250 research outputs found
Combined effects of heat waves and droughts on avian communities across the conterminous United States
Increasing surface temperatures and climatic variability associated with global climate change are expected to produce more frequent and intense heat waves and droughts in many parts of the world. Our goal was to elucidate the fundamental, but poorly understood, effects of these extreme weather events on avian communities across the conterminous United States. Specifically, we explored: (1) the effects of timing and duration of heat and drought events, (2) the effects of jointly occurring drought and heat waves relative to these events occurring in isolation, and (3) how effects vary among functional groups related to nest location and migratory habit, and among ecoregions with differing precipitation and temperature regimes. Using data from remote sensing, meteorological stations, and the North American Breeding Bird Survey, we used mixed effects models to quantify responses of overall and functional group abundance to heat waves and droughts (occurring alone or in concert) at two key periods in the annual cycle of birds: breeding and post-fledging. We also compared responses among species with different migratory and nesting characteristics, and among 17 ecoregions of the conterminous United States. We found large changes in avian abundances related to 100-year extreme weather events occurring in both breeding and post-fledging periods, but little support for an interaction among time periods. We also found that jointly-, rather than individually-occurring heat waves and droughts were both more common and more predictive of abundance changes. Declining abundance was the only significant response to post-fledging events, while responses to breeding period events were larger but could be positive or negative. Negative responses were especially frequent in the western U.S., and among ground-nesting birds and Neotropical migrants, with the largest single-season declines (36%) occurring among ground-nesting birds in the desert Southwest. These results indicate the importance of functional traits, timing, and geography in determining avian responses to weather extremes. Because dispersal to other regions appears to be an important avian response, it may be essential to maintain habitat refugia in a more climatically variable future
HerMES: the rest-frame UV emission and a lensing model for the z= 6.34 luminous dusty starburst galaxy HFLS3
We discuss the rest-frame ultraviolet emission from the starbursting galaxy HFLS3 at a redshift of 6.34. The galaxy was discovered in Herschel/SPIRE data due to its red color in the submillimeter wavelengths from 250 to 500 μm. Keck/NIRC2 K s -band adaptive optics imaging data showed two potential near-IR counterparts near HFLS3. Previously, the northern galaxy was taken to be in the foreground at z = 2.1, while the southern galaxy was assumed to be HFLS3's near-IR counterpart. The recently acquired Hubble/WFC3 and Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) imaging data show conclusively that both optically bright galaxies are in the foreground at z < 6. A new lensing model based on the Hubble imaging data and the millimeter-wave continuum emission yields a magnification factor of 2.2 ± 0.3, with a 95% confidence upper limit on the magnification of 3.5. When corrected for lensing, the instantaneous star formation rate is 1320 M ☉ yr–1, with the 95% confidence lower limit around 830 M ☉ yr–1. The dust and stellar masses of HFLS3 from the same spectral energy distribution (SED) models are at the level of 3 × 108 M ☉ and ~5 × 1010 M ☉, respectively, with large systematic uncertainties on assumptions related to the SED model. With Hubble/WFC3 images, we also find diffuse near-IR emission about 0.5 arcsec (~3 kpc) to the southwest of HFLS3 that remains undetected in the ACS imaging data. The emission has a photometric redshift consistent with either z ~ 6 or a dusty galaxy template at z ~ 2
Environment of the submillimeter-bright massive starburst HFLS3 at 6.34
We describe the search for Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) near the
sub-millimeter bright starburst galaxy HFLS3 at 6.34 and a study on the
environment of this massive galaxy during the end of reionization.We performed
two independent selections of LBGs on images obtained with the \textit{Gran
Telescopio Canarias} (GTC) and the \textit{Hubble Space Telescope} (HST) by
combining non-detections in bands blueward of the Lyman-break and color
selection. A total of 10 objects fulfilling the LBG selection criteria at
5.5 were selected over the 4.54 and 55.5 arcmin covered by our HST
and GTC images, respectively. The photometric redshift, UV luminosity, and the
star-formation rate of these sources were estimated with models of their
spectral energy distribution. These 6 candidates have physical
properties and number densities in agreement with previous results. The UV
luminosity function at 6 and a Voronoi tessellation analysis of this
field shows no strong evidence for an overdensity of relatively bright objects
(m25.9) associated with \textit{HFLS3}. However, the over-density
parameter deduced from this field and the surface density of objects can not
excluded definitively the LBG over-density hypothesis. Moreover we identified
three faint objects at less than three arcseconds from \textit{HFLS3} with
