2,285 research outputs found
Method for predicting rotor free-wake positions and the resulting rotor blade airloads
Computer program has been designed and written to predict rotor free-wake positions and resulting rotor blade airloads without requiring time-consuming and tedious calculations. This program was written in FORTRAN IV for use on an IBM-360 computer
Further Observational Evidence for a Critical Ionising Luminosity in Active Galaxies
We report the results of a survey for HI 21-cm absorption at redshifts of z >
2.6 in a new sample of radio sources with the Green Bank and Giant Metrewave
Radio Telescopes. From a total of 25 targets, we report zero detections in the
16 for which optical depth limits could be obtained. Based upon the detection
rate for z > 0.1 associated absorption, we would expect approximately four
detections. Of the 11 which have previously not been searched, there is
sufficient source-frame optical/ultra-violet photometry to determine the
ionising photon rate for four. Adding these to the literature, the hypothesis
that there is a critical rate of logQ = 56 ionising photons per second is now
significant at ~7 sigma. This reaffirms our assertion that searching z > 3
active galaxies for which optical redshifts are available selects sources in
which the ultra-violet luminosity is sufficient to ionise all of the neutral
gas in the host galaxy.Comment: Accepted by MNRA
High-Resolution Magnetometry with a Spinor Bose-Einstein Condensate
We demonstrate a precision magnetic microscope based on direct imaging of the
Larmor precession of a Rb spinor Bose-Einstein condensate. This
magnetometer attains a field sensitivity of 8.3 pT/Hz over a
measurement area of 120 m, an improvement over the low-frequency field
sensitivity of modern SQUID magnetometers. The corresponding atom shot-noise
limited sensitivity is estimated to be 0.15 pT/Hz for unity duty cycle
measurement. The achieved phase sensitivity is close to the atom shot-noise
limit suggesting possibilities of spatially resolved spin-squeezed
magnetometry. This magnetometer marks a significant application of degenerate
atomic gases to metrology
The Sub-parsec Scale Radio Properties of Southern Starburst Galaxies. I. Supernova Remnants, the Supernova Rate, and the Ionised Medium in the NGC 253 Starburst
Wide-field, very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) observations of the
nearby starburst galaxy NGC 253, obtained with the Australian Long Baseline
Array (LBA), have produced a 2.3 GHz image with a maximum angular resolution of
15 mas (0.3 pc). Six sources were detected, all corresponding to sources
identified in higher frequency (>5 GHz) VLA images. One of the sources,
supernova remnant 5.48-43.3, is resolved into a shell-like structure
approximately 90 mas (1.7 pc) in diameter. From these data and data from the
literature, the spectra of 20 compact radio sources in NGC 253 were modelled
and found to be consistent with free-free absorbed power laws. Broadly, the
free-free opacity is highest toward the nucleus but varies significantly
throughout the nuclear region (tau_0 ~ 1->20), implying that the overall
structure of the ionised medium is clumpy. Of the 20 sources, nine have flat
intrinsic spectra associated with thermal radio emission and the remaining 11
have steep intrinsic spectra, associated with synchrotron emission from
supernova remnants. A supernova rate upper limit of 2.4 yr^-1 is determined for
the inner 320 pc region of the galaxy at the 95% confidence level, based on the
lack of detection of new sources in observations spanning almost 17 years and a
simple model for the evolution of supernova remnants. A supernova rate of >0.14
(v/10^4) yr^-1 is implied from estimates of supernova remnant source counts,
sizes and expansion rates, where v is the radial expansion velocity of the
supernova remnant in km s^-1. A star formation rate of 3.4 (v/10^4) <
SFR(M<=5Msun) < 59 Msun yr^-1 has been estimated directly from the supernova
rate limits and is of the same order of magnitude as rates determined from
integrated FIR and radio luminosities.Comment: Accepted by the Astronomical Journal. 34 pages, 6 figures; fixed
typos in assumed expansion velocit
The Nuclear Ionized Gas in the Radio Galaxy M84 (NGC 4374)
We present optical images of the nucleus of the nearby radio galaxy M84 (NGC
4374 = 3C272.1) obtained with the Wide Field/Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) aboard
the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Our three images cover the H + [N II]
emission lines as well as the V and I continuum bands. Analysis of these images
confirms that the H + [N II] emission in the central 5'' (410 pc) is
elongated along position angle (P.A.) \approx 72\arcdeg, which is roughly
parallel to two nuclear dust lanes.Our high-resolution images reveal that the
H + [N II] emission has three components, namely a nuclear gas disk,an
`ionization cone', and outer filaments. The nuclear disk of ionized gas has
diameter pc and major axis P.A. \approx 58\arcdeg \pm
6\arcdeg. On an angular scale of 0\farcs5, the major axis of this nuclear
gas disk is consistent with that of the dust. However, the minor axis of the
