1,891 research outputs found
Nanostructure and properties of a Cu-Cr composite processed by severe plastic deformation
A Cu-Cr composite was processed by severe plastic deformation to investigate
the role of interphase boundaries on the grain size reduction mechanisms. The
as-deformed material exhibits a grain size of only 20nm. This gives rise to a
dramatic increase of the hardness. Some deformation induced Cu super saturated
solid solutions were clearly exhibited and it is shown that they decrease the
hardness. The formation of such supersaturated solid solution and their
influence on the mechanical properties are discussed
Dust in an extremely metal-poor galaxy: mid-infrared observations of SBS 0335-052
The metal deficient (Z = Z_sun/41) Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxy (BCD) SBS
0335-052 was observed with ISOCAM between 5 and 17 mic. With a L_12mic/L_B
ratio of 2.15, the galaxy is unexpectedly bright in the mid-infrared for such a
low-metallicity object. The mid-infrared spectrum shows no sign of the
Unidentified Infrared Bands, which we interpret as an effect of the destruction
of their carriers by the very high UV energy density in SBS 0335-052. The
spectral energy distribution (SED) is dominated by a very strong continuum
which makes the ionic lines of [SIV] and [NeIII] very weak. From 5 to 17 mic,
the SED can be fitted with a grey-body spectrum, modified by an extinction law
similar to that observed toward the Galactic Center, with an optical depth of
A_V~19-21 mag. Such a large optical depth implies that a large fraction (as
much as ~ 75%) of the current star-formation activity in SBS 0335-052 is hidden
by dust with a mass between 3x10^3 M_sun and 5x10^5 M_sun. Silicate grains are
present as silicate extinction bands at 9.7 and 18 mic can account for the
unusual shape of the MIR spectrum of SBS 0335-052. It is remarkable that such a
nearly primordial environment contains as much dust as galaxies which are 10
times more metal-rich. If the hidden star formation in SBS 0335-052 is typical
of young galaxies at high redshifts, then the cosmic star formation rate
derived from UV/optical fluxes would be underestimated.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, requires aaspp4.sty, accepted in Ap
The Embedded Super Star Cluster of SBS0335-052
We analyze the infrared (6-100 micron) spectral energy distribution of the
blue compact dwarf and metal-poor (Z=Z_solar/41) galaxy SBS0335-052. With the
help of DUSTY (Ivezic et al. 1999), a program that solves the radiation
transfer equations in a spherical environment, we evaluate that the infrared
(IR) emission of SBS0335-052 is produced by an embedded super-star cluster
(SSC) hidden under 10^5 M_solar of dust, causing 30 mag of visual extinction.
This implies that one cannot detect any stellar emission from the 2x10^6
M_solar stellar cluster even at near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths. The derived
grain size distribution departs markedly from the widely accepted size
distribution inferred for dust in our galaxy (the so-called MRN distribution,
Mathis et al. 1977), but resembles what is seen around AGNs, namely an absence
of PAH and smaller grains, and grains that grow to larger sizes (around 1
micron). The fact that a significant amount of dust is present in such a
low-metallicity galaxy, hiding from UV and optical view most of the star
formation activity in the galaxy, and that the dust size distribution cannot be
reproduced by a standard galactic law, should be borne in mind when
interpreting the spectrum of primeval galaxies.Comment: 32 pages, 3 figures,accepted for publication in A
Transcription of a β-1,3-glucanase gene in grape berries in a late developmental period, or earlier after wounding treatments
The hydrolytic enzymes β-1,3-glucanases (EC3.2.1.39) an known to be involved in plant defense reactions against pathogens and in developmental events. We have obtained two partial cDNA clones, corresponding to Vitis vinifera β-1,3-glucanase gene sequences (VvGlu1/7 and VvGlu26). The expression of VvGlu1/7 was studied in grape berries at different developmental stages and in wounded berries with or without salicylic acid elicitation. No constitutive expression was observed in young berries, whereas the induction of VvGlu1/7 transcription was detected during fruit ripening. By contrast, synthesis of mRNA coding for this isoform was generated in the first stage of rapid berry growth in response to wounding treatments with and without salicylic acid
Cellular localisation of VvRops and VvRabA5e, small GTPases developmentally regulated in grape berries
VvRops, in particular VvRop9, and VvRabA5e are small GTPases which are developmentally regulated in grape berries. In an attempt to help elucidate the role of these proteins during fruit development and ripening, we investigated their localisation in the fruit by immunocytofluorescence. These proteins were observed at a perinuclear location, at cell periphery and around vesicles. In particular VvRops were found to be located in the nucleus and likely on the plasma membrane. VvRop9 and VvRabA5e cDNAs were introduced separately into S. cerevisiae mutants with RHO1 and YPT31/YPT32 defective genes respectively. Neither cDNAs could complement these temperature-sensitive mutants, suggesting that the functions of the VvRop9 and VvRabA5e genes in grapevine likely differ from the functions of RHO1 and YPT31/YPT32 genes in yeast.
