1,422 research outputs found
An Integrated Spectrophotometric Survey of Nearby Star-Forming Galaxies
We present integrated optical spectrophotometry for a sample of 417 nearby
galaxies. Our observations consist of spatially integrated, S/N=10-100
spectroscopy between 3600 and 6900 Angstroms at ~8 Angstroms FWHM resolution.
In addition, we present nuclear (2.5"x2.5") spectroscopy for 153 of these
objects. Our sample targets a diverse range of galaxy types, including
starbursts, peculiar galaxies, interacting/merging systems, dusty,
infrared-luminous galaxies, and a significant number of normal galaxies. We use
population synthesis to model and subtract the stellar continuum underlying the
nebular emission lines. This technique results in emission-line measurements
reliably corrected for stellar absorption. Here, we present the integrated and
nuclear spectra, the nebular emission-line fluxes and equivalent widths, and a
comprehensive compilation of ancillary data available in the literature for our
sample. In a series of subsequent papers we use these data to study optical
star-formation rate indicators, nebular abundance diagnostics, the
luminosity-metallicity relation, the dust properties of normal and starburst
galaxies, and the star-formation histories of infrared-luminous galaxies.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
The Top Ten List of Gravitational Lens Candidates from the HST Medium Deep Survey
A total of 10 good candidates for gravitational lensing have been discovered
in the WFPC2 images from the HST Medium Deep Survey (MDS) and archival primary
observations. These candidate lenses are unique HST discoveries, i.e. they are
faint systems with sub-arcsecond separations between the lensing objects and
the lensed source images. Most of them are difficult objects for ground-based
spectroscopic confirmation or for measurement of the lens and source redshifts.
Seven are ``strong lens'' candidates which appear to have multiple images of
the source. Three are cases where the single image of the source galaxy has
been significantly distorted into an arc. The first two quadruply lensed
candidates were reported in Ratnatunga et al 1995 (ApJL, 453, L5) We report on
the subsequent eight candidates and describe them with simple models based on
the assumption of singular isothermal potentials. Residuals from the simple
models for some of the candidates indicate that a more complex model for the
potential will probably be required to explain the full structural detail of
the observations once they are confirmed to be lenses. We also discuss the
effective survey area which was searched for these candidate lens objects.Comment: 26 pages including 12 figures and 10 tables. AJ Vol. 117, No.
'They're battle scars, I wear them well': A phenomenological exploration of young women's experiences of building resilience following adversity in adolescence
This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in Journal of Youth Studies, 13(3), 273 - 290, 2010 [copyright Taylor & Francis], available online at: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/13676260903520886.This phenomenological study explored young women's accounts of building resilience following chains of adverse life experiences in adolescence. Six participants were interviewed, aged 20â25 years. Most had, or were receiving, a university education. They described their recovery from adversity as starting with certain pivotal moments, followed by both short-term and longer-term strategies. Short-term strategies tended to offer respite from distress and emotional comfort, increased clarity about their experiences and social affirmation. Recovery involved gaining new perspectives on their adverse situation and recovering a positive self-image through three longer-term strategies. These involved making visible progress in their education, rebuilding relationships with family and friends, and participating in the ânormalizingâ activities and developmental projects of adolescence. Participants believed that they were stronger and more compassionate although positive achievements co-existed with some regrets. Most perceived the adversity as catalyzing personal growth. These accounts of resilience revealed the complex psychosocial processes and resources available to some adolescents
Stars in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field
We identified 46 unresolved source candidates in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field,
down to i775 = 29.5. Unresolved objects were identified using a parameter S,
which measures the deviation from the curve-of-growth of a point source.
Extensive testing of this parameter was carried out, including the effects of
decreasing signal-to-noise and of the apparent motions of stars, which
demonstrated that stars brighter than i775 = 27.0 could be robustly identified.
Low resolution grism spectra of the 28 objects brighter than i775 = 27.0
identify 18 M and later stellar type dwarfs, 2 candidate L-dwarfs, 2 QSOs, and
4 white dwarfs. Using the observed population of dwarfs with spectral type M4
or later, we derive a Galactic disk scale height of 400 \pm 100 pc for M and L
stars. The local white dwarf density is computed to be as high as (1.1 \pm 0.3)
x10^(-2) stars/pc^3. Based on observations taken 73 days apart, we determined
that no object in the field has a proper motion larger than 0.027"/year (3
sigma detection limit). No high velocity white dwarfs were identified in the
HUDF, and all four candidates appear more likely to be part of the Galactic
thick disk. The lack of detected halo white dwarfs implies that, if the dark
matter halo is 12 Gyr old, white dwarfs account for less than 10% of the dark
matter halo mass.Comment: 35 pages, 11 figures, accepted by Ap
Effects of growth rate, size, and light availability on tree survival across life stages: a demographic analysis accounting for missing values and small sample sizes.
