1,409 research outputs found
Mayall II = G1 in M31: Giant Globular Cluster or Core of a Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy ?
(Abridged version) Mayall II = G1 is one of the brightest globular clusters
belonging to M31, the Andromeda galaxy. Our observations with HST/WFPC2 provide
data for the (I vs. V-I) and (V vs. V-I) color-magnitude diagrams. From model
fitting, we determine a rather high mean metallicity of [Fe/H] = --0.95 +-
0.09, somewhat similar to 47 Tucanae. We find a larger spread in V-I than can
be explained by the measurement errors, and we attribute this to an intrinsic
metallicity dispersion amongst the stars of G1. So far, only omega Centauri,
the giant Galactic globular cluster, has been known to exhibit such an
intrinsic metallicity dispersion.
Three estimates of the total mass of this globular cluster can be obtained:
King mass = 15 x 10^6 with M/Lv ~ 7.5, Virial mass = 7.3 x 10^6 with M/Lv ~
3.6, and King-Michie mass range from 14 to 17 x 10^6. Although uncertain, all
of these mass estimates make G1 more than twice as massive as omega Centauri.
Such large masses relate to the metallicity spread whose origin is still
unknown (either self-enrichment, an inhomogeneous proto-cluster cloud, or
remaining core of a dwarf galaxy). When considering the positions of G1 in the
different diagrams defined by Kormendy (1985), G1 always appears on the
sequence defined by globular clusters, and definitely away from the other
sequences defined by elliptical galaxies, bulges, and dwarf spheroidal
galaxies. The same is true for omega Centauri and for the nucleus of the dwarf
elliptical NGC 205. This does not prove that all (massive) globular clusters
are the remnant cores of nucleated dwarf galaxies.Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in AJ (August 2001
GAMBARAN KELUHAN PENYAKIT DEKOMPRESI PADA PENYELAM TRADISIONAL DI KAMPUNG SIMUENG KABUPATEN KEPULAUAN SANGIHE TAHUN 2017
Pada dasarnya nelayan penyelam tradisional yang sering disebut dengan nelayan kompresor yaitu penyelam yang menggunakan peralatan sangat terbatas. Potensi bahaya dapat dilihat juga dari perilaku nelayan yang bekerja tanpa memperhatikan aspek keselamatan (safety diving), keluhan yang sering terjadi antara lain rasa kesemutan pada daerah persendihan, gatal, keluar darah dari hidung bahkan dapat terjadi kelumpuhan (Navisah,2016). Metode yang digunakan dalam Penelitian ini ialah deskriptif dengan pendekatan survey pada 40 orang penyelam tradisional yang juga berprofesi sebagai nelayan di Kampung Simueng, Kabupaten Kepulauan Sangihe yang dilaksanakan selang bulan Mei 2017. Hasil penelitian menunjukan bahwa gejala ringan 35 % dan berat 27 % . Gejala ringan dialami berupa nyeri sendi, gatal– gatal, timbul bercak darah pada kulit dan kesemutan, adapun selain itu gejala berat yang dialami responden berupah pecah pembuluh darah, lumpuh, dan tuli. Kesimpulan dalam penelitian yakni sebagian responden mengalami gangguan akibat penyelaman, hal tersebut diakibatkan karena penyelam tidak mengikuti aturan serta standar penyelaman yang baik dan menurut para nelayan mereka belum pernah mendapatkan materi/penyuluhan tentang standar penyelaman oleh karena itu pelulis menyarankan kepada Pemerintah Daerah untuk menyelenggarakan pelatihan standar penyelaman kepada para Nelayan tersebut
Palomar 13: An Unusual Stellar System in the Galactic Halo
We have measured Keck/HIRES radial velocities for 30 candidate red giants in
the direction of Palomar 13: an object traditionally cataloged as a compact,
low-luminosity globular cluster. From a sample of 21 confirmed members, we find
a systemic velocity of 24.1 km/s and a projected, intrinsic velocity dispersion
of 2.2 km/s. Although small, this dispersion is several times larger than that
expected for a globular cluster of this luminosity and central concentration.
