1,079 research outputs found
The Evolution of Damped Lyman-alpha Absorbers: Metallicities and Star Formation Rates
The damped Lyman-alpha (DLA) and sub-DLA quasar absorption lines provide
powerful probes of the evolution of metals, gas, and stars in galaxies. One
major obstacle in trying to understand the evolution of DLAs and sub-DLAs has
been the small number of metallicity measurements at z < 1.5, an epoch spanning
\~70 % of the cosmic history. In recent surveys with the Hubble Space Telescope
and Multiple Mirror Telescope, we have doubled the DLA Zn sample at z < 1.5.
Combining our results with those at higher redshifts from the literature, we
find that the global mean metallicity of DLAs does not rise to the solar value
at low redshifts. These surprising results appear to contradict the near-solar
mean metallicity observed for nearby (z ~ 0) galaxies and the predictions of
cosmic chemical evolution models based on the global star formation history.
Finally, we discuss direct constraints on the star formation rates (SFRs) in
the absorber galaxies from our deep Fabry-Perot Ly-alpha imaging study and
other emission-line studies in the literature. A large fraction of the observed
heavy-element quasar absorbers at 0 < z < 3.4 appear to have SFRs substantially
below the global mean SFR, consistent with the low metallicities observed in
the spectroscopic studies.Comment: 6 pages,3 figures, To appear in "Probing Galaxies through Quasar
Absorption Lines", Proceedings IAU Colloquium 199, 2005, Eds. P. R. Williams,
C. Shu, and B. Menar
Library of medium-resolution fiber optic echelle spectra of F, G, K, and M field dwarfs to giants stars
We present a library of Penn State Fiber Optic Echelle (FOE) observations of
a sample of field stars with spectral types F to M and luminosity classes V to
I. The spectral coverage is from 3800 AA to 10000 AA with nominal a resolving
power 12000. These spectra include many of the spectral lines most widely used
as optical and near-infrared indicators of chromospheric activity such as the
Balmer lines (H_alpha, H_beta), Ca II H & K, Mg I b triplet, Na I D_{1} and
D_{2}, He I D_{3}, and Ca II IRT lines. There are also a large number of
photospheric lines, which can also be affected by chromospheric activity, and
temperature sensitive photospheric features such as TiO bands. The spectra have
been compiled with the goal of providing a set of standards observed at medium
resolution. We have extensively used such data for the study of active
chromosphere stars by applying a spectral subtraction technique. However, the
data set presented here can also be utilized in a wide variety of ways ranging
from radial velocity templates to study of variable stars and stellar
population synthesis. This library can also be used for spectral classification
purposes and determination of atmospheric parameters (T_eff, log{g}, [Fe/H]). A
digital version of all the fully reduced spectra is available via ftp and the
World Wide Web (WWW) in FITS format.Comment: Latex file with 17 pages, 4 figures. Full postscript (text and
figures) available at http://www.ucm.es/info/Astrof/fgkmsl/FOEfgkmsl.html To
be published in ApJ
Simulation of tethered oligomers in nanochannels using multi-particle collision dynamics
The effect of a high Reynold's number, pressure-driven flow of a compressible
gas on the conformation of an oligomer tethered to the wall of a square-channel
is studied under both ideal solvent and poor solvent conditions using a hybrid
multiparticle collision dynamics and molecular dynamics algorithm. Unlike
previous studies, the flow field contains an elongational component in addition
to a shear component as well as fluid slip near the walls and results in a
Schmidt number for the polymer beads that is less than unity. In both solvent
regimes the oligomer is found to extend in the direction of flow. Under the
ideal solvent conditions, torsional twisting of the chain and aperiodic
cyclical dynamics are observed for the end of the oligomer. Under poor solvent
conditions, a metastable helix forms in the end of the chain despite the lack
of any attractive potential between beads in the oligomeric chain. The
formation of the helix is postulated to be the result of a solvent induced
chain collapse that has been confined to a single dimension by a strong flow
field.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures, to appear in J. Chem. Phys., 201
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Revisiting the Cape Cod Bacteria Injection Experiment Using a Stochastic Modeling Approach
