1,047 research outputs found
Characterising the impact of ergot alkaloids on digestibility and growth performance of lambs
The negative impacts of ergot contamination of grain on the health of humans and animals were first documented during the fifth century AD. Although ergotism is now rare in humans, cleaning contaminated grain concentrates ergot bodies in screenings which are used as livestock feed. Ergot is found worldwide, with even low concentrations of alkaloids in the diet (<100 ppb total), reducing the growth efficiency of livestock. Extended periods of increased moisture and cold during flowering promote the development of ergot in cereal crops. Furthermore, the unpredictability of climate change may have detrimental impacts to important cereal crops, such as wheat, barley, and rye, favoring ergot production. Allowable limits for ergot in livestock feed are confusing as they may be determined by proportions of ergot bodies or by total levels of alkaloids, measurements that may differ widely in their estimation of toxicity. The proportion of individual alkaloids, including ergotamine, ergocristine, ergosine, ergocornine, and ergocryptine is extremely variable within ergot bodies and the relative toxicity of these alkaloids has yet to be determined. This raises concerns that current recommendations on safe levels of ergot in feeds may be unreliable. Furthermore, the total ergot alkaloid content is greatly dependent on the geographic region, harvest year, cereal species, variety and genotype and can vary greatly depending on the chosen analytical method. Considerable animal-to-animal variation in the ability of the liver to detoxify ergot alkaloids also exists and the impacts of factors, such as pelleting of feeds or use of binders to reduce bioavailability of alkaloids require study. Accordingly, unknowns greatly outnumber the knowns for cereal ergot and further study to help better define allowable limits for livestock would be welcome
The Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment: First Detection of High Velocity Milky Way Bar Stars
Commissioning observations with the Apache Point Observatory Galactic
Evolution Experiment (APOGEE), part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III, have
produced radial velocities (RVs) for ~4700 K/M-giant stars in the Milky Way
bulge. These high-resolution (R \sim 22,500), high-S/N (>100 per resolution
element), near-infrared (1.51-1.70 um; NIR) spectra provide accurate RVs
(epsilon_v~0.2 km/s) for the sample of stars in 18 Galactic bulge fields
spanning -1-32 deg. This represents the largest
NIR high-resolution spectroscopic sample of giant stars ever assembled in this
region of the Galaxy. A cold (sigma_v~30 km/s), high-velocity peak (V_GSR \sim
+200 km/s) is found to comprise a significant fraction (~10%) of stars in many
of these fields. These high RVs have not been detected in previous MW surveys
and are not expected for a simple, circularly rotating disk. Preliminary
distance estimates rule out an origin from the background Sagittarius tidal
stream or a new stream in the MW disk. Comparison to various Galactic models
suggests that these high RVs are best explained by stars in orbits of the
Galactic bar potential, although some observational features remain
unexplained.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
The Milky Way Tomography With SDSS. III. Stellar Kinematics
We study Milky Way kinematics using a sample of 18.8 million main-sequence stars with r 20 degrees). We find that in the region defined by 1 kpc < Z < 5 kpc and 3 kpc < R < 13 kpc, the rotational velocity for disk stars smoothly decreases, and all three components of the velocity dispersion increase, with distance from the Galactic plane. In contrast, the velocity ellipsoid for halo stars is aligned with a spherical coordinate system and appears to be spatially invariant within the probed volume. The velocity distribution of nearby (Z < 1 kpc) K/M stars is complex, and cannot be described by a standard Schwarzschild ellipsoid. For stars in a distance-limited subsample of stars (< 100 pc), we detect a multi-modal velocity distribution consistent with that seen by HIPPARCOS. This strong non-Gaussianity significantly affects the measurements of the velocity-ellipsoid tilt and vertex deviation when using the Schwarzschild approximation. We develop and test a simple descriptive model for the overall kinematic behavior that captures these features over most of the probed volume, and can be used to search for substructure in kinematic and metallicity space. We use this model to predict further improvements in kinematic mapping of the Galaxy expected from Gaia and the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope.NSF AST-615991, AST-0707901, AST-0551161, AST-02-38683, AST-06-07634, AST-0807444, PHY05-51164NASA NAG5-13057, NAG5-13147, NNXO-8AH83GPhysics Frontier Center/Joint Institute for Nuclear Astrophysics (JINA) PHY 08-22648U.S. National Science FoundationMarie Curie Research Training Network ELSA (European Leadership in Space Astrometry) MRTN-CT-2006-033481Fermi Research Alliance, LLC, United States Department of Energy DE-AC02-07CH11359Alfred P. Sloan FoundationParticipating InstitutionsJapanese MonbukagakushoMax Planck SocietyHigher Education Funding Council for EnglandMcDonald Observator
