6,410 research outputs found

    Quantifying stellar radial migration in an N-body simulation: blurring, churning, and the outer regions of galaxy discs

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    Radial stellar migration in galactic discs has received much attention in studies of galactic dynamics and chemical evolution, but remains a dynamical phenomenon that needs to be fully quantified. In this work, using a Tree-SPH simulation of an Sb-type disc galaxy, we quantify the effects of blurring (epicyclic excursions) and churning (change of guiding radius). We quantify migration (either blurring or churning) both in terms of flux (the number of migrators passing at a given radius), and by estimating the population of migrators at a given radius at the end of the simulation compared to non-migrators, but also by giving the distance over which the migration is effective at all radii. We confirm that the corotation of the bar is the main source of migrators by churning in a bar-dominated galaxy, its intensity being directly linked to the episode of a strong bar, in the first 1-3 Gyr of the simulation. We show that within the outer Lindblad resonance (OLR), migration is strongly dominated by churning, while blurring gains progressively more importance towards the outer disc and at later times. Most importantly, we show that the OLR limits the exchange of angular momentum, separating the disc in two distinct parts with minimal or null exchange, except in the transition zone, which is delimited by the position of the OLR at the epoch of the formation of the bar, and at the final epoch. We discuss the consequences of these findings for our understanding of the structure of the Milky Way disc. Because the Sun is situated slightly outside the OLR, we suggest that the solar vicinity may have experienced very limited churning from the inner disc.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics (acceptance date: 27/04/15), 24 pages, 24 figure

    Hiding its age: the case for a younger bulge

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    The determination of the age of the bulge has led to two contradictory results. On the one side, the color-magnitude diagrams in different bulge fields seem to indicate a uniformly old (>>10 Gyr) population. On the other side, individual ages derived from dwarfs observed through microlensing events seem to indicate a large spread, from \sim 2 to \sim 13 Gyr. Because the bulge is now recognised as being mainly a boxy peanut-shaped bar, it is suggested that disk stars are one of its main constituents, and therefore also stars with ages significantly younger than 10 Gyr. Other arguments as well point to the fact that the bulge cannot be exclusively old, and in particular cannot be a burst population, as it is usually expected if the bulge was the fossil remnant of a merger phase in the early Galaxy. In the present study, we show that given the range of metallicities observed in the bulge, a uniformly old population would be reflected into a significant spread in color at the turn-off which is not observed. Inversely, we demonstrate that the correlation between age and metallicity expected to hold for the inner disk would conspire to form a color-magnitude diagram with a remarkably small spread in color, thus mimicking the color-magnitude diagram of a uniformly old population. If stars younger than 10 Gyr are part of the bulge, as must be the case if the bulge has been mainly formed through dynamical instabilities in the disk, then a very small spread at the turn-off is expected, as seen in the observations.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in A&

    The age structure of stellar populations in the solar vicinity. Clues of a two-phase formation history of the Milky Way disk

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    We analyze high quality abundances data of solar neighborhood stars and show that there are two distinct regimes of [alpha/Fe] versus age which we identify as the epochs of the thick and thin disk formation. A tight correlation between metallicity and [alpha/Fe] versus age is clearly identifiable on thick disk stars, implying that this population formed from a well mixed ISM, over a time scale of 4-5 Gyr. Thick disk stars vertical velocity dispersion correlate with age, with the youngest objects having as small scale heights as those of thin disk stars. A natural consequence of these two results is that a vertical metallicity gradient is expected in this population. We suggest that the thick disk set the initial conditions for the formation of the inner thin disk. This provides also an explanation of the apparent coincidence between the step in metallicity at 7-10 kpc in the thin disk and the confinment of the thick disk at about R<10 kpc. We suggest that the outer thin disk developped outside the influence of the thick disk, but also that the high alpha-enrichment of the outer regions may originate from a primordial pollution by the gas expelled from the thick disk. Local metal-poor thin disk stars, whose properties are best explained by an origin in the outer disk, are shown to be as old as the youngest thick disk (9-10 Gyr), implying that the outer thin disk started to form while the thick disk formation was still on-going in the inner Galaxy. We point out that, given the tight age-abundance relations in the thick disk, an inside-out process would give rise to a radial gradient in abundances in this population which is not observed. Finally, we argue that the data discussed here leave little room for radial migration, either to have contaminated the solar vicinity, or, to have redistributed stars in significant proportion across the solar annulus.Comment: Accepted in A&A, Revised version with new figures and extended discussio