Bromide and resting-cell bacteria tracer tests carried out in a sand and gravel aquifer at the USGS Cape Cod site in 1987 were reinterpreted using a three-dimensional stochastic approach and Lagrangian particle tracking numerical methods. Bacteria transport was strongly coupled to colloid filtration through functional dependence of local-scale colloid transport parameters on hydraulic conductivity and seepage velocity in a stochastic advection-dispersion/attachment-detachment model. Information on geostatistical characterization of the hydraulic conductivity (K) field from a nearby plot was utilized as input that was unavailable when the original analysis was carried out. A finite difference model for groundwater flow and a particle-tracking model of conservative solute transport was calibrated to the bromide-tracer breakthrough data using the aforementioned geostatistical parameters. An optimization routine was utilized to adjust the mean and variance of the lnK field over 100 realizations such that a best fit of a simulated, average bromide breakthrough curve is achieved. Once the optimal bromide fit was accomplished (based on adjusting the lnK statistical parameters in unconditional simulations), a stochastic particle-tracking model for the bacteria was run without adjustments to the local-scale colloid transport parameters. Good predictions of the mean bacteria breakthrough data were achieved using several approaches for modeling components of the system. Simulations incorporating the recent Tufenkji and Elimelech [1] equation for estimating single collector efficiency were compared to those using the Rajagopalan and Tien [2] model. Both appeared to work equally well at predicting mean bacteria breakthrough using a constant mean bacteria diameter for this set of field conditions, with the Rajagopalan and Tien model yielding approximately a 30% lower peak concentration and less tailing than the Tufenkji and Elimelech formulation. Simulations using a distribution of bacterial cell diameters available from original field notes yielded a slight improvement in the model and data agreement compared to simulations using an average bacteria diameter; variable bacterial cell diameters lowered the modeled peak concentrations and more significantly diminished the tailing behavior, particularly for the Rajagopalan and Tien model of collision frequency. Spatial variability in detachment had little effect on the results. The Lagrangian particle transport model representing the non-idealities of the colloid transport process appears to be a robust, grid-free method for modeling field-scale distribution problems where incorporation of fine-scale heterogeneity would necessitate large numbers of computational cells. The stochastic approach based on estimates of local-scale parameters for the bacteria-transport process both captures the mean field behavior of bacteria transport and calculates an envelope of uncertainty that brackets the observations in most simulation cases
Is the EGRET source 3EG J1621+8203 the radio galaxy NGC 6251?
We discuss the nature of the unidentified EGRET source 3EG J1621+8203. In an
effort to identify the gamma-ray source, we have examined X-ray images of the
field from ROSAT PSPC, ROSAT HRI, and ASCA GIS. Of the several faint X-ray
point sources in the error circle of 3EG J1621+8203, most are stars or faint
radio sources, unlikely to be counterparts to the EGRET source. The most
notable object in the gamma-ray error box is the bright FR I radio galaxy NGC
6251. If 3EG J1621+8203 corresponds to NGC 6251, then it would be the second
radio galaxy to be detected in high energy gamma rays, after Cen A, which
provided the first clear evidence of the detection above 100 MeV of an AGN with
a large-inclination jet. If the detection of more radio galaxies by EGRET has
been limited by its threshold sensitivity, there exists the exciting
possibility that new high energy gamma-ray instruments, with much higher
sensitivity, will detect a larger number of radio galaxies in the future.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journal, August 2002 issu
Detections of Diffuse Interstellar Bands in the SDSS Low-resolution Spectra
Diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs) have been discovered for almost a century,
but their nature remains one of the most challenging problems in astronomical
spectroscopy. Most recent work to identify and investigate the properties and
carriers of DIBs concentrates on high-resolution spectroscopy of selected
sight-lines. In this paper, we report detections of DIBs in the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (SDSS) low-resolution spectra of a large sample of Galactic stars.
