1,833 research outputs found

    High-resolution absorption spectroscopy of the circumgalactic medium of the Milky Way

    Full text link
    In this article we discuss the importance of high-resolution absorption spectroscopy for our understanding of the distribution and physical nature of the gaseous circumgalactic medium (CGM) that surrounds the Milky Way. Observational and theoretical studies indicate a high complexity of the gas kinematics and an extreme multi-phase nature of the CGM in low-redshift galaxies. High-precision absorption-line measurements of the Milky Way's gas environment thus are essential to explore fundamental parameters of circumgalactic gas in the local Universe, such as mass, chemical composition, and spatial distribution. We shortly review important characteristics of the Milky Way's CGM and discuss recent results from our multi-wavelength observations of the Magellanic Stream. Finally, we discuss the potential of studying the warm-hot phase of the Milky Way's CGM by searching for extremely weak [FeX] l6374.5 and [FeIVX] l5302.9 absorption in optical QSO spectra.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in Astronomical Notes (paper version of a talk presented at the 10th Thinkshop, Potsdam, 2013

    Single-Voxel Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy of the Thalamus in Idiopathic Epileptic Dogs and in Healthy Control Dogs

    Full text link
    The role of magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) in the investigation of brain metabolites in epileptic syndromes in dogs has not been explored systematically to date. The aim of this study was to investigate metabolites in the thalamus in dogs affected by idiopathic epilepsy (IE) with and without antiepileptic drug treatment (AEDT) and to compare them to unaffected controls. Our hypothesis is that similar to humans with generalized epilepsy and loss of consciousness, N-acetyl aspartate (NAA) would be reduced, and glutamate-glutamine (Glx) would be increased in treated and untreated IE in comparison with the control group. In this prospective case-control study, Border Collie (BC) and Greater Swiss Mountain dog (GSMD) were divided into three groups: (1) healthy controls, IE with generalized tonic-clonic seizures with (2) and without (3) AEDT. A total of 41 BC and GSMD were included using 3 Tesla single-voxel proton MRS of the thalamus (PRESS localization, shortest TE, TR = 2000 ms, NSA = 240). After exclusion of 11 dogs, 30 dogs (18 IE and 12 healthy controls) remained available for analysis. Metabolite concentrations were estimated with LCModel using creatine as reference and compared using Kruskal-Wallis and Wilcoxon rank-sum tests. The Kruskal-Wallis test revealed significant differences in the NAA-to-creatine (p = 0.04) and Glx-to-creatine (p = 0.03) ratios between the three groups. The Wilcoxon rank-sum test further showed significant reduction in the NAA/creatine ratio in idiopathic epileptic dogs under AEDT compared to epileptic dogs without AEDT (p = 0.03) and compared to healthy controls (p = 0.03). In opposite to humans, Glx/creatine ratio was significantly reduced in dogs with IE under AEDT compared to epileptic dogs without AEDT (p = 0.03) and controls (p = 0.02). IE without AEDT and healthy controls did not show significant difference, neither in NAA/creatine (p = 0.60), nor in Glx-to-creatine (p = 0.55) ratio. In conclusion, MRS showed changes in dogs with IE and generalized seizures under AEDT, but not in those without AEDT. Based upon these results, MRS can be considered a useful advanced imaging technique for the evaluation of dogs with IE in the clinical and research settings

    Early Scottish Monasteries and Prehistory: A Preliminary Dialogue

    Get PDF
    Reflecting oil the diversity of monastic attributes found in the east and west of Britain, the author proposes that prehistoric ritual practice was influential on monastic form. An argument is advanced that this was not based solely oil inspiration Front the landscape, nor oil conservative tradition, but oil the intellectual reconciliation of Christian and non-Christian ideas, with disparate results that account. for the differences in monumentality. Among more general matters tentatively credited with a prehistoric root are the cult of relics, the tonsure and the date of Easter

    Experiments quantifying elemental and isotopic fractionations during evaporation of CAI-like melts in low-pressure hydrogen and in vacuum : Constraints on thermal processing of CAI in the protoplanetary disk