Taken at face value, this dispersion implies a mass-to-light ratio of ~ 40 (in
solar units) based on the best-fit King-Michie model. The surface density
profile of Palomar 13 also appears to be anomalous among Galactic globular
clusters -- depending upon the details of background subtraction and
model-fitting, Palomar 13 either contains a substantial population of
"extra-tidal" stars, or it is far more spatially extended than previously
suspected. The full surface density profile is equally well-fit by a
King-Michie model having a high concentration and large tidal radius, or by a
NFW model. We examine -- and tentatively reject -- a number of possible
explanations for the observed characteristics of Palomar 13 (e.g., velocity
"jitter" among the red giants, spectroscopic binary stars, non-standard mass
functions, modified Newtonian dynamics), and conclude that the two most
plausible scenarios are either catastrophic heating during a recent
perigalacticon passage, or the presence of a massive dark halo. Thus, the
available evidence suggests that Palomar 13 is either a globular cluster which
is now in the process of dissolving into the Galactic halo, or a faint,
dark-matter-dominated stellar system (ABRIDGED).Comment: 31 pages, 13 postscript figures and 1 color gif image. Also available
at http://www.physics.rutgers.edu/ast/ast-rap.html. Accepted for publication
in the Astrophysical Journa
The redshift of the gravitationally lensed radio source PKS1830-211
We report on the spectroscopic identification and the long awaited redshift
measurement of the heavily obscured, gravitationally lensed radio source PKS
1830-211, which was first observed as a radio Einstein ring. The NE component
of the doubly imaged core is identified, in our infrared spectrum covering the
wavelength range 1.5-2.5 microns, as an impressively reddened quasar at
z=2.507. Our redshift measurement, together with the recently measured time
delay (Lovell et al.), means that we are a step closer to determining the
Hubble constant from this lens. Converting the time delay into the Hubble
constant by using existing models leads to high values for the Hubble constant.
Since the lensing galaxy lies very close to the center of the lensed ring,
improving the error bars on the Hubble constant will require not only a more
precise time delay measurement, but also very precise astrometry of the whole
system.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, Accepted ApJ
Surface Brightness Profiles of Galactic Globular Clusters from Hubble Space Telescope Images
Hubble Space Telescope allows us to study the central surface brightness
profiles for globular clusters at unprecedented detail. We have mined the HST
archives to obtain 38 WFPC2 images of galactic globular clusters with adequate
exposure times and filters, which we use to measure their central structure. We
outline a reliable method to obtain surface brightness profiles from integrated
light that we test on an extensive set of simulated images. Most clusters have
central surface brightness about 0.5 mag brighter than previous measurements
made from ground-based data, with the largest differences around 2 magnitudes.
Including the uncertainties in the slope estimates, the surface brightness
slope distribution is consistent with half of the sample having flat cores and
the remaining half showing a gradual decline from 0 to -0.8
(dlog(Sigma)/dlogr). We deproject the surface brightness profiles in a
non-parametric way to obtain luminosity density profiles. The distribution of
luminosity density logarithmic slopes show similar features with half of the
sample between -0.4 and -1.8. These results are in contrast to our theoretical
bias that the central regions of globular clusters are either isothermal (i.e.
flat central profiles) or very steep (i.e. luminosity density slope ~-1.6) for
core-collapse clusters. With only 50% of our sample having central profiles
consistent with isothermal cores, King models appear to poorly represent most
globular clusters in their cores.Comment: 23 pages, 14 figures, AJ accepte
Chandra Study of a Complete Sample of Millisecond Pulsars in 47Tuc and NGC6397
We report Chandra observations of the complete sample of millisecond pulsars
(MSPs) with precise radio positions in the globular clusters 47Tuc (NGC104) and
NGC6397. The 47Tuc MSPs are predominantly soft sources suggestive of thermal
emission from small (r_x < 0.6km) polar caps on the neutron star rather than
magnetospheric emission and are a relatively homogeneous sample, with most
x-ray luminosities in a surprisingly narrow range (Lx ~1-4 X 10^30 erg/s). We
use previously derived intrinsic Pdot values and find a new relation between Lx
and spindown luminosity, Edot: Lx ~ Edot^beta, with beta ~0.5 vs. ~1.0 for both
pulsars and MSPs in the field. This Lx-Edot relation and also the Lx/Edot vs.
