534 research outputs found
H1517+656: the Birth of a BL Lac Object?
H1517+656 is an unusual source, even for a BL Lac object. It is one of the
most luminous BL Lacs known, with extreme emission properties at radio,
optical, and X-ray frequencies. Furthermore, in our WFPC2 snapshot survey we
discovered a series of peculiar arcs describing a 2.4 arcsec radius ring
surrounding the source. This paper describes follow-up observations with
additional WFPC2 bands and the STIS longpass filter, which have revealed this
structure to be the remnants of a very recent galaxy merger. Population
synthesis modelling has shown that regions of the arcs have stellar populations
with age < 20 Myrs. Additionally, the circularity of the arcs indicates that
the plane of the collision and hence accretion is very close to the plane of
the sky. Given that BL Lac jets are thought to be aligned with the line of
sight, this observation may provide a direct link between the transfer of
angular momentum in an interaction and the generation of a radio source.Comment: 29 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
A powerful intervention: general practitioners' use of sickness certification in depression
<b>Background</b> Depression is frequently cited as the reason for sickness absence, and it is estimated that sickness certificates are issued in one third of consultations for depression. Previous research has considered GP views of sickness certification but not specifically in relation to depression. This study aimed to explore GPs views of sickness certification in relation to depression.<p></p>
<b>Methods</b> A purposive sample of GP practices across Scotland was selected to reflect variations in levels of incapacity claimants and antidepressant prescribing. Qualitative interviews were carried out between 2008 and 2009.<p></p>
<b>Results</b> A total of 30 GPs were interviewed. A number of common themes emerged including the perceived importance of GP advocacy on behalf of their patients, the tensions between stakeholders involved in the sickness certification system, the need to respond flexibly to patients who present with depression and the therapeutic nature of time away from work as well as the benefits of work. GPs reported that most patients with depression returned to work after a short period of absence and that it was often difficult to predict which patients would struggle to return to work.<p></p>
<b>Conclusions</b>
GPs reported that dealing with sickness certification and depression presents distinct challenges. Sickness certificates are often viewed as powerful interventions, the effectiveness of time away from work for those with depression should be subject to robust enquiry
The Host Galaxies of Radio-Loud AGN: The Black Hole--Galaxy Connection
We have studied the host galaxies of a sample of radio-loud AGN spanning more
than four decades in the energy output of the nucleus. The core sample includes
40 low-power sources (BL Lac objects) and 22 high-power sources (radio-loud
quasars) spanning the redshift range z~0.15 to z~0.5, all imaged with the high
spatial resolution of HST. All of the sources are found to lie in luminous
elliptical galaxies, which follow the Kormendy relation for normal ellipticals.
A very shallow trend is detected between nuclear brightness (corrected for
beaming) and host galaxy luminosity. Black hole masses are estimated for the
entire sample, using both the bulge luminosity--black hole mass and the
velocity dispersion--black hole mass relations for local galaxies. The latter
involves a new method, using the host galaxy morphological parameters, mu_e and
r_e, to infer the velocity dispersion, sigma, via the fundamental plane
correlation. Both methods indicate that the entire sample of radio-loud AGN are
powered by very massive central black holes, with M_{black hole} ~ 10^8 to
10^10 M_{sun}$. Eddington ratios range from L/L_{Eddington} ~ 2 x 10^-4 to ~1,
with the high- power sources having higher Eddington ratios than the low-power
sources. Overall, radio-loud AGN appear to span a very large range in accretion
efficiency, which is all but independent of the mass of the host galaxy.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Host Galaxy Evolution in Radio-Loud AGN
We investigate the luminosity evolution of the host galaxies of radio-loud
AGN through Hubble Space Telescope imaging of 72 BL Lac objects, including new
STIS imaging of nine z > 0.6 BL Lacs. With their intrinsically low accretion
rates and their strongly beamed jets, BL Lacs provide a unique opportunity to
probe host galaxy evolution independent of the biases and ambiguities implicit
in quasar studies. We find that the host galaxies of BL Lacs evolve strongly,
consistent with passive evolution from a period of active star formation in the
range 0.5 <~ z <~ 2.5, and inconsistent with either passive evolution from a
high formation redshift or a non-evolving population. This evolution is broadly
consistent with that observed in the hosts of other radio-loud AGN, and
