7,976 research outputs found
Reconstructed warm season temperatures for Nome, Seward Peninsula, Alaska
[1] Understanding of past climate variability in the Bering Strait region and adjacent land areas is limited by a paucity of long instrumental and paleoclimatic records. Here we describe a reconstruction of May - August temperatures for Nome, Seward Peninsula, Alaska based on maximum latewood density data which considerably extends the available climatic information. The reconstruction shows warm conditions in the late 1600s and middle-20th century and cooler conditions in the 1800s. The summer of 1783, coinciding with the Laki, Iceland volcanic event, is among the coldest in the reconstruction. Statistically significant relationships with the North Pacific Index and Bering-Chukchi sea surface temperatures indicate that the Seward tree-ring data are potentially useful as long-term indices of atmosphere-ocean variability in the region.</p
Emerging Network-Based Tools in Movement Ecology
New technologies have vastly increased the available data on animal movement and behaviour. Consequently, new methods deciphering the spatial and temporal interactions between individuals and their environments are vital. Network analyses offer a powerful suite of tools to disentangle the complexity within these dynamic systems, and we review these tools, their application, and how they have generated new ecological and behavioural insights. We suggest that network theory can be used to model and predict the influence of ecological and environmental parameters on animal movement, focusing on spatial and social connectivity, with fundamental implications for conservation. Refining how we construct and randomise spatial networks at different temporal scales will help to establish network theory as a prominent, hypothesis-generating tool in movement ecology
The Local Group Census: planetary nebulae in Sextans B
Five planetary nebulae (PNe) have been discovered in the nearby dwarf
irregular galaxy. Emission line images were obtained using the Wide Field
Camera of the 2.5m Isaac Newton Telescope (INT) at La Palma (Spain). The
candidate PNe were identified by their point-like appearance and relatively
strong [OIII] emission-line fluxes. They are located within a galactocentric
distance of 2.8 arcmin, corresponding to 1.1 kpc at the distance of Sextans B.
Luminosities are in the range 1800--5600Lsolar. Sextans B is one of the
smallest dwarf irregular galaxies with a PN population. The number of PNe
detected suggest an enhanced star formation rate between 1 and 5 Gyr ago.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Chemical Abundances of Planetary Nebulae in M33
Using spectroscopic data presented in Magrini et al. (2003), we have analyzed
with the photoionization code CLOUDY 94.00 (Ferland et al. 1998) 11 Planetary
Nebulae belonging to the spiral galaxy M 33. Central star temperatures and
nebular parameters have been determined. In particular the chemical abundances
of He/H, O/H, N/H, Ar/H, and S/H have been measured and compared with values
obtained via the Ionization Correction Factors (ICFs) method, when available.
Chemical abundance relationships have been investigated; in particular, a
correlation between N/H and N/O similar to the Galactic one (Henry 1989), and a
feeble anti-correlation between O/H and N/O have been found.
  A gradient in O/H across the disc of M~33 is indicatively consistent with the
one found from HII regions in this galaxy (Vilchez et al 1988). Further studies
in the more external parts of M~33 are however needed to ascertain this point.
The present result shows that oxygen and helium abundances (with lower accuracy
also nitrogen, argon and sulphur) can be actually estimated from the brightest
PNe of a galaxy, even if the electron temperature cannot be measured. We also
found that the oxygen abundance is quite independent of the absolute magnitude
of the PN and consequently the brightest PNe are representative of the whole PN
population. This represents an important tool to measure the metallicity of
galaxies at the time of the formation of PNe progenitors.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, A&A accepte
The Circumstellar Extinction of Planetary Nebulae
We analyze the dependence of circumstellar extinction on core mass for the
brightest planetary nebulae (PNe) in the Magellanic Clouds and M31. We show
that in all three galaxies, a statistically significant correlation exists
between the two quantities, such that high core mass objects have greater
extinction. We model this behavior, and show that the relation is a simple
consequence of the greater mass loss and faster evolution times of high mass
stars. The relation is important because it provides a natural explanation for
the invariance of the [O III] 5007 planetary nebula luminosity function (PNLF)
with population age: bright Population I PNe are extinguished below the cutoff
of the PNLF. It also explains the counter-intuitive observation that
intrinsically luminous Population I PNe often appear fainter than PNe from
older, low-mass progenitors.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, accepted for ApJ, April 10, 199
The Rapidly Fading Afterglow from the Gamma-Ray Burst of 1999 May 6
We report on the discovery of the radio afterglow from the gamma-ray burst
(GRB) of 1999 May 6 (GRB 990506) using the Very Large Array (VLA). The radio
afterglow was detected at early times (1.5 days), but began to fade rapidly
sometime between 1 and 5 days after the burst. If we attribute the radio
emission to the forward shock from an expanding fireball, then this rapid onset
of the decay in the radio predicts that the corresponding optical transient
began to decay between 1 and 5 minutes after the burst. This could explain why
no optical transient for GRB 990506 was detected in spite of numerous searches.
The cause of the unusually rapid onset of the decay for the afterglow is
probably the result of an isotropically energetic fireball expanding into a low
density circumburst environment. At the location of the radio afterglow we find
a faint (R ~ 24 mag) host galaxy with a double morphology.Comment: in press at ApJ Letters, 13 page LaTeX document includes 2 postscript
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