343 research outputs found
Program Manager Competencies (Chapter 11 of Program Management for Improved Business Results)
The successful program manager is constantly seeking to learn and broaden his or her knowledge and experience in order to take on more complex and critical programs. The program management competency model was developed in order to address the breadth, depth, and complexity of the program management role. This chapter uses the program management competency model to detail the knowledge, skills, and abilities needed for program managers to continually grow as professionals and consistently succeed in their role. The various types of competencies that are discussed in the chapter are: customer and market competencies, business and financial competencies, process and project management competencies, and leadership competencies. Additionally, the chapter discusses the key organizational enablers needed to make the competency model fully effective and to adequately support the program management discipline within an organization
Cold gas outflows from the Small Magellanic Cloud traced with ASKAP
Feedback from massive stars plays a critical role in the evolution of the
Universe by driving powerful outflows from galaxies that enrich the
intergalactic medium and regulate star formation. An important source of
outflows may be the most numerous galaxies in the Universe: dwarf galaxies.
With small gravitational potential wells, these galaxies easily lose their
star-forming material in the presence of intense stellar feedback. Here, we
show that the nearby dwarf galaxy, the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), has atomic
hydrogen outflows extending at least 2 kiloparsecs (kpc) from the star-forming
bar of the galaxy. The outflows are cold, , and may have formed
during a period of active star formation million years (Myr) ago. The
total mass of atomic gas in the outflow is solar masses, , or % of the total atomic gas of the galaxy. The inferred
mass flux in atomic gas alone, , is up to an order of magnitude greater than the star
formation rate. We suggest that most of the observed outflow will be stripped
from the SMC through its interaction with its companion, the Large Magellanic
Cloud (LMC), and the Milky Way, feeding the Magellanic Stream of hydrogen
encircling the Milky Way.Comment: Published in Nature Astronomy, 29 October 2018,
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41550-018-0608-
WALLABY Early Science - I. The NGC 7162 Galaxy Group
We present Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind Survey (WALLABY) early
science results from the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP)
observations of the NGC 7162 galaxy group. We use archival HIPASS and Australia
Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) observations of this group to validate the new
ASKAP data and the data reduction pipeline ASKAPsoft. We detect six galaxies in
the neutral hydrogen (HI) 21-cm line, expanding the NGC 7162 group membership
from four to seven galaxies. Two of the new detections are also the first HI
detections of the dwarf galaxies, AM 2159-434 and GALEXASC J220338.65-431128.7,
for which we have measured velocities of and km s,
respectively. We confirm that there is extended HI emission around NGC 7162
possibly due to past interactions in the group as indicated by the
offset between the kinematic and morphological major axes for NGC 7162A, and
its HI richness. Taking advantage of the increased resolution (factor of
) of the ASKAP data over archival ATCA observations, we fit a tilted
ring model and use envelope tracing to determine the galaxies' rotation curves.
Using these we estimate the dynamical masses and find, as expected, high dark
matter fractions of for all group members. The
ASKAP data are publicly available.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The Discovery of a Second Field Methane Brown Dwarf from Sloan Digital Sky Survey Commissioning Data
We report the discovery of a second field methane brown dwarf from the
commissioning data of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The object, SDSS
J134646.45-003150.4 (SDSS 1346-00), was selected because of its very red color
and stellar appearance. Its spectrum between 0.8-2.5 mic is dominated by strong
absorption bands of H_2O and CH_4 and closely mimics those of Gliese 229B and
SDSS 162414.37+002915.6 (SDSS 1624+00), two other known methane brown dwarfs.
SDSS 1346-00 is approximately 1.5 mag fainter than Gliese 229B, suggesting that
it lies about 11 pc from the sun. The ratio of flux at 2.1 mic to that at 1.27
mic is larger for SDSS 1346-00 than for Gliese 229B and SDSS 1624+00, which
suggests that SDSS 1346-00 has a slightly higher effective temperature than the
others. Based on a search area of 130 sq. deg. and a detection limit of z* =
19.8, we estimate a space density of 0.05 pc^-3 for methane brown dwarfs with
T_eff ~ 1000 K in the 40 pc^3 volume of our search. This estimate is based on
small-sample statistics and should be treated with appropriate caution.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, AASTeX, to appear in ApJ Letters, authors list
update
Does Conservation Planning Matter in a Dynamic and Uncertain World?
We show that while comprehensive reserve network design is best when the entire network can be implemented immediately, when conservation investments must be staged over years, such solutions actually may be sub-optimal in the context of biodiversity loss and uncertainty
High-Redshift Quasars Found in Sloan Digital Sky Survey Commissioning Data II: The Spring Equatorial Stripe
This is the second paper in a series aimed at finding high-redshift quasars
from five-color (u'g'r'i'z') imaging data taken along the Celestial Equator by
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) during its commissioning phase. In this
paper, we present 22 high-redshift quasars (z>3.6) discovered from ~250 deg^2
of data in the spring Equatorial Stripe, plus photometry for two previously
known high-redshift quasars in the same region of sky. Our success rate of
identifying high-redshift quasars is 68%. Five of the newly discovered quasars
have redshifts higher than 4.6 (z=4.62, 4.69, 4.70, 4.92 and 5.03). All the
quasars have i* < 20.2 with absolute magnitude -28.8 < M_B < -26.1 (h=0.5,
q_0=0.5). Several of the quasars show unusual emission and absorption features
in their spectra, including an object at z=4.62 without detectable emission
lines, and a Broad Absorption Line (BAL) quasar at z=4.92.Comment: 28 pages, AJ in press (Jan 2000), final version with minor changes;
high resolution finding charts available at
http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~fan/paper/qso2.htm
Religion and HIV in Tanzania: Influence of Religious Beliefs on HIV stigma, Disclosure, and Treatment Attitudes.