Solving thermal issues in tensile-strained Ge microdisks
International audienceWe propose to use a Ge-dielectric-metal stacking to allow one to address both thermal management with the metal as an efficient heat sink and tensile strain engineering with the buried dielectric as a stressor layer. This scheme is particularly useful for the development of Ge-based optical sources. We demonstrate experimentally the relevance of this approach by comparing the optical response of tensile-strained Ge microdisks with an Al heat sink or an oxide pedestal. Photoluminescence indicates a much reduced temperature rise in the microdisk (16 K with Al pedestal against 200 K with SiO 2 pedestal under a 9 mW continuous wave optical pumping). An excellent agreement is found with finite element modeling of the temperature rise. This original stacking combining metal and dielectrics is promising for integrated photonics where thermal management is an issue
A Compendium of Far-Infrared Line and Continuum Emission for 227 Galaxies Observed by the Infrared Space Observatory
Far-infrared line and continuum fluxes are presented for a sample of 227
galaxies observed with the Long Wavelength Spectrometer on the Infrared Space
Observatory. The galaxy sample includes normal star-forming systems,
starbursts, and active galactic nuclei covering a wide range of colors and
morphologies. The dataset spans some 1300 line fluxes, 600 line upper limits,
and 800 continuum fluxes. Several fine structure emission lines are detected
that arise in either photodissociation or HII regions: [OIII]52um, [NIII]57um,
[OI]63um, [OIII]88um, [NII]122um, [OI]145um, and [CII]158um. Molecular lines
such as OH at 53um, 79um, 84um, 119um, and 163um, and H2O at 58um, 66um, 75um,
101um, and 108um are also detected in some galaxies. In addition to those lines
emitted by the target galaxies, serendipitous detections of Milky Way
[CII]158um and an unidentified line near 74um in NGC1068 are also reported.
Finally, continuum fluxes at 52um, 57um, 63um, 88um, 122um, 145um, 158um, and
170um are derived for a subset of galaxies in which the far-infrared emission
is contained within the ~75" ISO LWS beam. The statistics of this large
database of continuum and line fluxes, including trends in line ratios with the
far-infrared color and infrared-to-optical ratio, are explored.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Supplement
Serie
Extinction law variations and dust excitation in the spiral galaxy NGC 300
We investigate the origin of the strong radial gradient in the
ultraviolet-to-infrared ratio in the spiral galaxy NGC 300, and emphasize the
importance of local variations in the interstellar medium geometry, concluding
that they cannot be neglected with respect to metallicity effects. This
analysis is based upon a combination of maps from GALEX and Spitzer, and from
the ground (UBVRI, Halpha and Hbeta). We select ionizing stellar clusters
associated with HII regions of widely varying morphologies, and derive their
fundamental parameters from population synthesis fitting of their spectral
energy distributions, measured to eliminate local backgrounds accurately. From
these fits, we conclude that the stellar extinction law is highly variable in
the line of sight of young clusters of similar ages. In the particular model
geometry that we consider most appropriate to the sampled regions, we checked
that our findings are not significantly altered by the correct treatment of
radiative transfer effects. The variations are systematic in nature: extinction
laws of the Milky Way or LMC type are associated with compact HII regions (the
compacity being quantified in two different ways), while clusters surrounded by
diffuse HII regions follow extinction laws of the 30 Doradus or SMC type. The
Calzetti starburst attenuation law, although most often degenerate with the 30
Doradus extinction law, overpredicts ionizing photon fluxes by large amounts.
We also find that the extinction law variations are correlated with the column
density of dust species emitting in the near- and mid-infrared. Finally, we
briefly discuss the nebular to stellar extinction ratios, and the excitation of
aromatic band carriers, invalidating their claimed association with cold dust.Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ -- figure 6 abridged her
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