Insight Into the Formation of the Milky Way Through Cold Halo Substructure. I. The ECHOS of Milky Way Formation
We identify ten -- seven for the first time -- elements of cold halo
substructure (ECHOS) in the volume within 17.5 kpc of the Sun in the inner halo
of the Milky Way. Our result is based on the observed spatial and radial
velocity distribution of metal-poor main sequence turnoff (MPMSTO) stars in 137
Sloan Extension for Galactic Understanding and Exploration (SEGUE) lines of
sight. We point out that the observed radial velocity distribution is
consistent with a smooth stellar component of the Milky Way's inner halo
overall, but disagrees significantly at the radial velocities that correspond
to our detections. We show that all of our detections are statistically
significant and that we expect no false positives. We also use our detections
and completeness estimates to infer a formal upper limit of 0.34 +/- 0.02 on
the fraction of the MPMSTO population in the inner halo that belong to ECHOS.
Our detections and completeness calculations suggest that there is a
significant population of low fractional overdensity ECHOS in the inner halo,
and we predict that 1/3 of the inner halo (by volume) harbors ECHOS with MPMSTO
star number densities n ~ 15 kpc^-3. ECHOS are likely older than known surface
brightness substructure, so our detections provide us with a direct measure of
the accretion history of the Milky Way in a region and time interval that has
yet to be fully explored. In concert with previous studies, our result suggests
that the level of merger activity has been roughly constant over the past few
Gyr and that there has been no accretion of single stellar systems more massive
than a few percent of a Milky Way mass in that interval. (abridged)Comment: 47 pages, 23 figures, and 6 tables in emulaetapj format; accepted for
publication in Ap
Update on the Nature of Virgo Overdensity
We use the Eighth Data Release of Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS DR8) catalog
with its additional sky coverage of the southern Galactic hemisphere, to
measure the extent and study the nature of the Virgo Overdensity (VOD; Juric et
al. 2008). The data show that the VOD extends over no less than 2000 deg^2,
with its true extent likely closer to 3000 deg^2. We test whether the VOD can
be attributed to a tilt in the stellar halo ellipsoid with respect to the plane
of the Galactic disk and find that the observed symmetry of the north-south
Galactic hemisphere star counts excludes this possibility. We argue that the
Virgo Overdensity, in spite of its wide area and cloud-like appearance, is
still best explained by a minor merger. Its appearance and position is
qualitatively similar to a near perigalacticon merger event and, assuming that
the VOD and the Virgo Stellar Stream share the same progenitor, consistent with
the VSS orbit determined by Casetti-Dinescu et al. (2009).Comment: 9 pages,6 figures; accepted for publication in A
Tracing Sagittarius Structure with SDSS and SEGUE Imaging and Spectroscopy
We show that the Sagittarius dwarf tidal stream can be traced with very red
K/M-giant stars selected from SDSS photometry. A subset of these stars are
spectroscopically confirmed with SEGUE and SDSS spectra, and the distance scale
of 2MASS and SDSS M giants is calibrated to the RR Lyrae distance scale. The
absolute g band magnitude of the K/M-giant stars at the tip of the giant branch
is M_g=-1.0. The line-of-sight velocities of the M giant and BHB stars that are
spatially coincident with the Sgr dwarf tidal stream are consistent with those
of previous authors, reinforcing the need for new models that can explain all
of the Sgr tidal debris stream observations. We estimate stellar densities
along the tidal tails that can be used to help constrain future models. The
K/M-giant, BHB, and F-turnoff stars in the lower surface brightness tidal
stream that is adjacent to the main leading Sgr dwarf tidal tail have
velocities and metallicities that are similar to those of the stars in the
leading tidal tail. The ratio of K/M giants to BHBs and BHBs to F-turnoff stars
are also similar for both branches of the leading tidal tail. We show that
there is an additional low-metallicity tidal stream near the Sgr trailing tidal
tail.Comment: 19 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, references update
The Open Cluster Chemical Analysis and Mapping Survey: Local Galactic Metallicity Gradient with APOGEE using SDSS DR10
The Open Cluster Chemical Analysis and Mapping (OCCAM) Survey aims to produce
a comprehensive, uniform, infrared-based dataset for hundreds of open clusters,
and constrain key Galactic dynamical and chemical parameters from this sample.
