3,125 research outputs found
On the nature of the progenitors of three type II-P supernovae: 2004et, 2006my and 2006ov
The pre-explosion observations of the type II-P supernovae 2006my, 2006ov and
2004et, are re-analysed. In the cases of supernovae 2006my and 2006ov we argue
that the published candidate progenitors are not coincident with their
respective supernova sites in pre-explosion Hubble Space Telescope
observations. We therefore derive upper luminosity and mass limits for the
unseen progenitors of both these supernovae, assuming they are red supergiants:
2006my (log L/Lsun = 4.51; mass < 13Msun) and 2006ov (log L/Lsun = 4.29; mass <
10Msun). In the case of supernova 2004et we show that the yellow-supergiant
progenitor candidate, originally identified in Canada France Hawaii Telescope
images, is still visible ~3 years post-explosion in observations from the
William Herschel Telescope. High-resolution Hubble Space Telescope and Gemini
(North) adaptive optics late-time imagery reveal that this source is not a
single yellow supergiant star, but rather is resolved into at least three
distinct sources. We report the discovery of the unresolved progenitor as an
excess of flux in pre-explosion Isaac Newton Telescope i'-band imaging.
Accounting for the late-time contribution of the supernova using published
optical spectra, we calculate the progenitor photometry as the difference
between the pre- and post-explosion, ground-based observations. We find the
progenitor was most likely a late K to late M-type supergiant of 8 +5/-1 Msun.
In all cases we conclude that future, high-resolution observations of the
supernova sites will be required to confirm these results.Comment: 43 pages (pre-print format), 12 figures, 10 tables. Significant
revision following referee's comments. Accepted for publication in MNRA
The Role of Emotions in Service Encounters
This article advances our understanding of the influence of affect in consumersâ responses to brief, non-personal service encounters. This study contributes to the services marketing literature by examining for mundane service transactions the impact of customer-displayed emotion and affect on assessments of the service encounter and the overall experience. Observational and perceptual data from customers were matched with frontline employees in 200 transaction-specific encounters. The results of this study suggest that consumersâ evaluations of the service encounter correlate highly with their displayed emotions during the interaction and post-encounter mood states. Finally, the findings indicate that frontline employeesâ perceptions of the encounter are not aligned with those of their customers. The managerial implications of these findings are briefly discussed
The Core-Collapse Supernova Rate in Arp299 Revisited
We present a study of the CCSN rate in nuclei A and B1 of the luminous
infrared galaxy Arp299, based on 11 years of Very Large Array monitoring of
their radio emission at 8.4 GHz. Significant variations in the nuclear radio
flux density can be used to identify the CCSN activity in the absence of
high-resolution very long baseline interferometry observations. In the case of
the B1-nucleus, the small variations in its measured diffuse radio emission are
below the fluxes expected from radio supernovae, thus making it well-suited to
detect RSNe through flux density variability. In fact, we find strong evidence
for at least three RSNe this way, which results in a lower limit for the CCSN
rate of 0.28 +/- 0.16 per year. In the A-nucleus, we did not detect any
significant variability and found a SN detection threshold luminosity which
allows only the detection of the most luminous RSNe known. Our method is
basically blind to normal CCSN explosions occurring within the A-nucleus, which
result in too small variations in the nuclear flux density, remaining diluted
by the strong diffuse emission of the nucleus itself. Additionally, we have
attempted to find near-infrared counterparts for the earlier reported RSNe in
the Arp299 nucleus A, by comparing NIR adaptive optics images from the Gemini-N
telescope with contemporaneous observations from the European VLBI Network.
