1,847 research outputs found

    Phase Field Model for Dynamics of Sweeping Interface

    Full text link
    Motivated by the drying pattern experiment by Yamazaki and Mizuguchi[J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. {\bf 69} (2000) 2387], we propose the dynamics of sweeping interface, in which material distributed over a region is swept by a moving interface. A model based on a phase field is constructed and results of numerical simulations are presented for one and two dimensions. Relevance of the present model to the drying experiment is discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figure

    Relationships between a roller and a dynamic pressure distribution in circular hydraulic jumps

    Full text link
    We investigated numerically the relation between a roller and the pressure distribution to clarify the dynamics of the roller in circular hydraulic jumps. We found that a roller which characterizes a type II jump is associated with two high pressure regions after the jump, while a type I jump (without the roller) is associated with only one high pressure region. Our numerical results show that building up an appropriate pressure field is essential for a roller.Comment: 10 pages, 7 PS files. To appear in PR

    Experimental study of energy transport in thin Al and Au foils irradiated with a 263-nm laser

    Full text link
    Copyright 1989 American Institute of Physics. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. The following article appeared in Journal of Applied Physics, 65(12), 5068-5071, 1989 and may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.34318

    The Star Formation Rate and Metallicity of the Host Galaxy of the Dark GRB 080325 at z = 1.78

    Get PDF
    We present near-infrared spectroscopy of the host galaxy of the dark gamma-ray burst (GRB) 080325 using Subaru/Multi-Object Infrared Camera and Spectrograph. The obtained spectrum provides a clear detection of H emission and marginal [Nii]λ6584. The host is a massive (M∗ ∼ 1011 Mȯ), dusty (Av ∼ 1.2) star-forming galaxy at z = 1.78. The extinction-corrected star formation rate (SFR) calculated from the H luminosity (35.6-47.0 Mȯ yr-1) is typical among GRB host galaxies (and star-forming galaxies generally) at z > 1; however, the specific SFR is lower than for normal star-forming galaxies at redshift ∼1.6, in contrast to the high specific SFR measured for many of other GRB hosts. The metallicity of the host is estimated to be 12 + log(O/H)KK04 = 8.88. We emphasize that this is one of the most massive host galaxies at z > for which metallicity is measured with emission-line diagnostics. The metallicity is fairly high among GRB hosts, however, this is still lower than the metallicity of normal star-forming galaxies of the same mass at z ∼ 1.6. The metallicity offset from normal star-forming galaxies is close to a typical value of other GRB hosts and indicates that GRB host galaxies are uniformly biased toward low metallicity over a wide range of redshifts and stellar masses. The low-metallicity nature of the GRB 080325 host likely cannot be attributed to the fundamental metallicity relation of star-forming galaxies because it is a metal-poor outlier from the relation and has a low specific star formation rate. Thus, we conclude that metallicity is important to the mechanism that produced this GRB. © 2015. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved

    Initial Results from the Nobeyama Molecular Gas Observations of Distant Bright Galaxies

    Full text link
    We present initial results from the CO survey toward high redshift galaxies using the Nobeyama 45m telescope. Using the new wide bandwidth spectrometer equipped with a two-beam SIS receiver, we have robust new detections of three high redshift (z=1.6-3.4) submillimeter galaxies (SXDF 1100.001, SDP9, and SDP17), one tentative detection (SDSS J160705+533558), and one non-detection (COSMOS-AzTEC1). The galaxies observed during the commissioning phase are sources with known spectroscopic redshifts from previous optical or from wide-band submm spectroscopy. The derived molecular gas mass and line widths from Gaussian fits are ~10^11 Msun and 430-530 km/s, which are consistent with previous CO observations of distant submm galaxies and quasars. The spectrometer that allows a maximum of 32 GHz instantaneous bandwidth will provide new science capabilities at the Nobeyama 45m telescope, allowing us to determine redshifts of bright submm selected galaxies without any prior redshift information.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, PASJ Letter Accepte