inconsistent with the flatter luminosity evolution of quiescent early types and
radio-quiet hosts. This indicates that active star formation, and hence galaxy
interactions, are associated with the formation for radio-loud AGN, and that
these host galaxies preferentially accrete less material after their formation
epoch than galaxies without powerful radio jets. We discuss possible
explanations for the link between merger history and the incidence of a radio
jet.Comment: 37 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, for full PDF
incl. figures see
http://www.ph.unimelb.edu.au/~modowd/papers/odowdurry2005.pd
The HST Survey of BL Lacertae Objects. II. Host Galaxies
We have used the HST WFPC2 camera to survey 132 BL Lac objects comprising
seven complete radio-, X-ray-, and optically-selected samples. We obtained
useful images for 110 targets spanning the redshift range 0 < z < 1.3. In two
thirds of the BL Lac images, host galaxies are detected, including nearly all
for z < 0.5 (58 of 63). The highest redshift host galaxy detected is in a BL
Lac object at z=0.664. In 58 of the 72 resolved host galaxies, a de Vaucouleurs
profile is significantly preferred, at >99% confidence, over a pure exponential
disk; the two fits are comparable in the remaining 14 cases. These results
limit the number of disk systems to at most 8% of BL Lacs (at 99% confidence),
and are consistent with all BL~Lac host galaxies being ellipticals. The
detected host galaxies are luminous ellipticals with a median absolute
K-corrected magnitude of M_R= -23.7 +- 0.6 mag, at least one magnitude brighter
than M* and comparable to brightest cluster galaxies. The galaxy morphologies
are generally smooth and undisturbed, with small or negligible ellipticities
(<0.2). There is no correlation between host galaxy and observed nuclear
magnitude or estimated jet power corrected for beaming. If black hole mass is
correlated linearly with bulge mass in general, this implies a large range in
Eddington ratio. Present data strongly support the unification picture with FR
I galaxies constituting the bulk of the parent population of BL Lac objects.Comment: Accepted for publication on ApJ. 38 pages, 8 figure
Language and social/emotional problems identified at a universal developmental assessment at 30 months
Non peer reviewedPublisher PD
Response of the Aerodyne Aerosol Mass Spectrometer to Inorganic Sulfates and Organosulfur Compounds: Applications in Field and Laboratory Measurements
Organosulfur compounds are important components of secondary organic aerosols (SOA). While the Aerodyne high-resolution time-of-flight aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS) has been extensively used in aerosol studies, the response of the AMS to organosulfur compounds is not well-understood. Here, we investigated the fragmentation patterns of organosulfurs and inorganic sulfates in the AMS, developed a method to deconvolve total sulfate into components of inorganic and organic origins, and applied this method in both laboratory and field measurements. Apportionment results from laboratory isoprene photooxidation experiment showed that with inorganic sulfate seed, sulfate functionality of organic origins can contribute âŒ7% of SOA mass at peak growth. Results from measurements in the Southeastern U.S. showed that 4% of measured sulfate is from organosulfur compounds. Methanesulfonic acid was estimated for measurements in the coastal and remote marine boundary layer. We explored the application of this method to unit mass-resolution data, where it performed less well due to interferences. Our apportionment results demonstrate that organosulfur compounds could be a non-negligible source of sulfate fragments in AMS laboratory and field data sets. A reevaluation of previous AMS measurements over the full range of atmospheric conditions using this method could provide a global estimate/constraint on the contribution of organosulfur compounds
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Overview of the international project on biogenic aerosol formation in the boreal forest (BIOFOR)
Aerosol formation and subsequent particle growth in ambient air have been frequently observed at a boreal forest site (SMEAR II station) in Southern Finland. The EU funded project BIOFOR (Biogenic aerosol formation in the boreal forest) has focused on: (a) determination of formation mechanisms of aerosol particles in the boreal forest site; (b) verification of emissions of secondary organic aerosols from the boreal forest site; and (c) quantification of the amount of condensable vapours produced in photochemical reactions of biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOC) leading to aerosol formation. The approach of the project was to combine the continuous measurements with a number of intensive field studies. These field studies were organised in three periods, two of which were during the most intense particle production season and one during a non-event season. Although the exact formation route for 3 nm particles remains