241 research outputs found
Post-traumatic brachial plexus MRI in practice
AbstractInjuries are separated into spinal nerve root avulsions (pre-ganglionic lesions) and more distal rupture (post-ganglionic lesions). The lesions may be associated with different nerve root levels. Spinal MRI is used to diagnose pre-ganglionic lesions, which may be present in the absence of pseudomeningoceles. The other sequences described are used to diagnose post-ganglionic lesions, regardless of the type of lesion. Knowledge that a graftable C5 nerve root is present is important in the treatment strategy. Contrast enhancement in the scalene triangle does not predict the quality of the nerve root (continuous injury with response to peroperative stimulation or division of the root needing grafting). Understanding post-traumatic neuronal injuries to the brachial plexus. Knowing how to look for spinal MRI abnormalities and post-ganglionic abnormalities
The Mid-Infrared Spectra of Normal Galaxies
The mid-infrared spectra (2.5 to 5 and 5.7 to 11.6 mu) obtained by ISO-PHOT
reveal the interstellar medium emission from galaxies powered by star formation
to be strongly dominated by the aromatic features at 6.2, 7.7, 8.6 and 11.3 mu.
Additional emission appears in-between the features, and an underlying
continuum is clearly evident at 3-5 mu. This continuum would contribute about a
third of the luminosity in the 3 to 13 mu range. The features together carry 5
to 30% of the 40-to-120 mu `FIR' luminosity. The relative fluxes in individual
features depend very weakly on galaxy parameters such as the far-infrared
colors, direct evidence that the emitting particles are not in thermal
equilibrium. The dip at 10 mu is unlikely to result from silicate absorption,
since its shape is invariant among galaxies. The continuum component has a f_nu
\~ nu^{0.65} shape between 3 and 5 mu and carries 1 to 4% of the FIR
luminosity; its extrapolation to longer wavelengths falls well below the
spectrum in the 6 to 12 mu range. This continuum component is almost certainly
of non-stellar origin, and is probably due to fluctuating grains without
aromatic features. The spectra reported here typify the integrated emission
from the interstellar medium of the majority of star-forming galaxies, and
could thus be used to obtain redshifts of highly extincted galaxies up to z=3
with SIRTF.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, uses AAS LaTeX; to appear in the Astrophysical
Journal Letter
The HST Key Project on the Extragalactic Distance Scale XXVI. The Calibration of Population II Secondary Distance Indicators and the Value of the Hubble Constant
A Cepheid-based calibration is derived for four distance indicators that
utilize stars in the old stellar populations: the tip of the red giant branch
(TRGB), the planetary nebula luminosity function (PNLF), the globular cluster
luminosity function (GCLF) and the surface brightness fluctuation method (SBF).
The calibration is largely based on the Cepheid distances to 18 spiral galaxies
within cz =1500 km/s obtained as part of the HST Key Project on the
Extragalactic Distance Scale, but relies also on Cepheid distances from
separate HST and ground-based efforts. The newly derived calibration of the SBF
method is applied to obtain distances to four Abell clusters in the velocity
range between 3800 and 5000 km/s, observed by Lauer et al. (1998) using the
HST/WFPC2. Combined with cluster velocities corrected for a cosmological flow
model, these distances imply a value of the Hubble constant of H0 = 69 +/- 4
(random) +/- 6 (systematic) km/s/Mpc. This result assumes that the Cepheid PL
relation is independent of the metallicity of the variable stars; adopting a
metallicity correction as in Kennicutt et al. (1998), would produce a (5 +/-
3)% decrease in H0. Finally, the newly derived calibration allows us to
investigate systematics in the Cepheid, PNLF, SBF, GCLF and TRGB distance
scales.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 48 pages
(including 13 figures and 4 tables), plus two additional tables in landscape
format. Also available at http://astro.caltech.edu/~lff/pub.htm K' SBF
magnitudes have been update
The HST Key Project on the Extragalactic Distance Scale. XXII. The Discovery of Cepheids in NGC 1326-A
We report on the detection of Cepheids and the first distance measurement to
the spiral galaxy NGC 1326-A, a member of the Fornax cluster of galaxies. We
have employed data obtained with the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 on board
the Hubble Space Telescope. Over a 49 day interval, a total of twelve V-band
(F555W) and eight I-band (F814W) epochs of observation were obtained. Two
photometric reduction packages, ALLFRAME and DoPHOT, have been employed to
obtain photometry measures from the three Wide Field CCDs. Variability analysis
yields a total of 17 Cepheids in common with both photometry datasets, with
periods ranging between 10 and 50 days. Of these 14 Cepheids with high-quality
lightcurves are used to fit the V and I period-luminosity relations and derive
apparent distance moduli, assuming a Large Magellanic Cloud distance modulus
(m-M) (LMC) = 18.50 +- 0.10 mag and color excess E(B-V) = 0.10 mag. Assuming
A(V)/E(V-I) = 2.45, the DoPHOT data yield a true distance modulus to NGC 1326-A
of (m-M)_0 = 31.36 +- 0.17 (random) +- 0.13 (systematic) mag, corresponding to
a distance of 18.7 \pm 1.5 (random) \pm 1.2 (systematic) Mpc. The derived
distance to NGC 1326-A is in good agreement with the distance derived
previously to NGC 1365, another spiral galaxy member of the Fornax cluster.
