874 research outputs found
Conference Summary: HI Science in the Next Decade
The atomic hydrogen (HI) 21cm line measures the gas content within and around
galaxies, traces the dark matter potential and probes volumes and objects that
other surveys do not. Over the next decade, 21cm line science will exploit new
technologies, especially focal plane and aperture arrays, and will see the
deployment of Epoch of Reionization/Dark Age detection experiments and Square
Kilometer Array (SKA) precursor instruments. Several experiments designed to
detect and eventually to characterize the reionization history of the
intergalactic medium should deliver first results within two-three years time.
Although "precision cosmology" surveys of HI in galaxies at z ~ 1 to 3 require
the full collecting area of the SKA, a coherent program of HI line science
making use of the unique capabilities of both the existing facilities and the
novel ones demonstrated by the SKA precursors will teach us how many gas rich
galaxies there really are and where they reside and will yield fundamental
insight into how galaxies accrete gas, form stars and interact with their
environment.Comment: To appear in AIP Conference Proceedings, "The Evolution of Galaxies
through the Neutral Hydrogen Window", Feb 1-3 2008, Arecibo, Puerto Rico,
eds. R. Minchin & E. Momjian. 8 page
A new mid-infrared map of the BN/KL region using the Keck telescope
We present a new mid-infrared (12.5micron) map of the BN/KL high-mass
star-forming complex in Orion using the LWS instrument at Keck I. Despite poor
weather we achieved nearly diffraction-limited images (FWHM = 0.38'') over a
roughly 25'' X 25'' region centered on IRc2 down to a flux limit of ~250 mJy.
Many of the known infrared (IR) sources in the region break up into smaller
sub-components. We have also detected 6 new mid-IR sources. Nearly all of the
sources are resolved in our mosaic. The near-IR source ''n'' is slightly
elongated in the mid-IR along a NW--SE axis and perfectly bisects the
double-peaked radio source ''L''. Source n has been identified as a candidate
for powering the large IR luminosity of the BN/KL region (L = 10^5 L_sun). We
postulate that the 12 micron emission arises in a circumstellar disk
surrounding source n. The morphology of the mid-IR emission and the Orion ''hot
core'' (as seen in NH_3 emission), along with the location of water and OH
masers, is very suggestive of a bipolar cavity centered on source n and aligned
with the rotation axis of the hypothetical circumstellar disk. IRc2, once
thought to be the dominant energy source for the BN/KL region, clearly breaks
into 4 sub-sources in our mosaic, as seen previously at 3.8 -- 5.0 micron. The
anti-correlation of mid-IR emission and NH_3 emission from the nearby hot core
indicates that the IRc2 sources are roughly coincident (or behind) the dense
hot core. The nature of IRc2 is not clear: neither self-luminous sources
(embedded protostars) nor external heating by source I can be definitively
ruled out. We also report the discovery of a new arc-like feature SW of the BN
object, and some curious morphology surrounding near-IR source ''t".Comment: To appear in The Astronomical Journal, July 2004 (16 pages, 7
figures
The Effelsberg-Bonn HI Survey (EBHIS)
The new L-band 7-feed-array at the 100-m telescope in Effelsberg will be used
to perform an unbiased fully sampled HI survey of the entire northern
hemisphere observing the galactic and extragalactic sky using simultaneously
two different backends.
The survey will be extremely valuable for a broad range of research topics:
study of the low-mass end of the HI mass function (HIMF) in the local volume,
environmental and evolutionary effects (as seen in the HIMF), the search for
galaxies near low-redshift Lyman-alpha absorbers, and analysis of multiphase
and extraplanar gas, HI shells, and ultra-compact high-velocity-clouds.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, to appear in proceeding of "Galaxies in the Local
Volume" Sydney 8-13 July 200
Attack of the Flying Snakes : Formation of Isolated HI Clouds By Fragmentation of Long Streams
The existence of long (> 100 kpc) HI streams and small (< 20 kpc)
free-floating HI clouds is well-known. While the formation of the streams has
been investigated extensively, and the isolated clouds are often purported to
be interaction debris, little research has been done on the formation of
optically dark HI clouds that are not part of a larger stream. One possibility
is that such features result from the fragmentation of more extended streams,
while another idea is that they are primordial, optically dark galaxies. We
test the validity of the fragmentation scenario (via harassment) using
numerical simulations. In order to compare our numerical models with
observations, we present catalogues of both the known long HI streams (42
objects) and free-floating HI clouds suggested as dark galaxy candidates (51
objects). In particular, we investigate whether it is possible to form compact
features with high velocity widths (> 100 km/s), similar to observed clouds
which are otherwise intriguing dark galaxy candidates. We find that producing
such features is possible but extremely unlikely, occurring no more than 0.2%
of the time in our simulations. In contrast, we find that genuine dark galaxies
could be extremely stable to harassment and remain detectable even after 5 Gyr
in the cluster environment (with the important caveat that our simulations only
explore harassment and do not yet include the intracluster medium, heating and
cooling, or star formation). We also discuss the possibility that such objects
could be the progenitors of recently discovered ultra diffuse galaxies.Comment: 46 pages, 27 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Substrate-Dependent Activation of Polyphenol Oxidase in Red Clover
Polyphenol oxidases (PPO) are copper metaloproteins that catalyse the oxidation of o-diphenols to quinones, highly reactive molecules which readily bind to nucleophilic sites on cellular components and proteins. Red clover protein, due to this enzyme is resistant to protease degradation during. Theses enzymes (circa. 60-65 kDa) are located in the thylakoid lumen and can be converted to a 40-45 kDa form by proteolysis both in vitro and in vivo (Gelder et al., 1997). Conversion to the smaller form has been demonstrated to confer activity at neutral pH. Other treatments, such as the presence of lipids or detergents eg. SDS, can also confer activity at pH7 (Gelder et al., 1997). Here we describe studies on treatments that affect red clover PPO activity at neutral pH, which is equivalent to the physiological pH of macerated/homogenised leaf extracts
The Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA (ALFALFA) Extragalactic HI Survey
The Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA (ALFALFA) survey is a program aimed at obtaining
a census of HI-bearing objects over a cosmologically significant volume of the
local universe. When complete in ~3-4 years, it will cover 7000 square degrees
of high latitude sky using the 305m telescope and the seven-beam Arecibo L-band
feed array (ALFA). As of May 1, 2008, almost 60% of the required observations
are complete and a catalog exists in preliminary form for 25% of the final sky
area. ALFALFA is detecting about twice as many HI sources as predicted based on
previously published HI mass functions and should deliver a final catalog of
>25000 extragalactic HI sources. ALFALFA will detect hundreds of galaxies with
HI masses less than 10**7.5 solar masses and similarly large numbers greater
than 10**10.3 Msun. Its centroiding accuracy allows for the immediate
identification of highly probably optical counterparts to each HI detection.
