6,116 research outputs found
37 GHz methanol masers : Horsemen of the Apocalypse for the class II methanol maser phase?
We report the results of a search for class II methanol masers at 37.7, 38.3
and 38.5 GHz towards a sample of 70 high-mass star formation regions. We
primarily searched towards regions known to show emission either from the 107
GHz class II methanol maser transition, or from the 6.035 GHz excited OH
transition. We detected maser emission from 13 sources in the 37.7 GHz
transition, eight of these being new detections. We detected maser emission
from three sources in the 38 GHz transitions, one of which is a new detection.
We find that 37.7 GHz methanol masers are only associated with the most
luminous 6.7 and 12.2 GHz methanol maser sources, which in turn are
hypothesised to be the oldest class II methanol sources. We suggest that the
37.7 GHz methanol masers are associated with a brief evolutionary phase (of
1000-4000 years) prior to the cessation of class II methanol maser activity in
the associated high-mass star formation region.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
The Distance to IC 10 from Near-Infrared Observations of Cepheids
We have measured the distance to the Local Group dwarf irregular galaxy IC 10
from near-infrared observations of Cepheids. The reddening-corrected
distance modulus is mag or Mpc. This distance
lies at the short end of the range of previous estimates, and is significantly
more accurate than all prior determinations. At this distance, IC 10 is
comparable in total mass to the Small Magellanic Cloud, but has much more
vigorous star formation.Comment: 16 PostScript pages including 2 figures and 3 table, uuencoded
compressed. Also available at
http://www.physics.mcmaster.ca/Wilson_Preprints/IC10.htm
Substellar Companions to Main Sequence Stars: No Brown Dwarf Desert at Wide Separations
We use three field L and T dwarfs which were discovered to be wide companions
to known stars by the Two Micron All-Sky Survey (2MASS) to derive a preliminary
brown dwarf companion frequency. Observed L and T dwarfs indicate that brown
dwarfs are not unusually rare as wide (Delta >1000 A.U.) systems to F-M0
main-sequence stars (M>0.5M_sun, M_V<9.5), even though they are rare at close
separation (Delta <3 A.U.), the ``brown dwarf desert.'' Stellar companions in
these separation ranges are equally frequent, but brown dwarfs are >~ 10 times
as frequent for wide than close separations. A brown dwarf wide-companion
frequency as low as the 0.5% seen in the brown dwarf desert is ruled out by
currently-available observations.Comment: ApJL, in pres
High Mass Star Formation. II. The Mass Function of Submillimeter Clumps in M17
We have mapped an approximately 5.5 by 5.5 pc portion of the M17 massive
star-forming region in both 850 and 450 micron dust continuum emission using
the Submillimeter Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) on the James Clerk
Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). The maps reveal more than 100 dusty clumps with
deconvolved linear sizes of 0.05--0.2 pc and masses of 0.8--120 solar masses,
most of which are not associated with known mid-infrared point sources. Fitting
the clump mass function with a double power law gives a mean power law exponent
of alpha_high = -2.4 +/- 0.3 for the high-mass power law, consistent with the
exponent of the Salpeter stellar mass function. We show that a lognormal clump
mass distribution with a peak at about 4 solar masses produces as good a fit to
the clump mass function as does a double power law. This 4 solar mass peak mass
is well above the peak masses of both the stellar initial mass function and the
mass function of clumps in low-mass star-forming regions. Despite the
difference in intrinsic mass scale, the shape of the M17 clump mass function
appears to be consistent with the shape of the core mass function in low-mass
star-forming regions. Thus, we suggest that the clump mass function in
high-mass star-forming regions may be a scaled-up version of that in low-mass
regions, instead of its extension to higher masses.Comment: 33 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
The Brown Dwarf Kinematics Project (BDKP) I. Proper Motions and Tangential Velocities for a Large Sample of Late-type M, L and T Dwarfs
We report proper motion measurements for 427 late-type M, L and T dwarfs, 332
of which have been measured for the first time. Combining these new proper
motions with previously published measurements yields a sample of 841 M7-T8
dwarfs. We combined parallax measurements or calculated spectrophotometric
distances and computed tangential velocities for the entire sample. We find
that kinematics for the full and volume-limited 20 pc samples are consistent
with those expected for the Galactic thin disk, with no significant differences
between late-type M, L, and T dwarfs. Applying an age-velocity relation we
conclude that the average kinematic age of the 20 pc sample of ultracool dwarfs
is older than recent kinematic estimates and more consistent with age results
calculated with population synthesis models. There is a statistically distinct
population of high tangential velocity sources whose kinematics suggest an even
older population of ultracool dwarfs belonging to either the Galactic thick
disk or halo. We isolate subsets of the entire sample, including low
surface-gravity dwarfs, unusually blue L dwarfs, and photometric outliers in
J-Ks color and investigate their kinematics. We find that the spectroscopically
distinct class of unusually blue L dwarfs has kinematics clearly consistent
with old age, implying that high surface-gravity and/or low metallicity may be
relevant to their spectral properties. The low surface-gravity dwarfs are
kinematically younger than the overall population, and the kinematics of the
red and blue ultracool dwarfs suggest ages that are younger and older than the
full sample, respectively. We also present a reduced proper motion diagram at
2MASS Ks for the entire population and find that a limit of H_Ks > 18 excludes
M dwarfs from the L and T dwarf population regardless of near-infrared color.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal, 21 pages text,
12 tables, 12 figure
Colors and Kinematics of L Dwarfs From the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We present a sample of 484 L dwarfs, 210 of which are newly discovered from
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 7 spectroscopic database. We
combine this sample with known L dwarfs to investigate their colors.
