9,060 research outputs found
Passive Evolution: Are the Faint Blue Galaxy Counts Produced by a Population of Eternally Young Galaxies?
A constant age population of blue galaxies, postulated in the model of
Gronwall & Koo (1995), seems to provide an attractive explanation of the excess
of very blue galaxies in the deep galaxy counts. Such a population may be
generated by a set of galaxies with cycling star formation rates, or at the
other extreme, be maintained by the continual formation of new galaxies which
fade after they reach the age specified in the Gronwall and Koo model. For both
of these hypotheses, we have calculated the luminosity functions including the
respective selection criteria, the redshift distributions, and the number
counts in the B_J and K bands. We find a substantial excess in the number of
galaxies at low redshift (0 < z < 0.05) over that observed in the CFH redshift
survey (Lilly et al. 1995) and at the faint end of the Las Campanas luminosity
function (Lin et al. 1996). Passive or mild evolution fails to account for the
deep galaxy counts because of the implications for low redshift determinations
of the I-selected redshift distribution and the r-selected luminosity function
in samples where the faded counterparts of the star-forming galaxies would be
detectable.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX type (aaspp4.sty), 3 Postscript figures, submitted to
ApJ Letter
Galaxy Counts, Sizes, Colours and Redshifts in the Hubble Deep Field
We compare the galaxy evolution models of Bruzual & Charlot (1993) with the
faint galaxy count, size and colour data from the Hubble and Herschel Deep
Fields (Metcalfe et al 1996). For qo=0.05, we find that models where the SFR
increases exponentially out to z>2 are consistent with all of the observational
data. For qo=0.5, such models require an extra population of galaxies which are
only seen at high redshift and then rapidly fade or disappear. We find that,
whatever the cosmology, the redshift of the faint blue galaxies and hence the
epoch of galaxy formation is likely to lie at z>2. We find no implied peak in
the SFR at z=1 and we suggest that the reasons for this contradiction with the
results of Madau et al (1996) include differences in faint galaxy photometry,
in the treatment of spiral dust and in the local galaxy count normalisation.Comment: 8 pages, 5 eps figures, needs paspconf.st
Galaxy number counts- IV. surveying the Herschel deep field in the near-infrared
(abridged) We present results from two new near-infrared imaging surveys. One
covers 47.2 arcmin^2 to K(3\sigma)<20 whilst a second, deeper survey covers a
sub-area of 1.8 arcmin^2 to K(3\sigma)<22.75. Over the entire area we have
extremely deep UBRI photometry. Our K- counts are consistent with the
predictions of non-evolving models with 0 < q0 <0.5. The K-selected (B-K)
galaxy colour distributions move sharply bluewards fainter than K~20 and at at
brighter magnitudes (K<20) our observed colour distributions indicate a
deficiency of red, early-type galaxies at z~1 in comparison with passively
evolving models. This implies either a pure luminosity evolution (PLE) model
with a low level of continuing star-formation following an an initial burst, or
dynamical merging. At fainter magnitudes, the continuing bluewards trend
observed in (B-K) can be explained purely in terms of passively evolving PLE
models. Our observed numbers of (I-K)>4 galaxies at K<20 exhibit the same
deficiency, suggesting that at least part of the larger deficit observed in
(B-K) at K<20 may be due to star-formation rather than dynamical merging.
Finally, as we and others have noted, the number-redshift distribution at
18<K<19 of recent, deep K- selected redshift surveys is well fitted by
non-evolving models; passively evolving models with a Salpeter or Scalo initial
mass functions overpredict the numbers of galaxies with z>1. Dynamical merging
is one possible solution to reduce the numbers of these galaxies but a
dwarf-dominated IMF for early-type galaxies could offer an alternative
explanation; we show that this model reproduces both the optical-infrared
colour distributions and the K- band galaxy counts.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, revised version, requires astrobib.sty,
mn-abs.sty, submitted to MNRA
Investigating magnetic activity of F stars with the it Kepler mission
The dynamo process is believed to drive the magnetic activity of stars like
the Sun that have an outer convection zone. Large spectroscopic surveys showed
that there is a relation between the rotation periods and the cycle periods:
the longer the rotation period is, the longer the magnetic activity cycle
period will be. We present the analysis of F stars observed by Kepler for which
individual p modes have been measure and with surface rotation periods shorter
than 12 days. We defined magnetic indicators and proxies based on photometric
observations to help characterise the activity levels of the stars. With the
Kepler data, we investigate the existence of stars with cycles (regular or
not), stars with a modulation that could be related to magnetic activity, and
stars that seem to show a flat behaviour.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, proceedings of IAU Symposium 302 'Magnetic fields
through stellar evolution', 25-30 August 2013, Biarritz, Franc
Experimental evaluation of battery cells for space-based radar application
A test program was conducted to characterize five space-quality nickel-hydrogen (NiH2) battery cells. A subset of those tests was also done on five commercial nickel-cadmium (NiCd) cells, for correlation to the characteristics of an Energy Storage Unit Simulator. The test program implemented the recommendations of a 1991 study, as reported to IECEC-92. The findings of the tests are summarized, and expected impacts on the performance of the electrical power system (EPS) of a large space-based radar (SBR) surveillance satellite are derived. The main characteristics examined and compared were terminal voltage (average and transient) and capacity through discharge, equivalent series resistance, derived inductance and capacitance, charge return efficiency, and inter-pulse charge effectiveness
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