Fewer than 3% of all extragalactic HI sources, and < 1% of ones with HI masses
> 10**9.5 Msun cannot be identified with a stellar counterpart. The hundreds of
HI sources with observed line widths of 20-30 km/s include a population of
optically faint dwarf galaxies. The objects with highest HI masses exhibit a
range of morphologies, optical colors and surface brightnesses, but most appear
to be massive disk systems. The latter represent the population likely to
dominate future studies of HI at high redshift.Comment: To appear in AIP Conference Proceedings, "The Evolution of Galaxies
through the Neutral Hydrogen Window", Feb 1-3 2008, Arecibo, Puerto Rico,
eds. R. Minchin & E. Momjian. 3 page
"GiGa": the Billion Galaxy HI Survey -- Tracing Galaxy Assembly from Reionization to the Present
In this paper, we review the Billion Galaxy Survey that will be carried out
at radio--optical wavelengths to micro--nanoJansky levels with the telescopes
of the next decades. These are the Low-Frequency Array, the Square Kilometer
Array and the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope as survey telescopes, and the
Thirty Meter class Telescopes for high spectral resolution+AO, and the James
Webb Space Telescope (JWST) for high spatial resolution near--mid IR follow-up.
With these facilities, we will be addressing fundamental questions like how
galaxies assemble with super-massive black-holes inside from the epoch of First
Light until the present, how these objects started and finished the
reionization of the universe, and how the processes of star-formation, stellar
evolution, and metal enrichment of the IGM proceeded over cosmic time. We also
summarize the high-resolution science that has been done thus far on high
redshift galaxies with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Faint galaxies have
steadily decreasing sizes at fainter fluxes and higher redshifts, reflecting
the hierarchical formation of galaxies over cosmic time. HST has imaged this
process in great structural detail to z<~6. We show that ultradeep
radio-optical surveys may slowly approach the natural confusion limit, where
objects start to unavoidably overlap because of their own sizes, which only SKA
can remedy with HI redshifts for individual sub-clumps. Finally, we summarize
how the 6.5 meter James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) will measure first light,
reionization, and galaxy assembly in the near--mid-IR.Comment: 8 pages, LaTeX2e requires 'aip' style (included), 8 postscript
figures. To appear in the proceedings of the `The Evolution of Galaxies
through the Neutral Hydrogen Window' conference, Arecibo Observatory Feb 1-3,
2008; Eds. R. Minchin & E. Momjian, AIP Conf Pro
Trajectories of Vegetation Response to Water Management in Taylor Slough, Everglades National Park, Florida
Ecosystem management practices that modify the major drivers and stressors of an ecosystem often lead to changes in plant community composition. This paper examines how closely the trajectory of vegetation change in seasonally-flooded wetlands tracks management-induced alterations in hydrology and soil characteristics. We used trajectory analysis, a multivariate method designed to test hypotheses about rates and directions of community change, to examine vegetation shifts in response to changes in water management practices within the Taylor Slough basin of Everglades National Park. We summarized vegetation data by non-metric multidimensional scaling ordination, and examined the time trajectory of each site along environmental vectors representing hydrology and soil phosphorus gradients. In the Taylor Slough basin, vegetation change trajectories closely followed the hydrologic changes caused by the operation of water pumps and detention ponds adjacent to the canals. We also observed a shift in vegetation composition along a vector of increasing soil phosphorus, which suggests the need for implementing measures to avoid P-enrichment in southern Everglades marl prairies. This study indicates that shifts in vegetation composition in response to changes in hydrologic conditions and associated parameters may be detected through trajectory analysis, thereby providing feedback for adaptive management of wetland ecosystems
Analysis of Tracer Profiles with Applications to Phloem Transport
ABSTRACT Tracer experiments are quantitatively described in a way which is independent of the tracer profile, and hence the loading process. This enables properties of the transport system to be determined which are independent of tracer profile shape and hence of the loading process. Comparison is made between transit times obtained by this approach and by measurement directly from tracer fronts. The direct method is shown to give results which are dependent on the shape of the tracer profile. This method also enables in vivo measurement of leakage from the transport pathway
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