17,282 research outputs found
New low-mass members of the Octans stellar association and an updated 30-40 Myr lithium age
The Octans association is one of several young stellar moving groups recently
discovered in the Solar neighbourhood, and hence a valuable laboratory for
studies of stellar, circumstellar disc and planetary evolution. However, a lack
of low-mass members or any members with trigonometric parallaxes means the age,
distance and space motion of the group are poorly constrained. To better
determine its membership and age, we present the first spectroscopic survey for
new K and M-type Octans members, resulting in the discovery of 29 UV-bright
K5-M4 stars with kinematics, photometry and distances consistent with existing
members. Nine new members possess strong Li I absorption, which allow us to
estimate a lithium age of 30-40 Myr, similar to that of the Tucana-Horologium
association and bracketed by the firm lithium depletion boundary ages of the
Beta Pictoris (20 Myr) and Argus/IC 2391 (50 Myr) associations. Several stars
also show hints in our medium-resolution spectra of fast rotation or
spectroscopic binarity. More so than other nearby associations, Octans is much
larger than its age and internal velocity dispersion imply. It may be the
dispersing remnant of a sparse, extended structure which includes some younger
members of the foreground Octans-Near association recently proposed by
Zuckerman and collaborators.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS (16 pages, 5 tables
The distribution of chlorophyll in the western Indian Ocean during the northeast monsoon period, February 13-July 16, 1965
This report contains the observations of phytoplankton pigment characteristics made during ATLANTIS II Cruise No. 15 in the western Indian Ocean and its reaches during the period of February 13 through July 16, 1965. As pointed out in a previous report for this region (Laird et al., 1964), the observations should by no means be considered synoptic since short-term variation will occur in biological measurements. The value of the present observations is greatly enhanced by the fact that they repeat and extend the previous data from ATLANTIS II Cruise No. 8 for the area, but are taken at the opposite period of the year for all regions. The data permit only a first approximation of the relative fertility in the area, yet the seasonal contrast becomes an important consideration in the analysis and interpretation of the data. It is believed that this represents the first such large-scale survey for Indian Ocean waters.The National Science Foundation under Grant NSF-GP 82
New members of the TW Hydrae Association and two accreting M-dwarfs in Scorpius-Centaurus
We report the serendipitous discovery of several young mid-M stars found
during a search for new members of the 30-40 Myr-old Octans Association. Only
one of the stars may be considered a possible Octans(-Near) member. However,
two stars have proper motions, kinematic distances, radial velocities,
photometry and Li I 6708AA measurements consistent with membership in the 8-10
Myr-old TW Hydrae Association. Another may be an outlying member of TW Hydrae
but has a velocity similar to that predicted by membership in Octans. We also
identify two new lithium-rich members of the neighbouring Scorpius-Centaurus OB
Association (Sco-Cen). Both exhibit large 12 and 22 micron excesses and strong,
variable H-alpha emission which we attribute to accretion from circumstellar
discs. Such stars are thought to be incredibly rare at the ~16 Myr median age
of Sco-Cen and they join only one other confirmed M-type and three higher-mass
accretors outside of Upper Scorpius. The serendipitous discovery of two
accreting stars hosting large quantities of circumstellar material may be
indicative of a sizeable age spread in Sco-Cen, or further evidence that disc
dispersal and planet formation time-scales are longer around lower-mass stars.
To aid future studies of Sco-Cen we also provide a newly-compiled catalogue of
305 early-type Hipparcos members with spectroscopic radial velocities sourced
from the literature.Comment: 12 pages. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Tarski monoids: Matui's spatial realization theorem
We introduce a class of inverse monoids, called Tarski monoids, that can be
regarded as non-commutative generalizations of the unique countable, atomless
Boolean algebra. These inverse monoids are related to a class of etale
topological groupoids under a non-commutative generalization of classical Stone
duality and, significantly, they arise naturally in the theory of dynamical
systems as developed by Matui. We are thereby able to reinterpret a theorem of
Matui on a class of \'etale groupoids as an equivalent theorem about a class of
Tarski monoids: two simple Tarski monoids are isomorphic if and only if their
groups of units are isomorphic. The inverse monoids in question may also be
viewed as countably infinite generalizations of finite symmetric inverse
monoids. Their groups of units therefore generalize the finite symmetric groups
and include amongst their number the classical Thompson groups.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1407.147
Minimal kernels of Dirac operators along maps
Let be a closed spin manifold and let be a closed manifold. For maps
and Riemannian metrics on and on , we consider
the Dirac operator of the twisted Dirac bundle . To this Dirac operator one can associate an index
in . If is -dimensional, one gets a lower bound for
the dimension of the kernel of out of this index. We investigate
the question whether this lower bound is obtained for generic tupels
First detection of a low-mass stellar halo around the young open cluster Eta Chamaeleontis
We have identified several lithium-rich low-mass (0.08<M<0.3 Msun) stars
within 5.5 deg of the young open cluster Eta Chamaeleontis, nearly four times
the radius of previous search efforts. Of these stars we propose 4 new probable
cluster members, and 3 possible members requiring further investigation. These
findings are consistent with a dynamical origin for the current configuration
of the cluster, without the need to invoke an abnormal Initial Mass Function
deficient in low-mass objects. Candidates were selected on the basis of DENIS
and 2MASS photometry, NOMAD astrometry and extensive follow-up spectroscopy.Comment: 5 Pages. 5 Figures and 1 Table. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
Letters. Higher resolution figures available at
http://www.mso.anu.edu.au/~murphysj/
Producing lucerne hay for North-West pastoral areas.
On a great number of our North-West and Kimberley stations, surplus water, which could be used for irrigation, is available in large quantities from river and creek pools and bores. Many station managers have made use of these water supplies to very good effect, and others are keenly interested
Peanut growing on the levee soils of the Gascoyne River
Records show that in 1920 a number of blocks of land along the Gascoyne River were thrown open for the purpose of commercial peanut production, the main purpose being to establish ex-service settlers on this land. Seed was planted on these blocks but failed to germinate; rumour has it that the nuts had been previously roasted! Ten years later, in 1930, Mr. J. Buzolic, an early settler in the area who had achieved success in growing tomatoes and beans, planted a crop of peanuts from which he claimed reasonably good returns. Thirty-six cornsacks filled with peanuts were shipped to Perth in what is believed to be the first West Australian commercial venture into peanut growing. The prices received for the nuts at that time were such, however, that the crop could not compete favourably with others under irrigation conditions
Hierarchical strategies for efficient fault recovery on the reconfigurable PAnDA device
A novel hierarchical fault-tolerance methodology for reconfigurable devices is presented. A bespoke multi-reconfigurable FPGA architecture, the programmable analogue and digital array (PAnDA), is introduced allowing fine-grained reconfiguration beyond any other FPGA architecture currently in existence. Fault blind circuit repair strategies, which require no specific information of the nature or location of faults, are developed, exploiting architectural features of PAnDA. Two fault recovery techniques, stochastic and deterministic strategies, are proposed and results of each, as well as a comparison of the two, are presented. Both approaches are based on creating algorithms performing fine-grained hierarchical partial reconfiguration on faulty circuits in order to repair them. While the stochastic approach provides insights into feasibility of the method, the deterministic approach aims to generate optimal repair strategies for generic faults induced into a specific circuit. It is shown that both techniques successfully repair the benchmark circuits used after random faults are induced in random circuit locations, and the deterministic strategies are shown to operate efficiently and effectively after optimisation for a specific use case. The methods are shown to be generally applicable to any circuit on PAnDA, and to be straightforwardly customisable for any FPGA fabric providing some regularity and symmetry in its structure
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