This first contribution from the OCCAM survey presents analysis of 141 members
stars in 28 open clusters with high-resolution metallicities derived from a
large uniform sample collected as part of the SDSS-III/Apache Point Observatory
Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE). This sample includes the first
high-resolution metallicity measurements for 22 open clusters. With this
largest ever uniformly observed sample of open cluster stars we investigate the
Galactic disk gradients of both [M/H] and [alpha/M]. We find basically no
gradient across this range in [alpha/M], but [M/H] does show a gradient for
R_{GC} < 10 kpc and a significant flattening beyond R_{GC} = 10 kpc. In
particular, whereas fitting a single linear trend yields an [M/H] gradient of
-0.09 +/- 0.03$ dex/kpc --- similar to previously measure gradients inside 13
kpc --- by independently fitting inside and outside 10 kpc separately we find a
significantly steeper gradient near the Sun (7.9 <= R_{GC} <= 10) than
previously found (-0.20 +/- 0.08 dex/kpc) and a nearly flat trend beyond 10 kpc
(-0.02 +/- 0.09 dex/kpc).Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, ApJ letters, in pres
The Milky Way Tomography with SDSS: III. Stellar Kinematics
We study Milky Way kinematics using a sample of 18.8 million main-sequence
stars with r<20 and proper-motion measurements derived from SDSS and POSS
astrometry, including ~170,000 stars with radial-velocity measurements from the
SDSS spectroscopic survey. Distances to stars are determined using a
photometric parallax relation, covering a distance range from ~100 pc to 10 kpc
over a quarter of the sky at high Galactic latitudes (|b|>20 degrees). We find
that in the region defined by 1 kpc <Z< 5 kpc and 3 kpc <R< 13 kpc, the
rotational velocity for disk stars smoothly decreases, and all three components
of the velocity dispersion increase, with distance from the Galactic plane. In
contrast, the velocity ellipsoid for halo stars is aligned with a spherical
coordinate system and appears to be spatially invariant within the probed
volume. The velocity distribution of nearby ( kpc) K/M stars is complex,
and cannot be described by a standard Schwarzschild ellipsoid. For stars in a
distance-limited subsample of stars (<100 pc), we detect a multimodal velocity
distribution consistent with that seen by HIPPARCOS. This strong
non-Gaussianity significantly affects the measurements of the velocity
ellipsoid tilt and vertex deviation when using the Schwarzschild approximation.
We develop and test a simple descriptive model for the overall kinematic
behavior that captures these features over most of the probed volume, and can
be used to search for substructure in kinematic and metallicity space. We use
this model to predict further improvements in kinematic mapping of the Galaxy
expected from Gaia and LSST.Comment: 90 pages, 26 figures, submitted to Ap
Indoor Air Quality Analysis in Oakridge Oregon
Single page posterClimate change and intense fire seasons in Oregon have
worsened air quality, posing health risks to residents. Low cost
PM2.5 sensors monitor indoor air quality in Oakridge,
Oregon. Many homes received interventions to improve
indoor air quality. This study evaluates these interventions'
effectiveness and examines the relationship between
outdoor and indoor air quality before and after the
interventions. We used statistical methods to analyze the
data and present preliminary results of this air quality
analysis.This research is supported by the Ecosystem Workforce Program at the
University of Oregon through a grant from the Lane Regional Protection
Agency as part of the Environmental Protection Agency 2021 Targeted
Airshed Program (TAG2), under intergovernmental agreement number
LRAPA 22-05-01 TAG2
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