147 research outputs found
In vitro free radical scavenging activity of different extracts of Adansonia digitata L.
The species Adanasonia digitata L. (Bombacaceae) is a multipurpose tree with enormous range of medicinal and economic importance. The objective of the current study was to investigate the free radical scavenging potential of A. digitata. The methanol extracts of different parts i.e., leaf, seed, bark, fruit wall and floral extracts of A. digitata were screened for antioxidant activity using DPPH assay. Results from this study showed that the maximum and minimum percentage of free radical scavenging activity was exhibited by methanol extracts of seed and fruit wall (27.69 & 20) as measured by using DPPH assay. These results showed the antioxidant potential of this medicinal plant to make use in the preparation of drugs with free radical scavenging activity
Near-Infrared Spectroscopy of Carbon-Enhanced Metal-Poor Stars. I. A SOAR/OSIRIS Pilot Study
We report on an abundance analysis for a pilot study of seven Carbon-Enhanced
Metal-Poor (CEMP) stars, based on medium-resolution optical and near-infrared
spectroscopy. The optical spectra are used to estimate [Fe/H], [C/Fe], [N/Fe],
and [Ba/Fe] for our program stars. The near-infrared spectra, obtained during a
limited early science run with the new SOAR 4.1m telescope and the Ohio State
Infrared Imager and Spectrograph (OSIRIS), are used to obtain estimates of
[O/Fe] and 12C/13C. The chemical abundances of CEMP stars are of importance for
understanding the origin of CNO in the early Galaxy, as well as for placing
constraints on the operation of the astrophysical s-process in very
low-metallicity Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) stars.
This pilot study includes a few stars with previously measured [Fe/H],
[C/Fe], [N/Fe],[O/Fe], 12C/13C, and [Ba/Fe], based on high-resolution optical
spectra obtained with large-aperture telescopes. Our analysis demonstrates that
we are able to achieve reasonably accurate determinations of these quantities
for CEMP stars from moderate-resolution optical and near-infrared spectra. This
opens the pathway for the study of significantly larger samples of CEMP stars
in the near future. Furthermore, the ability to measure [Ba/Fe] for (at least
the cooler) CEMP stars should enable one to separate stars that are likely to
be associated with s-process enhancements (the CEMP-s stars) from those that do
not exhibit neutron-capture enhancements (the CEMP-no stars).Comment: 27 pages, including 5 tables, 6 figures, accepted for publication in
The Astronomical Journa
Development of a polymeric piezoelectric C-block actuator using hybrid optimization technique
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/76810/1/AIAA-13031-236.pd
Two Stellar Components in the Halo of the Milky Way
The halo of the Milky Way provides unique elemental abundance and kinematic
information on the first objects to form in the Universe, which can be used to
tightly constrain models of galaxy formation and evolution. Although the halo
was once considered a single component, evidence for its dichotomy has slowly
emerged in recent years from inspection of small samples of halo objects. Here
we show that the halo is indeed clearly divisible into two broadly overlapping
structural components -- an inner and an outer halo -- that exhibit different
spatial density profiles, stellar orbits and stellar metallicities (abundances
of elements heavier than helium). The inner halo has a modest net prograde
rotation, whereas the outer halo exhibits a net retrograde rotation and a peak
metallicity one-third that of the inner halo. These properties indicate that
the individual halo components probably formed in fundamentally different ways,
through successive dissipational (inner) and dissipationless (outer) mergers
and tidal disruption of proto-Galactic clumps.Comment: Two stand-alone files in manuscript, concatenated together. The first
is for the main paper, the second for supplementary information. The version
is consistent with the version published in Natur
The Seventh Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
This paper describes the Seventh Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
(SDSS), marking the completion of the original goals of the SDSS and the end of
the phase known as SDSS-II. It includes 11663 deg^2 of imaging data, with most
of the roughly 2000 deg^2 increment over the previous data release lying in
regions of low Galactic latitude. The catalog contains five-band photometry for
357 million distinct objects. The survey also includes repeat photometry over
250 deg^2 along the Celestial Equator in the Southern Galactic Cap. A
coaddition of these data goes roughly two magnitudes fainter than the main
survey. The spectroscopy is now complete over a contiguous area of 7500 deg^2
in the Northern Galactic Cap, closing the gap that was present in previous data
releases. There are over 1.6 million spectra in total, including 930,000
galaxies, 120,000 quasars, and 460,000 stars. The data release includes
improved stellar photometry at low Galactic latitude. The astrometry has all
been recalibrated with the second version of the USNO CCD Astrograph Catalog
(UCAC-2), reducing the rms statistical errors at the bright end to 45
milli-arcseconds per coordinate. A systematic error in bright galaxy photometr
is less severe than previously reported for the majority of galaxies. Finally,
we describe a series of improvements to the spectroscopic reductions, including
better flat-fielding and improved wavelength calibration at the blue end,
better processing of objects with extremely strong narrow emission lines, and
an improved determination of stellar metallicities. (Abridged)Comment: 20 pages, 10 embedded figures. Accepted to ApJS after minor
correction
Globular Cluster UVIT legacy Survey (GlobUleS) III. Omega Centauri in Far-Ultraviolet
We present the first comprehensive study of the most massive globular cluster
Omega Centauri in the far-ultraviolet (FUV) extending from the center to ~ 28%
of the tidal radius using the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope aboard AstroSat. A
comparison of the FUV-optical color-magnitude diagrams with available canonical
models reveals that the horizontal branch (HB) stars bluer than the knee (hHBs)
and the white dwarfs (WDs) are fainter in the FUV by ~ 0.5 mag than model
predictions. They are also fainter than their counterparts in M13, another
massive cluster. We simulated HB with at least five subpopulations, including
