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Preservation Through Design: Reclaiming Franklin Park\u27s Place in the Future of Boston
This project is a demonstration of heritage landscape preservation done through a new design for Franklin Park in Boston, Massachusetts. Design from a preservation perspective requires sensitivity to the interacting forces between site history, existing conditions, and future needs, especially when engaging a historical landscape that was designed by a renowned figure like Olmsted. The goals of this project are to rehabilitate the Franklin Park site, securing its integrity and historical value, while allowing changes and future growth to take place
The dependence of the IR-radio correlation on the metallicity
We have compiled a sample of 26 metal-poor galaxies with 12 + log(O/H) < 8.1
with both infrared continuum and 1.4 GHz radio continuum data. By comparing to
galaxies at higher metallicity, we have investigated the dependence on the
metallicity of the IR-radio relationship at 24 um, 70 um, 100 um and 160 um
bands as well as the integrated FIR luminosity. It is found that metal-poor
galaxies have on average lower qIR than metal-rich ones with larger offsets at
longer IR wavelengths, from -0.06 dex in q24um to -0.6 dex in q160um. The qIR
of all galaxies as a whole at 160 um show positive trends with the metallicity
and IR-to-FUV ratio, and negative trends with the IR color, while those at
lower IR wavelengths show weaker correlations. We proposed a mechanism that
invokes combined effects of low obscured-SFR/total-SFR fraction and warm dust
temperature at low metallicity to interpret the above behavior of qIR, with the
former reducing the IR radiation and the latter further reducing the IR
emission at longer IR wavelength. Other mechanisms that are related to the
radio emission including the enhanced magnetic field strength and increased
thermal radio contribution are unable to reconcile the IR-wavelength-dependent
differences of qIR between metal-poor and metal- rich galaxies. In contrast to
qIR, the mean total-SFR/radio ratio of metal-poor galaxies is the same as the
metal-rich one, indicating the 1.4 GHz radio emission is still an effective
tracer of SFRs at low metallicity.Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures, 4 tables. ApJ in pres
The Weak Carbon Monoxide Emission In An Extremely Metal Poor Galaxy, Sextans A
Carbon monoxide (CO) is one of the primary coolants of gas and an easily
accessible tracer of molecular gas in spiral galaxies but it is unclear if CO
plays a similar role in metal poor dwarfs. We carried out a deep observation
with IRAM 30 m to search for CO emission by targeting the brightest far-IR peak
in a nearby extremely metal poor galaxy, Sextans A, with 7% Solar metallicity.
A weak CO J=1-0 emission is seen, which is already faint enough to place a
strong constraint on the conversion factor (a_CO) from the CO luminosity to the
molecular gas mass that is derived from the spatially resolved dust mass map.
The a_CO is at least seven hundred times the Milky Way value. This indicates
that CO emission is exceedingly weak in extremely metal poor galaxies,
challenging its role as a coolant in these galaxies.Comment: 4 pages, 1 table, 4 figures. ApJL in pres
Carbon monoxide in an extremely metal-poor galaxy
Extremely metal-poor galaxies with metallicity below 10% of the solar value
in the local universe are the best analogues to investigating the interstellar
medium at a quasi-primitive environment in the early universe. In spite of the
ongoing formation of stars in these galaxies, the presence of molecular gas
(which is known to provide the material reservoir for star formation in
galaxies, such as our Milky Way) remains unclear. Here, we report the detection
of carbon monoxide (CO), the primary tracer of molecular gas, in a galaxy with
7% solar metallicity, with additional detections in two galaxies at higher
metallicities. Such detections offer direct evidence for the existence of
molecular gas in these galaxies that contain few metals. Using archived
infrared data, it is shown that the molecular gas mass per CO luminosity at
extremely low metallicity is approximately one-thousand times the Milky Way
value.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 1 table. Supplementary data at
http://www.nature.com/article-assets/npg/ncomms/2016/161209/ncomms13789/extref/ncomms13789-s1.pd
Inefficient Star Formation In Extremely Metal Poor Galaxies
The first galaxies contain stars born out of gas with little or no metals.
The lack of metals is expected to inhibit efficient gas cooling and star
formation but this effect has yet to be observed in galaxies with oxygen
abundance relative to hydrogen below a tenth of that of the Sun. Extremely
metal poor nearby galaxies may be our best local laboratories for studying in
detail the conditions that prevailed in low metallicity galaxies at early
epochs. Carbon Monoxide (CO) emission is unreliable as tracers of gas at low
metallicities, and while dust has been used to trace gas in low-metallicity
galaxies, low-spatial resolution in the far-infrared has typically led to large
uncertainties. Here we report spatially-resolved infrared observations of two
galaxies with oxygen abundances below 10 per cent solar, and show that stars
form very inefficiently in seven star-forming clumps of these galaxies. The
star formation efficiencies are more than ten times lower than found in normal,
metal rich galaxies today, suggesting that star formation may have been very
inefficient in the early Universe.Comment: Author's version (10 pages, 4 figures). Published in Natur
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