24,035 research outputs found
A Look At Three Different Scenarios for Bulge Formation
In this paper, we present three qualitatively different scenarios for bulge
formation: a secular evolution model in which bulges form after disks and
undergo several central starbursts, a primordial collapse model in which bulges
and disks form simultaneously, and an early bulge formation model in which
bulges form prior to disks. We normalize our models to the local z=0
observations of de Jong & van der Kruit (1994) and Peletier & Balcells (1996)
and make comparisons with high redshift observations. We consider model
predictions relating directly to bulge-to-disk properties. As expected, smaller
bulge-to-disk ratios and bluer bulge colors are predicted by the secular
evolution model at all redshifts, although uncertainties in the data are
currently too large to differentiate strongly between the models.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
A new catalog of photometric redshifts in the Hubble Deep Field
Using the newly available infrared images of the Hubble Deep Field in the J,
H, and K bands and an optimal photometric method, we have refined a technique
to estimate the redshifts of 1067 galaxies. A detailed comparison of our
results with the spectroscopic redshifts in those cases where the latter are
available shows that this technique gives very good results for bright enough
objects (AB(8140) < 26.0). From a study of the distribution of residuals
(Dz(rms)/(1+z) ~ 0.1 at all redshifts) we conclude that the observed errors are
mainly due to cosmic variance. This very important result allows for the
assessment of errors in quantities to be directly or indirectly measured from
the catalog. We present some of the statistical properties of the ensemble of
galaxies in the catalog, and finish by presenting a list of bright
high-redshift (z ~ 5) candidates extracted from our catalog, together with
recent spectroscopic redshift determinations confirming that two of them are at
z=5.34 and z=5.60.Comment: 28 pages, 12PS+4JPEG figures, aaspp style. Accepted for publication
in The Astrophysical Journal. The catalog, together with a clickable map of
the HDF, Tables 4 and 5 (HTML, LaTeX or ASCII format), and the figures, are
available at http://bat.phys.unsw.edu.au/~fsoto/hdfcat.htm
Dark and Baryonic Matter in Bright Spiral Galaxies: I.Near-infrared and Optical Broadband Surface Photometry of 30 Galaxies
We present photometrically calibrated images and surface photometry in the B,
V, R, J, H, and K-bands of 25, and in the g, r, and K-bands of 5 nearby bright
(Bo_T<12.5 mag) spiral galaxies with inclinations between 30-65 degrees
spanning the Hubble Sequence from Sa to Scd. Data are from The Ohio State
University Bright Spiral Galaxy Survey, the Two Micron All Sky Survey, and the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey Second Data Release. Radial surface brightness
profiles are extracted, and integrated magnitudes are measured from the
profiles. Axis ratios, position angles, and scale lengths are measured from the
near-infrared images. A 1-dimensional bulge/disk decomposition is performed on
the near-infrared images of galaxies with a non-negligible bulge component, and
an exponential disk is fit to the radial surface brightness profiles of the
remaining galaxies.Comment: 28 page
Evaluation of spoken document retrieval for historic speech collections
The re-use of spoken word audio collections maintained by audiovisual archives is severely hindered by their generally limited access. The CHoral project, which is part of the CATCH program funded by the Dutch Research Council, aims to provide users of speech archives with online, instead of on-location, access to relevant fragments, instead of full documents. To meet this goal, a spoken document retrieval framework is being developed. In this paper the evaluation efforts undertaken so far to assess and improve various aspects of the framework are presented. These efforts include (i) evaluation of the automatically generated textual representations of the spoken word documents that enable word-based search, (ii) the development of measures to estimate the quality of the textual representations for use in information retrieval, and (iii) studies to establish the potential user groups of the to-be-developed technology, and the first versions of the user interface supporting online access to spoken word collections
The cholesterol-raising diterpenes from coffee beans increase serum lipid transfer protein activity levels in humans
Cafestol and kahweolâditerpenes present in unfiltered coffeeâ strongly raise serum VLDL and LDL cholesterol and slightly reduce HDL cholesterol in humans. The mechanism of action is unknown. We determined whether the coffee diterpenes may affect lipoprotein metabolism via effects on lipid transfer proteins and lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase in a randomized, double-blind cross-over study with 10 healthy male volunteers. Either cafestol (61â64 mg/day) or a mixture of cafestol (60 mg/day) and kahweol (48â54 mg/day) was given for 28 days. Serum activity levels of cholesterylester transfer protein, phospholipid transfer protein and lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase were measured using exogenous substrate assays. Relative to baseline values, cafestol raised the mean (±S.D.) activity of cholesterylester transfer protein by 18±12% and of phospholipid transfer protein by 21±14% (both P<0.001). Relative to cafestol alone, kahweol had no significant additional effects. Lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activity was reduced by 11±12% by cafestol plus kahweol (P=0.02). It is concluded that the effects of coffee diterpenes on plasma lipoproteins may be connected with changes in serum activity levels of lipid transfer proteins
Morphological Evolution of Distant Galaxies from Adaptive Optics Imaging
We report here on a sample of resolved, infrared images of galaxies at z~0.5
taken with the 10-m Keck Telescope's Adaptive Optics (AO) system. We regularly
