2,005 research outputs found

    The Panchromatic Starburst Intensity Limit At Low And High Redshift

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    The integrated bolometric effective surface brightness S_e distributions of starbursts are investigated for samples observed in 1. the rest frame ultraviolet (UV), 2. the far-infrared and H-alpha, and 3. 21cm radio continuum emission. For the UV sample we exploit a tight empirical relationship between UV reddening and extinction to recover the bolometric flux. Parameterizing the S_e upper limit by the 90th percentile of the distribution, we find a mean S_{e,90} = 2.0e11 L_{sun}/kpc^2 for the three samples, with a factor of three difference between the samples. This is consistent with what is expected from the calibration uncertainties alone. We find little variation in S_{e,90} with effective radii for R_e ~ 0.1 - 10 kpc, and little evolution out to redshifts z ~ 3. The lack of a strong dependence of S_{e,90} on wavelength, and its consistency with the pressure measured in strong galactic winds, argue that it corresponds to a global star formation intensity limit (\dot\Sigma_{e,90} ~ 45 M_{sun}/kpc^2/yr) rather than being an opacity effect. There are several important implications of these results: 1. There is a robust physical mechanism limiting starburst intensity. We note that starbursts have S_e consistent with the expectations of gravitational instability models applied to the solid body rotation portion of galaxies. 2. Elliptical galaxies and spiral bulges can plausibly be built with maximum intensity bursts, while normal spiral disks can not. 3. The UV extinction of high-z galaxies is significant, implying that star formation in the early universe is moderately obscured. After correcting for extinction, the observed metal production rate at z ~ 3 agrees well with independent estimates made for the epoch of elliptical galaxy formation.Comment: 31 pages Latex (aas2pp4.sty,psfig.sty), 9 figures, accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journa

    Intelligence: From Secrets to Policy

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    Neutral Gas Properties and Lyα\alpha Escape in Extreme Green Pea Galaxies

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    Mechanisms regulating the escape of Lyα\alpha photons and ionizing radiation remain poorly understood. To study these processes we analyze VLA 21cm observations of one Green Pea (GP), J160810+352809 (hereafter J1608), and HST COS spectra of 17 GP galaxies at z<0.2z<0.2. All are highly ionized: J1608 has the highest [O III] λ5007\lambda5007/[O II] λ3727\lambda3727 for star-forming galaxies in SDSS, and the 17 GPs have [O III]/[O II] 6.6\geq6.6. We set an upper limit on J1608's HI mass of logMHI/M=8.4\log M_{HI}/M_\odot=8.4, near or below average compared to similar mass dwarf galaxies. In the COS sample, eight GPs show Lyα\alpha absorption components, six of which also have Lyα\alpha emission. The HI column densities derived from Lyα\alpha absorption are high, logNHI/\log N_{HI}/cm2=1921^{-2}=19-21, well above the LyC optically thick limit. Using low-ionization absorption lines, we measure covering fractions (f_{\mbox{cov}}) of 0.110.1-1, and find that f_{\mbox{cov}} strongly anti-correlates with Lyα\alpha escape fraction. Low covering fractions may facilitate Lyα\alpha and LyC escape through dense neutral regions. GPs with f_{\mbox{cov}}\sim1 all have low neutral gas velocities, while GPs with lower f_{\mbox{cov}}=0.2-0.6 have a larger range of velocities. Conventional mechanical feedback may help establish low f_{\mbox{cov}} in some cases, whereas other processes may be important for GPs with low velocities. Finally, we compare f_{\mbox{cov}} with proposed indicators of LyC escape. Ionizing photon escape likely depends on a combination of neutral gas geometry and kinematics, complicating the use of emission-line diagnostics for identifying LyC emitters.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Ap

    Analysis of Albumin-Associated Peptides and Proteins from Ovarian Cancer Patients

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    Fucoidan and cancer: A multifunctional molecule with anti-tumor potential

