516 research outputs found

    Review of Big Bang Nucleosynthesis and Primordial Abundances

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    Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN) is the synthesis of the light nuclei, Deuterium, He3, He4 and Li7, during the first few minutes of the universe. This review concentrates on recent improvements in the measurement of the primordial (after BBN, and prior to modification) abundances of these nuclei. We mention improvement in the standard theory, and the non-standard extensions which are limited by the data. (abridged)Comment: 61 pages, to appear in Physica Script

    Re-calibration of SDF/SXDS Photometric Catalogs of Suprime-Cam with SDSS Data Release 8

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    We present photometric recalibration of the Subaru Deep Field (SDF) and Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Survey (SXDS). Recently, Yamanoi et al. (2012) suggested the existence of a discrepancy between the SDF and SXDS catalogs. We have used the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 8 (DR8) catalog and compared stars in common between SDF/SXDS and SDSS. We confirmed that there exists a 0.12 mag offset in B-band between the SDF and SXDS catalogs. Moreover, we found that significant zero point offsets in i-band (~ 0.10 mag) and z-band (~ 0.14 mag) need to be introduced to the SDF/SXDS catalogs to make it consistent with the SDSS catalog. We report the measured zero point offsets of five filter bands of SDF/SXDS catalogs. We studied the potential cause of these offsets, but the origins are yet to be understood.Comment: 36 pages, 19 figures(128 EPS files), PASJ accepte

    Relationship Between Oral Malodor and Oral Microbiota

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    Evidence-Based Control of Oral Malodor

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    Relative Flux Calibration of Keck HIRES Echelle Spectra

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    We describe a new method to calibrate the relative flux levels in spectra from the HIRES echelle spectrograph on the Keck-I telescope. Standard data reduction techniques that transfer the instrument response between HIRES integrations leave errors in the flux of 5 - 10%, because the effective response varies. The flux errors are most severe near the ends of each spectral order, where there can be discontinuous jumps. The source of these errors is uncertain, but may include changes in the vignetting connected to the optical alignment. Our new flux calibration method uses a calibrated reference spectrum of each target to calibrate individual HIRES integrations. We determine the instrument response independently for each integration, and hence we avoid the need to transfer the instrument response between HIRES integrations. The procedure can be applied to any HIRES spectrum, or any other spectrum. While the accuracy of the method depends upon many factors, we have been able to flux calibrate a HIRES spectrum to 1% over scales of 200 A that include order joins. We illustrate the method with spectra of Q1243+3047 towards which we have measured the deuterium to hydrogen abundance ratio.Comment: 24 pages, 17 figures, submitted to PAS

    Predicting QSO Continua in the Ly Alpha Forest

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    We present a method to make predictions with sets of correlated data values, in this case QSO flux spectra. We predict the continuum in the Lyman-Alpha forest of a QSO, from 1020 -- 1216 A, using the spectrum of that QSO from 1216 -- 1600 A . We find correlations between the unabsorbed flux in these two wavelengths regions in the HST spectra of 50 QSOs. We use principal component analysis (PCA) to summarize the variety of these spectra and we relate the weights of the principal components for 1020 -- 1600 A to the weights for 1216 -- 1600 A, and we apply this relation to make predictions. We test the method on the HST spectra, and we find an average absolute flux error of 9%, with a range 3 -- 30%, where individual predictions are systematically too low or too high. We mention several ways in which the predictions might be improved.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Ap
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