Our spectroscopically selected sample has 0.1 magnitude bluer median
colors at a given spectral type (for L0 to L4) than previously known L
dwarfs, which reflects a bias towards redder L dwarfs in past selection
criteria. We present photometric distance relations based on and
colors and derive distances to our L dwarf sample. We combine the distances
with SDSS/2MASS proper motions in order to examine the tangential velocities.
For the majority of our spectroscopic sample, we measured radial velocities and
present three dimensional kinematics. We also provide H detections for
the fraction of our sample with sufficient quality spectra. Comparison of the
velocities of our L dwarf sample to a kinematic model shows evidence for both
cold and hot dynamical populations, consistent with young and old disk
components. The dispersions of these components are similar to those found for
M dwarfs. We also show that color is correlated with velocity
dispersion, confirming a relationship between color and age.Comment: 58 pages, 11 figures, 8 tables, accepted for publication in the
Astronomical Journa
SpeX Spectroscopy of Unresolved Very Low-Mass Binaries. I. Identification of Seventeen Candidate Binaries Straddling the L Dwarf/T Dwarf Transition
We report the identification of 17 candidate brown dwarf binaries whose
components straddle the L dwarf/T dwarf transition. These sources were culled
from a large near-infrared spectral sample of L and T dwarfs observed with the
Infrared Telescope Facility SpeX spectrograph. Candidates were selected on the
basis of spectral ratios which segregate known (resolved) L dwarf/T dwarf pairs
from presumably single sources. Composite templates, constructed by combining
13581 pairs of absolute flux-calibrated spectra, are shown to provide
statistically superior fits to the spectra of our seventeen candidates as
compared to single templates. Ten of these candidates appear to have secondary
components that are significantly brighter than their primaries over the
1.0-1.3 micron band, indicative of rapid condensate depletion at the L dwarf/T
dwarf transition. Our results support prior indications of enhanced
multiplicity amongst early-type T dwarfs; 53+/-7% of the T0-T4 dwarfs in our
spectral sample are found to be either resolved or unresolved (candidate)
pairs, although this is consistent with an intrinsic (volume complete) brown
dwarf binary fraction of only 15%. If verified, this sample of spectral
binaries more than doubles the number of known L dwarf/T dwarf transition
pairs, enabling a broader exploration of this poorly-understood phase of brown
dwarf atmospheric evolution.Comment: 65 pages (11pt manuscript format), 68 figures, accepted for
publication to ApJ; spectral data can be accessed at
http://www.browndwarfs.org/spexpris
Frequency of shearing increases growth of fibre and changes objective and subjective attributes of Angora goat fleeces
The impact of genotype and of frequency and timing of shearing, on mohair attributes and production of modern Angora goats was studied. Goats in the southern hemisphere grazed pastures between February 2004 and 2006. There were seven shearing treatments by three genetic strains with four or eight replicates of individual goats. Treatments were: three different 6-month shearing intervals and two of 12-month shearing intervals with different months of shearing, a 7-month winter shearing interval and a 3-month shearing interval. Genetic strain was based on sire line: 1·0 South African; 1·0 Texan; and Mixed 0·5 South African and 0·5 Texan. Annual greasy mohair production was 5·08 kg, and average clean fleece production was 4·37 kg. The Angora goats produced an annual clean fleece equivalent to 0·122 of their mean fleece-free live weight which was equal to 0·34 g/kg/day. Measurements were analysed over the period of spring 2004 shearing to spring 2005 shearing, excluding the June–December shearing treatment. Increased frequency of shearing increased fleece growth and affected 13 objective and subjective attributes of mohair that were evaluated including clean washing yield, fibre diameter and fibre diameter variation, incidence of medullated fibres, staple length, fibre curvature, crimp frequency, style, staple definition, staple fibre entanglement and staple tip shape. The direction of these effects were generally favourable and for most attributes the magnitude of the response was linear and commercially important. Each additional shearing resulted in an additional 149 g of clean mohair representing 0·034 of the annual clean mohair production. This increase was associated with a 0·6 cm increase in staple length and 0·32 μm increase in mean fibre diameter. In conclusion, Angora goats shorn less frequently grew less mohair that was more likely to be entangled in spring. Managers of Angora goats should take note of these findings.<br /
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