3,563 research outputs found
Preparation of microscopic cross sections of U235 for reactor calculations
Preparation of microscopic cross section of uranium 235 for high temperature reactor calculation
The 51.8 micron (0 3) line emission observed in four galactic H 2 regions
The (0 III) 51.8 microns line from four H II regions, M42, M17, W51 and NGC 6375A was detected. Respective line strengths are 7 x 10 to the minus 15 power, 1.0 x 10 to the minus 14 power, 2.1 x 10 to the minus 15 power and 2.6 x 10 to the minus 15 power watt cm/2. Observations are consistent with previously reported line position and place the line at 51.80 + or 0.05 micron. When combined with the 88.35 microns (0 III) reported earlier, clumping seems to be an important factor in NGC 6375A and M42 and to a lesser extent in W51 and M17. The combined data also suggest an (0 III) abundance of approximately 3 x 0.0001 sub n e' a factor of 2 greater than previously assumed
Towards a Precision Cosmology from Starburst Galaxies at z>2
This work investigates the use of a well-known empirical correlation between
the velocity dispersion, metallicity, and luminosity in H beta of nearby HII
galaxies to measure the distances to HII-like starburst galaxies at high
redshifts. This correlation is applied to a sample of 15 starburst galaxies
with redshifts between z=2.17 and z=3.39 to constrain Omega_m, using data
available from the literature. A best-fit value of Omega_m = 0.21 +0.30 -0.12
in a Lambda-dominated universe and of Omega_m = 0.11 +0.37 -0.19 in an open
universe is obtained. A detailed analysis of systematic errors, their causes,
and their effects on the values derived for the distance moduli and Omega_m is
carried out. A discussion of how future work will improve constraints on
Omega_m by reducing the errors is also presented.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Observations of the 51.8 micron (O III) emission line in Orion
The 51.8 micron fine structure transition P2:3P2 3P1 for doubly ionized oxygen was observed in the Orion nebula. The observed line strength is of 5 plus or minus 3 times 10 to the minus 15th power watt/sq cm is in good agreement with theoretical predictions. Observations are consistent with the newly predicted 51.8 micron line position. The line lies close to an atmospheric water vapor feature at 51.7 micron, but is sufficiently distant so that corrections for this feature are straightforward. Observations of the 51.8 (O III) line are particularly important since the previously discovered 88 micron line from the same ion also is strong. This pair of lines should, therefore, yield new data about densities in observed H II regions; or else, if density data already are available from radio or other observations, the lines can be used to determine the differential dust absorption between 52 and 88 micron in front of heavily obscured regions
Molecular Line Emission as a Tool for Galaxy Observations (LEGO). I. HCN as a tracer of moderate gas densities in molecular clouds and galaxies
Trends observed in galaxies, such as the Gao \& Solomon relation, suggest a
linear relation between the star formation rate and the mass of dense gas
available for star formation. Validation of such relations requires the
establishment of reliable methods to trace the dense gas in galaxies. One
frequent assumption is that the HCN (--0) transition is unambiguously
associated with gas at densities . If so,
the mass of gas at densities could be inferred from
the luminosity of this emission line, . Here we
use observations of the Orion~A molecular cloud to show that the HCN (--0)
line traces much lower densities in cold sections of
this molecular cloud, corresponding to visual extinctions
. We also find that cold and dense gas in a cloud like
Orion produces too little HCN emission to explain
in star--forming galaxies, suggesting that galaxies might contain a hitherto
unknown source of HCN emission. In our sample of molecules observed at
frequencies near 100~GHz (also including , ,
, CN, and CCH), is the only species clearly
associated with rather dense gas.Comment: accepted to A&A Letter
ALMA data suggest the presence of a spiral structure in the inner wind of CW Leo
(abbreviated) We aim to study the inner wind of the well-known AGB star CW
Leo. Different diagnostics probing different geometrical scales have pointed
toward a non-homogeneous mass-loss process: dust clumps are observed at
milli-arcsec scale, a bipolar structure is seen at arcsecond-scale and
multi-concentric shells are detected beyond 1". We present the first ALMA Cycle
0 band 9 data around 650 GHz. The full-resolution data have a spatial
resolution of 0".42x0".24, allowing us to study the morpho-kinematical
structure within ~6". Results: We have detected 25 molecular lines. The
emission of all but one line is spatially resolved. The dust and molecular
lines are centered around the continuum peak position. The dust emission has an
asymmetric distribution with a central peak flux density of ~2 Jy. The
molecular emission lines trace different regions in the wind acceleration
region and suggest that the wind velocity increases rapidly from about 5 R*
almost reaching the terminal velocity at ~11 R*. The channel maps for the
brighter lines show a complex structure; specifically for the 13CO J=6-5 line
different arcs are detected within the first few arcseconds. The curved
structure present in the PV map of the 13CO J=6-5 line can be explained by a
spiral structure in the inner wind, probably induced by a binary companion.
