4,089 research outputs found
Detection of 84-GHz class I methanol maser emission towards NGC 253
We have investigated the central region of NGC 253 for the presence of
84.5-GHz (E) methanol emission using the Australia
Telescope Compact Array. We present the second detection of 84.5-GHz class~I
methanol maser emission outside the Milky Way. This maser emission is offset
from dynamical centre of NGC 253, in a region with previously detected emission
from class~I maser transitions (36.2-GHz E and 44.1-GHz
A methanol lines) . The emission features a narrow
linewidth (12 km s) with a luminosity approximately 5 orders of
magnitude higher than typical Galactic sources. We determine an integrated line
intensity ratio of between the 36.2 GHz and 84.5-GHz class I
methanol maser emission, which is similar to the ratio observed towards
Galactic sources. The three methanol maser transitions observed toward NGC 253
each show a different distribution, suggesting differing physical conditions
between the maser sites and that observations of additional class~I methanol
transitions will facilitate investigations of the maser pumping regime.Comment: Accepted into ApJL 12 October 2018. 10 pages, 3 Figures and 2 Table
Cities, The Sharing Economy and What's Next
This report seeks to provide an analysis of what is currently happening in American cities so that city leaders may better understand, encourage and regulate the growing sharing economy. Interviews were conducted with city officials on the impact of the sharing economy and related topics, and the report centers around five key themes: innovation, economic development, equity, safety and implementation.The sharing economy is also commonly referred to as collaborative consumption, the collaborative economy, or the peer-to-peer economy. This term refers to business models that enable providers and consumers to share resources and services, from housing to vehicles and more. These business models typically take the form of an online and/or application-based platform for business transactions
Accounting for false mortality in telemetry tag applications
Deaths of animals in the wild are rarely observed directly, which often limits understanding of survival rates. Telemetry transmitters offer field ecologists the opportunity to observe mortality events in cases as the absence of animal movement. When observations of mortality are based on factors such as the absence of animal movement, live individuals can be mistaken for dead, resulting in biased estimates of survival. Additionally, tag failure or emigration might also influence estimates of survival in telemetry studies. Failing to account for mis-classification, tag failure, and emigration rates can result in overestimates of mortality rates by up two-fold, even when the data are corrected for obviously mistaken entries. We use a multi-state capture–recapture model with a misclassification parameter in estimating both the rate of permanent emigration and/or tag failure and the rate at which individuals are mistakenly identified as dead. We use this method on an annual telemetry survey of three species of native fish in the Murray river, Australia: Murray cod (Maccullochella peelii), trout cod (Maccullochella macquariensis) and golden perch (Macquaria ambigua). Evidence for higher mortality rates in the first year post-implantation occurred for Murray cod and golden perch, which is likely an effect of tagging and/or the transmitter, or transmitters shedding. Using simulations, we confirm that our model approach is robust to a broad range of misclassification and transmitter failure rates. With these simulations we also demonstrate that misclassification models that do not account for emigration will likely be erroneous if live and dead animals have different probabilities of detection. These findings will have a broad interest to ecologists wishing to account for multiple sources of misclassification error in capture-mark-recapture studies, with the caveat that the specifics of the approach are dependent on species, transmitter types and other aspects of experimental design which may or may not be amenable to the misclassification framework
Definition and experience of flooding : residents' and officials' perspectives
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