three He-rich populations with a substantial He enrichment of Y up to 0.43 dex,
to reproduce the observed FUV distribution. We find the He-rich younger
subpopulations to be radially more segregated than the He-normal older ones,
suggesting an in-situ enrichment from older generations. The Omega Cen hHBs
span the same effective temperature range as their M13 counterparts, but some
have smaller radii and lower luminosities. This may suggest that a fraction of
Omega Cen hHBs are less massive than those of M13, similar to the result
derived from earlier spectroscopic studies of outer extreme HB stars. The WDs
in Omega Cen and M13 have similar luminosity-radius-effective temperature
parameters, and 0.44 - 0.46 M He-core WD model tracks evolving from
progenitors with Y = 0.4 dex are found to fit the majority of these. This study
provides constraints on the formation models of Omega Cen based on the
estimated range in age, [Fe/H] and Y (in particular), for the HB stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL; 13 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
The Eighth Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey: First Data from SDSS-III
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) started a new phase in August 2008, with
new instrumentation and new surveys focused on Galactic structure and chemical
evolution, measurements of the baryon oscillation feature in the clustering of
galaxies and the quasar Ly alpha forest, and a radial velocity search for
planets around ~8000 stars. This paper describes the first data release of
SDSS-III (and the eighth counting from the beginning of the SDSS). The release
includes five-band imaging of roughly 5200 deg^2 in the Southern Galactic Cap,
bringing the total footprint of the SDSS imaging to 14,555 deg^2, or over a
third of the Celestial Sphere. All the imaging data have been reprocessed with
an improved sky-subtraction algorithm and a final, self-consistent photometric
recalibration and flat-field determination. This release also includes all data
from the second phase of the Sloan Extension for Galactic Understanding and
Evolution (SEGUE-2), consisting of spectroscopy of approximately 118,000 stars
at both high and low Galactic latitudes. All the more than half a million
stellar spectra obtained with the SDSS spectrograph have been reprocessed
through an improved stellar parameters pipeline, which has better determination
of metallicity for high metallicity stars.Comment: Astrophysical Journal Supplements, in press (minor updates from
submitted version
The Milky Way Tomography with SDSS: II. Stellar Metallicity
Using effective temperature and metallicity derived from SDSS spectra for
~60,000 F and G type main sequence stars (0.2<g-r<0.6), we develop polynomial
models for estimating these parameters from the SDSS u-g and g-r colors. We
apply this method to SDSS photometric data for about 2 million F/G stars and
measure the unbiased metallicity distribution for a complete volume-limited
sample of stars at distances between 500 pc and 8 kpc. The metallicity
distribution can be exquisitely modeled using two components with a spatially
varying number ratio, that correspond to disk and halo. The two components also
possess the kinematics expected for disk and halo stars. The metallicity of the
halo component is spatially invariant, while the median disk metallicity
smoothly decreases with distance from the Galactic plane from -0.6 at 500 pc to
-0.8 beyond several kpc. The absence of a correlation between metallicity and
kinematics for disk stars is in a conflict with the traditional decomposition
in terms of thin and thick disks. We detect coherent substructures in the
kinematics--metallicity space, such as the Monoceros stream, which rotates
faster than the LSR, and has a median metallicity of [Fe/H]=-0.96, with an rms
scatter of only ~0.15 dex. We extrapolate our results to the performance
expected from the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) and estimate that the
LSST will obtain metallicity measurements accurate to 0.2 dex or better, with
proper motion measurements accurate to ~0.2 mas/yr, for about 200 million F/G
dwarf stars within a distance limit of ~100 kpc (g<23.5). [abridged]Comment: 40 pages, 21 figures, emulateApJ style, accepted to ApJ, high
resolution figures are available from
http://www.astro.washington.edu/ivezic/sdss/mw/astroph0804.385
Very Low-mass Stellar and Substellar Companions to Solar-like Stars from MARVELS II: A Short-period Companion Orbiting an F Star with Evidence of a Stellar Tertiary And Significant Mutual Inclination
We report the discovery via radial velocity of a short-period (P = 2.430420
\pm 0.000006 days) companion to the F-type main sequence star TYC 2930-00872-1.
A long-term trend in the radial velocities indicates the presence of a tertiary
stellar companion with days. High-resolution spectroscopy of the
host star yields T_eff = 6427 +/- 33 K, log(g) = 4.52 +/- 0.14, and
[Fe/H]=-0.04 +/- 0.05. These parameters, combined with the broad-band spectral
energy distribution and parallax, allow us to infer a mass and radius of the
host star of M_1=1.21 +/- 0.08 M_\odot and R_1=1.09_{-0.13}^{+0.15} R_\odot. We
are able to exclude transits of the inner companion with high confidence. The
host star's spectrum exhibits clear Ca H and K core emission indicating stellar
activity, but a lack of photometric variability and small v*sin(I) suggest the
primary's spin axis is oriented in a pole-on configuration. The rotational
period of the primary from an activity-rotation relation matches the orbital
period of the inner companion to within 1.5 \sigma, suggesting they are tidally
locked. If the inner companion's orbital angular momentum vector is aligned
with the stellar spin axis, as expected through tidal evolution, then it has a
stellar mass of M_2 ~ 0.3-0.4 M_\odot. Direct imaging limits the existence of
stellar companions to projected separations < 30 AU. No set of spectral lines
and no significant flux contribution to the spectral energy distribution from
either companion are detected, which places individual upper mass limits of M <
1.0 M_\odot, provided they are not stellar remnants. If the tertiary is not a
stellar remnant, then it likely has a mass of ~0.5-0.6 M_\odot, and its orbit
is likely significantly inclined from that of the secondary, suggesting that
the Kozai-Lidov mechanism may have driven the dynamical evolution of this
system.Comment: 37 pages, 7 tables, 21 figures, Accepted in A
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