color consistent with those expected for 6 galaxies. Deeper data are
needed to confirm their redshifts and to study their association with
\textit{HFLS3} and the galaxy merger that may be responsible for the massive
starburst.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Symmetries of the Self-Dual Sector of N=4 Super Yang-Mills on the Light Cone
A recent paper proposes a way of constructing infinite dimensional symmetries
of the non-supersymmetric self-dual Yang-Mills action using isometries of the
space-time. We review the Lagrangian formulation of N = 4 super Yang-Mills MHV
rules and extend the approach taken for the non-supersymmetric case to
construct infinite dimensional symmetries of self-dual N = 4 super Yang-Mills.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figures. V[2] Added references and minor typographical
correction
The source counts of submillimetre galaxies detected at 1.1 mm
The source counts of galaxies discovered at sub-millimetre and millimetre
wavelengths provide important information on the evolution of infrared-bright
galaxies. We combine the data from six blank-field surveys carried out at 1.1
mm with AzTEC, totalling 1.6 square degrees in area with root-mean-square
depths ranging from 0.4 to 1.7 mJy, and derive the strongest constraints to
date on the 1.1 mm source counts at flux densities S(1100) = 1-12 mJy. Using
additional data from the AzTEC Cluster Environment Survey to extend the counts
to S(1100) ~ 20 mJy, we see tentative evidence for an enhancement relative to
the exponential drop in the counts at S(1100) ~ 13 mJy and a smooth connection
to the bright source counts at >20 mJy measured by the South Pole Telescope;
this excess may be due to strong lensing effects. We compare these counts to
predictions from several semi-analytical and phenomenological models and find
that for most the agreement is quite good at flux densities > 4 mJy; however,
we find significant discrepancies (>3sigma) between the models and the observed
1.1 mm counts at lower flux densities, and none of them are consistent with the
observed turnover in the Euclidean-normalised counts at S(1100) < 2 mJy. Our
new results therefore may require modifications to existing evolutionary models
for low luminosity galaxies. Alternatively, the discrepancy between the
measured counts at the faint end and predictions from phenomenological models
could arise from limited knowledge of the spectral energy distributions of
faint galaxies in the local Universe.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, 4 tables; accepted for publication in MNRA
The rapid assembly of an elliptical galaxy of 400 billion solar masses at a redshift of 2.3
Stellar archeology shows that massive elliptical galaxies today formed
rapidly about ten billion years ago with star formation rates above several
hundreds solar masses per year (M_sun/yr). Their progenitors are likely the
sub-millimeter-bright galaxies (SMGs) at redshifts (z) greater than 2. While
SMGs' mean molecular gas mass of 5x10^10 M_sun can explain the formation of
typical elliptical galaxies, it is inadequate to form ellipticals that already
have stellar masses above 2x10^11 M_sun at z ~ 2. Here we report
multi-wavelength high-resolution observations of a rare merger of two massive
SMGs at z = 2.3. The system is currently forming stars at a tremendous rate of
2,000 M_sun/yr. With a star formation efficiency an order-of-magnitude greater
than that of normal galaxies, it will quench the star formation by exhausting
the gas reservoir in only ~200 million years. At a projected separation of 19
kiloparsecs, the two massive starbursts are about to merge and form a passive
elliptical galaxy with a stellar mass of ~4x10^11 M_sun. Our observations show
that gas-rich major galaxy mergers, concurrent with intense star formation, can
form the most massive elliptical galaxies by z ~ 1.5.Comment: Appearing in Nature online on May 22 and in print on May 30.
Submitted here is the accepted version (including the Supplementary
Information), see nature.com for the final versio
Millimeter imaging of submillimeter galaxies in the COSMOS field: Redshift distribution
We present new IRAM PdBI 1.3mm continuum observations at ~1.5" resolution of
28 SMGs previously discovered with the 870um bolometer LABOCA at APEX within
the central 0.7deg2 of the COSMOS field. 19 out of the 28 LABOCA sources were
detected with the PdBI at a >~3sigma level of ~1.4mJy/b. A combined analysis of
this new sample with existing interferometrically identified SMGs in the COSMOS
field yields the following results: 1) >~15%, and possibly up to ~40% of
single-dish detected SMGs consist of multiple sources, 2) statistical
identifications of multi-wavelength counterparts to the single-dish SMGs yield
that only ~50% of these single-dish SMGs have real radio or IR counterparts, 3)
~18% of interferometric SMGs have only radio or even no multi-wavelength
counterpart at all, and 4) ~50-70% of z>~3 SMGs have no radio counterparts down
to an rms of 7-12uJy at 1.4GHz. Using the exact interferometric positions to
identify proper multi-wavelength counterparts allows us to determine accurate
photometric redshifts for these sources. The redshift distributions of the
combined and the individual 1.1mm and 870um selected samples have a higher mean
and broader width than the redshift distributions derived in previous studies.
