233 research outputs found
The 3-D ionization structure and evolution of NGC 7009 (Saturn Nebula)
Tomographic and 3-D analyses for extended, emission-line objects are applied
to long-slit ESO NTT + EMMI high-resolution spectra of the intriguing planetary
nebula NGC 7009, covered at twelve position angles. We derive the gas expansion
law, the diagnostics and ionic radial profiles, the distance and the central
star parameters, the nebular photo-ionization model and the spatial recovery of
the plasma structure and evolution. The Saturn Nebula (distance~1.4 kpc,
age~6000 yr, ionized mass~0.18 Mo) consists of several interconnected
components, characterized by different morphology, physical conditions,
excitation and kinematics. The internal shell, the main shell, the streams and
the ansae expand at V(exp)~4.0xR" km/s, the outer shell, the caps and the
equatorial pseudo-ring at V(exp)~3.15xR" km/s, and the halo at V(exp)~10 km/s.
We compare the radial distribution of the physical conditions and the line
fluxes observed in the eight sub-systems with the theoretical profiles coming
from the photo-ionization code CLOUDY, inferring that all the spectral
characteristics of NGC 7009 are explainable in terms of photo-ionization by the
central star, a hot (logT*~4.95) and luminous (log L*/Lo~3.70) 0.60--0.61 Mo
post--AGB star in the hydrogen-shell nuclear burning phase. The 3--D shaping of
the Saturn Nebula is discussed within an evolutionary scenario dominated by
photo-ionization and supported by the fast stellar wind: it begins with the
superwind ejection, passes through the neutral, transition phase (lasting ~
3000 yr), the ionization start (occurred ~2000 yr ago), and the full ionization
of the main shell (~1000 yr ago), at last reaching the present days: the whole
nebula is optically thin to the UV stellar flux, except the caps and the ansae.Comment: accepted for pub. in A&A, 28 pages, 14 figures, full text with
figures available at http://web.pd.astro.it/supern/ps/h4665.ps, movies on the
3D structure available at http://web.pd.astro.it/sabbadin
The gas turbulence in planetary nebulae: quantification and multi-D maps from long-slit, wide-spectral range echellogram
This methodological paper is part of a short series dedicated to the
long-standing astronomical problem of de-projecting the bi-dimensional,
apparent morphology of a three-dimensional distribution of gas. We focus on the
quantification and spatial recovery of turbulent motions in planetary nebulae
(and other classes of expanding nebulae) by means of long-slit echellograms
over a wide spectral range. We introduce some basic theoretical notions,
discuss the observational methodology, and develop an accurate procedure
disentangling all broadening components of the velocity profile in all spatial
positions of each spectral image. This allows us to extract random, non-thermal
motions at unprecedented accuracy, and to map them in 1-, 2- and 3-dimensions.
We present the solution to practical problems in the multi-dimensional
turbulence-analysis of a testing-planetary nebula (NGC 7009), using the
three-step procedure (spatio-kinematics, tomography, and 3-D rendering)
developed at the Astronomical Observatory of Padua. In addition, we introduce
an observational paradigm valid for all spectroscopic parameters in all classes
of expanding nebulae. Unsteady, chaotic motions at a local scale constitute a
fundamental (although elusive) kinematical parameter of each planetary nebula,
providing deep insights on its different shaping agents and mechanisms, and on
their mutual interaction. The detailed study of turbulence, its stratification
within a target and (possible) systematic variation among different sub-classes
of planetary nebulae deserve long-slit, multi-position angle, wide-spectral
range echellograms containing emissions at low-, medium-, and high-ionization,
to be analyzed pixel-to-pixel with a straightforward and versatile methodology,
extracting all the physical information stored in each frame at best.Comment: 11 page, 10 figures, A&A in pres
3-D ionization structure (in stereoscopic view) of Planetary Nebulae: the case of NGC 1501
Long-slit echellograms of the high excitation planetary nebula NGC1501,
reduced according to the methodology developed by Sabbadin et al. (2000a, b),
allowed us to obtain the ``true'' distribution of the ionized gas in the eight
nebular slices covered by the spectroscopic slit. A 3-D rendering procedure is
described and applied, which assembles the tomographic maps and rebuilds the
spatial structure. The images of NGC 1501, as seen in 12 directions separated
by 15 deg, form a series of stereoscopic pairs giving surprising 3-D views in
as many directions. The main nebula consists of an almost oblate ellipsoid of
