173 research outputs found

    educationUndergraduate: Journal of undergraduate research in education (Volume 8)

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    Edited by Tracy Jeffery and Daphne Whiteoak. Contents: 'What are Practitioners’ Perceptions of Qualifications and Progression within the Early Years’ Sector? A Small Scale Research Project Within a Pre-School Setting' by Philippa Coldicott; 'The Benefits of Forest School to Children Aged 2-16: A Systematic Review' by Rebecca Dix; 'Slither Down the Snake of Success: The Link between Synthetic Phonics and Reading Attainment' by Kate Kent; 'Is the App Evaluation Rubric Developed by Weng and Taber-Doughty (2015) an Effective System for Educators to Select the Most Appropriate Apps for Children with Special Educational Needs in the United Kingdom?' by Alex Liddle; 'What do Upper KS2 Children from a Small Village Primary School Perceive to be the Benefits and Potential Challenges of Physical Education Lessons?' by Joseph Piper; 'Has Growing Awareness of Mental Health Issues been Reflected in Improvements in Support and Awareness Within Schools?' by Emily Spalding

    The Radio Lifetime of Supernova Remnants and the Distribution of Pulsar Velocities at Birth

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    We have made VLA images of the fields around three young pulsars which have resulted in the discovery of two new supernova remnants and confirmation of a third. We argue that, in at least two cases and perhaps the third, the pulsars are physically associated with these supernova remnants. A review of all known young pulsars shows that the majority are associated with supernova remnants. We show that the typical density of the interstellar medium into which the supernova remnants are evolving has a density of 0.2 cm−3^{-3} instead of the low value of 0.01 cm−3^{-3} which had been calculated from other studies, and results in a considerably longer radio lifetime for supernova remnants. Both the morphology of the supernova remnants and the location of the pulsars imply that most of these young pulsars are born with large transverse velocities (∌\sim500 km s−1^{-1}). This high velocity mean in the distribution of pulsar velocities appears to be a general property of the pulsar population at birth, not seen in proper motion studies, due to selection effects. We explore the implications of this result as it relates to the origin of these velocities and the galactic distribution of pulsars. High velocity pulsars can escape their supernova remnant in a very short timescale, comparable to the lifetime of the remnant and may even play a role in extending the observable radio lifetime of the remnant. A significant fraction will be capable of escaping the disk of the Galaxy, producing an extended halo population.Comment: (apJ accepted). uuencoded, compressed postscript file. 23 pages. Hardcopies of figures and table available on request from [email protected]

    Resolving the compact HII regions in N160A with HST

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    Using high-resolution imaging with the Hubble Space Telescope, we study the Large Magellanic Cloud HII region N160A and uncover several striking features of this complex massive star-forming site. The two compact high excitation HII blobs (HEBs) A1 and A2 are for the first time resolved and their stellar content and morphology is revealed. A1, being of higher excitation, is powered by a single massive star whose strong wind has created a surrounding bubble. A2 harbors several exciting stars enshrouded inside large quantities of dust. The whole N160A nebula is energized by three star clusters for which we obtain photometry and study their color-magnitude diagram. The HII region is particularly dusty, with extinction values reaching an A_v~2.5 mag in the visible, and it is separated from the molecular cloud by an outstanding ionization front. A previously detected infrared young stellar object is also accurately located with respect to the HII region.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics. A version of the paper with higher quality images is available at http://wwwusr.obspm.fr/~heydari/projects/N16