achieve a spatial resolution of 0.05'' and are thus able to resolve both the
disk and bulge components. We have extracted morphological information for ten
galaxies and compared their properties to those of a local sample. The
selection effects of both samples were explicitly taken into account in order
to derive the unbiased result that disks at z~0.5 are ~0.6 mag arcsec^-2
brighter than, and about the same size as, local disks. The
no-luminosity-evolution case is ruled out at 90% confidence. We also find, in a
more qualitative analysis, that the bulges of these galaxies have undergone a
smaller amount of surface brightness evolution and have also not changed
significantly in size from z~0.5 to today. This is the first time this type of
morphological evolution has been measured in the infrared and it points to the
unique power of AO in exploring galaxy evolution.Comment: 27 pages, 7figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
LARCH Vogels Nationaal; een expertsysteem voor het beoordelen van de ruimtelijke samenhang en de duurzaamheid van broedvogelpopulaties in Nederland
Het model LARCH is een onderdeel van het kerninstrumentarium van het Natuurplanbureau. Het model voorspelt de kans op duurzaam voorkomen van vooral diersoorten op basis van de ruimtelijke configuratie van leefgebieden en de kwaliteit daarvan. Dit rapport beschrijft het toepasbaar maken van LARCH voor 89 broedvogelsoorten in Nederland, LARCH VOGELS NATIONAAL genaamd. Ten behoeve hiervan is een speciale begroeiingstypenkaart vervaardigd. Het model maakt deel uit van de Natuurplanner van het RIVM. De Natuurplanner integreert kennis over de effecten van de zogenoemde "ver"-thema's (verdroging, verzuring, vermesting) op planten en vegetatie(structuur). Door de uitbreiding met broedvogels kan ook de kennis over versnippering worden meegenomen
Models of Disk Evolution: Confrontation with Observations
We present simple models for disk evolution based on two different
approaches: a forward approach based on predictions generic to hierarchical
models for structure formation (e.g., Mo, Mao, & White 1998) and a backwards
approach based on detailed modeling of the Milky Way galaxy (e.g., Bouwens,
Cayon, & Silk 1997). We normalize these models to local observations and
predict high-redshift luminosities, sizes, circular velocities, and surface
brightnesses. Both approaches yield somewhat similar predictions for size,
surface brightness, and luminosity evolution though they clearly differ in the
amount of number evolution. These predictions seem to be broadly consistent
with the high-redshift observations of Simard et al. (1999), suggesting that
the B-band surface brightness of disks has indeed evolved by ~1.5 mag from z~0
to z~1 similar to the models and is not an artifact of selection effects as
previously claimed. We also find a lack of low surface brightness galaxies in
several high redshift samples relative to model predictions based on local
samples (de Jong & van der Kruit 1994; Mathewson, Ford, & Buchhorn 1992).Comment: 34 pages, 9 figures, accepted to Ap
Gas Rich Dwarfs from the PSS-II III. HI Profiles and Dynamical Masses
We present Arecibo neutral hydrogen data on a sample of optically selected
dwarf galaxies. The sample ranges in HI mass from 10^6 M_sun to 5x10^9 M_sun,
with a mean of 7.9x10^8 M_sun. Using estimated HI radii, the HI surface
densities range from 0.6 to 20 M_sun pc^-2, all well below the critical
threshold for star formation (Kennicutt 1998). M_HI/L values of the LSB dwarfs
range from 0.3 to 12 with a mean value of 2.0. Dynamical masses, calculated
from the HI profile widths, range from 10^8 M_sun to 10^11 M_sun. There is a
strong correlation between optical luminosity and dynamical mass for LSB dwarfs
implying that the dark matter (whether baryonic or non-baryonic) follows the
detectable baryonic matter.Comment: 53 pages, AASTeX v4.0, 8 figures, to be published in ApJ Suppl,
images, tables and referee report can be found at http://zebu.uoregon.edu/~j
Structure of Disk Dominated Galaxies I. Bulge/Disk Parameters, Simulations, and Secular Evolution
(Abridged) A robust analysis of galaxy structural parameters, based on the
modeling of bulge and disk brightnesses in the BVRH bandpasses, is presented
for 121 face-on and moderately inclined late-type spirals. Each surface
brightness (SB) profile is decomposed into a sum of a generalized Sersic bulge
and an exponential disk. The reliability and limitations of our bulge-to-disk
(B/D) decompositions are tested with extensive simulations of galaxy brightness
profiles (1D) and images (2D). Galaxy types are divided into 3 classes
according to their SB profile shapes; Freeman Type-I and Type-II, and a third
``Transition'' class for galaxies whose profiles change from Type-II in the
optical to Type-I in the infrared. We discuss possible interpretations of
Freeman Type-II profiles. The Sersic bulge shape parameter for nearby Type-I
late-type spirals shows a range between n=0.1-2 but, on average, the underlying
surface density profile for the bulge and disk of these galaxies is adequately
described by a double-exponential distribution. We confirm a coupling between
the bulge and disk with a scale length ratio r_e/h=0.22+/-0.09, or
h_bulge/h_disk=0.13+/-0.06 for late-type spirals, in agreement with recent
N-body simulations of disk formation and models of secular evolution. This
ratio increases from ~0.20 for late-type spirals to ~0.24 for earlier types.
The similar scaling relations for early and late-type spirals suggest
comparable formation and/or evolution scenarios for disk galaxies of all Hubble
types.Comment: 78 pages with 23 embedded color figures + tables of galaxy structural
parameters. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. The
interested reader is strongly encouraged to ignore some of the low res
figures within; instead, download the high resolution version from
http://www.astro.ubc.ca/people/courteau/public/macarthur02_disks.ps.g
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