Our sample supports the previous tentative trend that on average brighter
and/or mm-selected SMGs are located at higher redshifts. There is a tentative
offset between the mean redshift for the 1.1mm (=3.1+/-0.4) and 870um
(=2.6+/-0.4) selected samples, with the 1.1mm sources lying on average at
higher redshifts. Based on our nearly complete sample of AzTEC 1.1mm SMGs
within a uniform 0.15deg2 area we infer a higher surface density of z>~4 SMGs
than predicted by current cosmological models. In summary, our findings imply
that (sub-)millimeter interferometric identifications are crucial to build
statistically complete and unbiased samples of SMGs.Comment: 35 pages, 18 figures, 10 tables; accepted for publication in A&
Monitoring Climate Impacts on Annual Forage Production across U.S. Semi-Arid Grasslands
The ecosystem performance approach, used in a previously published case study focusing on the Nebraska Sandhills, proved to minimize impacts of non-climatic factors (e.g., overgrazing, fire, pests) on the remotely-sensed signal of seasonal vegetation greenness resulting in a better attribution of its changes to climate variability. The current study validates the applicability of this approach for assessment of seasonal and interannual climate impacts on forage production in the western United States semi-arid grasslands. Using a piecewise regression tree model, we developed the Expected Ecosystem Performance (EEP), a proxy for annual forage production that reflects climatic influences while minimizing impacts of management and disturbances. The EEP model establishes relations between seasonal climate, site-specific growth potential, and long-term growth variability to capture changes in the growing season greenness measured via a time-integrated Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) observed using a Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS). The resulting 19 years of EEP were converted to expected biomass (EB, kg ha-1 year-1) using a newly-developed relation with the Soil Survey Geographic Database range production data (R2= 0.7). Results were compared to ground-observed biomass datasets collected by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and University of Nebraska-Lincoln (R2 = 0.67). This study illustrated that this approach is transferable to other semi-arid and arid grasslands and can be used for creating timely, post-season forage production assessments. When combined with seasonal climate predictions, it can provide within-season estimates of annual forage production that can serve as a basis for more informed adaptive decision making by livestock producers and land managers
H-ATLAS: a candidate high redshift cluster/protocluster of star-forming galaxies
We investigate the region around the Planck-detected z=3.26 gravitationally lensed galaxy HATLAS J114637.9-001132 (hereinafter HATLAS12-00) using both archival Herschel data from the H-ATLAS survey and using submm data obtained with both LABOCA and SCUBA2. The lensed source is found to be surrounded by a strong overdensity of both Herschel-SPIRE sources and submm sources. We detect 17 bright (S870 >~7 mJy) sources at >4sigma closer than 5 arcmin to the lensed object at 850/870 microns. Ten of these sources have good cross-identifications with objects detected by Herschel-SPIRE which have redder colours than other sources in the field, with 350 micron flux > 250 micron flux, suggesting that they lie at high redshift. Submillimeter Array (SMA) observations localise one of these companions to ~1 arcsecond, allowing unambiguous cross identification with a 3.6 and 4.5 micron Spitzer source. The optical/near-IR spectral energy distribution (SED) of this source is measured by further observations and found to be consistent with z>2, but incompatible with lower redshifts. We conclude that this system may be a galaxy cluster/protocluster or larger scale structure that contains a number of galaxies undergoing starbursts at the same time
An ALMA survey of CO in submillimetre galaxies: companions, triggering, and the environment in blended sources
We present ALMA observations of the mid-J 12CO emission from six single-dish selected 870-μm sources in the Extended Chandra Deep Field-South and UKIDSS Ultra-Deep Survey fields. These six single-dish submillimetre sources were selected based on previous ALMA continuum observations, which showed that each comprised a blend of emission from two or more individual submillimetre galaxies (SMGs), separated on 5–10 arcsec scales. The six single-dish submillimetre sources targeted correspond to a total of 14 individual SMGs, of which seven have previously measured robust optical/near-infrared spectroscopic redshifts, which were used to tune our ALMA observations. We detect CO(3–2) or CO(4–3) at z = 2.3–3.7 in 7 of the 14 SMGs, and in addition serendipitously detect line emission from three gas-rich companion galaxies, as well as identify four new 3.3 mm selected continuum sources in the six fields. Joint analysis of our CO spectroscopy and existing data suggests that 64(±18)percent of the SMGs in blended submillimetre sources are unlikely to be physically associated. However, three of the SMG fields (50 per cent) contain new, serendipitously detected CO-emitting (but submillimetre-faint) sources at similar redshifts to the 870 μm selected SMGs we targeted. These data suggest that the SMGs inhabit overdense regions, but that these are not sufficiently overdense on ∼100 kpc scales to influence the source blending given the short lifetimes of SMGs. We find that 21±12percent of SMGs have spatially distinct and kinematically close companion galaxies (∼8–150 kpc and ≲ 300 km s−1), which may have enhanced their star formation via gravitational interactions
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