15,872 research outputs found
Research study on materials processing in space, experiment M512
Gallium arsenide, a commercially valuable semiconductor, has been prepared from the melt (M.P. 1237C), by vapor growth, and by growth from metallic solutions. It has been established that growth from metallic solution can produce material with high, and perhaps with the highest possible, chemical homogeneity and crystalline perfection. Growth of GaAs from metallic solution can be performed at relatively low temperatures (about 600C) and is relatively insensitive to temperature fluctuations. However, this type of crystal growth is subject to the decided disadvantage that density induced convection currents may produce variations in rates of growth at a growing surface. This problem would be minimized under reduced gravity conditions
Recent developments in classical density functional theory: Internal energy functional and diagrammatic structure of fundamental measure theory
An overview of several recent developments in density functional theory for
classical inhomogeneous liquids is given. We show how Levy's constrained search
method can be used to derive the variational principle that underlies density
functional theory. An advantage of the method is that the Helmholtz free energy
as a functional of a trial one-body density is given as an explicit expression,
without reference to an external potential as is the case in the standard
Mermin-Evans proof by reductio ad absurdum. We show how to generalize the
approach in order to express the internal energy as a functional of the
one-body density distribution and of the local entropy distribution. Here the
local chemical potential and the bulk temperature play the role of Lagrange
multipliers in the Euler-Lagrange equations for minimiziation of the
functional. As an explicit approximation for the free-energy functional for
hard sphere mixtures, the diagrammatic structure of Rosenfeld's fundamental
measure density unctional is laid out. Recent extensions, based on the
Kierlik-Rosinberg scalar weight functions, to binary and ternary non-additive
hard sphere mixtures are described.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
Dependence of Dust Obscuration on Star Formation Rates in Galaxies
Many investigations of star formation rates (SFRs) in galaxies have explored
details of dust obscuration, with a number of recent analyses suggesting that
obscuration appears to increase in systems with high rates of star formation.
To date these analyses have been primarily based on nearby (z < 0.03) or UV
selected samples. Using 1.4 GHz imaging and optical spectroscopic data from the
Phoenix Deep Survey, the SFR-dependent obscuration is explored. The use of a
radio selected sample shows that previous studies exploring SFR-dependent
obscurations have been biased against obscured galaxies. The observed relation
between obscuration and SFR is found to be unsuitable to be used as an
obscuration measure for individual galaxies. Nevertheless, it is shown to be
successful as a first order correction for large samples of galaxies where no
other measure of obscuration is available, out to intermediate redshifts (z ~
0.8).Comment: 9 pages (including 5 encapsulated postscript figures), aastex, uses
emulateapj5.sty. Accepted for publication in Ap
The Phoenix Deep Survey: X-ray properties of faint radio sources
In this paper we use a 50ks XMM-Newton pointing overlapping with the Phoenix
Deep Survey, a homogeneous radio survey reaching muJy sensitivities, to explore
the X-ray properties and the evolution of star-forming galaxies. UV, optical
and NIR photometry is available and is used to estimate photometric redshifts
and spectral types for radio sources brighter than R=21.5mag (total of 82).
Sources with R<21.5mag and spiral galaxy SEDs (34) are grouped into two
redshift bins with a median of z=0.240 and 0.455 respectively. Stacking
analysis for both the 0.5-2 and 2-8keV bands is performed on these subsamples.
A high confidence level signal (>3.5sigma) is detected in the 0.5-2keV band
corresponding to a mean flux of ~3e-16cgs for both subsamples. This flux
translates to mean luminosities of ~5e40 and 1.5e41cgs for the z=0.240 and
0.455 subsamples respectively. Only a marginally significant signal (2.6sigma)
is detected in the 2-8keV band for the z=0.455 subsample. We argue that the
stacked signal above is dominated by star-formation. The mean L_X/L_B ratio and
the mean L_X of the two subsamples are found to be higher than optically
selected spirals and similar to starbursts. We also find that the mean L_X and
L_1.4 of the faint radio sources studied here are consistent with the L_X-L_1.4
correlation of local star-forming galaxies. Moreover, the X-ray emissivity of
sub-mJy sources to z~0.3 is found to be elevated compared to local HII
galaxies. The observed increase is consistent with L_X evolution of the form
(1+z)^3. Assuming that our sample is indeed dominated by starbursts this is
direct evidence for evolution of such systems at X-ray wavelengths. Using an
empirical L_X to SFR conversion we estimate a global SFR density at z~0.3 of
\~0.029M_o/yr/Mpc in agreement with previous studies.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The Phoenix Deep Survey: spectroscopic catalog
The Phoenix Deep Survey is a multi-wavelength survey based on deep 1.4 GHz
radio imaging, reaching well into the sub-100 microJy level. One of the aims of
this survey is to characterize the sub-mJy radio population, exploring its
nature and evolution. In this paper we present the catalog and results of the
spectroscopic observations aimed at characterizing the optically ``bright''
(R<~ 21.5 mag) counterparts of faint radio sources. Out of 371 sources with
redshift determination, 21% have absorption lines only, 11% show AGN
signatures, 32% are star-forming galaxies, 34% show narrow emission lines that
do not allow detailed spectral classification (due to poor signal-to-noise
ratio and/or lack of diagnostic emission lines) and the remaining 2% are
identified with stars. For the star-forming galaxies with a Balmer decrement
measurement we find a median extinction of A(Ha)=1.9 mag, higher than that of
optically selected samples. This is a result of the radio selection, which is
not biased against dusty systems. Using the available spectroscopic
information, we estimate the radio luminosity function of star-forming galaxies
in two independent redshift bins at z~0.1 and 0.3 respectively. We find direct
evidence for strong luminosity evolution of these systems consistent with L(1.4
GHz) ~ (1+z)^(2.7).Comment: 39 pages, 12 figures. References added, and minor changes to reflect
published versio
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