5,313 research outputs found
The Globular Cluster System in the Inner Region of M87
1057 globular cluster candidates have been identified in a WFPC2 image of the
inner region of M87. The Globular Cluster Luminosity Function (GCLF) can be
well fit by a Gaussian profile with a mean value of m_V^0=23.67 +/- 0.07 mag
and sigma=1.39 +/- 0.06 mag (compared to m_V^0=23.74 mag and sigma=1.44 mag
from an earlier study using the same data by Whitmore it et al. 1995). The GCLF
in five radial bins is found to be statistically the same at all points,
showing no clear evidence of dynamical destruction processes based on the
luminosity function (LF), in contradiction to the claim by Gnedin (1997).
Similarly, there is no obvious correlation between the half light radius of the
clusters and the galactocentric distance. The core radius of the globular
cluster density distribution is R_c=56'', considerably larger than the core of
the stellar component (R_c=6.8''). The mean color of the cluster candidates is
V-I=1.09 mag which corresponds to an average metallicity of Fe/H = -0.74 dex.
The color distribution is bimodal everywhere, with a blue peak at V-I=0.95 mag
and a red peak at V-I=1.20 mag. The red population is only 0.1 magnitude bluer
than the underlying galaxy, indicating that these clusters formed late in the
metal enrichment history of the galaxy and were possibly created in a burst of
star/cluster formation 3-6 Gyr after the blue population. We also find that
both the red and the blue cluster distributions have a more elliptical shape
(Hubble type E3.5) than the nearly spherical galaxy. The average half light
radius of the clusters is ~2.5 pc which is comparable to the 3 pc average
effective radius of the Milky Way clusters, though the red candidates are ~20%
smaller than the blue ones.Comment: 40 pages, 17 figures, 4 tables, latex, accepted for publication in
the Ap
The Globular Cluster Systems around NGC 3311 and NGC 3309
We present extensive new photometry in (g',i') of the large globular cluster
(GC) system around NGC 3311, the central cD galaxy in the Hydra cluster. Our
GMOS data cover a 5.5' field of view and reach a limiting magnitude i' = 26,
about 0.5 magnitude fainter than the turnover point of the GC luminosity
function. We find that NGC 3311 has a huge population of ~16, 000 GCs, closely
similar to the prototypical high specific frequency Virgo giant M87. The
color-magnitude distribution shows that the metal-poor blue GC sequence and the
metal-richer red sequence are both present, with nearly equal numbers of
clusters. Bimodal fits to the color distributions confirm that the blue
sequence shows the same trend of progressively increasing metallicity with GC
mass that has previously been found in many other large galaxies; the
correlation we find corresponds to a scaling of GC metallicity with mass of Z ~
M^0.6 . By contrast, the red sequence shows no change of mean metallicity with
mass, but it shows an upward extension to much higher than normal luminosity
into the UCD-like range, strengthening the potential connections between
massive GCs and UCDs. The GC luminosity function, which we measure down to the
turnover point at M_I = -8.4, also has a normal form like those in other giant
ellipticals. Within the Hydra field, another giant elliptical NGC 3309 is
sitting just 100" from the cD NGC 3311. We use our data to solve simultaneously
for the spatial structure and total GC populations of both galaxies at once.
