3,572 research outputs found
Classifications of the Host Galaxies of Supernovae
Classifications on the DDO system are given for the host galaxies of 177
supernovae (SNe) that have been discovered since 1997 during the course of the
Lick Observatory Supernova Search with the Katzman Automatic Imaging Telescope.
Whereas SNe Ia occur in all galaxy types, it is found, at a high level of
statistical confidence, that SNe Ib, Ic, and II are strongly concentrated in
late-type galaxies. However, attention is drawn to a possible exception
provided by SN 2001I. This SN IIn occurred in the E2 galaxy UGC 2836, which was
not expected to harbor a massive young supernova progenitor.Comment: Accepted to be published in PAS
The Luminosity Distribution of Local Group Galaxies
From a rediscussion of Local Group membership, and of distances to individual
galaxies, we obtain values for 35 probable and possible Local Group
members. The luminosity function of these objects is well fitted by a Schechter
function with faint end slope . The probability that the
luminosity distribution of the Local Group is a single Schechter function with
steeper than -1.3 is less than 1 per cent. However, more complicated
luminosity functions, such as multi-component Schechter functions with steep
faint-end slopes, cannot be ruled out. There is some evidence that the
luminosity distribution of dwarf spheroidal galaxies in the Local Group is
steeper than that of dwarf irregular galaxies.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in The Astronomical
Journal. Figure 2 replaced, conclusion based on this figure change
Killing spinor space-times and constant-eigenvalue Killing tensors
A class of Petrov type D Killing spinor space-times is presented, having the
peculiar property that their conformal representants can only admit Killing
tensors with constant eigenvalues.Comment: 11 pages, submitted to CQ
The Binary Galaxies NGC 147 And NGC 185
Contrary to a previously published claim it is found that the spheroidal
galaxies NGC 147 and NGC 185 probably form a stable binary system. Distance
estimates place this pair on the near side of the Andromeda subgroup of the
Local Group. The fact that this system has probably remained stable over a
Hubble time suggests that it does not have a plunging orbit that brings it very
close to M 31. It is noted that the only two Local Group galaxy pairs, in which
the components have comparable masses, also have similar morphological types.
NGC 147 and NGC 185 are both spheroidals, while the LMC and SMC are both
irregulars. This suggests that protogalaxies of similar mass that are spawned
in similar environments evolve into objects having similar morphologies.Comment: To be published in A.J. October 199
Caltech Faint Galaxy Redshift Survey XV: Classification of Galaxies with 0.2 < z < 1.1 in the Hubble Deep Field (North) and its Flanking Fields
To circumvent the spatial effects of resolution on galaxy classification, the
images of 233 objects of known redshift in the Hubble Deep Field (HDF) and its
Flanking Fields (FF) that have redshifts in the range 0.20 < z < 1.10 were
degraded to the resolution that they would have had if they were all located at
a redshift z= 1.00. As in paper XIV of the present series, the effects of
shifts in rest wavelength were mitigated by using R-band images for the
classification of galaxies with 0.2 < z < 0.6 and I-band images for objects
with redshifts 0.6 < z < 1.1. A special effort was made to search for bars in
distant galaxies. The present data strongly confirm the previous conclusion
that the Hubble tuning fork diagram only provides a satisfactory framework for
the classification of galaxies with z ~< 0.3. More distant disk galaxies are
often difficult to shoehorn into the Hubble classification scheme. The paucity
of barred spirals and of grand-design spirals at large redshifts is confirmed.
It is concluded that the morphology of disk galaxies observed at look-back
times smaller than 3--4 Gyr differs systematically from that of more distant
galaxies viewed at look-back times of 4--8 Gyr. The disks of late-type spirals
at z >0.5 are seen to be more chaotic than those of their nearer counterparts.