Religion shapes everyday beliefs and activities, but few studies have examined its associations with attitudes about HIV. This exploratory study in Tanzania probed associations between religious beliefs and HIV stigma, disclosure, and attitudes toward antiretroviral (ARV) treatment. A self-administered survey was distributed to a convenience sample of parishioners (n = 438) attending Catholic, Lutheran, and Pentecostal churches in both urban and rural areas. The survey included questions about religious beliefs, opinions about HIV, and knowledge and attitudes about ARVs. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed to assess how religion was associated with perceptions about HIV, HIV treatment, and people living with HIV/AIDS. Results indicate that shame-related HIV stigma is strongly associated with religious beliefs such as the belief that HIV is a punishment from God (p < 0.01) or that people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) have not followed the Word of God (p < 0.001). Most participants (84.2%) said that they would disclose their HIV status to their pastor or congregation if they became infected. Although the majority of respondents (80.8%) believed that prayer could cure HIV, almost all (93.7%) said that they would begin ARV treatment if they became HIV-infected. The multivariate analysis found that respondents' hypothetical willingness to begin ARV treatme was not significantly associated with the belief that prayer could cure HIV or with other religious factors. Refusal of ARV treatment was instead correlated with lack of secondary schooling and lack of knowledge about ARVs. The decision to start ARVs hinged primarily on education-level and knowledge about ARVs rather than on religious factors. Research results highlight the influence of religious beliefs on HIV-related stigma and willingness to disclose, and should help to inform HIV-education outreach for religious groups
The First Hour of Extra-galactic Data of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Spectroscopic Commissioning: The Coma Cluster
On 26 May 1999, one of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) fiber-fed
spectrographs saw astronomical first light. This was followed by the first
spectroscopic commissioning run during the dark period of June 1999. We present
here the first hour of extra-galactic spectroscopy taken during these early
commissioning stages: an observation of the Coma cluster of galaxies. Our data
samples the Southern part of this cluster, out to a radius of 1.5degrees and
thus fully covers the NGC 4839 group. We outline in this paper the main
characteristics of the SDSS spectroscopic systems and provide redshifts and
spectral classifications for 196 Coma galaxies, of which 45 redshifts are new.
For the 151 galaxies in common with the literature, we find excellent agreement
between our redshift determinations and the published values. As part of our
analysis, we have investigated four different spectral classification
algorithms: spectral line strengths, a principal component decomposition, a
wavelet analysis and the fitting of spectral synthesis models to the data. We
find that a significant fraction (25%) of our observed Coma galaxies show signs
of recent star-formation activity and that the velocity dispersion of these
active galaxies (emission-line and post-starburst galaxies) is 30% larger than
the absorption-line galaxies. We also find no active galaxies within the
central (projected) 200 h-1 Kpc of the cluster. The spatial distribution of our
Coma active galaxies is consistent with that found at higher redshift for the
CNOC1 cluster survey. Beyond the core region, the fraction of bright active
galaxies appears to rise slowly out to the virial radius and are randomly
distributed within the cluster with no apparent correlation with the potential
merger of the NGC 4839 group. [ABRIDGED]Comment: Accepted in AJ, 65 pages, 20 figures, 5 table
Weak Lensing with SDSS Commissioning Data: The Galaxy-Mass Correlation Function To 1/h Mpc
(abridged) We present measurements of galaxy-galaxy lensing from early
commissioning imaging data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). We measure
a mean tangential shear around a stacked sample of foreground galaxies in three
bandpasses out to angular radii of 600'', detecting the shear signal at very
high statistical significance. The shear profile is well described by a
power-law. A variety of rigorous tests demonstrate the reality of the
gravitational lensing signal and confirm the uncertainty estimates. We
interpret our results by modeling the mass distributions of the foreground
galaxies as approximately isothermal spheres characterized by a velocity
dispersion and a truncation radius. The velocity dispersion is constrained to
be 150-190 km/s at 95% confidence (145-195 km/s including systematic
uncertainties), consistent with previous determinations but with smaller error
bars. Our detection of shear at large angular radii sets a 95% confidence lower
limit , corresponding to a physical radius of
kpc, implying that galaxy halos extend to very large radii. However, it is
likely that this is being biased high by diffuse matter in the halos of groups
and clusters. We also present a preliminary determination of the galaxy-mass
correlation function finding a correlation length similar to the galaxy
autocorrelation function and consistency with a low matter density universe
with modest bias. The full SDSS will cover an area 44 times larger and provide
spectroscopic redshifts for the foreground galaxies, making it possible to
greatly improve the precision of these constraints, measure additional
parameters such as halo shape, and measure the properties of dark matter halos
separately for many different classes of galaxies.Comment: 28 pages, 11 figures, submitted to A
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