    A structural and biochemical model of processive chitin synthesis

    Get PDF
    Chitin synthases (CHS) produce chitin, an essential component of the fungal cell wall. The molecular mechanism of processive chitin synthesis is not understood, limiting the discovery of new inhibitors of this enzyme class. We identified the bacterial glycosyltransferase NodC as an appropriate model system to study the general structure and reaction mechanism of CHS. A high throughput screening-compatible novel assay demonstrates that a known inhibitor of fungal CHS also inhibit NodC. A structural model of NodC, on the basis of the recently published BcsA cellulose synthase structure, enabled probing of the catalytic mechanism by mutagenesis, demonstrating the essential roles of the DD and QXXRW catalytic motifs. The NodC membrane topology was mapped, validating the structural model. Together, these approaches give insight into the CHS structure and mechanism and provide a platform for the discovery of inhibitors for this antifungal target

    "Dark" GRB 080325 in a Dusty Massive Galaxy at z ~ 2

    Full text link
    We present optical and near infrared observations of GRB 080325 classified as a "Dark GRB". Near-infrared observations with Subaru/MOIRCS provided a clear detection of afterglow in Ks band, although no optical counterpart was reported. The flux ratio of rest-wavelength optical to X-ray bands of the afterglow indicates that the dust extinction along the line of sight to the afterglow is Av = 2.7 - 10 mag. This large extinction is probably the major reason for optical faintness of GRB 080325. The J - Ks color of the host galaxy, (J - Ks = 1.3 in AB magnitude), is significantly redder than those for typical GRB hosts previously identified. In addition to J and Ks bands, optical images in B, Rc, i', and z' bands with Subaru/Suprime-Cam were obtained at about one year after the burst, and a photometric redshift of the host is estimated to be z_{photo} = 1.9. The host luminosity is comparable to L^{*} at z \sim 2 in contrast to the sub-L^{*} property of typical GRB hosts at lower redshifts. The best-fit stellar population synthesis model for the host shows that a large dust extinction (Av = 0.8 mag) attributes to the red nature of the host and that the host galaxy is massive (M_{*} = 7.0 \times 10^{10} Msun) which is one of the most massive GRB hosts previously identified. By assuming that the mass-metallicity relation for star-forming galaxies at z \sim 2 is applicable for the GRB host, this large stellar mass suggests the high metallicity environment around GRB 080325, consistent with inferred large extinction.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa

    SXDF-UDS-CANDELS-ALMA 1.5 arcmin2^2 deep survey

    Full text link
    We have conducted 1.1 mm ALMA observations of a contiguous 105×50105'' \times 50'' or 1.5 arcmin2^2 window in the SXDF-UDS-CANDELS. We achieved a 5σ\sigma sensitivity of 0.28 mJy, providing a flat sensus of dusty star-forming galaxies with LIR6×1011L_{\rm IR} \sim6\times10^{11} LL_\odot (for TdustT_{\rm dust} =40K) up to z10z\sim10 thanks to the negative K-correction at this wavelength. We detected 5 brightest sources (S/N>>6) and 18 low-significance sources (5>>S/N>>4; these may contain spurious detections, though). One of the 5 brightest ALMA sources (S1.1mm=0.84±0.09S_{\rm 1.1mm} = 0.84 \pm 0.09 mJy) is extremely faint in the WFC3 and VLT/HAWK-I images, demonstrating that a contiguous ALMA imaging survey is able to uncover a faint dust-obscured population that is invisible in deep optical/near-infrared surveys. We found a possible [CII]-line emitter at z=5.955z=5.955 or a low-zz CO emitting galaxy within the field, which may allow us to constrain the [CII] and/or the CO luminosity functions across the history of the universe.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, to appear in the proceedings of IAU Symposium 319 "Galaxies at High Redshift and Their Evolution over Cosmic Time", eds. S. Kaviraj & H. Ferguso
    corecore