Using a template subtraction method, we have successfully identified the DIBs
5780, 6283 in the SDSS spectra of a sample of about 2,000
stars and measured their strengths and radial velocities. The sample is by far
the largest ever assembled. The targets span a large range of reddening, E(B-V)
~ 0.2 -- 1.0, and are distributed over a large sky area and involve a wide
range of stellar parameters (effective temperature, surface gravity and
metallicity), confirming that the carriers of DIBs are ubiquitous in the
diffuse interstellar medium (ISM). The sample is used to investigate relations
between strengths of DIBs and magnitudes of line-of-sight extinction, yielding
results (i.e., EW(5780)= 0.61 x E(B-V) and EW(6283) = 1.26 x E(B-V)) consistent
with previous studies. DIB features have also been detected in the
commissioning spectra of the Guoshoujing Telescope (LAMOST) of resolving power
similar to that of SDSS. Detections of DIBs towards hundreds of thousands of
stars are expected from the on-going and up-coming large scale spectroscopic
surveys such as RAVE, SDSS III and LAMOST, particularly from the LAMOST Digital
Sky Survey of the Galactic Anti-center (DSS-GAC). Such a huge database will
provide an unprecedented opportunity to study the demographical distribution
and nature of DIBs as well as using DIBs to probe the distribution and
properties of the ISM and the dust extinction.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Multi-State Trials of Bt Sweet Corn Varieties for Control of the Corn Earworm (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae)
Field tests in 2010-2011 were performed in New York, Minnesota, Maryland, Ohio, and Georgia to compare Bt sweet corn lines expressing Cry1A.105 + Cry2Ab2 and Cry1Ab with their non-Bt isolines, with and without the use of foliar insecticides. The primary insect pest in all locations during the trial years was Heliocoverpa zea (Boddie), which is becoming the most serious insect pest of sweet corn in the United States. At harvest, the ears were measured for marketability according to fresh market and processing standards. For fresh market and processing, least squares regression showed significant effects of protein expression, state, and insecticide frequency. There was a significant effect of year for fresh market but not for processing. The model also showed significant effects of H. zea per ear by protein expression. Sweet corn containing two genes (Cry1A.105 + Cry2Ab2) and a single gene (Cry1Ab) provided high marketability, and both Bt varieties significantly outperformed the traditional non-Bt isolines in nearly all cases regardless of insecticide application frequency. For pest suppression of H. zea, plants expressing Bt proteins consistently performed better than non-Bt isoline plants, even those sprayed at conventional insecticide frequencies. Where comparisons in the same state were made between Cry1A.105 + Cry2Ab2 and Cry1Ab plants for fresh market, the product expressing Cry1A.105 + Cry2Ab2 provided better protection and resulted in less variability in control. Overall, these results indicate Cry1A.105 + Cry2Ab2 and Cry1Ab plants are suitable for fresh market and processing corn production across a diversity of growing regions and years. Our results demonstrate that Bt sweet corn has the potential to significantly reduce the use of conventional insecticides against lepidopteran pests and, in turn, reduce occupational and environmental risks that arise from intensive insecticide us
Statistical competencies for medical research learners: What is fundamental?
IntroductionIt is increasingly essential for medical researchers to be literate in statistics, but the requisite degree of literacy is not the same for every statistical competency in translational research. Statistical competency can range from 'fundamental' (necessary for all) to 'specialized' (necessary for only some). In this study, we determine the degree to which each competency is fundamental or specialized.MethodsWe surveyed members of 4 professional organizations, targeting doctorally trained biostatisticians and epidemiologists who taught statistics to medical research learners in the past 5 years. Respondents rated 24 educational competencies on a 5-point Likert scale anchored by 'fundamental' and 'specialized.'ResultsThere were 112 responses. Nineteen of 24 competencies were fundamental. The competencies considered most fundamental were assessing sources of bias and variation (95%), recognizing one's own limits with regard to statistics (93%), identifying the strengths, and limitations of study designs (93%). The least endorsed items were meta-analysis (34%) and stopping rules (18%).ConclusionWe have identified the statistical competencies needed by all medical researchers. These competencies should be considered when designing statistical curricula for medical researchers and should inform which topics are taught in graduate programs and evidence-based medicine courses where learners need to read and understand the medical research literature
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