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    There is a wide variety of cancer types yet, all share some common cellular and molecular behaviors. Most of the chemotherapeutic agents used in cancer treatment are designed to target common deregulated mechanisms within cancer cells. Many healthy tissues are also affected by the cytotoxic effects of these chemical agents. Fucoidan, a natural component of brown seaweed, has anti-cancer activity against various cancer types by targeting key apoptotic molecules. It also has beneficial effects as it can protect against toxicity associated with chemotherapeutic agents and radiation. Thus the synergistic effect of fucoidan with current anti-cancer agents is of considerable interest. This review discusses the mechanisms by which fucoidan retards tumor development, eradicates tumor cells and synergizes with anti-cancer chemotherapeutic agents. Challenges to the development of fucoidan as an anti-cancer agent will also be discussed

    Detection of a Substantial Molecular Gas Reservoir in a brightest cluster galaxy at z = 1.7

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    We report the detection of CO(2-1) emission coincident with the brightest cluster galaxy (BCG) of the high-redshift galaxy cluster SpARCS1049+56, with the Redshift Search Receiver (RSR) on the Large Millimetre Telescope (LMT). We confirm a spectroscopic redshift for the gas of z = 1.7091+/-0.0004, which is consistent with the systemic redshift of the cluster galaxies of z = 1.709. The line is well-fit by a single component Gaussian with a RSR resolution-corrected FWHM of 569+/-63 km/s. We see no evidence for multiple velocity components in the gas, as might be expected from the multiple image components seen in near-infrared imaging with the Hubble Space Telescope. We measure the integrated flux of the line to be 3.6+/-0.3 Jy km/s and, using alpha_CO = 0.8 Msun (K km s^-1 pc^2)^-1 we estimate a total molecular gas mass of 1.1+/-0.1x10^11 Msun and a M_H2/M_star ~ 0.4. This is the largest gas reservoir detected in a BCG above z > 1 to date. Given the infrared-estimated star formation rate of 860+/-130 Msun/yr, this corresponds to a gas depletion timescale of ~0.1Gyr. We discuss several possible mechanisms for depositing such a large gas reservoir to the cluster center -- e.g., a cooling flow, a major galaxy-galaxy merger or the stripping of gas from several galaxies -- but conclude that these LMT data are not sufficient to differentiate between them.Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ Letter

    Total Molecular Gas Masses of Planck - Herschel Selected Strongly Lensed Hyper Luminous Infrared Galaxies

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    We report the detection of CO(1 - 0) line emission from seven Planck and Herschel selected hyper luminous (LIR(8-1000um) > 10^13Lsun) infrared galaxies with the Green Bank Telescope (GBT). CO(1 - 0) measurements are a vital tool to trace the bulk molecular gas mass across all redshifts. Our results place tight constraints on the total gas content of these most apparently luminous high-z star-forming galaxies (apparent IR luminosities of LIR > 10^(13-14) Lsun), while we confirm their predetermined redshifts measured using the Large Millimeter Telescope, LMT (zCO = 1.33 - 3.26). The CO(1 - 0) lines show similar profiles as compared to Jup = 2 -4 transitions previously observed with the LMT. We report enhanced infrared to CO line luminosity ratios of = 110 (pm 22) Lsun(K km s^-1 pc^-2)^-1 compared to normal star-forming galaxies, yet similar to those of well-studied IR-luminous galaxies at high-z. We find average brightness temperature ratios of = 0.93 (2 sources), = 0.34 (5 sources), and = 0.18 (1 source). The r31 and r41 values are roughly half the average values for SMGs. We estimate the total gas mass content as uMH2 = (0.9 - 27.2) x 10^11(alphaCO/0.8)Msun, where u is the magnification factor and alphaCO is the CO line luminosity to molecular hydrogen gas mass conversion factor. The rapid gas depletion times are, on average, tau = 80 Myr, which reveal vigorous starburst activity, and contrast the Gyr depletion timescales observed in local, normal star-forming galaxies.Comment: published in MNRAS, 9pages, 5fig
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