairing the seal welds. A welding operator monitors and controls these functions remotely via a workstation located outside the hot cell. The discussion describes the hardware and software that have been developed and the results of testing that has been done to date
Kinematics of Metal-Poor Stars in the Galaxy. II. Proper Motions for a Large Non-Kinematically Selected Sample
We present a revised catalog of 2106 Galactic stars, selected without
kinematic bias, and with available radial velocities, distance estimates, and
metal abundances in the range 0.0 <= [Fe/H] <= -4.0. This update of the Beers
and Sommer-Larsen (1995) catalog includes newly-derived homogeneous photometric
distance estimates, revised radial velocities for a number of stars with
recently obtained high-resolution spectra, and refined metallicities for stars
originally identified in the HK objective-prism survey (which account for
nearly half of the catalog) based on a recent re-calibration. A subset of 1258
stars in this catalog have available proper motions, based on measurements
obtained with the Hipparcos astrometry satellite, or taken from the updated
Astrographic Catalogue (AC 2000; second epoch positions from either the Hubble
Space Telescope Guide Star Catalog or the Tycho Catalogue), the Yale/San Juan
Southern Proper Motion (SPM) Catalog 2.0, and the Lick Northern Proper Motion
(NPM1) Catalog. Our present catalog includes 388 RR Lyrae variables (182 of
which are newly added), 38 variables of other types, and 1680 non-variables,
with distances in the range 0.1 to 40 kpc.Comment: 31 pages, including 8 figures, to appear in AJ (June 2000), full
paper with all figures embedded available at
http://pluto.mtk.nao.ac.jp/people/chiba/preprint/halo4
Recommended from our members
The Effects of Stress Mitigation on Nondestructive Examination
Ultrasonic volumetric and eddy current and visual profile surface inspections of the completed weld securing the outer lid of the Yucca Mountain waste package are required after stress mitigation. However, the technique implemented may affect the ability of the different evaluation techniques to properly characterize the completed weld. An evaluation was performed to determine the extent the nondestructive evaluation techniques are affected by two candidate mitigation processes: controlled plasticity burnishing and laser peening. This report describes the work performed and summarizes the results
The Century Survey Galactic Halo Project III: A Complete 4300 deg^2 Survey of Blue Horizontal Branch Stars in the Metal-Weak Thick Disk and Inner Halo
We present a complete spectroscopic survey of 2414 2MASS-selected blue
horizontal branch (BHB) candidates selected over 4300 deg^2 of the sky. We
identify 655 BHB stars in this non-kinematically selected sample. We calculate
the luminosity function of field BHB stars and find evidence for very few hot
BHB stars in the field. The BHB stars located at a distance from the Galactic
plane |Z|<4 kpc trace what is clearly a metal-weak thick disk population, with
a mean metallicity of [Fe/H]= -1.7, a rotation velocity gradient of
dv_{rot}/d|Z|= -28+-3.4 km/s in the region |Z|<6 kpc, and a density scale
height of h_Z= 1.26+-0.1 kpc. The BHB stars located at 5<|Z|<9 kpc are a
predominantly inner-halo population, with a mean metallicity of [Fe/H]= -2.0
and a mean Galactic rotation of -4+-31 km/s. We infer the density of halo and
thick disk BHB stars is 104+-37 kpc^-3 near the Sun, and the relative
normalization of halo to thick-disk BHB stars is 4+-1% near the Sun.Comment: 12 pages in emulateapj format, accepted for publication in February
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