6,941 research outputs found

    A photospheric metal line profile analysis of hot DA white dwarfs with circumstellar material

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    Some hot DA white dwarfs have circumstellar high ion absorption features in their spectra, in addition to those originating in the photosphere. In many cases, the line profiles of these absorbing components are unresolved. Given the importance of the atmospheric composition of white dwarfs to studies of stellar evolution, extra-solar planetary systems and the interstellar medium, we examine the effect of including circumstellar line profiles in the abundance estimates of photospheric metals in six DA stars. The photospheric C and Si abundances are reduced in five cases where the circumstellar contamination is strong, though the relative weakness of the circumstellar Si IV absorption introduces minimal contamination, resulting in a small change in abundance. The inability of previous, approximate models to reproduce the photospheric line profiles here demonstrates the need for a technique that accounts for the physical line profiles of both the circumstellar and photospheric lines when modelling these blended absorption features.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figues, 3 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA

    A Radio Determination of the Time of the New Moon

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    The detection of the New Moon at sunset is of importance to communities based on the lunar calendar. This is traditionally undertaken with visual observations. We propose a radio method which allows a higher visibility of the Moon relative to the Sun and consequently gives us the ability to detect the Moon much closer to the Sun than is the case of visual observation. We first compare the relative brightness of the Moon and Sun over a range of possible frequencies and find the range 5--100\,GHz to be suitable. The next consideration is the atmospheric absorption/emission due to water vapour and oxygen as a function of frequency. This is particularly important since the relevant observations are near the horizon. We show that a frequency of ∌10\sim 10 GHz is optimal for this programme. We have designed and constructed a telescope with a FWHM resolution of 0∘ ⁣ ⁣^\circ{}\!\!.6 and low sidelobes to demonstrate the potential of this approach. At the time of the 21 May 2012 New Moon the Sun/Moon brightness temperature ratio was 72.7±2.272.7 \pm 2.2 in agreement with predictions from the literature when combined with the observed sunspot numbers for the day. The Moon would have been readily detectable at ∌2∘\sim 2^{\circ} from the Sun. Our observations at 16\,hr\,36\,min UT indicated that the Moon would have been at closest approach to the Sun 16\,hr\,25\,min earlier; this was the annular solar eclipse of 00\,hr\,00\,min\,UT on 21 May 2012.Comment: 11 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Direct evidence for an early reionization of the Universe?

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    We examine the possible reionization of the intergalactic medium (IGM) by the source UDF033238.7-274839.8 (hereafter HUDF-JD2), which was discovered in deep {\it HST}/VLT/{\it Spitzer} images obtained as part of the Great Observatory Origins Deep Survey and {\it Hubble} Ultra-Deep Field projects. Mobasher et al (2005) have identified HUDF-JD2 as a massive (∌6×1011M⊙\sim6\times10^{11}M_\odot) post-starburst galaxy at redshift z≳6.5\gtrsim6.5. We find that HUDF-JD2 may be capable of reionizing its surrounding region of the Universe, starting the process at a redshift as high as z≈15±5\approx 15 \pm5.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter

    Simulations for single-dish intensity mapping experiments

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    HI intensity mapping is an emerging tool to probe dark energy. Observations of the redshifted HI signal will be contaminated by instrumental noise, atmospheric and Galactic foregrounds. The latter is expected to be four orders of magnitude brighter than the HI emission we wish to detect. We present a simulation of single-dish observations including an instrumental noise model with 1/f and white noise, and sky emission with a diffuse Galactic foreground and HI emission. We consider two foreground cleaning methods: spectral parametric fitting and principal component analysis. For a smooth frequency spectrum of the foreground and instrumental effects, we find that the parametric fitting method provides residuals that are still contaminated by foreground and 1/f noise, but the principal component analysis can remove this contamination down to the thermal noise level. This method is robust for a range of different models of foreground and noise, and so constitutes a promising way to recover the HI signal from the data. However, it induces a leakage of the cosmological signal into the subtracted foreground of around 5%. The efficiency of the component separation methods depends heavily on the smoothness of the frequency spectrum of the foreground and the 1/f noise. We find that as, long as the spectral variations over the band are slow compared to the channel width, the foreground cleaning method still works.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures. Submitted to MNRA

    Untold experiences from the perspectives of women mortuary science students: A qualitative study

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    Women students are entering mortuary science programs, being retained, and graduating at much higher rates than ever before. This is despite research that shows women in science-related programs often face discrimination and other barriers to degree completion (Bailey & DiPrete 2016; Jesse 2006; Shauman 2016; Steele et al., 2002; Title IX at 45, 2017). The purpose of this qualitative study was to explore current and former mortuary science students’—who identify as women—lived educational and professional experiences. A secondary goal was to generate recommendations to improve learning environments. This study focused on 10 mortuary science students’ educational journeys. Participants were recruited to participate in two, semi-structured interviews and asked to prepare and handwrite an “open letter” prior to the second interview.After multiple cycles of coding (initial and focused), salient categories were developed, and I situated themes within them. This study applied an a posteriori framework, specifically the theory of gendered organizations developed by Joan Acker (1990) to code and understand how institutions or workplaces remain gendered. Three key findings emerged from the data analysis. First, participants were met with an abundance of gendered interaction processes that ultimately influenced their journeys in a variety of ways. Second, participants felt that their gender is either hyper-focused on or disregarded completely (gender blind). Their narratives unearthed that mainstream and gender blindness is present not only in organizational logic, but also in hierarchies, jobs, and their substructures, including forms and handbooks, and even funeral-related equipment. A final key finding of this study is that “bodied processes” and embodiment or consideration of the whole being are not welcome (age, race/ethnicity, body size, religion, sexual orientation, etc.) and affected the participants' educational journey by making it more challenging and forming unnecessary barriers. The outcomes of this study are intended to provide insight into what women’s journeys to becoming a funeral director look like and recommendations on how to adapt educational programs, both academically and professionally, to ensure all students are given an equitable opportunity in the funeral service industry
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