854 research outputs found
Stellar Populations Found in the Central kpc of Four Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies at Intermediate Redshift
We investigate the star formation history of the central regions of four
Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies (LCBGs). LCBGs are blue (B-V<0.6), compact
(MU_B<21.5 mag arcsec^-2) galaxies with absolute magnitudes M_B brighter than
-17.5. The LCBGs analyzed here are located at 0.436<z<0.525. They are among the
most luminous (M_B < -20.5), blue (B-V < 0.4) and high surface brightness (MU_B
< 19.0 mag arcsec^-2) of this population. The observational data used were
obtained with the HST/STIS spectrograph, the HST/WF/PC-2 camera and the
HST/NICMOS first camera. We find evidence for multiple stellar populations. One
of them is identified as the ionizing population, and the other one corresponds
to the underlying stellar generation.
The estimated masses of the inferred populations are compatible with the
dynamical masses, which are typically 2--10x 10^9 M_sun. Our models also
indicate that the first episodes of star formation the presented LCBGs
underwent happened between 5 and 7 Gyr ago.
We compare the stellar populations found in LCBGs with the stellar
populations present in bright, local HII galaxies, nearby spheroidal systems
and Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxies. It turns out that the underlying stellar
populations of LCBGs are similar yet bluer to those of local HII galaxies. It
is also the case that the passive color evolution of the LCBGs could convert
them into local Spheroidal galaxies if no further episode of star formation
takes place. Our results help to impose constraints on evolutionary scenarios
for the population of LCBGs found commonly at intermediate redshifts.Comment: 35 pages, 10 Figures. Accepted for publication in AJ. Compile with
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Racial and ethnic inequality in Latin America
This chapter examines socioeconomic inequality in Latin America through the lens of race and ethnicity. We primarily use national census data from the International Public Use Micro Data Sample (IPUMS). Since censuses use inconsistent measures of race and ethnicity, we also draw on two additional measures from the Latin American Public Opinion Project (LAPOP). Unlike censuses, LAPOP data offer a more consistent ethnoracial scheme across countries and a unique interviewer-rated skin color measure. Our study shows that black and indigenous populations and those with darker skin color experience educational, income, and occupational disadvantages, even after controlling for their social origins. However, inequality and hierarchical ordering of Afro-descendants, indigenous peoples, mestizos, whites, and others vary across countries. We include an extended examination of educational inequality in Brazil, the region’s largest country. The chapter concludes with an exploration of public policy approaches to address black and indigenous disadvantage across Latin America while also highlighting the case of Brazil, where targeted antiracism policy is most advanced
Boundary element formulation for elastoplastic analysis of axisymmetric bodies
The complete formulation of B.E.M. applied to the analysis of axisymmetric bodies acting in the plastic range is presented in this paper. The concept of derivative of a singular integral given by Mikhlin has been used in order to calculate the stresses in internal points. Also a semianalytical approach is proposed to compute the matrix coefficients, presenting the way in which it can be done and the results obtained
Out-of-phase oscillation between superfluid and thermal components for a trapped Bose condensate under oscillatory excitation
The vortex nucleation and the emergence of quantum turbulence induced by
oscillating magnetic fields, introduced by Henn E A L, et al. 2009 (Phys. Rev.
A 79, 043619) and Henn E A L, et al. 2009 (Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 045301), left
a few open questions concerning the basic mechanisms causing those interesting
phenomena. Here, we report the experimental observation of the slosh dynamics
of a magnetically trapped Rb Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) under the
influence of a time-varying magnetic field. We observed a clear relative
displacement in between the condensed and the thermal fraction center-of-mass.
We have identified this relative counter move as an out-of-phase oscillation
mode, which is able to produce ripples on the condensed/thermal fractions
interface. The out-of-phase mode can be included as a possible mechanism
involved in the vortex nucleation and further evolution when excited by time
dependent magnetic fields.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, 25 reference
Emission-Line Galaxy Surveys as Probes of the Spatial Distribution of Dwarf Galaxies. I. The University of Michigan Survey
Objective-prism surveys which select galaxies on the basis of line-emission
are extremely effective at detecting low-luminosity galaxies and constitute
some of the deepest available samples of dwarfs. In this study, we confirm that
emission-line galaxies (ELGs) in the University of Michigan (UM)
objective-prism survey (MacAlpine et al. 1977-1981) are reliable tracers of
large-scale structure, and utilize the depth of the samples to examine the
spatial distribution of low-luminosity (M -18.0) dwarfs relative to
higher luminosity giant galaxies (M -18.0) in the Updated Zwicky
Catalogue (Falco et al. 1999). New spectroscopic data are presented for 26 UM
survey objects. We analyze the relative clustering properties of the overall
starbursting ELG and normal galaxy populations, using nearest neighbor and
correlation function statistics. This allows us to determine whether the
activity in ELGs is primarily caused by gravitational interactions. We conclude
that galaxy-galaxy encounters are not the sole cause of activity in ELGs since
ELGs tend to be more isolated and are more often found in the voids when
compared to their normal galaxy counterparts. Furthermore, statistical analyses
performed on low-luminosity dwarf ELGs show that the dwarfs are less clustered
when compared to their non-active giant neighbors. The UM dwarf samples have
greater percentages of nearest neighbor separations at large values and lower
correlation function amplitudes relative to the UZC giant galaxy samples. These
results are consistent with the expectations of galaxy biasing.Comment: 17 pages, 4 tables, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in the Ap
HST morphologies of local Lyman break galaxy analogs I: Evidence for starbursts triggered by merging
Heckman et al. (2005) used the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) UV imaging
survey to show that there exists a rare population of nearby compact
UV-luminous galaxies (UVLGs) that closely resembles high redshift Lyman break
galaxies (LBGs). We present HST images in the UV, optical, and Ha, and
resimulate them at the depth and resolution of the GOODS/UDF fields to show
that the morphologies of UVLGs are also similar to those of LBGs. Our sample of
8 LBG analogs thus provides detailed insight into the connection between star
formation and LBG morphology. Faint tidal features or companions can be seen in
all of the rest-frame optical images, suggesting that the starbursts are the
result of a merger or interaction. The UV/optical light is dominated by
unresolved (~100-300 pc) super starburst regions (SSBs). A detailed comparison
with the galaxies Haro 11 and VV 114 at z=0.02 indicates that the SSBs
themselves consist of diffuse stars and (super) star clusters. The structural
features revealed by the new HST images occur on very small physical scales and
are thus not detectable in images of high redshift LBGs, except in a few cases
where they are magnified by gravitational lensing. We propose, therefore, that
LBGs are mergers of gas-rich, relatively low-mass (~10^10 Msun) systems, and
that the mergers trigger the formation of SSBs. If galaxies at high redshifts
are dominated by SSBs, then the faint end slope of the luminosity function is
predicted to have slope alpha~2. Our results are the most direct confirmation
to date of models that predict that the main mode of star formation in the
early universe was highly collisional.Comment: 32 pages, 15 figures. ApJ In pres
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