87 research outputs found
A Novel Modelling Process in Chemistry: Merging Biological and Mathematical Perspectives to Develop Modelling Competences
Models are essential in science and therefore in scientific literacy. Therefore, pupils need to
attain competency in the appropriate use of models. This so-called modelâmethodical competence
distinguishes between model competence (the conceptual part) and modelling competence (the
procedural part), wherefrom a definition follows a general overview of the concept of models in this
article. Based on this, modelling processes enable the promotion of the modelling competence. In this
context, two established approaches mainly applied in other disciplines (biology and mathematics)
and a survey among chemistry teachers and employees of chemistry education departments (N = 98)
form the starting point for developing a chemistry modelling process. The article concludes with
a description of the developed modelling process, which by its design, provides an opportunity to
develop studentsâ modelling competence
The Star Formation Rate Function of the Local Universe
We have derived the bivariate luminosity function for the far ultraviolet
(1530Angstroms) and far infrared (60 microns). We used matched GALEX and IRAS
data, and redshifts from NED and PSC-z. We have derived a total star formation
luminosity function phi(L_{tot}), with L_{tot} = L_{FUV}+L_{FIR}. Using these,
we determined the cosmic ``star formation rate'' function and density for the
local universe. The total SFR function is fit very well by a log-normal
distribution over five decades of luminosity. We find that the bivariate
luminosity function phi(L_{FUV},L_{FIR}) shows a bimodal behavior, with L_{FIR}
tracking L_{FUV} for L_{TOT}< 10^10 L_sun, and L_{FUV} saturating at 10^10
L_sun, while L_{TOT} L_{FIR} for higher luminosities. We also calculate the SFR
density and compare it to other measurements.Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer
(GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of
papers will be available at http:/www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after
November 22, 200
GALEX UV Color Relations for Nearby Early-Type Galaxies
We use GALEX/optical photometry to construct color-color relationships for
early-type galaxies sorted by morphological type. We have matched objects in
the GALEX GR1 public release and the first IR1.1 internal release, with the RC3
early-type galaxies having a morphological type -5.5<T<-1.5 with mean error in
T<1.5, and mean error on (B-V)T<0.05. After visual inspection of each match, we
are left with 130 galaxies with a reliable GALEX pipeline photometry in the
far-UV and near-UV bands. This sample is divided into Ellipticals (-5.5<T<-3.5)
and Lenticulars (-3.5<T<-1.5). After correction for the Galactic extinction,
the color-color diagrams FUV-NUV vs. (B-V)_{Tc} are plotted for the two
subsamples. We find a tight anti-correlation between the FUV-NUV and (B-V)_{Tc}
colors for Ellipticals, the UV color getting bluer when the (B-V)_{Tc} get
redder. This relationship very likely is an extension of the color-metallicity
relationship into the GALEX NUV band. We suspect that the main source of the
correlation is metal line blanketing in the NUV band. The FUV-NUV vs B-V
correlation has larger scatter for lenticular galaxies; we speculate this
reflects the presence of low level star formation. If the latter objects (i.e.
those that are blue both in FUV-NUV and B-V) are interpreted as harboring
recent star formation activity, this would be the case for a few percent (~4%)
of Ellipticals and ~15% of Lenticulars; this would make about 10% of early-type
galaxies with residual star formation in our full sample of 130 early-type
galaxies. We also plot FUV-NUV vs. the Mg_2 index and central velocity
dispersion. We find a tight anti-correlation between FUV-NUV and the Mg_2
index(...).Comment: 25 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in ApJS (abstract
abridged), typos corrected in section 2.
New Constraints on the Star Formation Histories and Dust Attenuation of Galaxies in the Local Universe from GALEX
We derive a variety of physical parameters including star formation rates
(SFRs), dust attenuation and burst mass fractions for 6472 galaxies observed by
the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) and present in the SDSS DR1 main
spectroscopic sample. Parameters are estimated in a statistical way by
comparing each observed broad-band SED (two GALEX and five SDSS bands) with an
extensive library of model galaxy SEDs, which cover a wide range of star
formation histories and include stochastic starbursts. We compare the
constraints derived using SDSS bands only with those derived using the
combination of SDSS and GALEX photometry. We find that the addition of the
GALEX bands leads to significant improvement in the estimation of both the dust
optical depth and the star formation rate over timescales of 100 Myr to 1 Gyr
in a galaxy. We are sensitive to SFRs as low as 10^{-3} M_sun/yr, and we find
that low levels of star formation (SF) are mostly associated with early-type,
red galaxies. The least massive galaxies have ratios of current to
past-averaged SF rates (b-parameter) consistent with constant SF over a Hubble
time. For late-type galaxies, this ratio on average decreases with mass. We
find that b correlates tightly with NUV-r color, implying that the SF history
of a galaxy can be constrained on the basis of the NUV-r color alone. The
fraction of galaxies that have undergone a significant starburst episode within
the last 1 Gyr steeply declines with mass-from ~20% for galaxies with ~10^8
M_sun to ~5% for ~10^11 M_sun galaxies.Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer
(GALEX) ApJ Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of papers will be
available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS after Nov 22, 200
The Look-back Time Evolution of Far-Ultraviolet Flux from the Brightest Cluster Elliptical Galaxies at z < 0.2
We present the GALEX UV photometry of the elliptical galaxies in Abell
clusters at moderate redshifts (z < 0.2) for the study of the look-back time
evolution of the UV upturn phenomenon. The brightest elliptical galaxies (M_r <
-22) in 12 remote clusters are compared with the nearby giant elliptical
galaxies of comparable optical luminosity in the Fornax and Virgo clusters. The
sample galaxies presented here appear to be quiescent without signs of massive
star formation or strong nuclear activity, and show smooth, extended profiles
in their UV images indicating that the far-UV (FUV) light is mostly produced by