From modeling the ALMA data, we deduce that the potential orbital axis for the
binary system lies at a position angle of ~10-20 deg to the North-East and that
the spiral structure is seen almost edge-on. We infer an orbital period of 55
yr and a binary separation of 25 au (or ~8.2 R*). We tentatively estimate that
the companion is an unevolved low-mass main-sequence star. The ALMA data hence
provide us for the first time with the crucial kinematical link between the
dust clumps seen at milli-arcsecond scale and the almost concentric arcs seen
at arcsecond scale.Comment: 22 pages, 18 Figures, Astronomy & Astrophysic
Physical properties of outflows: Comparing CO and H2O based parameters in Class 0 sources
Context. The observed physical properties of outflows from low-mass sources
put constraints on possible ejection mechanisms. Historically, these quantities
have been derived from CO using ground-based observations. It is thus important
to investigate whether parameters such as momentum rate (thrust) and mechanical
luminosity (power) are the same when different molecular tracers are used.
Aims. We aim at determining the outflow momentum, dynamical time-scale, thrust,
energy and power using CO and H2O as tracers of outflow activity. Methods.
Within the framework of the WISH key program, three molecular outflows from
Class 0 sources have been mapped using the HIFI instrument aboard Herschel. We
use these observations together with previously published H2 data to infer the
physical properties of the outflows. We compare the physical properties derived
here with previous estimates based on CO observations. Results. Inspection of
the spatial distribution of H2O and H2 confirms that these molecules are
co-spatial. The most prominent emission peaks in H2 coincide with strong H2O
emission peaks and the estimated widths of the flows when using the two tracers
are comparable. Conclusions. For the momentum rate and the mechanical
luminosity, inferred values are independent of which tracer that is used, i.e.,
the values agree to within a factor of 4 and 3 respectively.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 5 pages, 2 figure
A Multi-Band Far-Infrared Survey with a Balloon-Borne Telescope
Nine additional radiation sources, above a 3-sigma confidence level of 1300 Jy, were identified at 100 microns by far infrared photometry of the galactic plane using a 0.4 meter aperture, liquid helium cooled, multichannel far infrared balloon-borne telescope. The instrument is described, including its electronics, pointing and suspension systems, and ground support equipment. Testing procedures and flight staging are discussed along with the reduction and analysis of the data acquired. The history of infrared astronomy is reviewed. General infrared techniques and the concerns of balloon astronomers are explored
The Dark Energy Equation of State using Alternative High-z Cosmic Tracers
We propose to use alternative cosmic tracers to measure the dark energy
equation of state and the matter content of the Universe [w(z) & Omega_m]. Our
proposed method consists of two components: (a) tracing the Hubble relation
using HII galaxies which can be detected up to very large redshifts, z~4, as an
alternative to supernovae type Ia, and (b) measuring the clustering pattern of
X-ray selected AGN at a median redshift of z~1. Each component of the method
can in itself provide interesting constraints on the cosmological parameters,
especially under our anticipation that we will reduce the corresponding random
and systematic errors significantly. However, by joining their likelihood
functions we will be able to put stringent cosmological constraints and break
the known degeneracies between the dark energy equation of state (whether it is
constant or variable) and the matter content of the universe and provide a
powerful and alternative route to measure the contribution to the global
dynamics and the equation of state of dark energy. A preliminary joint analysis
of X-ray selected AGN (based on the largest to-date XMM survey; the 2XMM) and
the currently largest SNIa sample (Hicken et al.), using as priors a flat
universe and the WMAP5 normalization of the power-spectrum, provides:
Omega_m=0.27+-0.02 and w=-0.96+-0.07. Equivalent and consistent results are
provided by the joint analysis of X-ray selected AGN clustering and the latest
Baryonic Acoustic Oscillation measures, providing: Omega_m=0.27+-0.02 and
w=-0.97+-0.04.Comment: Different versions of this paper appear in the "Dark Universe"
conference (Paris, July 2009) and in the "1st Mediterranean Conference in
Classical & Quantum Gravity" (invited
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