    The Circumnuclear Molecular Gas in the Seyfert Galaxy NGC4945

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    We have mapped the central region of NGC 4945 in the J=2→1J=2\to1 transition of 12^{12}CO, 13^{13}CO, and C18^{18}O, as well as the continuum at 1.3 mm, at an angular resolution of 5\farc \times 3\farc with the Submillimeter Array. The relative proximity of NGC 4945 (distance of only 3.8 Mpc) permits a detailed study of the circumnuclear molecular gas and dust in a galaxy exhibiting both an AGN (classified as a Seyfert 2) and a circumnuclear starburst in an inclined ring with radius ∌\sim2\farcs5 (∌\sim50 pc). We find that all three molecular lines trace an inclined rotating disk with major axis aligned with that of the starburst ring and large-scale galactic disk, and which exhibits solid-body rotation within a radius of ∌\sim5\farc (∌\sim95 pc). We infer an inclination for the nuclear disk of 62∘±2∘62^{\circ} \pm 2^{\circ}, somewhat smaller than the inclination of the large-scale galactic disk of ∌\sim78∘78^{\circ}. The continuum emission at 1.3 mm also extends beyond the starburst ring, and is dominated by thermal emission from dust. If it traces the same dust emitting in the far-infrared, then the bulk of this dust must be heated by star-formation activity rather than the AGN. We discover a kinematically-decoupled component at the center of the disk with a radius smaller than 1\farcs4 (27 pc), but which spans approximately the same range of velocities as the surrounding disk. This component has a higher density than its surroundings, and is a promising candidate for the circumnuclear molecular torus invoked by AGN unification models.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures,accepted by Ap

    Dense gas in nearby galaxies XVI. The nuclear starburst environment in NGC4945

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    A multi-line millimeter-wave study of the nearby starburst galaxy NGC 4945 has been carried out using the Swedish-ESO Submillimeter Telescope (SEST). The study covers the frequency range from 82 GHz to 354 GHz and includes 80 transitions of 19 molecules. 1.3 mm continuum data of the nuclear source are also presented. A large number of molecular species indicate the presence of a prominent high density interstellar gas component characterized by nH2∌105n_{\rm H_2}\sim10^5 cm−3^{-3}. Abundances of molecular species are calculated and compared with abundances observed toward the starburst galaxies NGC 253 and M 82 and galactic sources. Apparent is an `overabundance' of HNC in the nuclear environment of NGC 4945. While the HNC/HCN JJ=1--0 line intensity ratio is ∌\sim0.5, the HNC/HCN abundance ratio is ∌\sim1. While HCN is subthermally excited (Tex∌T_{\rm ex}\sim8 K), CN is even less excited (Tex∌T_{\rm ex}\sim3--4 K), indicating that it arises from a less dense gas component and that its NN=2--1 line can be optically thin even though its NN=1--0 emission is moderately optically thick. Overall, fractional abundances of NGC 4945 suggest that the starburst has reached a stage of evolution that is intermediate between those observed in NGC 253 and M 82. Carbon, nitrogen, oxygen and sulfur isotope ratios are also determined. Within the limits of uncertainty, carbon and oxygen isotope ratios appear to be the same in the nuclear regions of NGC 4945 and NGC 253. High 18^{18}O/17^{17}O, low 16^{16}O/18^{18}O and 14^{14}N/15^{15}N and perhaps also low 32^{32}S/34^{34}S ratios appear to be characteristic properties of a starburst environment in which massive stars have had sufficient time to affect the isotopic composition of the surrounding interstellar medium.Comment: 26 pages, 16 figures, accepted bt A&

    The Molonglo Galactic Plane Survey: I. Overview and Images

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    The first epoch Molonglo Galactic Plane Survey (MGPS1) is a radio continuum survey made using the Molonglo Observatory Synthesis Telescope (MOST) at 843 MHz with a resolution of 43" X 43" cosec |delta|. The region surveyed is 245 deg < l < 355 deg, |b| < 1.5 deg. The thirteen 9 deg X 3 deg mosaic images presented here are the superposition of over 450 complete synthesis observations, each taking 12 h and covering 70' X 70' cosec |delta|. The root-mean-square sensitivity over much of the mosaiced survey is 1-2 mJy/beam (1 sigma), and the positional accuracy is approximately 1" X 1" cosec |delta| for sources brighter than 20 mJy. The dynamic range is no better than 250:1, and this also constrains the sensitivity in some parts of the images. The survey area of 330 sq deg contains well over 12,000 unresolved or barely resolved objects, almost all of which are extra-galactic sources lying in the Zone of Avoidance. In addition a significant fraction of this area is covered by extended, diffuse emission associated with thermal complexes, discrete H II regions, supernova remnants, and other structures in the Galactic interstellar medium.Comment: Paper with 3 figures and 1 table + Table 2 + 7 jpg grayscales for Fig 4. Astrophysical Journal Supplement (in press) see also http://www.astrop.physics.usyd.edu.au/MGP

