30,759 research outputs found
The Nature of Radio Emission from Distant Galaxies
I describe an observational program aimed at understanding the radio emission
from distant, rapidly evolving galaxy populations. These observations were
carried out at 1.4 and 8.5 GHz with the VLA centered on the Hubble Deep Field.
Further MERLIN observations of the HDF region at 1.4 GHz provided an angular
resolution of 0.2" and when combined with the VLA data produced an image with
an unprecedented rms noise of 4 Jy. All radio sources detected in the VLA
complete sample are resolved with a median angular size of 1-2". The
differential count of the radio sources is marginally sub-Euclidean ( =
-2.4 0.1) and fluctuation analysis suggests nearly 60 sources per
arcmin are present at the 1 Jy level. A correlation analysis indicates
spatial clustering among the 371 radio sources on angular scales of 1- 40
arcmin.
Optical identifications are made primarily with bright (I = 22) disk systems
composed of irregulars, peculiars, interacting/merging galaxies, and a few
isolated field spirals. Available redshifts span the range 0.2 - 3. These clues
coupled with the steep spectral index of the 1.4 GHz selected sample are
indicative of diffuse synchrotron radiation in distant galactic disks. Thus the
evolution in the microjansky radio population is driven principally by
star-formation.
I have isolated a number of optically faint radio sources (about 25% of the
overall sample) which remain unidentified to I = 26-28 in the HDF and flanking
optical fields. Several of these objects have extremely red counterparts and
constitute a new class of radio sources which are candidate high-z dusty
protogalaxies.Comment: dissertation summary to be published in PASP, sucessfully defended on
May 19, 1999 at the University of Virginia, committee composed of R. W.
O'Connell (UVa), K. I. Kellermann (NRAO), E. B Fomalont (NRAO), T. X. Thuan
(UVa), P. Humphreys (UVa), and J. Wall (Oxford
MERLIN imaging of the maser flare in Markarian 348
MERLIN images of Mrk 348 at 22 GHz show water maser emission at 0.02 - 0.11
Jy, within approximately 0.8 pc of the nucleus. This is the first direct
confirmation that molecular material exists close to the Seyfert 2 nucleus. Mrk
348 was observed in 2000 May one month after Falcke et al. (2000) first
identified the maser in single-dish spectra. The peak maser flux density has
increased about threefold. The masing region is < 0.6 pc in radius. The flux
density of radio continuum emission from the core has been rising for about 2
years. The maser-core separation is barely resolved but at the 3 sigma
significance level they are not coincident along the line of sight. The masers
lie in the direction of the northern radio lobes and probably emanate from
material shocked by a jet with velocity close to c. The correlation between the
radio continuum increase and maser flare is explained as arising from high
level nuclear activity through a common excitation mechanism although direct
maser amplification of the core by masers tracing a Keplerian disc is not
completely ruled out.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS Letters, 5 pages, 3 figures, corrections in text
and figur
Access to primary care and the route of emergency admission to hospital: retrospective analysis of national hospital administrative data
BACKGROUND: The UK government is pursuing policies to improve primary care access, as many patients visit accident and emergency (A and E) departments after being unable to get suitable general practice appointments. Direct admission to hospital via a general practitioner (GP) averts A and E use, and may reduce total hospital costs. It could also enhance the continuity of information between GPs and hospital doctors, possibly improving healthcare outcomes. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether primary care access is associated with the route of emergency admission-via a GP versus via an A and E department. METHODS: Retrospective analysis of national administrative data from English hospitals for 2011-2012. Adults admitted in an emergency (unscheduled) for ≥1 night via a GP or an A and E department formed the study population. The measure of primary care access-the percentage of patients able to get a general practice appointment on their last attempt-was derived from a large, nationally representative patient survey. Multilevel logistic regression was used to estimate associations, adjusting for patient and admission characteristics. RESULTS: The analysis included 2 322 112 emergency admissions (81.9% via an A and E department). With a 5 unit increase in the percentage of patients able to get a general practice appointment on their last attempt, the adjusted odds of GP admission (vs A and E admission) was estimated to increase by 15% (OR 1.15, 95% CI 1.12 to 1.17). The probability of GP admission if ≥95% of appointment attempts were successful in each general practice was estimated to be 19.6%. This probability reduced to 13.6% when <80% of appointment attempts were successful. This equates to 139 673 fewer GP admissions (456 232 vs 316 559) assuming no change in the total number of admissions. Associations were consistent in direction across geographical regions of England. CONCLUSIONS: Among hospital inpatients admitted as an emergency, patients registered to more accessible general practices were more likely to have been admitted via a GP (vs an A and E department). This furthers evidence suggesting that access to general practice is related to use of emergency hospital services in England. The relative merits of the two admission routes remain unclear
Preliminary analysis of performance and loads data from the 2-megawatt mod-1 wind turbine generator
Preliminary test data on output power versus wind speed, rotor blade loads, system dynamic behavior, and start-stop characteristics on the Mod-1 wind turbine generator are presented. These data were analyzed statistically and are compared with design predictions of system performance and loads. To date, the Mod-1 wind turbine generator has produced up to 1.5 MW of power, with a measured power versus wind speed curve which agrees closely with design. Blade loads were measured at wind speeds up to 14 m/s and also during rapid shutdowns. Peak transient loads during the most severe shutdowns are less than the design limit loads. On the inboard blade sections, fatigue loads are approximately equal to the design cyclic loads. On the outboard blade sections, however, measured cyclic loads are significantly larger than design values, but they do not appear to exceed fatigue allowable loads as yet
The dust emission of high-redshift quasars
The detection of powerful near-infrared emission in high redshift (z>5)
quasars demonstrates that very hot dust is present close to the active nucleus
also in the very early universe. A number of high-redshift objects even show
significant excess emission in the rest frame NIR over more local AGN spectral
energy distribution (SED) templates. In order to test if this is a result of
the very high luminosities and redshifts, we construct mean SEDs from the
latest SDSS quasar catalogue in combination with MIR data from the WISE
preliminary data release for several redshift and luminosity bins. Comparing
these mean SEDs with a large sample of z>5 quasars we could not identify any
significant trends of the NIR spectral slope with luminosity or redshift in the
regime 2.5 < z < 6 and 10^45 < nuL_nu(1350AA) < 10^47 erg/s. In addition to the
NIR regime, our combined Herschel and Spitzer photometry provides full infrared
SED coverage of the same sample of z>5 quasars. These observations reveal
strong FIR emission (L_FIR > 10^13 L_sun) in seven objects, possibly indicating
star-formation rates of several thousand solar masses per year. The FIR excess
emission has unusally high temperatures (T ~ 65 K) which is in contrast to the
temperature typically expected from studies at lower redshift (T ~ 45 K). These
objects are currently being investigated in more detail.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings to "The Central
Kiloparsec in Galactic Nuclei (AHAR2011)", Journal of Physics: Conference
Series (JPCS), IOP Publishin
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