spindown age are each similar to that found by Harding & Muslimov (2002) for
thermal emission from polar cap heating although the cluster MSPs are
relatively longer-lived (in thermal x-rays) than either the models or field
MSPs. We suggest the cluster MSPs may have altered surface magnetic field
topology (e.g.multipole) or their neutron stars are more massive from repeated
accretion episodes due to encounters and repeated exchange interactions. MSP
binary companions on or just off the main sequence are likely to have been
re-exchanged and might show anomalous Pdot and Edot values due to relaxation of
misaligned core-crust spins. The radial distribution of 40 soft Chandra sources
in 47Tuc is consistent with a 1.4Msun component. The implied total MSP
population in 47Tuc with Lx >10^30 erg/s is ~35-90, and can constrain the
relative beaming in radio vs. soft x-rays. NGC6397 is relatively deficient in
MSPs; its single detected example may have been re-exchanged out of the cluster
core. (abridged)Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for Ap
The low-mass Initial Mass Function in the 30 Doradus starburst cluster
We present deep Hubble Space Telescope (HST) NICMOS 2 F160W band observations
of the central 56*57" (14pc*14.25pc) region around R136 in the starburst
cluster 30 Dor (NGC 2070) located in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Our aim is to
derive the stellar Initial Mass Function (IMF) down to ~1 Msun in order to test
whether the IMF in a massive metal-poor cluster is similar to that observed in
nearby young clusters and the field in our Galaxy. We estimate the mean age of
the cluster to be 3 Myr by combining our F160W photometry with previously
obtained HST WFPC2 optical F555W and F814W band photometry and comparing the
stellar locus in the color-magnitude diagram with main sequence and pre-main
sequence isochrones. The color-magnitude diagrams show the presence of
differential extinction and possibly an age spread of a few megayears. We
convert the magnitudes into masses adopting both a single mean age of 3 Myr
isochrone and a constant star formation history from 2 to 4 Myr. We derive the
IMF after correcting for incompleteness due to crowding. The faintest stars
detected have a mass of 0.5 Msun and the data are more than 50% complete
outside a radius of 5 pc down to a mass limit of 1.1 Msun for 3 Myr old
objects. We find an IMF of dN/dlog(M) M^(-1.20+-0.2) over the mass range
1.1--20 Msun only slightly shallower than a Salpeter IMF. In particular, we
find no strong evidence for a flattening of the IMF down to 1.1 Msun at a
distance of 5 pc from the center, in contrast to a flattening at 2 Msun at a
radius of 2 pc, reported in a previous optical HST study. We examine several
possible reasons for the different results. If the IMF determined here applies
to the whole cluster, the cluster would be massive enough to remain bound and
evolve into a relatively low-mass globular cluster.Comment: Accepted in ApJ. Abstract abridge
An Error Analysis of the Geometric Baade-Wesselink Method
We derive an analytic solution for the minimization problem in the geometric
Baade-Wesselink method. This solution allows deriving the distance and mean
radius of a pulsating star by fitting its velocity curve and angular diameter
measured interferometrically. The method also provide analytic solutions for
the confidence levels of the best fit parameters, and accurate error estimates
for the Baade-Wesselink solution. Special care is taken in the analysis of the
various error sources in the final solution, among which the uncertainties due
to the projection factor, the limb darkening and the velocity curve. We also
discuss the importance of the phase shift between the stellar lightcurve and
the velocity curve as a potential error source in the geometric Baade-Wesselink
method. We finally discuss the case of the Classical Cepheid zeta Gem, applying
our method to the measurements derived with the Palomar Testbed Interferometer.
We show how a careful treatment of the measurement errors can be potentially
used to discriminate between different models of limb darkening using
interferometric techniques.Comment: 24 pages, to be published on the Astrophysical Journal, vol. 603
March 200
Simultaneous Estimation of Time Delays and Quasar Structure
We expand our Bayesian Monte Carlo method for analyzing the light curves of
gravitationally lensed quasars to simultaneously estimate time delays and
quasar structure including their mutual uncertainties. We apply the method to
HE1104-1805 and QJ0158-4325, two doubly-imaged quasars with microlensing and
intrinsic variability on comparable time scales. For HE1104-1805 the resulting
time delay of (Delta t_AB) = t_A - t_B = 162.2 -5.9/+6.3 days and accretion
disk size estimate of log(r_s/cm) = 15.7 -0.5/+0.4 at 0.2 micron in the rest
frame are consistent with earlier estimates but suggest that existing methods
for estimating time delays in the presence of microlensing underestimate the
uncertainties. We are unable to measure a time delay for QJ0158-4325, but the
accretion disk size is log(r_s/cm) = 14.9 +/- 0.3 at 0.3 micron in the rest
frame.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Ap
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