Their specific frequencies are S_N (NGC 3311) = 12.5 +/- 1.5 and S_N (NGC 3309)
= 0.6 +/-0.4. NGC 3311 is completely dominant and entirely comparable with
other cD-type systems such as M87 in Virgo.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures. Accepted to the Astrophysical Journal. Version
with higher resolution figures is available at
http://www.thewehners.net/astro/papers/wehner_n3311_highres.pd
Probing small-x parton densities in proton- proton (-nucleus) collisions in the very forward direction
We present calculations of several pp scattering cross sections with
potential applications at the LHC. Significantly large rates for momentum
fraction, x, as low as 10^-7 are obtained, allowing for possible extraction of
quark and gluon densities in the proton and nuclei down to these small x values
provided a detector with good acceptance at maximal rapidities is used.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX, 12 figures, uses revtex.st
Hierarchical Structure Formation and Modes of Star Formation in Hickson Compact Group 31
The handful of low-mass, late-type galaxies that comprise Hickson Compact
Group 31 is in the midst of complex, ongoing gravitational interactions,
evocative of the process of hierarchical structure formation at higher
redshifts. With sensitive, multicolor Hubble Space Telescope imaging, we
characterize the large population of <10 Myr old star clusters that suffuse the
system. From the colors and luminosities of the young star clusters, we find
that the galaxies in HCG 31 follow the same universal scaling relations as
actively star-forming galaxies in the local Universe despite the unusual
compact group environment. Furthermore, the specific frequency of the globular
cluster system is consistent with the low end of galaxies of comparable masses
locally. This, combined with the large mass of neutral hydrogen and tight
constraints on the amount of intragroup light, indicate that the group is
undergoing its first epoch of interaction-induced star formation. In both the
main galaxies and the tidal-dwarf candidate, F, stellar complexes, which are
sensitive to the magnitude of disk turbulence, have both sizes and masses more
characteristic of z=1-2 galaxies. After subtracting the light from compact
sources, we find no evidence for an underlying old stellar population in F --
it appears to be a truly new structure. The low velocity dispersion of the
system components, available reservoir of HI, and current star formation rate
of ~10 solar masses per year, indicate that HCG31 is likely to both exhaust its
cold gas supply and merge within ~1 Gyr. We conclude that the end product will
be an isolated, X-ray-faint, low-mass elliptical.Comment: 24 pages, 14 figures (including low resolution versions of color
images), latex file prepared with emulateapj. Accepted for publication by the
Astronomical Journa
Using H-alpha Morphology and Surface Brightness Fluctuations to Age-Date Star Clusters in M83
We use new WFC3 observations of the nearby grand design spiral galaxy M83 to
develop two independent methods for estimating the ages of young star clusters.
The first method uses the physical extent and morphology of Halpha emission to
estimate the ages of clusters younger than tau ~10 Myr. It is based on the
simple premise that the gas in very young (tau < few Myr) clusters is largely
coincident with the cluster stars, is in a small, ring-like structure
surrounding the stars in slightly older clusters (e.g., tau ~5 Myr), and is in
a larger ring-like bubble for still older clusters (i.e., ~5-10 Myr). The
second method is based on an observed relation between pixel-to-pixel flux
variations within clusters and their ages. This method relies on the fact that
the brightest individual stars in a cluster are most prominent at ages around
10 Myr, and fall below the detection limit (i.e., M_V < -3.5) for ages older
than about 100 Myr. These two methods are the basis for a new morphological
classification system which can be used to estimate the ages of star clusters
based on their appearance. We compare previous age estimates of clusters in M83
determined from fitting UBVI Halpha measurements using predictions from stellar
evolutionary models with our new morphological categories and find good
agreement at the ~95% level. The scatter within categories is ~0.1 dex in log
tau for young clusters (10 Myr) clusters. A
by-product of this study is the identification of 22 "single-star" HII regions
in M83, with central stars having ages ~4 Myr.Comment: 33 pages, 10 figures, 3 tables; published in March Ap
MULTIPLICATION OF ANIMAL CELLS IN SUSPENSION MEASURED BY COLONY COUNTS
Archived with permission from the National Academy of Sciences USA. Originally published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA volume 43 issue 6. Please refer to www.pnas.org for this series of publications. Author holds all copyright for this article.During the past few years the development of new techniques for the cultivation
of animal cells in vitro has facilitated the quantitative study of many aspects of
cell biology. At present the most commonly used method of propagating cell
strains is based on the ability of cells to multiply while attached to a glass surface.
The cells may be subcultured by removing them from the surface into suspension
and then distributing them into other vessels, where they will again adhere to the
glass and populate the surface. This procedure has been developed by Earle and
his associates into the so-called quantitative replicate culture technique and
applied to a variety of studies with animal cells. Despite the technical advance
represented by this method, there are, nevertheless, serious experimental limitations inherent in the use of glass surfaces for cultivating large cell populations. Perhaps
the most obvious of these is the problem of removing representative samples at
will during the growth of a cell population. In addition, subculture requires the
removal of cells from the surface, with consequent risk of cell injury.Aided in part by grants from the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, the Public Health Service of the National Institutes of Health of the United States, the National Cancer Institute of Canada, and the W. B. Boyd Memorial Fun
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