moderate ellipticity (a=44 arcsec, a/b=1.02, a/c=1.11), brighter in the
equatorial belt, deformed by several bumps, and embedded in a quite
homogeneous, inwards extended cocoon. Some reliability tests are applied to the
rebuilt nebula; the radial matter profile, the small scale density fluctuations
and the 2-D (morphology) - 3-D (structure) correlation are presented and
analysed. The wide applications of the 3-D reconstruction to the morphology,
physical conditions, ionization parameters and evolutionary status of expanding
nebulae in general (planetary nebulae, nova and supernova remnants, shells
around Population I Wolf-Rayet stars, nebulae ejected by symbiotic stars,
bubbles surrounding early spectral type main sequence stars etc.) are
introduced.Comment: 12 pages + 11 (gif) figures. Accepted for publication in A&A. A
postscript file with figs. can be retrieved at
http://panoramix.pd.astro.it/~sabbadi
A new method for ultrasonographic measurement of kidney size in healthy dogs
Introduction: The authors propose a simple method for assessment of canine kidney size derived from the radiological technique described by Finco et al in 1971. Methods: In 26 healthy dogs ultrasonography was used to measure the length, height, and thickness of each kidney. These measurements were correlated with the lengths of the fifth and sixth lumbar vertebrae (L5 and L6), also measured by ultrasound. The resulting values were compared with the linear correlation method and the ratios defined using descriptive statistics.
Results: No significant differences were observed between the dimensions of the right and left kidneys. The length of both kidneys displayed significant correlation with both the length of L5 and that of L6. In both cases, the renal:vertebral length ratios ranged from 1.3 to 2.7.
Discussion: The ratio of kidney length to the length of L5 or L6 can be considered a useful parameter for assessing the size of the kidneys in healthy dogs. The normal range we iden- tified in this study (from 1.3 to 2.7) is sufficiently narrow to allow sonographic detection of even limited changes in renal length
Observational Study of the Multistructured Planetary Nebula NGC 7354
We present an observational study of the planetary nebula (PN) NGC 7354
consisting of narrowband Halpha and [NII]6584 imaging as well as low- and
high-dispersion long-slit spectroscopy and VLA-D radio continuum. According to
our imaging and spectroscopic data, NGC 7354 has four main structures: a quite
round outer shell and an elliptical inner shell, a collection of low-excitation
bright knots roughly concentrated on the equatorial region of the nebula, and
two symmetrical jet-like features, not aligned either with the shells' axes, or
with each other. We have obtained physical parameters like electron temperature
and electron density as well as ionic and elemental abundances for these
different structures. Electron temperature and electron density slightly vary
throughout the nebula. The local extinction coefficient c_Hbeta shows an
increasing gradient from south to north and a decreasing gradient from east to
west consistent with the number of equatorial bright knots present in each
direction. Abundance values show slight internal variations but most of them
are within the estimated uncertainties. In general, abundance values are in
good agreement with the ones expected for PNe. Radio continuum data are
consistent with optically thin thermal emission. We have used the interactive
three-dimensional modeling tool SHAPE to reproduce the observed morphokinematic
structures in NGC 7354 with different geometrical components. Our SHAPE model
is in very good agreement with our imaging and spectroscopic observations.
Finally, after modeling NGC 7354 with SHAPE, we suggest a possible scenario for
the formation of the nebula.Comment: Accepted for publication in AJ, 12 pages, 8 figure
Implementing the “Best Template Searching” tool into Adenosiland platform
Background: Adenosine receptors (ARs) belong to the G protein-coupled receptors (GCPRs) family. The recent release of X-ray structures of the human A2A AR (h A2A AR ) in complex with agonists and antagonists has increased the application of structure-based drug design approaches to this class of receptors. Among them, homology modeling represents the method of choice to gather structural information on the other receptor subtypes, namely A1, A2B, and A3 ARs. With the aim of helping users in the selection of either a template to build its own models or ARs homology models publicly available on our platform, we implemented our web-resource dedicated to ARs, Adenosiland, with the “Best Template Searching” facility. This tool is freely accessible at the following web address: http://mms.dsfarm.unipd.it/Adenosiland/ligand.php.