However the distances to both galaxies are significantly lower than to NGC
1425, a third Cepheid calibrator in the outer parts of the cluster.Comment: 33 pages A gzipped tar file containing 12 figures can be obtained
from http://www.ipac.caltech.edu/H0kp/n1326a/n1326a.htm
A Database of Cepheid Distance Moduli and TRGB, GCLF, PNLF and SBF Data Useful for Distance Determinations
We present a compilation of Cepheid distance moduli and data for four
secondary distance indicators that employ stars in the old stellar populations:
the planetary nebula luminosity function (PNLF), the globular cluster
luminosity function (GCLF), the tip of the red giant branch (TRGB), and the
surface brightness fluctuation (SBF) method. The database includes all data
published as of July 15, 1999. The main strength of this compilation resides in
all data being on a consistent and homogeneous system: all Cepheid distances
are derived using the same calibration of the period-luminosity relation, the
treatment of errors is consistent for all indicators, measurements which are
not considered reliable are excluded. As such, the database is ideal for
inter-comparing any of the distance indicators considered, or for deriving a
Cepheid calibration to any secondary distance indicator. Specifically, the
database includes: 1) Cepheid distances, extinctions and metallicities; 2)
apparent magnitudes of the PNLF cutoff; 3) apparent magnitudes and colors of
the turnover of the GCLF (both in the V- and B-bands); 4) apparent magnitudes
of the TRGB (in the I-band) and V-I colors at and 0.5 magnitudes fainter than
the TRGB; 5) apparent surface brightness fluctuation magnitudes I, K', K_short,
and using the F814W filter with the HST/WFPC2. In addition, for every galaxy in
the database we give reddening estimates from DIRBE/IRAS as well as HI maps,
J2000 coordinates, Hubble and T-type morphological classification, apparent
total magnitude in B, and systemic velocity. (Abridged)Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Supplement
Series. Because of space limitations, the figures included are low resolution
bitmap images. Original figures can be found at
http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~laura/pub.ht
Towards an Understanding of the Mid-Infrared Surface Brightness of Normal Galaxies
We report a mid-infrared color and surface brightness analysis of IC 10, NGC
1313, and NGC 6946, three of the nearby galaxies studied under the Infrared
Space Observatory Key Project on Normal Galaxies. Images with < 9 arcsecond
(170 pc) resolution of these nearly face-on, late-type galaxies were obtained
using the LW2 (6.75 mu) and LW3 (15 mu) ISOCAM filters. Though their global
I_nu(6.75 mu)/I_nu(15 mu) flux ratios are similar and typical of normal
galaxies, they show distinct trends of this color ratio with mid-infrared
surface brightness. We find that I_nu(6.75 mu)/I_nu(15 mu) ~< 1 only occurs for
regions of intense heating activity where the continuum rises at 15 micron and
where PAH destruction can play an important role. The shape of the
color-surface brightness trend also appears to depend, to the second-order, on
the hardness of the ionizing radiation. We discuss these findings in the
context of a two-component model for the phases of the interstellar medium and
suggest that star formation intensity is largely responsible for the
mid-infrared surface brightness and colors within normal galaxies, whereas
differences in dust column density are the primary drivers of variations in the
mid-infrared surface brightness between the disks of normal galaxies.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures, uses AAS LaTeX; to appear in the November
Astronomical Journa
A Cepheid Distance to NGC 4603 in Centaurus
In an attempt to use Cepheid variables to determine the distance to the
Centaurus cluster, we have obtained images of NGC 4603 with the Hubble Space
Telescope on 9 epochs using WFPC2 and the F555W and F814W filters. This galaxy
has been suggested to lie within the ``Cen30'' portion of the cluster and is
the most distant object for which this method has been attempted. Previous
distance estimates for Cen30 have varied significantly and some have presented
disagreements with the peculiar velocity predicted from redshift surveys,
motivating this investigation. Using our observations, we have found 61
candidate Cepheid variable stars; however, a significant fraction of these
candidates are likely to be nonvariable stars whose magnitude measurement
errors happen to fit a Cepheid light curve of significant amplitude for some
choice of period and phase. Through a maximum likelihood technique, we
determine that we have observed 43 +/- 7 real Cepheids and that NGC 4603 has a
distance modulus of 32.61 +0.11/-0.10 (random, 1 sigma) +0.24/-0.25
(systematic, adding in quadrature), corresponding to a distance of 33.3 Mpc.