    Get PDF
    This work was supported by NASA grant NNX17AE84G (to R.M.). Magnesium isotopic measurements were supported by NSF grant EAR-17407706 (to F.-Z. T.). P.S. and the Si isotope measurements made at the St Andrews Isotope Group (STAiG) at the University of St Andrews were supported by NERC grant NE/R002134/1 a Carnegie Trust Research Incentive Grant. Evaporation experiments at Hokkaido University were supported by the Ministry of Education, Sports, Science, and Technology KAKENHI Grant (to S.T.).It is widely believed that the precursors of coarse-grained CAIs in chondrites are solar nebula condensates that were later reheated and melted to a high degree. Such melting under low-pressure conditions is expected to result in evaporation of moderately volatile magnesium and silicon and their mass-dependent isotopic fractionation. The evaporation of silicate melts has been extensively studied in vacuum laboratory experiments and a large experimental database on chemical and isotopic fractionations now exists. Nevertheless, it remains unclear if vacuum evaporation of CAI-like melts adequately describes the evaporation in the hydrogen-rich gas of the solar nebula. Here we report the results of a detailed experimental study on evaporation of a such melt at 1600°C in both vacuum and low-pressure hydrogen gas, using 1.5- and 2.5-mm diameter samples. The experiments show that although at 2×10−4 bar H2 magnesium and silicon evaporate ∼2.8 times faster than at 2×10−5 bar H2 and ∼45 times faster than in vacuum, their relative evaporation rates and isotopic fractionation factors remain the same. This means that the chemical and isotopic evolutions of all evaporation residues plot along a single evaporation trajectory regardless of experimental conditions (vacuum or low-PH2) and sample size. The independence of chemical and isotopic evaporation trajectories on PH2 of the surrounding gas imply that the existing extensive experimental database on vacuum evaporation of CAI-like materials can be safely used to model the evaporation under solar nebula conditions, taking into account the dependence of evaporation kinetics on PH2. The experimental data suggest that it would take less than 25 minutes at 1600°C to evaporate 15–50% of magnesium and 5–20% of silicon from a 2.5-mm diameter sample in a solar nebula with PH2∼2×10−4 bar and to enrich the residual melt in heavy magnesium and silicon isotopes up to δ25Mg ∼ 5–10‰ and δ29Si ∼ 2–4‰. The expected chemical and isotopic features are compatible to those typically observed in coarse-grained Type A and B CAIs. Evaporation for ∼1 hour will produce δ25Mg ∼30–35‰ and δ29Si ∼10–15‰, close to the values in highly fractionated Type F and FUN CAIs. These very short timescales suggest melting and evaporation of CAI precursors in very short dynamic heating events. The experimental results reported here provide a stringent test of proposed astrophysical models for the origin and evolution of CAIs.PostprintPeer reviewe

    The MeerKAT Fornax Survey

    Full text link
    We present the science case and observations plan of the MeerKAT Fornax Survey, an HI and radio continuum survey of the Fornax galaxy cluster to be carried out with the SKA precursor MeerKAT. Fornax is the second most massive cluster within 20 Mpc and the largest nearby cluster in the southern hemisphere. Its low X-ray luminosity makes it representative of the environment where most galaxies live and where substantial galaxy evolution takes place. Fornax's ongoing growth makes it an excellent laboratory for studying the assembly of clusters, the physics of gas accretion and stripping in galaxies falling in the cluster, and the connection between these processes and the neutral medium in the cosmic web. We will observe a region of 12 deg2^2 reaching a projected distance of 1.5 Mpc from the cluster centre. This will cover a wide range of environment density out to the outskirts of the cluster, where gas-rich in-falling groups are found. We will: study the HI morphology of resolved galaxies down to a column density of a few times 1e+19 cm2^{-2} at a resolution of 1 kpc; measure the slope of the HI mass function down to M(HI) 5e+5 M(sun); and attempt to detect HI in the cosmic web reaching a column density of 1e+18 cm2^{-2} at a resolution of 10 kpc.Comment: Proceedings of Science, "MeerKAT Science: On the Pathway to the SKA", Stellenbosch, 25-27 May 201

    The Grizzly, May 3, 1985

    Get PDF
    Reimert Hall Will Welcome Girls in the Fall • Fraternities Are Still Alive at Ursinus • Ursinus Applicants Improve • Letters: Greek Week Disappointing; Radio Offers Thanks • Drinking Age of 21 Should Not Be a Standard • Profile: Dr. Coggers Says Farewell • Greek Week\u27s Final Results • Lacrosse Looks to Repeat Division III Title • Successful Year for Lacrosse Club • Gasser Retires • Sally Grim Shines As Star Pitcher • Griffin Worth Far More than Gold • Trackmen Head to MAC\u27s • Stormy Baver is Pilot Behind the Plate • Golf Team Optimistic • Visit the Writing Center • 1985 Baseball Wraps it Up • 1985 Lacrosse Stats • St. Joseph\u27s M.B.A Courses Offered at Ursinus • Open Dialog On Intervention • Area Residents Share College Memories • Shorts: Faculty Members to Retire; Open Dialog; Color Analysis Held on Campus; Evening Concert Announced; Voices ; Art Show • Dead Kennedys • WVOU Conducts Survey • Luau on Sat. • Weekend Highlights • It Will Be a Fantasy Weekendhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1142/thumbnail.jp

    The Grizzly, September 12, 1986

    Get PDF
    Patterns Passes Midpoint • Future of Dorms Fuzzy • Rutgers Rough For Lady Bears • Bomberger Organizes Itself • Pottstown Reich Cracks Down on Cruising • Ursinus\u27 Colors: A Long Tradition • Letter: Maples: The Place Just Ain\u27t the Same • Clean up Cans • The Private Eye • Infirmary Info • AXE: Fraternity With a Difference • Bodolus Bounces Back • Men\u27s and Women\u27s X-Country Off and Running • U.C. Does Dorneyhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1167/thumbnail.jp

    The Grizzly, October 17, 1986

    Get PDF
    False Alarm Alarms Dean and 310 Party. LCB Suspected • Two Alumnae Tell Pros and Cons of Pledging • Electrical Accident Victims Doing Well Considering the Extent of Their Injuries • Editorial: Temple Jars Campus • Letters: Alumna Gives New Interpretation of Temple; Incarcerated in Attica • Commitment to Excellence Results in Tuition Hike • $37,000 Available • Genesis Returns Home and Turns it on Again • Despite Comeback, Bears Are Tied Up • Bear Pack Overcomes Doubt in March to Top • Up and Down Season for Injured Bears • Athlete of the Week • Selling to Recruitershttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1172/thumbnail.jp
    corecore