The data set supporting the results of this article is available in the Dryad repository, http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.6f4qs. Moustakas, A. and Evans, M. R. (2015) Effects of
growth rate, size, and light availability on tree survival across life stages: a demographic analysis accounting for missing values.Plant survival is a key factor in forest dynamics and survival probabilities often vary across life stages. Studies specifically aimed at assessing tree survival are unusual and so data initially designed for other purposes often need to be used; such data are more likely to contain errors than data collected for this specific purpose
Morphologies and Spectral Energy Distributions of Extremely Red Galaxies in the GOODS-South Field
Using U'- through Ks-band imaging data in the GOODS-South field, we construct
a large, complete sample of 275 ``extremely red objects'' (EROs; K_s<22.0,
R-K_s>3.35; AB), all with deep HST/ACS imaging in B_435, V_606, i_775, and
z_850, and well-calibrated photometric redshifts. Quantitative concentration
and asymmetry measurements fail to separate EROs into distinct morphological
classes. We therefore visually classify the morphologies of all EROs into four
broad types: ``Early'' (elliptical-like), ``Late'' (disk galaxies),
``Irregular'' and ``Other'' (chain galaxies and low surface brightness
galaxies), and calculate their relative fractions and comoving space densities.
For a broad range of limiting magnitudes and color thresholds, the relative
number of early-type EROs is approximately constant at 33-44%, and the comoving
space densities of Early- and Late-type EROs are comparable. Mean rest-frame
spectral energy distributions (SEDs) at wavelengths between 0.1 and 1.2 um are
constructed for all EROs. The SEDs are extremely similar in their range of
shapes, independent of morphological type. The implication is that any
differences between the broad-band SEDs of Early-type EROs and the other types
are relatively subtle, and there is no robust way of photometrically
distinguishing between different morphological types with usual
optical/near-infrared photometry.Comment: Submitted to the ApJL. A version with full-resolution figures, all
GOODS data and all GOODS collaboration papers may be found at
http://www.stsci.edu/science/goods
Mid-Infrared Evidence for Accelerated Evolution in Compact Group Galaxies
We find evidence for accelerated evolution in compact group galaxies from the
distribution in mid-infrared colorspace of 42 galaxies from 12 Hickson Compact
Groups (HCGs) compared to the the distributions of several other samples
including the LVL+SINGS galaxies, interacting galaxies, and galaxies from the
Coma Cluster. We find that the HCG galaxies are not uniformly distributed in
colorspace, as well as quantitative evidence for a gap. Galaxies in the infall
region of the Coma cluster also exhibit a non-uniform distribution and a less
well defined gap, which may reflect a similarity with the compact group
environment. Neither the Coma Center or interacting samples show evidence of a
gap, leading us to speculate that the gap is unique to the environment of high
galaxy density where gas has not been fully processed or stripped.Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the Galaxy Wars: Stellar Populations
and Star Formation in Interacting Galaxies Conferenc
Two-Channel Kondo Physics from Tunnelling Impurities with Triangular Symmetry
Tunnelling impurities in metals have been known for some time to have the
potential for exhibiting Kondo-like physics. However previous models based on
an impurity hopping between two equivalent positions have run into trouble due
to the existence of relevant operators that drive the system away from the
non-Fermi-liquid Kondo fixed point. In the case of an impurity hopping among
positions with higher symmetry, such as triangular symmetry, it is shown here
that the non-Fermi-liquid behavior at low temperatures can be generic. Using
various bosonization techniques, the fixed point is shown to be {\em stable}.
However, unlike the conventional two-channel Kondo (2CK) model, it has {\em
four} leading irrelevant operators, implying that while the form of the
singular temperature dependence of physical quantities is similar to the 2CK
model, there will not be simple universal amplitude ratios. The phase diagram
of this system is analyzed and a critical manifold is found to separate the
non-Fermi-liquid from a conventional Fermi liquid fixed point. Generalization
to higher symmetries, such as cubic, and the possibility of physical
realizations with dynamic Jahn-Teller impurities is discussed.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures, RevTex format, submitted to Phys. Rev.
The Structure and Star Formation History of Early-Type Galaxies in the UDF/GRAPES Survey
We present a two-pronged approach to the formation of early-type galaxies,
using a sample of 18 galaxies at 0.5 < z < 1 from the HST/ACS Ultra Deep Field
and GRAPES surveys: 1) We combine slitless low resolution spectroscopy from the
GRAPES dataset with simple models of galaxy formation to explore their star
formation histories. 2) We also perform an analysis of their surface brightness
distribution with the unprecedented details provided by the ACS superb angular
resolution and photometric depth. Our spectroscopic analysis reveals that their
stellar populations are rather homogeneous in age and metallicity and formed at
redshifts z ~ 2-5. Evolving them passively, they become practically
indistinguishable from ellipticals at z = 0. Also, their isophotal shapes
appear very similar to those observed for nearby ellipticals, in that the
percentages of disky and boxy galaxies at z ~ 1 are close to the values
measured at z = 0. Moreover,we find that the isophotal structure of z ~ 1
early-type galaxies obeys the correlations already observed among nearby
ellipticals, i.e. disky ellipticals have generally higher characteristic
ellipticities, and boxy ellipticals have larger half-light radii and are
brighter in the restframe B band. In this respect then, no significant
structural differences are seen for ellipticals between z = 0 and 1.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures, accepted by ApJ. Higher quality figures are
available at http://www.stsci.edu/science/grapes/papers/pasquali0
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