23,292 research outputs found
Active adjustment of the cervical spine during pitch production compensates for shape: The ArtiVarK study
The anterior lordosis of the cervical spine is thought to contribute to pitch (fo) production by influencing cricoid rotation as a function of larynx height. This study examines the matter of inter-individual variation in cervical spine shape and whether this has an influence on how fo is produced along increasing or decreasing scales, using the ArtiVarK dataset, which contains real-time MRI pitch production data. We find that the cervical spine actively participates in fo production, but the amount of displacement depends on individual shape. In general, anterior spine motion (tending toward cervical lordosis) occurs for low fo, while posterior movement (tending towards cervical kyphosis) occurs for high fo
Color Magnitude Relation and Morphology of Low-Redshift ULIRGs in SDSS
We present color-magnitude and morphological analysis of 54 low-redshift
ULIRGs, a subset of the IRAS 1Jy sample (Kim & Sanders, 1998), in the SDSS. The
ULIRGs are on average 1 magnitude brighter in M0.1r than the SDSS galaxies
within the same redshift range. The majority of the ULIRGs (~87%) have the
colors typical of the blue cloud, and only 4 sources (~7%) are located in the
red sequence. While ULIRGs are popularly thought to be precursors to a QSO
phase, we find few (~6%) in the "green valley" where the majority of the X-ray
and IR selected AGNs are found, and none of which harbors an AGN. For the 14
previously spectroscopic identified AGNs (~28%), we perform PSF subtractions
and find that on average the central point sources contribute less than one
third to the total luminosity, and that their high optical luminosities and
overall blue colors are apparently the result of star formation activity of the
host galaxies. Visual inspection of the SDSS images reveals a wide range of
disturbed morphologies. A detailed morphology analysis using Gini and M20
coefficients shows that slightly less than one half (~42% in g band) of the
ULIRGs are located in the region where most local mergers are found. The
heterogeneous distribution of ULIRGs in the G-M20 space is qualitatively
consistent with the results found by numerical simulations of disk-disk
mergers. Our study also shows that the measured morphological parameters are
systematically affected by the SNR and thus the merging galaxies can appear at
various regions in the G-M20 space. In general, our results reinforce the view
that ULIRGs contain young stellar populations and are mergers in progress. Our
study provides a uniform comparison sample for studying ULIRGs at higher
redshifts such as Spitzer mid-IR selected ULIRGs at z=1~2 and submm galaxies.Comment: 42 pages, 11 figures, ApJ accepte
Structure of Magnetocentrifugal Disk-Winds: From the Launching Surface to Large Distances
Protostellar jets and winds are probably driven magnetocentrifugally from the
surface of accretion disks close to the central stellar objects. The exact
launching conditions on the disk, such as the distributions of magnetic flux
and mass ejection rate, are poorly unknown. They could be constrained from
observations at large distances, provided that a robust model is available to
link the observable properties of the jets and winds at the large distances to
the conditions at the base of the flow. We discuss the difficulties in
constructing such large-scale wind models, and describe a novel technique which
enables us to numerically follow the acceleration and propagation of the wind
from the disk surface to arbitrarily large distances and the collimation of
part of the wind into a dense, narrow ``jet'' around the rotation axis. Special
attention is paid to the shape of the jet and its mass flux relative to that of
the whole wind. The mass flux ratio is a measure of the jet formation
efficiency.Comment: 6 pages, figures included. To appear in "The Origins of Stars and
Planets: The VLT View". J. Alves and M. McCaughrean, editor
Minimum fuel coplanar aeroassisted orbital transfer using collocation and nonlinear programming
The fuel optimal control problem arising in coplanar orbital transfer employing aeroassisted technology is addressed. The mission involves the transfer from high energy orbit (HEO) to low energy orbit (LEO) without plane change. The basic approach here is to employ a combination of propulsive maneuvers in space and aerodynamic maneuvers in the atmosphere. The basic sequence of events for the coplanar aeroassisted HEO to LEO orbit transfer consists of three phases. In the first phase, the transfer begins with a deorbit impulse at HEO which injects the vehicle into a elliptic transfer orbit with perigee inside the atmosphere. In the second phase, the vehicle is optimally controlled by lift and drag modulation to satisfy heating constraints and to exit the atmosphere with the desired flight path angle and velocity so that the apogee of the exit orbit is the altitude of the desired LEO. Finally, the second impulse is required to circularize the orbit at LEO. The performance index is maximum final mass. Simulation results show that the coplanar aerocapture is quite different from the case where orbital plane changes are made inside the atmosphere. In the latter case, the vehicle has to penetrate deeper into the atmosphere to perform the desired orbital plane change. For the coplanar case, the vehicle needs only to penetrate the atmosphere deep enough to reduce the exit velocity so the vehicle can be captured at the desired LEO. The peak heating rates are lower and the entry corridor is wider. From the thermal protection point of view, the coplanar transfer may be desirable. Parametric studies also show the maximum peak heating rates and the entry corridor width are functions of maximum lift coefficient. The problem is solved using a direct optimization technique which uses piecewise polynomial representation for the states and controls and collocation to represent the differential equations. This converts the optimal control problem into a nonlinear programming problem which is solved numerically by using a modified version of NPSOL. Solutions were obtained for the described problem for cases with and without heating constraints. The method appears to be more robust than other optimization methods. In addition, the method can handle complex dynamical constraints
The Neutral Hydrogen Distribution in Merging Galaxies: Differences between Stellar and Gaseous Tidal Morphologies
We have mapped the neutral atomic gas (HI) in the three disk-disk merger
systems NGC 520, Arp 220, and Arp 299. These systems differ from the majority
of the mergers mapped in HI, in that their stellar and gaseous tidal features
do not coincide. In particular, they exhibit large stellar tidal features with
little if any accompanying neutral gas and large gas-rich tidal features with
little if any accompanying starlight. On smaller scales, there are striking
anti-correlations where the gaseous and stellar tidal features appear to cross.
