3,017 research outputs found
The Stellar Populations of NGC 3109: Another Dwarf Irregular Galaxy with a Population II Stellar Halo
We have obtained V and I-band photometry for about 17500 stars in the field
of the dwarf irregular galaxy NGC3109, located in the outskirts of the Local
Group. The photometry allows us to study the stellar populations present inside
and outside the disk of this galaxy. From the VI color-magnitude diagram we
infer metallicities and ages for the stellar populations in the main body and
in the halo of NGC3109. The stars in the disk of this galaxy have a wide
variety of ages, including very young stars with approximately 10^7 yr. Our
main result is to establish the presence of a halo consisting of population II
stars, extending out to about 4.5 arcmin (or 1.8 kpc) above and below the plane
of this galaxy. For these old stars we derive an age of > 10 Gyr and a
metallicity of [Fe/H] = -1.8 +/- 0.2. We construct a deep luminosity function,
obtaining an accurate distance modulus (m-M)_0 = 25.62 +/- 0.1 for this galaxy
based on the I-magnitude of the red giant branch (RGB) tip and adopting E(V-I)
= 0.05.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal 23 pages, latex,
12 Figures (Fig 1 not available in electronic format
Student Interaction Module:Reusable architecture for the front-end of an Intelligent Tutoring System
A new HCN maser in IRAS 15082-4808
We have identified a new vibrational HCN maser at 89.087 GHz in the
asymptotic giant branch (AGB) star IRAS 15082-4808, a maser which is thought to
trace the innermost region of an AGB envelope. The observations of this maser
at three epochs are presented: two positive detections and one null detection.
The line profile has varied between the positive detections, as has the
intensity of the maser. The major component of the maser is found to be offset
by -2.0+/-0.9 km/s with respect to the systemic velocity of the envelope, as
derived from the 88.631 GHz transition of HCN. Similar blueshifts are measured
in the other 9 sources where this maser has been detected. Maser variability
with pulsation phase has been investigated for the first time using the 10
stars now available. Comparisons with AGB model atmospheres constrain the
position of the formation region of the maser to the region between the
pulsation shocks and the onset of dust acceleration, between 2 and 4 stellar
radii.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted MNRAS, minor correction to equation
Accelerated post-AGB evolution, initial-final mass relations, and the star-formation history of the Galactic bulge
We study the star-formation history of the Galactic bulge, as derived from
the age distribution of the central stars of planetary nebulae that belong to
this stellar population. The high resolution imaging and spectroscopic
observations of 31 compact planetary nebulae are used to derive their central
star masses. The Bloecker tracks with the cluster IFMR result in ages, which
are unexpectedly young. We find that the Bloecker post-AGB tracks need to be
accelerated by a factor of three to fit the local white dwarf masses. This
acceleration extends the age distribution. We adjust the IFMR as a free
parameter to map the central star ages on the full age range of bulge stellar
populations. This fit requires a steeper IFMR than the cluster relation. We
find a star-formation rate in the Galactic bulge, which is approximately
constant between 3 and 10 Gyr ago. The result indicates that planetary nebulae
are mainly associated with the younger and more metal-rich bulge populations.
The constant rate of star-formation between 3 and 10 Gyr agrees with
suggestions that the metal-rich component of the bulge is formed during an
extended process, such as a bar interaction.Comment: accepted for publication in A&
AIDS patients have increased surfactant protein D but normal mannose binding lectin levels in lung fluid.
