182 research outputs found
Keck Spectroscopy of Two Young Globular Clusters in the Merger Remnant NGC 3921
Low-resolution UV-to-visual spectra of two candidate globular clusters in the
merger remnant NGC 3921 are presented. These two clusters of apparent magnitude
V = 22.2 (Mv = -12.5) lie at projected distances of ~5 kpc from the center and
move with halo-type radial velocities relative to the local galaxy background.
Their spectra show strong Balmer absorption lines indicative of main-sequence
turnoffs dominated by A-type stars. Comparisons with model-cluster spectra
computed by Bruzual & Charlot and others yield cluster ages in the range of
200-530 Myr, and metallicities about solar to within a factor of three. Given
their small half-light radii (Reff < 5 pc) and ages corresponding to ~100 core-
crossing times, these clusters are gravitationally bound and, hence, indeed
young globulars. Assuming that they had Chabrier-type initial mass functions,
their estimated current masses are 2.3(+-0.1)x10^6 Msun and 1.5(+-0.1)x10^6
Msun, respectively, or roughly half the mass of omegaCen. Since NGC 3921 itself
shows many signs of being a 0.7(+-0.3) Gyr old protoelliptical, these two young
globulars of roughly solar metallicity and their many counterparts observed
with the Hubble Space Telescope provide supporting evidence that, in the
process of forming elliptical-like remnants, major mergers of gas-rich disks
can also increase the number of metal-rich globular clusters. (Abridged)Comment: 22 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in AJ, July 200
The Stellar Populations of the Cetus Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy
We present Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 photometry in
the V and I passbands of the recently discovered Local Group dwarf spheroidal
galaxy in Cetus. Our color-magnitude diagram extends from above the first
ascent red giant branch (RGB) tip to approximately half a magnitude below the
horizontal branch (HB). Adopting a reddening of E(B-V) = 0.03, the magnitude of
the RGB tip yields a distance modulus of (m-M)o = 24.46 +/- 0.14. After
applying the reddening and distance modulus, we have utilized the color
distribution of RGB stars to determine a mean metal abundance of [Fe/H] = -1.7
on the Zinn & West scale with an intrinsic internal abundance dispersion of
+/-0.2 dex. An indirect calculation of the HB morphology of Cetus based on the
mean dereddened HB color yields (B-R)/(B+V+R) = -0.91 +/- 0.09, which
represents an HB that is redder than what can be attributed solely to Cetus'
metal abundance. As such, Cetus suffers from the `second parameter effect' in
which another parameter besides metallicity is controlling the HB morphology.
If we adopt the conventional `age hypothesis' explanation for the second
parameter effect, then this implies that Cetus is 2-3 Gyr younger than Galactic
globular clusters at its metallicity.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, Accepted for publication in the March 10, 2002
Ap
Addendum: "The Dynamics of M15: Observations of the Velocity Dispersion Profile and Fokker-Planck Models" (ApJ, 481, 267 [1997])
It has recently come to our attention that there are axis scale errors in
three of the figures of Dull et al. (1997, hereafter D97). D97 presented
Fokker-Planck models for the collapsed-core globular cluster M15 that include a
dense, centrally concentrated population of neutron stars and massive white
dwarfs, but do not include a central black hole. In this Addendum, we present
corrected versions of Figures 9, 10, and 12, and an expanded version of Figure
6. This latter figure, which shows the full run of the velocity dispersion
profile, indicates that the D97 model predictions are in good agreement with
the moderately rising HST-STIS velocity dispersion profile for M15 reported by
Gerssen et al. (2002, astro-ph/0209315). Thus, a central black hole is not
required to fit the new STIS velocity measurements, provided that there is a
sufficient population of neutron stars and massive white dwarfs. This
conclusion is consistent with the findings of Gerssen et al. (2002,
astro-ph/0210158), based on a reapplication of their Jeans equation analysis
using the corrected mass-to-light profile (Figure 12) for the D97 models.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Ap
Pentoxifylline inhibits the fibrogenic activity of pleural effusions and transforming growth factor-β
Physiopathology of organ fibrosis is far from being completely understood, and the efficacy of the available therapeutic strategies is disappointing. We chose pleural disease for further studies and addressed the questions of which cytokines are relevant in pleural fibrosis and which drugs might interrupt its development. We screened pleural effusions for mediators thought to interfere with fibrogenesis (transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β), tumour necrosis factor α (TNFα), soluble TNF-receptor p55 (sTNF-R)) and correlated the results with patient clinical outcome in terms of extent of pleural thickenings. We found pleural thickenings correlated with TGF-β
(p < 0.005) whereas no correlations could be observed with TNFα and sTNF-R. Further, we were interested in finding out how TGF-β effects on fibroblast growth could be modulated. We found that pentoxifylline is able to inhibit both fibroblast proliferation and collagen synthesis independently of the stimulus. We conclude that, judging from in vitro studies, pentoxifylline might offer a new approach in the therapy of pleural as well as pulmonary fibrosis
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