This is consistent with a number of recent estimates of the distance to NGC
4603 or Cen30 and implies a small peculiar velocity consistent with predictions
from the IRAS 1.2 Jy redshift survey if the galaxy lies in the foreground of
the cluster.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 17 pages with
17 embedded figures and 3 tables using emulateapj.sty. Additional figures and
images may be obtained from http://astro.berkeley.edu/~marc/n4603
The HST Key Project on the Extragalactic Distance Scale XXV. A Recalibration of Cepheid Distances to Type Ia Supernovae and the Value of the Hubble Constant
Cepheid-based distances to seven Type Ia supernovae (SNe)-host galaxies have
been derived using the standard HST Key Project on the Extragalactic Distance
Scale pipeline. For the first time, this allows for a transparent comparison of
data accumulated as part of three different HST projects, the Key Project, the
Sandage et al. Type Ia SNe program, and the Tanvir et al. Leo I Group study.
Re-analyzing the Tanvir et al. galaxy and six Sandage et al. galaxies we find a
mean (weighted) offset in true distance moduli of 0.12+/-0.07 mag -- i.e., 6%
in linear distance -- in the sense of reducing the distance scale, or
increasing H0. Adopting the reddening-corrected Hubble relations of Suntzeff et
al. (1999), tied to a zero point based upon SNe~1990N, 1981B, 1998bu, 1989B,
1972E and 1960F and the photometric calibration of Hill et al. (1998), leads to
a Hubble constant of H0=68+/-2(random)+/-5(systematic) km/s/Mpc. Adopting the
Kennicutt et al. (1998) Cepheid period-luminosity-metallicity dependency
decreases the inferred H0 by 4%. The H0 result from Type Ia SNe is now in good
agreement, to within their respective uncertainties, with that from the
Tully-Fisher and surface brightness fluctuation relations.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. 62 pages,
LaTeX, 9 Postscript figures. Also available at
http://casa.colorado.edu/~bgibson/publications.htm
The HST Key Project on the Extragalactic Distance Scale. XXVIII. Combining the Constraints on the Hubble Constant
Since the launch of the Hubble Space Telescope nine years ago, Cepheid
distances to 25 galaxies have been determined for the purpose of calibrating
secondary distance indicators. A variety of these can now be calibrated, and
the accompanying papers by Sakai, Kelson, Ferrarese, and Gibson employ the full
set of 25 galaxies to consider the Tully-Fisher relation, the fundamental plane
of elliptical galaxies, Type Ia supernovae, and surface brightness
fluctuations.
When calibrated with Cepheid distances, each of these methods yields a
measurement of the Hubble constant and a corresponding measurement uncertainty.
We combine these measurements in this paper, together with a model of the
velocity field, to yield the best available estimate of the value of H_0 within
the range of these secondary distance indicators and its uncertainty.
The result is H_0 = 71 +/- 6 km/sec/Mpc. The largest contributor to the
uncertainty of this 67% confidence level result is the distance of the Large
Magellanic Cloud, which has been assumed to be 50 +/- 3 kpc
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