hot stars in the underlying old stellar population. Compared to their
counterparts in nearby clusters, the FUV flux of cluster giant elliptical
galaxies at moderate redshifts fades rapidly with ~ 2 Gyrs of look-back time,
and the observed pace in FUV - V color evolution agrees reasonably well with
the prediction from the population synthesis models where the dominant FUV
source is hot horizontal-branch stars and their progeny. A similar amount of
color spread (~ 1 mag) in FUV - V exists among the brightest cluster elliptical
galaxies at z ~ 0.1, as observed among the nearby giant elliptical galaxies of
comparable optical luminosity.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Special GALEX ApJ Supplement,
December 200
The detection of M-dwarf UV flare events in the GALEX data archives
We present the preliminary results from implementing a new software tool that
enables inspection of time-tagged photon data for the astronomical sources
contained within individual GALEX ultraviolet images of the sky. We have
inspected the photon data contained within 1802 GALEX images to reveal rapid,
short-term (<500 sec) UV source variability in the form of stellar flares. The
mean associated change in NUV magnitude due to this flaring activity is
2.7+/-0.3 mag. A list of 49 new UV variable-star candidates is presented,
together with their associated Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) photometric
magnitudes. From these data we can associate the main source of these UV flare
events with magnetic activity on M-dwarf stars. Photometric parallaxes have
been determined for 32 of these sources, placing them at distances ranging from
approximately 25 to 1000pc. The average UV flare energy for these flare events
is 2.5E30 ergs, which is of a similar energy to that of U-band, X-ray and EUV
flares observed on many local M-dwarf stars. We have found that stars of
classes M0 to M5 flare with energies spanning a far larger range and with an
energy approximately 5 times greater than those of later (M6 to M8) spectral
type.Comment: Accepted for the Astrophysical Journal Supplement, GALEX Special
Issu
Recent Star Formation in the Extreme Outer Disk of M83
Ultraviolet imaging with the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) has revealed
an extensive sample of UV-bright stellar complexes in the extreme outer disk of
M83, extending to about four times the radius where the majority of HII regions
are detected (R_HII = 5.1' or 6.6 kpc). These sources are typically associated
with large-scale filamentary HI structures in the warped outer disk of M83, and
are distributed beyond the galactocentric radii at which molecular ISM has yet
been detected. We present measured properties of these stellar complexes,
including FUV and NUV magnitudes and local gas surface density. Only a subset
of the outer disk UV sources have corresponding HII regions detected in H-alpha
imaging, consistent with a sample of mixed age in which some sources are a few
Myr old and others are much more evolved (~ 10^8 yr).Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer
(GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of
papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after
November 22, 200
Panoramic GALEX FUV and NUV imaging of M31 and M33
We present Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) far-UV and near-UV mosaic
observations covering the entirety of M31 and M33. For both targets, we measure
the decline of surface brightness (in FUV and NUV) and changes in FUV--NUV
color as a function of galactocentric radius. These UV radial profiles are
compared to the distribution of ionized gas traced by H-alpha emission. We find
that the extent of the UV emission, in both targets, is greater than the extent
of the observed HII regions and diffuse ionized gas. We determine the
ultraviolet diffuse fraction in M33 using our FUV observations and compare it
to the H-alpha diffuse fraction obtained from wide-field narrow-band imaging.
The FUV diffuse fraction appears to be remarkably constant near 0.65 over a
large range in galactocentric radius, with departures to higher values in
circumnuclear regions and, most notably, at the limit of the H-alpha disk. We
suggest that the increase in FUV diffuse fraction at large galactocentric radii
could indicate that a substantial portion of the diffuse emission beyond this
point is not generated in situ but rather scattered from dust, after
originating in the vicinity of the disk's outermost HII regions. Radial
variation of the H-alpha diffuse fraction was also measured. We found the
H-alpha diffuse fraction generally near 0.4 but rising toward the galaxy
center, up to 0.6. We made no attempt to correct our diffuse fraction
measurements for position-dependent extinction, so the quoted values are best
interpreted as upper limits given the plausibly higher extinction for stellar
clusters relative to their surroundings.Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer
(GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of
papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after
November 22, 2004. Individual high-resolution figures can be found at
http://dolomiti.pha.jhu.edu/publgoto.htm
The Galex Ultraviolet Variability (GUVV) Catalog
We present Version 1.0 of the NASA Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX)
ultraviolet variability catalog (GUVV) that contains information on 84
time-variable and transient sources gained with simultaneous near and far
ultraviolet photometric observations. These time-variable sources were
serendipitously revealed in the various 1.2 degree star fields currently being
surveyed by the GALEX satellite in two ultraviolet bands (NUV 1750-2750A, FUV
1350-1750A) with limiting AB magnitudes of 23-25. The largest-amplitude
variable objects presently detected by GALEX are M-dwarf flare stars, which can
brighten by 5-10 mag in both the NUV and FUV bands during short duration (<
500s) outbursts. Other types of large-amplitude ultraviolet variable objects
include ab-type RR Lyrae stars, which can vary periodically by 2-5mag in the
GALEX FUV band. This first GUVV catalog lists galactic positions and possible
source identifications in order to provide the astronomical community with a
list of time-variable objects that can now be repeatedly observed at other
wavelengths. We expect the total number of time-variable source detections to
increase as the GALEX mission progresses, such that later version numbers of
the GUVV catalog will contain substantially more variable sources
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