4,664 research outputs found
Serendipitous research process
This article presents the results of an exploratory study asking faculty in the first-year writing program and instruction librarians about their research process focusing on results specifically related to serendipity. Steps to prepare for serendipity are highlighted as well as a model for incorporating serendipity into a first-year writing course
Soft X-ray Emission from the Spiral Galaxy NGC 1313
The nearby barred spiral galaxy NGC 1313 has been observed with the PSPC
instr- ument on board the ROSAT X-ray satellite. Ten individual sources are
found. Three sources (X-1, X-2 and X-3 [SN~1978K]) are very bright (~10^40
erg/s) and are unusual in that analogous objects do not exist in our Galaxy. We
present an X-ray image of NGC~1313 and \xray spectra for the three bright
sources. The emission from the nuclear region (R ~< 2 kpc) is dominated by
source X-1, which is located ~1 kpc north of the photometric (and dynamical)
center of NGC~1313. Optical, far-infrared and radio images do not indicate the
presence of an active galactic nucleus at that position; however, the compact
nature of the \xray source (X-1) suggests that it is an accretion-powered
object with central mass M >~ 10^3 Msun. Additional emission (L_X ~ 10^39
erg/s) in the nuclear region extends out to ~2.6 kpc and roughly follows the
spiral arms. This emission is from 4 sources with luminosity of several x 10^38
erg/s, two of which are consistent with emission from population I sources
(e.g., supernova remnants, and hot interstellar gas which has been heated by
supernova remnants). The other two sources could be emission from population II
sources (e.g., low-mass \xray binaries). The bright sources X-2 and SN~1978K
are positioned in the southern disk of NGC~1313. X-2 is variable and has no
optical counterpart brighter than 20.8 mag (V-band). It is likely that it is an
accretion-powered object in NGC~1313. The type-II supernova SN~1978K (Ryder
\etal 1993) has become extra- ordinarily luminous in X-rays 13 years
after optical maximum.Comment: to appear in 10 Jun 1995 ApJ, 30 pgs uuencoded compressed postscript,
25 pgs of figures available upon request from colbert, whole preprint
available upon request from Sandy Shrader ([email protected]),
hopefully fixed unknown problem with postscript fil
A postmortem investigation of the Type IIb supernova 2001ig
We present images taken with the GMOS instrument on Gemini-South, in
excellent (<0.5 arcsec) seeing, of SN 2001ig in NGC 7424, ~1000 days after
explosion. A point source seen at the site of the SN is shown to have colours
inconsistent with being an H II region or a SN 1993J-like remnant, but can be
matched to a late-B through late-F supergiant with A_V<1. We believe this
object is the massive binary companion responsible for periodic modulation in
mass loss material around the Wolf-Rayet progenitor which gave rise to
significant structure in the SN radio light curve.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters. Fig. 1
resolution degraded to meet size limitations; full resolution version
available from http://www.aao.gov.au/local/www/sdr/pubs/sn2001ig_gmos.ps.g
Alien Registration- Ryder, Lesley E. (Portland, Cumberland County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/21753/thumbnail.jp
A SINFONI view of Galaxy Centers: Morphology and Kinematics of five Nuclear Star Formation Rings
We present near-infrared (H- and K-band) integral-field observations of the
circumnuclear star formation rings in five nearby spiral galaxies. The data,
obtained at the Very Large Telescope with the SINFONI spectrograph, are used to
construct maps of various emission lines that reveal the individual star
forming regions ("hot spots") delineating the rings. We derive the
morphological parameters of the rings, and construct velocity fields of the
stars and the emission line gas. We propose a qualitative, but robust,
diagnostic for relative hot spot ages based on the intensity ratios of the
emission lines Brackett gamma, HeI, and [FeII]. Application of this diagnostic
to the data presented here provides tentative support for a scenario in which
star formation in the rings is triggered predominantly at two well-defined
regions close to, and downstream from, the intersection of dust lanes along the
bar with the inner Lindblad resonance.Comment: 45 pages incl. 4 tables and 12 (mostly color) figures. Accepted for
publication in AJ. A version with full resolution figures can be obtained at
ftp://ftp.rssd.esa.int/pub/tboeker/SINFONI/ms.pd
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