3,260 research outputs found
Laser-only adaptive optics achieves significant image quality gains compared to seeing-limited observations over the entire sky
Adaptive optics laser guide star systems perform atmospheric correction of
stellar wavefronts in two parts: stellar tip-tilt and high-spatial-order
laser-correction. The requirement of a sufficiently bright guide star in the
field-of-view to correct tip-tilt limits sky coverage. Here we show an
improvement to effective seeing without the need for nearby bright stars,
enabling full sky coverage by performing only laser-assisted wavefront
correction. We used Robo-AO, the first robotic AO system, to comprehensively
demonstrate this laser-only correction. We analyze observations from four years
of efficient robotic operation covering 15,000 targets and 42,000 observations,
each realizing different seeing conditions. Using an autoguider (or a
post-processing software equivalent) and the laser to improve effective seeing
independent of the brightness of a target, Robo-AO observations show a 39+/-19%
improvement to effective FWHM, without any tip-tilt correction. We also
demonstrate that 50% encircled-energy performance without tip-tilt correction
remains comparable to diffraction-limited, standard Robo-AO performance.
Faint-target science programs primarily limited by 50% encircled-energy (e.g.
those employing integral field spectrographs placed behind the AO system) may
see significant benefits to sky coverage from employing laser-only AO.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal. 7 pages, 6
figure
Tropospheric gravity waves observed by three closely spaced ST radars
Clear-air radar experiments were carried out on the southern coast of France during the (ALPEX) Alpine experiment program vertically directed stratosphere-troposphere-radars were set up with spacings of about 5 to 6 km. The temporal and spectral characteristics of the vertical velocity fluctuations were examined. The horizontal and vertical properties of gravity waves in the lower atmosphere were analyzed. The techniques used and the first results from this wave study are described
Robo-AO Discovery and Basic Characterization of Wide Multiple Star Systems in the Pleiades, Praesepe, and NGC 2264 Clusters
We identify and roughly characterize 66 candidate binary star systems in the
Pleiades, Praesepe, and NGC 2264 star clusters based on robotic adaptive optics
imaging data obtained using Robo-AO at the Palomar 60" telescope. Only
10% of our imaged pairs were previously known. We detect companions at
red optical wavelengths having physical separations ranging from a few tens to
a few thousand AU. A 3-sigma contrast curve generated for each final image
provides upper limits to the brightness ratios for any undetected putative
companions. The observations are sensitive to companions with maximum contrast
6 at larger separations. At smaller separations, the mean (best) raw
contrast at 2 arcsec is 3.8 (6), at 1 arcsec is 3.0 (4.5), and
at 0.5 arcsec is 1.9 (3). PSF subtraction can recover close to the full
contrast in to the closer separations. For detected candidate binary pairs, we
report separations, position angles, and relative magnitudes. Theoretical
isochrones appropriate to the Pleiades and Praesepe clusters are then used to
determine the corresponding binary mass ratios, which range from 0.2-0.9 in
. For our sample of roughly solar-mass (FGK type) stars in NGC 2264
and sub-solar-mass (K and early M-type) primaries in the Pleiades and Praesepe,
the overall binary frequency is measured at 15.5% 2%. However, this
value should be considered a lower limit to the true binary fraction within the
specified separation and mass ratio ranges in these clusters, given that
complex and uncertain corrections for sensitivity and completeness have not
been applied.Comment: Accepted to A
Direct measurements of the polarization of terrestrial kilometric radiation from Voyagers 1 and 2
Terrestrial radiation measurements obtained with planetary radio astronomy experiments on Voyager-1 and 2 during the early portions of each flight show the signals to be predominantly left-hand circularly polarized. Since these emissions were most probably generated above the Northern Hemisphere auroral zone, it is concluded that the radiation is emitted primarily in the extraordinary mode
The Performance of the Robo-AO Laser Guide Star Adaptive Optics System at the Kitt Peak 2.1-m Telescope
Robo-AO is an autonomous laser guide star adaptive optics system recently
commissioned at the Kitt Peak 2.1-m telescope. Now operating every clear night,
Robo-AO at the 2.1-m telescope is the first dedicated adaptive optics
observatory. This paper presents the imaging performance of the adaptive optics
system in its first eighteen months of operations. For a median seeing value of
, the average Strehl ratio is 4\% in the band
and 29\% in the J band. After post-processing, the contrast ratio under
sub-arcsecond seeing for a primary star is five and
seven magnitudes at radial offsets of and
, respectively. The data processing and archiving pipelines
run automatically at the end of each night. The first stage of the processing
pipeline shifts and adds the data using techniques alternately optimized for
stars with high and low SNRs. The second "high contrast" stage of the pipeline
is eponymously well suited to finding faint stellar companions.Comment: 12 pages, 16 figures, to be submitted to PAS
Observations Suggesting a Possible Link Between Gammacarboxyglutamic Acid and Porcine Bioprosthetic Valve Calcification
Observations that link gammacarboxyglutamic acid (Gla) peptides with ectopic calcification are accumulating in the literature and may be summarized as follows: 1) Gla peptides selectively bind calcium and hydroxyapatite. 2) The presence of detectable levels of Gla in calcified tissue is concurrent with the onset of mineralization. 3) In an animal model, osteocalcin (a Gla-containing protein) accounts for more than 90% of all the Gla found in the resulting subcutaneously implanted calcified leaflet. 4) Vitamin D stimulates osteocalcin synthesis in cultures of osteosarcoma cells, and in vitamin D deficient rats subcutaneously implanted valve leaflets are not calcified. 5) Gla content and the degree of calcification in degenerated porcine bioprosthetic valves removed from humans are positively correlated. 6) Porcine bioprosthetic valves implanted in children are calcified more rapidly than those of adults, and the normal GIa levels in the urine of children are more than twice those of normal adults
Influences of state anxiety on gaze behavior and stepping accuracy in older adults during adaptive locomotion
This article is available open access through the publisher’s website at the link below. Copyright © The Authors 2011.OBJECTIVES: Older adults deemed to be at a high risk of falling transfer their gaze from a stepping target earlier than their low-risk counterparts. The extent of premature gaze transfer increases with task complexity and is associated with a decline in stepping accuracy. This study tests the hypothesis that increased anxiety about upcoming obstacles is associated with (a) premature transfers of gaze toward obstacles (i.e., looking away from a target box prior to completing the step on it in order to fixate future constraints in the walkway) and (b) reduced stepping accuracy on the target in older adults. METHODS: High-risk (9) and low-risk (8) older adult participants walked a 10-m pathway containing a stepping target area followed by various arrangements of obstacles, which varied with each trial. Anxiety, eye movements, and movement kinematics were measured. RESULTS: Progressively increasing task complexity resulted in associated statistically significant increases in measures of anxiety, extent of early gaze transfer, and stepping inaccuracies in the high-risk group. DISCUSSION: These results provide evidence that increased anxiety about environmental hazards is related to suboptimal visual sampling behavior which, in turn, negatively influences stepping performance, potentially contributing to increased falls risk in older adults.Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Counci
Voyager spacecraft radio observations of Jupiter: Initial cruise results
Jupiter's low-frequency radio emission were detected by the planetary radio astronomy instruments onboard the two Voyager spacecraft. The emission is surprisingly similar in morphology but opposite in polarization to the high-frequency Jovian radio noise that were observed with ground-based telescopes for more than two decades. Several possible explanations for the behavior of the low-frequency emission are examined, but none of them is completely satisfactory
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