Findings: The template suggestions and homology models provided by the “Best Template Searching” tool are guided by the similarity of a query structure (putative or known ARs ligand) with all ligands co-crystallized with hA2A AR subtype. The tool computes several similarity indexes and sort the outcoming results according to the index selected by the user.
Conclusions: We have implemented our web-resource dedicated to ARs Adenosiland with the “Best Template Searching” facility, a tool to guide template and models selection for hARs modelling. The underlying idea of our new facility, that is the selection of a template (or models built upon a template) whose co-crystallized ligand shares the highest similarity with the query structure, can be easily extended to other GPCRs
The 3-D shaping of NGC 6741: a massive, fast-evolving Planetary Nebula at the recombination--reionization edge
We infer the gas kinematics, diagnostics and ionic radial profiles, distance
and central star parameters, nebular photo- ionization model, spatial structure
and evolutionary phase of the PN NGC 6741 by means of long-slit high-resolution
spectra at nine position angles. NGC 6741 (distance ~2.0 kpc, age ~1400 yr,
ionized mass Mion ~0.06 Mo) is a dense (electron density up to 12,000 cm^(-3)),
high-excitation, almost- prolate ellipsoid, surrounded by a sharp
low-excitation skin (the ionization front), and embedded into a spherical
(radius ~ 0.080 pc), almost-neutral, high-density (n(HI) ~7 x 10^3 atoms
cm^(-3)) halo containing a large fraction of the nebular mass (Mhalo>0.20 Mo).
The kinematics, physical conditions and ionic structure indicate that NGC 6741
is in a deep recombination phase, started about 200 years ago, and caused by
the quick luminosity drop of the massive (M*=0.66-0.68 Mo), hot (logT* ~ 5.23)
and faint (log L*/Lo ~ 2.75) post--AGB star, which has exhausted the
hydrogen-shell nuclear burning and is moving along the white dwarf cooling
sequence. The general expansion law of the ionized gas in NGC 6741, Vexp (km
s^(-1)=13 x R", fails in the innermost, highest-excitation layers, which move
slower than expected. The observed deceleration is ascribable to the luminosity
drop of the central star, and appears in striking contrast to recent reports
inferring that acceleration is a common property of the Planetary Nebulae
innermost layers. Some general implications on the shaping mechanisms of
Planetary Nebulae are discussed.Comment: 27 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, movies of the
reconstructed nebula are available at http://web.pd.astro.it/sabbadin
Far-UV Spectroscopic Analyses of Four Central Stars of Planetary Nebulae
We analyze the Far-UV/UV spectra of four central stars of planetary nebulae
with strong wind features -- NGC 2371, Abell 78, IC 4776 and NGC 1535, and
derive their photospheric and wind parameters by modeling high-resolution FUSE
(Far-Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer) data in the Far-UV and HST-STIS and
IUE data in the UV with spherical non-LTE line-blanketed model atmospheres.
Abell 78 is a hydrogen-deficient transitional [WR]-PG 1159 object, and we find
NGC 2371 to be in the same stage, both migrating from the constant-luminosity
phase to the white dwarf cooling sequence with Teff ~= 120 kK, Mdot ~= 5x10^-8
Msun/yr. NGC 1535 is a ``hydrogen-rich'' O(H) CSPN, and the exact nature of IC
4776 is ambiguous, although it appears to be helium burning. Both objects lie
on the constant-luminosity branch of post-AGB evolution and have Teff ~= 65 kK,
Mdot ~= 1x10^-8 Msun/yr. Thus, both the H-rich and H-deficient channels of PN
evolution are represented in our sample. We also investigate the effects of
including higher ionization stages of iron (up to FeX) in the model atmosphere
calculations of these hot objects (usually neglected in previous analyses), and
find iron to be a useful diagnostic of the stellar parameters in some cases.
The Far-UV spectra of all four objects show evidence of hot (T ~ 300 K)
molecular hydrogen in their circumstellar environments.Comment: 38 pages, 8 figures (6 color). Accepted for publication in Ap
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