5,170 research outputs found
MSUO Information Technology and Geographical Information Systems: Common Protocols & Procedures. Report to the Marine Safety Umbrella Operation
The Marine Safety Umbrella Operation (MSUO) facilitates the cooperation between Interreg
funded Marine Safety Projects and maritime stakeholders. The main aim of MSUO is to
permit efficient operation of new projects through Project Cooperation Initiatives, these
include the review of the common protocols and procedures for Information Technology (IT)
and Geographical Information Systems (GIS).
This study carried out by CSA Group and the National Centre for Geocomputation (NCG)
reviews current spatial information standards in Europe and the data management
methodologies associated with different marine safety projects.
International best practice was reviewed based on the combined experience of spatial data
research at NCG and initiatives in the US, Canada and the UK relating to marine security
service information and acquisition and integration of large marine datasets for ocean
management purposes.
This report identifies the most appropriate international data management practices that could
be adopted for future MSUO projects
Nucler star formation in NGC 6240
We have made use of archival HST BVIJH photometry to constrain the nature of
the three discrete sources, A1, A2 and B1, identified in the double nucleus of
NGC 6240. STARBURST99 models have been fitted to the observed colours, under
the assumption, first, that these sources can be treated as star clusters (i.e.
single, instantaneous episodes of star formation), and subsequently as
star-forming regions (i.e. characterised by continuous star formation). For
both scenarios, we estimate ages as young as 4 million years, integrated masses
ranging between 7x10^6 Msun (B1) and 10^9 Msun (A1) and a rate of 1 supernova
per year, which, together with the stellar winds, sustains a galactic wind of
44 Msun/yr. In the case of continuous star formation, a star-formation rate has
been derived for A1 as high as 270 Msun/yr, similar to what is observed for
warm Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies (ULIRGs) with a double nucleus. The A1
source is characterised by a mass density of about 1200 Msun/pc^3 which
resembles the CO molecular mass density measured in cold ULIRGs and the stellar
density determined in ``elliptical core'' galaxies. This, together with the
recent discovery of a supermassive binary black hole in the double nucleus of
NGC 6240, might indicate that the ongoing merger could shape the galaxy into a
core elliptical.Comment: 14 pages, 5 postscript figures, accepted by A&
Exploring the formation of spheroidal galaxies out to z ∼ 1.5 in GOODS
The formation of massive spheroidal galaxies is studied on a visually classified sample extracted from the Advanced Camera for Surveys/Hubble Space Telescope (ACS/HST) images of the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey north and south fields, covering a total area of 360 arcmin . The sample size (910 galaxies brighter than i = 24) allows us to explore in detail the evolution over a wide range of redshifts (0.4 10 M galaxies by a factor of 2 between z = 1 and 0, in contrast with a factor of ∼50 for lower mass galaxies (10 <M / M <10 ). One-quarter of the whole sample of early types are photometrically classified as blue galaxies. On a volume-limited sample out to z <0.7, the average stellar mass of the blue ellipticals is 5 × 10 M compared to 4 × 10 M for red ellipticals. On a volume-limited subsample out to z = 1.4 probing the brightest galaxies (M <-21), we find the median redshift of blue and red early types: 1.10 and 0.85, respectively. Blue early types only amount to 4 per cent of this sample (compared to 26 per cent in the full sample). The intrinsic colour distribution correlates overall bluer colours with blue cores (positive radial gradients of colour), suggesting an inside-out process of formation. The redshift evolution of the observed colour gradients is incompatible with a significant variation in stellar age within each galaxy. The slope of the Kormendy relation in the subsample of massive galaxies does not change over 0.4 <z <1.4 and is compatible with z = 0 values. The 'zero-point' of the Kormendy relation (i.e. the surface brightness at a fixed half-light radius) is 1 mag fainter (in the B band) for the subsample of low-mass (M <3.5 × 10 M ) early types.Peer reviewe
Oxygen and silicon abundances in Cygnus OB2: Chemical homogeneity in a sample of OB slow rotators
Cygnus OB2 is a rich OB association in the Galaxy which has experienced
intense star formation in the last 20-25 Myr. Its stellar population shows a
correlation between age and Galactic longitude. Exploring the chemical
composition of its stellar content we will be able to check the degree of
homogeneity of the natal molecular cloud and possible effects of
self-enrichment processes. Our aim is to determine silicon and oxygen
abundances for a sample of eight early-type slow rotators in Cygnus OB2 in
order to check possible inhomogeneities across the whole association and
whether there exists a correlation of chemical composition with Galactic
longitude. We have performed a spectroscopic analysis of a sample of late O and
early B stars with low rotational velocity, which have been chosen so as to
cover the whole association area. We have carried out an analysis based on
equivalent widths of metal lines, the wings of the H Balmer lines and FASTWIND
stellar atmosphere models to determine their stellar fundamental parameters as
well as the silicon and oxygen surface abundances. We derive a rather
homogeneous distribution of silicon and oxygen abundances across the region,
with average values of 12+log(Si/H)=7.530.08 dex and
12+log(O/H)=8.650.12 dex. We find a homogeneous chemical composition in
Cygnus OB2 with no clear evidence for significant chemical self-enrichment,
despite indications of strong stellar winds and possible supernovae during the
history of the region. Comparison with different scenarios of chemical
enrichment by stellar winds and supernovae point to star forming efficiencies
not significantly above 10%. The degree of homogeneity that we find is
consistent with the observed Milky Way oxygen gradient based on HII regions. We
also find that the oxygen scatter within Cygnus OB2 is at least of the same
order than among HII regions at similar Galactocentric distance.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Fluctuation-induced interactions between dielectrics in general geometries
We study thermal Casimir and quantum non-retarded Lifshitz interactions
between dielectrics in general geometries. We map the calculation of the
classical partition function onto a determinant which we discretize and
evaluate with the help of Cholesky factorization. The quantum partition
function is treated by path integral quantization of a set of interacting
dipoles and reduces to a product of determinants. We compare the approximations
of pairwise additivity and proximity force with our numerical methods. We
propose a ``factorization approximation'' which gives rather good numerical
results in the geometries that we study
Mapping a Homopolymer onto a Model Fluid
We describe a linear homopolymer using a Grand Canonical ensemble formalism,
a statistical representation that is very convenient for formal manipulations.
We investigate the properties of a system where only next neighbor interactions
and an external, confining, field are present, and then show how a general pair
interaction can be introduced perturbatively, making use of a Mayer expansion.
Through a diagrammatic analysis, we shall show how constitutive equations
derived for the polymeric system are equivalent to the Ornstein-Zernike and
P.Y. equations for a simple fluid, and find the implications of such a mapping
for the simple situation of Van der Waals mean field model for the fluid.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
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