unclear, the results can be summarised as follows: Nucleation was always connected to Arctic or Polar air advecting over the site, giving conditions for a stable nocturnal boundary layer followed by a rapid formation and growth of a turbulent convective mixed layer closely followed by formation of new particles. The nucleation seems to occur in the mixed layer or entrainment zone. However two more prerequisites seem to be necessary. A certain threshold of high enough sulphuric acid and ammonia concentrations is probably needed as the number of newly formed particles was correlated with the product of the sulphuric acid production and the ammonia concentrations. No such correlation was found with the oxidation products of terpenes. The condensation sink, i.e., effective particle area, is probably of importance as no nucleation was observed at high values of the condensation sink. From measurement of the hygroscopic properties of the nucleation particles it was found that inorganic compounds and hygroscopic organic compounds contributed both to the particle growth during daytime while at night time organic compounds dominated. Emissions rates for several gaseous compounds was determined. Using four independent ways to estimate the amount of the condensable vapour needed for observed growth of aerosol particles we get an estimate of 2â10Ă107 vapour molecules cmâ3. The estimations for source rate give 7.5â11Ă104 cmâ3 sâ1. These results lead to the following conclusions: The most probable formation mechanism is ternary nucleation (water-sulphuric acid-ammonia). After nucleation, growth into observable sizes (~3 nm) is required before new particles appear. The major part of this growth is probably due to condensation of organic vapours. However, there is lack of direct proof of this phenomenon because the composition of 1â5 nm size particles is extremely difficult to determine using the present state-of-art instrumentation
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Overview of the international project on biogenic aerosol formation in the boreal forest (BIOFOR)
Aerosol formation and subsequent particle growth in ambient air have been frequently observed at a boreal forest site (SMEAR II station) in Southern Finland. The EU funded project BIOFOR (Biogenic aerosol formation in the boreal forest) has focused on: (a) determination of formation mechanisms of aerosol particles in the boreal forest site; (b) verification of emissions of secondary organic aerosols from the boreal forest site; and (c) quantification of the amount of condensable vapours produced in photochemical reactions of biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOC) leading to aerosol formation. The approach of the project was to combine the continuous measurements with a number of intensive field studies. These field studies were organised in three periods, two of which were during the most intense particle production season and one during a non-event season. Although the exact formation route for 3 nm particles remains unclear, the results can be summarised as follows: Nucleation was always connected to Arctic or Polar air advecting over the site, giving conditions for a stable nocturnal boundary layer followed by a rapid formation and growth of a turbulent convective mixed layer closely followed by formation of new particles. The nucleation seems to occur in the mixed layer or entrainment zone. However two more prerequisites seem to be necessary. A certain threshold of high enough sulphuric acid and ammonia concentrations is probably needed as the number of newly formed particles was correlated with the product of the sulphuric acid production and the ammonia concentrations. No such correlation was found with the oxidation products of terpenes. The condensation sink, i.e., effective particle area, is probably of importance as no nucleation was observed at high values of the condensation sink. From measurement of the hygroscopic properties of the nucleation particles it was found that inorganic compounds and hygroscopic organic compounds contributed both to the particle growth during daytime while at night time organic compounds dominated. Emissions rates for several gaseous compounds was determined. Using four independent ways to estimate the amount of the condensable vapour needed for observed growth of aerosol particles we get an estimate of 2â10Ă107 vapour molecules cmâ3. The estimations for source rate give 7.5â11Ă104 cmâ3 sâ1. These results lead to the following conclusions: The most probable formation mechanism is ternary nucleation (water-sulphuric acid-ammonia). After nucleation, growth into observable sizes (~3 nm) is required before new particles appear. The major part of this growth is probably due to condensation of organic vapours. However, there is lack of direct proof of this phenomenon because the composition of 1â5 nm size particles is extremely difficult to determine using the present state-of-art instrumentation
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