    Revisiting two local constraints of the Galactic chemical evolution

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    I review the uncertainties in two observational constraints of the Galactic disc chemical evolution: the metallicity distribution (MD) of long-lived dwarfs and the age-metallicity relation (AMR). It is shown first that the observed MD, designed with standard methods, is more fit to a closed-box model than to the infall MD. We argue that this is due to the specific contribution of the thick disc population, which has been overlooked both in the derivation of the observed MD and in the standard chemical evolution models. Although this agreement disqualifies the MD as the best supportive evidence for infall, we argue that the evolution must be more complex than described by either the closed-box or the standard infall models. A new age-metallicity distribution is obtained, where particularities of the previous recent determinations are phased out. The new AMR shows a mean increase limited to about a factor of 2 in Z over the disc age. It is shown that below 3 Gyrs, the dispersion in metallicity is about 0.1 dex, which, (given the observational uncertainties), is compatible with the small cosmic dispersion measured on the interstellar medium and meteoritic pre-solar dust grains. A population that is progressively older and more metal rich arises at a metallicity greater than that of the Hyades, to reach [Fe/H] ~ +0.5 dex at ages > 5 Gyr. We suggest that this is best explained by radial migration. A symmetrical widening towards lower metallicities is seen at about the same age. Finally, the new derived ages are sufficiently consistent that an AMR within the thick disc is confirmed. These new features altogether draw a picture of the chemical evolution where dynamical effects and complexity in the AMR dominate, rather than a generalized high dispersion at all ages. (abridged)Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA

    A Seven Year Reaction to the Single Audit Act of 1984

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    The Single Audit Act of 1984 attempted to provide a sense of uniformity amongst governmental audits. It provided strict regulations and procedures the auditor must follow when conducting the audit. Having only one audit provides efficient use of resources, rather than having many audits instituted by each relevant federal agency. The auditors must follow generally accepted governmental auditing standards when performing the audit. Controls and compliance with proper regulations have to be examined to ensure they are being utilized effectively. Reactions from all of the relevant parties have been positive and supportive, so the Single Audit Act should be around for a long time guiding the auditors in their audits of governmental units.B.A. (Bachelor of Arts

    Juan de Torres's Poetics of Vision : "Oiosqueyanovesque"

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    In this article, I examine Juan de Torres's poetics of the visual through a reading of his Cancionero de Palacio dealing with the visual sphere. I argue that his poetry demonstrates familiarity with medieval scholastic psychology, particularly in relation to sight and memory. The visual sphere can be understood as both the external, phenomenological and somatic world of experience and intersubject interaction, and as the interior world of the psyche and the affect. Lacanian and Jamesonian reading strategies are deployed to approach latent psychological and socio-political content in Torres's representation of the psychic disarray of the lover. The visual sphere is the medium by and through which desire is apprehended and the subject inscribes itself in the symbolic order, seeks the desire of the Other and is subject to the surveying gaze of power hierarchies. Torres's work shows great skill and wit, and stands as a particularly good example of the way in which a highly abstract poetic corpus deals directly with the visual understood as power and hierarchy.El presente artículo examina una gama de obras de Juan de Torres del Cancionero de Palacio en que el vate trata un temario que engloba el campo visual. En las obras bajo consideración Torres recurre a la teoría de las facultades o potencias del alma según la psicología escolástica, sobre todo en su relación con el sentido de la vista y la memoria. El campo visual abarca tanto el mundo externo, fenomenológico y somático de interacciones intersubjetivas como el interno del ánimo y los sentimientos. Uso las ópticas lacaniana y jamesoniana para explicar el contenido psicológico latente y socio-político de la representación de la confusión anímica del yo-lírico. El campo visual es el medio por el cual se percibe el deseo y el sujeto se inscribe en el orden simbólico, busca el deseo del Otro y es sujeto a la vigilancia del poder. La poética de Torres manifiesta con gran destreza y cierto tono humorístico la manera en que una poesía con alto grado de abstracción trata directamente con el campo visual como registro de poder y jerarquía