BACKGROUND: Surfactant protein D (SP-D) and Mannose Binding Lectin (MBL) are collectins that have opsonic and immunoregulatory functions, are found in lung fluid and interact with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). We compared collectin levels in lung fluid and serum from HIV infected and normal subjects to determine if alterations in lung collectin levels were associated with HIV infection and might result in increased susceptibility to other pulmonary infections. METHODS: Blood and bronchoalveolar lavage samples were collected from 19 HIV-infected individuals and 17 HIV-uninfected individuals, all with normal chest X ray at time of study. HIV viral loads and peripheral blood CD4+ T cell counts were measured in all subjects. SP-D was measured in lung fluid, and MBL in both lung fluid and serum. RESULTS: SP-D levels were not significantly different in lung fluid from HIV-uninfected (median 406.72 ng/ml) and HIV-infected individuals with high CD4 count (CD4 >200) (median 382.60 ng/ml) but were elevated in HIV-infected individuals with low CD4 count (median 577.79 ng/ml; Kruskall Wallis p < 0.05). MBL levels in serum were not significantly different between HIV-uninfected and HIV-infected individuals (median 1782.70 ng/ml vs 2639.73 ng/ml) and were not detectable in lung fluid. CONCLUSION: SP-D levels are increased in lung fluid from AIDS patients but not in patients with early HIV infection. MBL levels are not altered by HIV infection or AIDS. There is no evidence that altered pulmonary collectin levels result in susceptibility to infection in these patients
Millimeter polarisation of the protoplanetary nebula OH 231.8+4.2: A follow-up study with CARMA
In order to investigate the characteristics and influence of the magnetic
field in evolved stars, we performed a follow-up investigation of our previous
submillimeter analysis of the proto-planetary nebula (PPN) OH 231.8+4.2 (Sabin
et al. 2014), this time at 1.3mm with the CARMA facility in polarisation mode
for the purpose of a multi-scale analysis. OH 231.8+4.2 was observed at ~2.5"
resolution and we detected polarised emission above the 3-sigma threshold (with
a mean polarisation fraction of 3.5 %). The polarisation map indicates an
overall organised magnetic field within the nebula. The main finding in this
paper is the presence of a structure mostly compatible with an ordered toroidal
component that is aligned with the PPN's dark lane. We also present some
alternative magnetic field configuration to explain the structure observed.
These data complete our previous SMA submillimeter data for a better
investigation and understanding of the magnetic field structure in OH
231.8+4.2.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Een visie op high-tech-gewasbescherming in de toekomst
In het kader van het Endure netwerk of excellence heeft een groep onderzoekers uit Nederland, Denemarken, Hongarije, Polen en Italië een visie ontwikkeld over hoe de Europese gewasbescherming er uit zou kunnen zien wanneer daarvoor innovatieve technieken voor monitoren en precisiespuiten zouden worden toegepast. Het resultaat was een model voor hoogtechnologische gewasbescherming voor de toekoms
Detection of the Central Star of the Planetary Nebula NGC 6302
NGC 6302 is one of the highest ionization planetary nebulae known and shows
emission from species with ionization potential >300eV. The temperature of the
central star must be >200,000K to photoionize the nebula, and has been
suggested to be up to ~ 400,000K. On account of the dense dust and molecular
disc, the central star has not convincingly been directly imaged until now. NGC
6302 was imaged in six narrow band filters by Wide Field Camera 3 on HST as
part of the Servicing Mission 4 Early Release Observations. The central star is
directly detected for the first time, and is situated at the nebula centre on
the foreground side of the tilted equatorial disc. The magnitudes of the
central star have been reliably measured in two filters(F469N and F673N).
Assuming a hot black body, the reddening has been measured from the
(4688-6766\AA) colour and a value of c=3.1, A_v=6.6 mag determined. A G-K main
sequence binary companion can be excluded. The position of the star on the HR
diagram suggests a fairly massive PN central star of about 0.64,M_sun close to
the white dwarf cooling track. A fit to the evolutionary tracks for
(T,L,t)=(200,000K, 2000L_sun, 2200yr), where t is the nebular age, is obtained;
however the luminosity and temperature remain uncertain. The model tracks
predict that the star is rapidly evolving, and fading at a rate of almost 1 %
per year. Future observations could test this prediction.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, submitted to ApJ Letters on 25.09.2009 accepted
on 19.10.200
Modelling the alumina abundance of oxygen-rich evolved stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud
In order to determine the composition of the dust in the circumstellar
envelopes of oxygen-rich asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars we have computed a
grid of modust radiative-transfer models for a range of dust compositions,
mass-loss rates, dust shell inner radii and stellar parameters. We compare the
resulting colours with the observed oxygen-rich AGB stars from the SAGE-Spec
Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) sample, finding good overall agreement for stars
with a mid-infrared excess. We use these models to fit a sample of 37 O-rich
AGB stars in the LMC with optically thin circumstellar envelopes, for which
535-m Spitzer infrared spectrograph (IRS) spectra and broadband
photometry from the optical to the mid-infrared are available. From the
modelling, we find mass-loss rates in the range to
M, and we show that a grain
mixture consisting primarily of amorphous silicates, with contributions from
amorphous alumina and metallic iron provides a good fit to the observed
spectra. Furthermore, we show from dust models that the AKARI [11][15]
versus [3.2][7] colour-colour diagram, is able to determine the fractional
abundance of alumina in O-rich AGB stars.Comment: 22 pages, 17 figures, accepted MNRA
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