However, we were not able to detect NIR counterparts for the reported radio SNe
within the innermost regions of nucleus A. While our NIR observations were
sensitive to typical CCSNe at 300 mas from the centre of the nucleus A,
suffering from extinction up to A_v~15 mag, they were not sensitive to such
highly obscured SNe within the innermost nuclear regions where most of the EVN
sources were detected. (abridged)Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures and 7 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
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Become a Fan: A Review of Restaurants\u27 Facebook Fan Pages
Social media has attracted increasing research interests in recent years. It can be used as an effective marketing tool. To the authorsâ knowledge, no academic research has been conducted to conceptualize the approach for social media marketing, and the potential effect on customer attitude. Therefore, the current study sets out to propose a conceptual model that articulates the technological affordances of social media. In addition, heuristics triggered by corresponding affordances are introduced. Lastly, to identify the gap between an optimal strategy and the existing practice, this study examined 25 restaurant facebook fan pages. The results indicate that restaurant companies have not yet fully utilized the affordance of social media
Supernovae and radio transients in M 82
We present optical and near-infrared (IR) photometry and near-IR spectroscopy
of SN 2004am, the only optically detected supernova (SN) in M 82. These
demonstrate that SN 2004am was a highly reddened type II-P SN similar to the
low luminosity type II-P events such as SNe 1997D and 2005cs. We show that SN
2004am was located coincident with the obscured super star cluster M 82-L, and
from the cluster age infer a progenitor mass of 12 +7/-3 Msun. In addition to
this, we present a high spatial resolution Gemini-N K-band adaptive optics
image of the site of SN 2008iz and a second transient of uncertain nature, both
detected so far only at radio wavelengths. Using image subtraction techniques
together with archival data from the Hubble Space Telescope, we are able to
recover a near-IR transient source co-incident with both objects. We find the
likely extinction towards SN 2008iz to be not more than Av ~ 10. The nature of
the second transient remains elusive and we regard an extremely bright
microquasar in M 82 as the most plausible scenario.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Metal-ligand interplay in strongly-correlated oxides: a parametrized phase diagram for pressure induced spin transitions
We investigate the magnetic properties of archetypal transition-metal oxides
MnO, FeO, CoO and NiO under very high pressure by x-ray emission spectroscopy
at the K\beta line. We observe a strong modification of the magnetism in the
megabar range in all the samples except NiO. The results are analyzed within a
multiplet approach including charge-transfer effects. The pressure dependence
of the emission line is well accounted for by changes of the ligand field
acting on the d electrons and allows us to extract parameters like local
d-hybridization strength, O-2p bandwidth and ionic crystal field across the
magnetic transition. This approach allows a first-hand insight into the
mechanism of the pressure induced spin transition.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Can Reflection from Grains Diagnose the Albedo?
By radiation transfer models with a realistic power spectra of the projected
density distributions, we show that the optical properties of grains are poorly
constrained by observations of reflection nebulae. The ISM is known to be
hierarchically clumped from a variety of observations (molecules, H I,
far-infrared). Our models assume the albedo and phase parameter of the dust,
the radial optical depth of the sphere averaged over all directions, and random
distributions of the dust within the sphere. The outputs are the stellar
extinction, optical depth, and flux of scattered light as seen from various
viewing angles. Observations provide the extinction and scattered flux from a
particular direction.
Hierarchical geometry has a large effect on the flux of scattered light
emerging from a nebula for a particular extinction of the exciting star. There
is a very large spread in both scattered fluxes and extinctions for any
distribution of dust. Consequently, an observed stellar extinction and
scattered flux can be fitted by a wide range of albedos. With hierarchical
geometry it is not completely safe to determine even relative optical constants
from multiwavelength observations of the same reflection nebula. The geometry
effectively changes with wavelength as the opacity of the clumps varies. Limits
on the implications of observing the same object in various wavelengths are
discussed briefly.
Henry (2002) uses a recipe to determine the scattered flux from a star with a
given extinction. It is claimed to be independent of the geometry. It provides
considerably more scattering than our models, probably leading to an
underestimate of the grain albedos from the UV Diffuse Galactic Light.Comment: 27 pages, including 7 figures. Accepted by Ap
Core-collapse supernovae missed by optical surveys
We estimate the fraction of core-collapse supernovae (CCSNe) that remain
undetected by optical SN searches due to obscuration by large amounts of dust
in their host galaxies. This effect is especially important in luminous and
ultraluminous infrared galaxies, which are locally rare but dominate the star
formation at redshifts of z~1-2. We perform a detailed investigation of the SN
activity in the nearby luminous infrared galaxy Arp 299 and estimate that up to
83% of the SNe in Arp 299 and in similar galaxies in the local Universe are
missed by observations at optical wavelengths. For rest-frame optical surveys
we find the fraction of SNe missed due to high dust extinction to increase from
the average local value of ~19% to ~38% at z~1.2 and then stay roughly constant
up to z~2. It is therefore crucial to take into account the effects of
obscuration by dust when determining SN rates at high redshift and when
predicting the number of CCSNe detectable by future high-z surveys such as
LSST, JWST, and Euclid. For a sample of nearby CCSNe (distances 6-15 Mpc)
detected during the last 12 yr, we find a lower limit for the local CCSN rate
of 1.5 +0.4/-0.3 x 10^-4 yr^-1 Mpc^-3, consistent with that expected from the
star formation rate. Even closer, at distances less than ~6 Mpc, we find a
significant increase in the CCSN rate, indicating a local overdensity of star
formation caused by a small number of galaxies that have each hosted multiple
SNe.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, 11 tables, minor changes to match the published
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