    When the Milky Way turned off the lights: APOGEE provides evidence of star formation quenching in our Galaxy

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    Quenching, the cessation of star formation, is one of the most significant events in the life cycle of galaxies. We show here the first evidence that the Milky Way experienced a generalised quenching of its star formation at the end of its thick disk formation \sim9 Gyr ago. Elemental abundances of stars studied as part of the APOGEE survey reveal indeed that in less than \sim2 Gyr the star formation rate in our Galaxy dropped by an order-of-magnitude. Because of the tight correlation between age and alpha abundance, this event reflects in the dearth of stars along the inner disk sequence in the [Fe/H]-[α\alpha/Fe] plane. Before this phase, which lasted about 1.5 Gyr, the Milky Way was actively forming stars. Afterwards, the star formation resumed at a much lower level to form the thin disk. These events are very well matched by the latest observation of MW-type progenitors at high redshifts. In late type galaxies, quenching is believed to be related to a long and secular exhaustion of gas. In our Galaxy, it occurred on a much shorter time scale, while the chemical continuity before and after the quenching indicates that it was not due to the exhaustion of the gas. While quenching is generally associated with spheroids, our results show that it also occurs in galaxies like the Milky Way, possibly when they are undergoing a morphological transition from thick to thin disks. Given the demographics of late type galaxies in the local universe, in which classical bulges are rare, we suggest further that this may hold true generally in galaxies with mass lower than or approximately MM^*, where quenching could be directly a consequence of thick disk formation. We emphasize that the quenching phase in the Milky Way could be contemporaneous with, and related to, the formation of the bar. We sketch a scenario on how a strong bar may inhibit star formation.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures. Published versio

    Composting paper and grass clippings with anaerobically treated palm oil mill effluent

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    Purpose The purpose of this study is to investigate the composting performance of anaerobically treated palm oil mill effluent (AnPOME) mixed with paper and grass clippings. Methods Composting was conducted using a laboratory scale system for 40 days. Several parameters were determined: temperature, mass reduction, pH, electrical conductivity, colour, zeta potential, phytotoxicity and final compost nutrients. Results The moisture content and compost mass were reduced by 24 and 18 %, respectively. Both final compost pH value and electrical conductivity were found to increase in value. Colour (measured as PtCo) was not suitable as a maturity indicator. The negative zeta potential values decreased from −12.25 to −21.80 mV. The phytotoxicity of the compost mixture was found to decrease in value during the process and the final nutrient value of the compost indicates its suitability as a soil conditioner. Conclusions From this study, we conclude that the addition of paper and grass clippings can be a potential substrate to be composted with anaerobically treated palm oil mill effluent (AnPOME). The final compost produced is suitable for soil conditioner

    Signatures of radial migration in barred galaxies: Azimuthal variations in the metallicity distribution of old stars

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    By means of N-body simulations, we show that radial migration in galaxy disks, induced by bar and spiral arms, leads to significant azimuthal variations in the metallicity distribution of old stars at a given distance from the galaxy center. Metals do not show an axisymmetric distribution during phases of strong migration. Azimuthal variations are visible during the whole phase of strong bar phase, and tend to disappear as the effect of radial migration diminishes, together with a reduction in the bar strength. These results suggest that the presence of inhomogeneities in the metallicity distribution of old stars in a galaxy disk can be a probe of ongoing strong migration. Such signatures may be detected in the Milky Way by Gaia (and complementary spectroscopic data), as well as in external galaxies, by IFU surveys like CALIFA and ATLAS3D. Mixing - defined as the tendency toward a homogeneous, azimuthally symmetric, stellar distribution in the disk - and migration turns out to be two distinct processes, the effects of mixing starting to be visible when strong migration is over.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication on Astronomy and Astrophysic
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