32,077 research outputs found
Methanol detection in M82
We present a multilevel study of the emission of methanol, detected for the
first time in this galaxy, and discuss the origin of its emission. The high
observed methanol abundance of a few 10^-9 can only be explained if injection
of methanol from dust grains is taken into account. While the overall
[CH3OH]/[NH3] ratio is much larger than observed towards other starbursts, the
dense high excitation component shows a similar value to that found in NGC 253
and Maffei 2. Our observations suggest the molecular material in M 82 to be
formed by dense warm cores, shielded from the UV radiation and similar to the
molecular clouds in other starbursts, surrounded by a less dense
photodissociated halo. The dense warm cores are likely the location of recent
and future star formation within M 82.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A Letter
Sustainable business models: integrating employees, customers and technology
This Special Issue of the Journal of Business & Industrial Marketing has the same title as the 23rd International Conference CBIM 2018 (June 18-20, 2018, Madrid, Spain) “Sustainable Business Models: Integrating Employees, Customers and Technology”. In this edition of International Conference, following a competitive blind review process, papers from 126 authors and 25 countries were ultimately accepted. The best papers of the Conference were invited to submit to this Special Issue and we were also open to direct submissions from other authors.
We present here the 17 accepted papers for publication in this Special Issue
Dynamical variables in Gauge-Translational Gravity
Assuming that the natural gauge group of gravity is given by the group of
isometries of a given space, for a maximally symmetric space we derive a model
in which gravity is essentially a gauge theory of translations. Starting from
first principles we verify that a nonlinear realization of the symmetry
provides the general structure of this gauge theory, leading to a simple choice
of dynamical variables of the gravity field corresponding, at first order, to a
diagonal matrix, whereas the non-diagonal elements contribute only to higher
orders.Comment: 15 page
Photodissociation chemistry footprints in the Starburst galaxy NGC 253
We report the first detection of PDR molecular tracers, namely HOC+, and CO+,
and confirm the detection of the also PDR tracer HCO towards the starburst
galaxy NGC 253, claimed to be mainly dominated by shock heating and in an
earlier stage of evolution than M 82, the prototypical extragalactic PDR. Our
CO+ detection suffers from significant blending to a group of transitions of
13CH3OH, tentatively detected for the first time in the extragalactic
interstellar medium. These species are efficiently formed in the highly UV
irradiated outer layers of molecular clouds, as observed in the late stage
nuclear starburst in M 82. The molecular abundance ratios we derive for these
molecules are very similar to those found in M 82. This strongly supports the
idea that these molecules are tracing the PDR component associated with the
starburst in the nuclear region of NGC 253. A comparison with the predictions
of chemical models for PDRs shows that the observed molecular ratios are
tracing the outer layers of UV illuminated clouds up to two magnitudes of
visual extinction. Chemical models, which include grain formation and
photodissociation of HNCO, support the scenario of a photo-dominated chemistry
as an explanation to the abundances of the observed species. From this
comparison we conclude that the molecular clouds in NGC 253 are more massive
and with larger column densities than those in M 82, as expected from the
evolutionary stage of the starbursts in both galaxies.Comment: 32 pages, 4 figures, Published in Ap
Resolved Hubble Space spectroscopy of ultracool binary systems
Using the low-resolution mode of the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph
(STIS) aboard the \emph{Hubble Space Telescope} (HST), we have obtained
spatially resolved spectra of 20 ultracool dwarfs. 18 of them belong to 9 known
very low-mass binary systems with angular separations in the range 0.37-0.098
arcseconds. We have derived spectral types in the range dM7.5 to dL6 from the
PC3 index, and by comparing our STIS spectra with ground-based spectra of
similar spectral resolution from Mart{\'\i}n et al. (1999). We have searched
for H emission in each object but it was clearly detected in only 2 of
them. We find that the distribution of H emission in our sample is
statistically different from that of single field dwarfs, suggesting an
intriguing anticorrelation between chromospheric activity and binarity for
M7--M9.5 dwarfs. We provide measuments of the strength of the main photospheric
features and the PC3 index, and we derive calibrations of spectral subclasses
versus F814W and K-band absolute magnitudes for a subset of 10 dwarfs in 5
binaries that have known trigonometric parallaxes.Comment: accepted for publication in A&
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