We explore several possible causes for these differences, including dust
obscuration, ram pressure stripping, and ionization effects. No single
explanation can account for all of the observed differences. The fact that each
of these systems shows evidence for a starburst driven superwind expanding in
the direction of the most striking anti-correlations leads us to suggest that
the superwind is primarily responsible for the observed differences, either by
sweeping the features clear of gas via ram pressure, or by excavating a clear
sightline towards the starburst and allowing UV photons to ionize regions of
the tails.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, uses emulateapj.sty. To appear in the March 2000
issue of AJ. Version with full resolution figures is available via
http://www.cv.nrao.edu/~jhibbard/HIdisp/HIdisp.htm
Elastic metamaterials with simultaneously negative effective shear modulus and mass density
We propose a type of elastic metamaterial comprising fluid-solid composite
inclusions which can possess negative shear modulus and negative mass density
over a large frequency region. Such a solid metamaterial has a unique elastic
property that only transverse waves can propagate with a negative dispersion
while longitudinal waves are forbidden. This leads to many interesting
phenomena such as negative refraction, which is demonstrated by using a wedge
sample, and a significant amount of mode conversion from transverse waves to
longitudinal waves that cannot occur on the interface of two natural solids
The Scatter in the Relationship between Redshift and the Radio-to-Submm Spectral Index
We derive the scatter in the relationship between redshift and radio-to-submm
spectral index, alpha^{350}_{1.4}, using the observed spectral energy
distributions of 17 low redshift star forming galaxies. A mean galaxy model is
derived, along with the rms scatter in alpha^{350}_{1.4}. The scatter is
roughly constant with redshift. Constant rms scatter, combined with the
flattening of the mean alpha^{350}_{1.4} -- z relationship with increasing
redshift, leads to increasing uncertainty for redshift estimates at high
redshifts. Normalizing by the dust temperature in the manner proposed by Blain
decreases the scatter in alpha^{350}_{1.4} for most of the sample, but does not
remove outliers, and free-free absorption at rest frequencies above 1.4 GHz is
not likely to be a dominant cause for scatter in the alpha^{350}_{1.4} -- z
relationship. We re-derive the cumulative redshift distribution of the 14 field
galaxies in a recent submm and radio source sample of Smail et al.. The most
likely median redshift for the distribution is 2.7, with a conservative lower
limit of z = 2, as was also found by Smail et al. based on the original
alpha^{350}_{1.4} -- z models. The normalization and shape of the redshift
distribution for the faint submm sources are consistent with those expected for
forming elliptical galaxies.Comment: Added Erratum, standard AAS LATEX forma
Figure of Merit for Dark Energy Constraints from Current Observational Data
Choosing the appropriate figure of merit (FoM) for dark energy (DE)
constraints is key in comparing different DE experiments. Here we show that for
a set of DE parameters {f_i}, it is most intuitive to define FoM =
1/\sqrt{Cov(f1,f2,f3,...)}, where Cov(f1,f2,f3,...) is the covariance matrix of
{f_i}. The {f_i} should be minimally correlated. We demonstrate two useful
choices of {f_i} using 182 SNe Ia (compiled by Riess et al. 2007), [R(z_*),
l_a(z_*), \Omega_b h^2] from the five year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe
(WMAP) observations, and SDSS measurement of the baryon acoustic oscillation
(BAO) scale, assuming the HST prior of H_0=72+/-8 km/s Mpc^{-1} and without
assuming spatial flatness. We find that the correlation of (w_0,w_{0.5})
[w_0=w_X(z=0), w_{0.5}=w_X(z=0.5), w_X(a) = 3w_{0.5}-2w_0+3(w_0-w_{0.5})a] is
significantly smaller than that of (w_0,w_a) [w_X(a)=w_0+(1-a)w_a]. In order to
obtain model-independent constraints on DE, we parametrize the DE density
function X(z)=\rho_X(z)/\rho_X(0) as a free function with X_{0.5}, X_{1.0}, and
X_{1.5} [values of X(z) at z=0.5, 1.0, and 1.5] as free parameters estimated
from data. If one assumes a linear DE equation of state, current data are
consistent with a cosmological constant at 68% C.L. If one assumes X(z) to be a
free function parametrized by (X_{0.5}, X_{1.0}, X_{1.5}), current data deviate
from a cosmological constant at z=1 at 68% C.L., but are consistent with a
cosmological constant at 95% C.L.. Future DE experiments will allow us to
dramatically increase the FoM of constraints on (w_0,w_{0.5}) and of (X_{0.5},
X_{1.0}, X_{1.5}). This will significantly shrink the DE parameter space to
enable the discovery of DE evolution, or the conclusive evidence for a
cosmological constant.Comment: 7 pages, 3 color figures. Submitte
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