    Detection of 6.7 GHz methanol absorption towards hot corinos

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    Methanol masers at 6.7 GHz have been found exclusively towards high-mass star forming regions. Recently, some Class 0 protostars have been found to display conditions similar to what are found in hot cores that are associated with massive star formation. These hot corino sources have densities, gas temperatures, and methanol abundances that are adequate for exciting strong 6.7 GHz maser emission. This raises the question of whether 6.7 GHz methanol masers can be found in both hot corinos and massive star forming regions, and if not, whether thermal methanol emission can be detected. We searched for the 6.7 GHz methanol line towards five hot corino sources in the Perseus region using the Arecibo radio telescope. To constrain the excitation conditions of methanol, we observed thermal submillimeter lines of methanol in the NGC1333-IRAS 4 region with the APEX telescope. We did not detect 6.7 GHz emission in any of the sources, but found absorption against the cosmic microwave background in NGC1333-IRAS 4A and NGC1333-IRAS 4B. Using a large velocity gradient analysis, we modeled the excitation of methanol over a wide range of physical parameters, and verify that the 6.7 GHz line is indeed strongly anti-inverted for densities lower than 10^6 cm^-3. We used the submillimeter observations of methanol to verify the predictions of our model for IRAS 4A by comparison with other CH3OH transitions. Our results indicate that the methanol observations from the APEX and Arecibo telescopes are consistent with dense (n ~ 10^6 cm^-3), cold (T ~ 15-30 K) gas. The lack of maser emission in hot corinos and low-mass protostellar objects in general may be due to densities that are much higher than the quenching density in the region where the radiation field is conducive to maser pumping.Comment: Accepted by A&

    Supernova Remnant Evolution in Wind Bubbles: A Closer Look at Kes 27

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    Massive Stars (> 8 solar masses) lose mass in the form of strong winds. These winds accumulate around the star, forming wind-blown bubbles. When the star explodes as a supernova (SN), the resulting shock wave expands within this wind-blown bubble, rather than the interstellar medium. The properties of the resulting remnant, its dynamics and kinematics, the morphology, and the resulting evolution, are shaped by the structure and properties of the wind-blown bubble. In this article we focus on Kes 27, a supernova remnant (SNR) that has been proposed by Chen et al (2008) to be evolving in a wind-blown bubble, explore its properties, and investigate whether the properties could be ascribed to evolution of a SNR in a wind-blown bubble. Our initial model does not support this conclusion, due to the fact that the reflected shock is expanding into much lower densities.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Revised version submitted to High Energy Density Physics. To be published in a special issue of the proceedings of the 2012 HEDLA conferenc

    Radio Emission from the Composite Supernova Remnant G326.3-1.8 (MSH15-56)

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    High resolution radio observations of the composite supernova remnant (SNR) G326.3-1.8 or MSH 15-56 with the Australia Telescope Compact Array show details of both the shell and the bright plerion which is offset about 1/3 of the distance from the center of the SNR to the shell. The shell appears to be composed of thin filaments, typical of older shell SNRs. The central part of the elongated plerion is composed of a bundle of parallel ridges which bulge out at the ends and form a distinct ring structure on the northwestern end. The magnetic field with a strength of order 45 microGauss, is directed along the axis of the ridges but circles around the northwestern ring. This plerion is large and bright in the radio but is not detected in x-ray or optical wavelengths. There is, however, a faint hard x-ray feature closer to the shell outside the plerion. Perhaps if the supernova explosion left a rapidly moving magnetar with large energy input but initially rapid decay of both relativistic particles and magnetic field, the observed differences with wavelength could be explained.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, accepted by Ap

    How to win friends and influence people: the value of the cohort in a doctoral research training programme

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    open access articleThis article is not about retention and attrition rates, or about successful outcomes, or about supervision, even though these are at the nub of most research on the doctoral experience. This article concerns the experiences of doctoral students undertaking educational research methods training, as opposed to the experiences of the PhD itself. The specific phenomenon identified in this small group study is the value of peer interaction within the cohort. Three strands of this relationship, namely peer support, cultural mix and bonding/ad-hoc social gatherings have been investigated. Our findings illustrate the importance and unexpected value of the ‘cohort’ on the participants in this study as they journey towards academia
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