gas disk (P.A. \approx 148\arcdeg) is tilted with respect to that of the
filamentary H + [N II] emission at distances > 2'' from the nucleus;
the minor axis of this larger scale gas is roughly aligned with the axis of the
kpc-scale radio jets (P.A. \approx 170\arcdeg). The ionization cone (whose
apex is offset by \approx 0\farcs3 south of the nucleus) extends 2'' from the
nucleus along the axis of the southern radio jet. This feature is similar to
the ionization cones seen in some Seyfert nuclei, which are also aligned with
the radio axes.Comment: 11 pages plus 4 figure
Radio Sources in Low-Luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei. I. VLA Detections of Compact, Flat-Spectrum Cores
We report a 0.2" resolution, 15 GHz survey of a sample of 48 low-luminosity
active galactic nuclei with the Very Large Array. Compact radio emission has
been detected in 57% (17 of 30) of LINERs and low-luminosity Seyferts, at least
15 of which have a flat to inverted radio spectrum (alpha > -0.3). The compact
radio cores are found in both type 1 (i.e. with broad Halpha) and type 2
(without broad Halpha) nuclei. The 2 cm radio power is significantly correlated
with the emission-line ([OI] lambda6300) luminosity. While the present
observations are consistent with the radio emission originating in star-forming
regions, higher resolution radio observations of 10 of the detected sources,
reported in a companion paper (Falcke et al. 2000), show that the cores are
very compact (= 10^8K) and
probably synchrotron self-absorbed, ruling out a starburst origin. Thus, our
results suggest that at least 50% of low-luminosity Seyferts and LINERs in the
sample are accretion powered, with the radio emission presumably coming from
jets or advection-dominated accretion flows. We have detected only 1 of 18
`transition' (i.e. LINER + HII) nuclei observed, indicating their radio cores
are significantly weaker than those of `pure' LINERs.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journal, October 20, 200
Extended Emission Line Gas in Radio Galaxies - PKS0349-27
PKS0349-27 is a classical FRII radio galaxy with an AGN host which has a
spectacular, spiral-like structure in its extended emission line gas (EELG). We
have measured the velocity field in this gas and find that it splits into 2
cloud groups separated by radial velocities which at some points approach 400
km/s Measurements of the diagnostic emission line ratios [OIII]5007/H-beta,
[SII]6716+6731/H-alpha, and [NII]6583/H-alpha in these clouds show no evidence
for the type of HII region emission associated with starburst activity in
either velocity system. The measured emission line ratios are similar to those
found in the nuclei of narrow-line radio galaxies, but the extended
ionization/excitation cannot be produced by continuum emission from the active
nucleus alone. We present arguments which suggest that the velocity
disturbances seen in the EELG are most likely the result of a galaxy-galaxy
collision or merger but cannot completely rule out the possibility that the gas
has been disrupted by the passage of a radio jet.Comment: 12 pages, 3 fig pages, to appear in the Astrophys.
Popular music, psychogeography, place identity and tourism: The case of Sheffield
Tourism and cultural agencies in some English provincial cities are promoting their popular music âheritageâ and, in some cases, contemporary musicians through the packaging of trails, sites, âiconicâ venues and festivals. This article focuses on Sheffield, a âpost-industrialâ northern English city which is drawing on its associations with musicians past and present in seeking to attract tourists. This article is based on interviews with, among others, recording artists, promoters, producers and venue managers, along with reflective observational and documentary data. Theoretical remarks are made on the representations of popular musicians through cultural tourism strategies, programmes and products and also on the ways in which musicians convey a âpsychogeographicalâ sense of place in the âsoundscapeâ of the city
Modelling galactic spectra: I - A dynamical model for NGC3258
In this paper we present a method to analyse absorption line spectra of a
galaxy designed to determine the stellar dynamics and the stellar populations
by a direct fit to the spectra. This paper is the first one to report on the
application of the method to data. The modelling results in the knowledge of
distribution functions that are sums of basis functions. The practical
implementation of the method is discussed and a new type of basis functions is
introduced.
With this method, a dynamical model for NGC 3258 is constructed. This galaxy
can be successfully modelled with a potential containing 30% dark matter within
1r_e with a mass of 1.6x10^11 M_o. The total mass within 2r_e is estimated as
5x10^11 M_o, containing 63% dark matter. The model is isotropic in the centre,
is radially anisotropic between 0.2 and 2 kpc (0.88 r_e) and becomes
tangentially anisotropic further on. The photometry reveals the presence of a
dust disk near the centre
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