Furthermore the spiral structure in distant early-type spirals appears to be
less well-developed than it is in nearby early-galaxies.Comment: Accepted for publication in the A
Rotating solenoidal perfect fluids of Petrov type D
We prove that aligned Petrov type D perfect fluids for which the vorticity
vector is not orthogonal to the plane of repeated principal null directions and
for which the magnetic part of the Weyl tensor with respect to the fluid
velocity has vanishing divergence, are necessarily purely electric or locally
rotationally symmetric. The LRS metrics are presented explicitly.Comment: 6 pages, no figure
Spiral Structure and Galaxy Environment
Among 330 normal spirals of types Sa-Sc the fraction of objects exhibiting
``ring'', ``intermediate'' and ``spiral'' arm varieties does not correlated
with environment. A similar conclusion appears to apply to the arm varieties of
123 barred spirals of types SBa-SBc. It is concluded that, among the northern
Shapley-Ames galaxies, the distinction between the spiral and ring varieties of
spiral arms is, within the accuracy of presently available data, independent of
galaxy environment. This result suggests that the detailed morphology of spiral
arms depends primarily on parent galaxy characteristics, rather than on the
galactic environment.Comment: 8 pages. no figures. To be published in the August 2202 issue of A
The Expansion Center and Dynamical Age of the Galactic Supernova Remnant Cassiopeia A
We present proper motions for 21 bright main shell and 17 faint,
higher-velocity, outer ejecta knots in the Cas A supernova remnant and use them
to derive new estimates for the remnant's expansion center and age. Our study
included 1951 - 1976 Palomar 5 m prime focus plates, 1988 - 1999 CCD images
from the KPNO 4 m and MDM 2.4 m telescopes, and 1999 HST WFPC2 images.
Measurable positions covered a 23 to 41 yr time span for most knots, with a few
outer knots followed for almost 48 yr. We derive an expansion center of alpha =
23h 23m 27s.77 +- 0s.05, delta = 58d 48' 49".4 +- 0".4 (ICRS), with little
difference between centers derived using outer or main shell knots. This
position is 3.0 arcsec due north of that estimated by van den Bergh and Kamper
(1983). It also lies 6.6 +- 1.5 arcsec almost due north (PA = 354 deg) of the
remnant's recently-detected central X-ray point source, implying a transverse
velocity for the X-ray point source of about 330 km/s at a distance of 3.4 kpc.
Using the knots which lie out ahead of the remnant's forward blast wave, we
estimate a knot convergent date of A.D. 1671.3 +- 0.9, assuming no
deceleration. However, a deceleration of just approximately 1.6 km/(s yr) over
a 300 yr time span would produce an explosion date A.D. 1680, consistent with
the suspected sighting of the Cas A supernova by J. Flamsteed.Comment: Astron. Journal in press, sched. July 2001. AASTex5, 17 pages, 2 jpeg
greyscale figures, 3 postscript figure
Diameters of Open Star Clusters
The present paper presents a tabulation of data on all 600 Galactic open
clusters for which it is presently possible to calculate linear diameters. As
expected, the youngest `clusters' with ages < 15 Myr, contain a significant
(greater than or equal to 20%) admixture of associations. Among
intermediate-age clusters, with ages in the range 15 Myr to 1.5 Gyr, the median
cluster diameter is found to increase with age. Small compact clusters are rare
among objects with ages > 1.5 Gyr. Open clusters with ages > 1 Gyr appear to
form what might be termed a `cluster thick disk', part of which consistst of
objects that were probably captured gravitationally by the main body of the
Galaxy.Comment: Astronomical Journal, in pres
Sustainable nations: What do aggregate indexes tell us? Environment, development and sustainability
What is a 'sustainable nation' and how can we identify and rank 'sustainable nations?' Are nations producing and consuming in a sustainable way? Although several aggregate indexes have been proposed to answer such questions, comprehensive and internationally comparable data are not available for most of these. This paper quantitatively compares three aggregate indexes of sustainability: the World Bank's 'Genuine Savings' measure, the 'Ecological Footprint,' and the 'Environmental Sustainability Index.' These three indexes are available for a large number of countries and also seem to be the most influential among the aggregate indexes. This paper first discusses the main limitations and weaknesses of each of these indexes. Subsequently, it shows that rankings of sustainable nations and aggregate assessments of unsustainable world population and world GDP shares vary considerably among these indexes. This disagreement leads to suggestions for analysis and policy. One important insight is that climate change, arguable the most serious threat currently faced by humanity, is not or arbitrarily captured by the indexes. © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2008
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