1,550 research outputs found
Escenarios y criterios para la evaluación de la calidad de la educación ambiental en las escuelas
El cambio necesario para una educación orientada hacia el desarrollo sostenible no afecta sólo al concepto de ‘educación ambiental’ sino también a los conceptos implícitos de ‘calidad’ y de modalidad de evaluación adecuados para apreciar esta calidad. El estudio presentado tiene como objetivo la comparación entre los diversos ‘criterios de calidad’ que en manera implícita y/o explícita guían las propuestas relativas a las ‘ecoescuelas’ y propone la identificación de los diversos ‘escenarios’ de las diferentes visiones del mundo que guían las propuestas. Los ‘criterios de calidad para escuelas para el desarrollo sostenible’ surgidos de esta encuesta han sido propuestos por las redes internacionales ENSI y SEED en 18 idiomas, como instrumentos utilizables para la reflexión sobre los procesos para la autovaloración dirigida a la mejora de la calidad
The circumstellar disc around the Herbig AeBe star HD169142
We present 7 mm and 3.5 cm wavelength continuum observations toward the
Herbig AeBe star HD169142 performed with the Very Large Array (VLA) with an
angular resolution of ~1". We find that this object exhibits strong (~4.4 mJy),
unresolved (~1") 7 mm continuum emission, being one of the brightest isolated
Herbig AeBe stars ever detected with the VLA at this wavelength. No emission is
detected at 3.5 cm continuum, with a 3 sigma upper limit of ~0.08 mJy. From
these values, we obtain a spectral index of ~2.5 in the 3.5 cm to 7 mm
wavelength range, indicating that the observed flux density at 7mm is most
likely dominated by thermal dust emission coming from a circumstellar disc. We
use available photometric data from the literature to model the spectral energy
distribution (SED) of this object from radio to near-ultraviolet frequencies.
The observed SED can be understood in terms of an irradiated accretion disc
with low mass accretion rate, 10^{-8} solar masses per year, surrounding a star
with an age of ~10 Myr. We infer that the mass of the disc is ~0.04 solar
masses, and is populated by dust grains that have grown to a maximum size of 1
mm everywhere, consistent with the lack of silicate emission at 10 microns.
These features, as well as indications of settling in the wall at the dust
destruction radius, led us to speculate the disc of HD169142 is in an advanced
stage of dust evolution, particularly in its inner regions.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures. Accepted by MNRA
Pre-main sequence stars with disks in the Eagle Nebula observed in scattered light
NGC6611 and its parental cloud, the Eagle Nebula (M16), are well-studied
star-forming regions, thanks to their large content of both OB stars and stars
with disks and the observed ongoing star formation. We identified 834
disk-bearing stars associated with the cloud, after detecting their excesses in
NIR bands from J band to 8.0 micron. In this paper, we study in detail the
nature of a subsample of disk-bearing stars that show peculiar characteristics.
They appear older than the other members in the V vs. V-I diagram, and/or they
have one or more IRAC colors at pure photospheric values, despite showing NIR
excesses, when optical and infrared colors are compared. We confirm the
membership of these stars to M16 by a spectroscopic analysis. The physical
properties of these stars with disks are studied by comparing their spectral
energy distributions (SEDs) with the SEDs predicted by models of T-Tauri stars
with disks and envelopes. We show that the age of these stars estimated from
the V vs. V-I diagram is unreliable since their V-I colors are altered by the
light scattered by the disk into the line of sight. Only in a few cases their
SEDs are compatible with models with excesses in V band caused by optical
veiling. Candidate members with disks and photospheric IRAC colors are selected
by the used NIR disk diagnostic, which is sensitive to moderate excesses, such
as those produced by disks with low masses. In 1/3 of these cases, scattering
of stellar flux by the disks can also be invoked. The photospheric light
scattered by the disk grains into the line of sight can affect the derivation
of physical parameters of ClassII stars from photometric optical and NIR data.
Besides, the disks diagnostic we defined are useful for selecting stars with
disks, even those with moderate excesses or whose optical colors are altered by
veiling or photospheric scattered light.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
A Spatially Resolved Inner Hole in the Disk around GM Aurigae
We present 0.3 arcsec resolution observations of the disk around GM Aurigae
with the Submillimeter Array (SMA) at a wavelength of 860 um and with the
Plateau de Bure Interferometer at a wavelength of 1.3 mm. These observations
probe the distribution of disk material on spatial scales commensurate with the
size of the inner hole predicted by models of the spectral energy distribution.
The data clearly indicate a sharp decrease in millimeter optical depth at the
disk center, consistent with a deficit of material at distances less than ~20
AU from the star. We refine the accretion disk model of Calvet et al. (2005)
based on the unresolved spectral energy distribution (SED) and demonstrate that
it reproduces well the spatially resolved millimeter continuum data at both
available wavelengths. We also present complementary SMA observations of CO
J=3-2 and J=2-1 emission from the disk at 2" resolution. The observed CO
morphology is consistent with the continuum model prediction, with two
significant deviations: (1) the emission displays a larger CO J=3-2/J=2-1 line
ratio than predicted, which may indicate additional heating of gas in the upper
disk layers; and (2) the position angle of the kinematic rotation pattern
differs by 11 +/- 2 degrees from that measured at smaller scales from the dust
continuum, which may indicate the presence of a warp. We note that
photoevaporation, grain growth, and binarity are unlikely mechanisms for
inducing the observed sharp decrease in opacity or surface density at the disk
center. The inner hole plausibly results from the dynamical influence of a
planet on the disk material. Warping induced by a planet could also potentially
explain the difference in position angle between the continuum and CO data
sets.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Correlation between the spatial distribution of circumstellar disks and massive stars in the young open cluster NGC 6611. II: Cluster members selected with Spitzer/IRAC
Context: the observations of the proplyds in the Orion Nebula Cluster,
showing clear evidence of ongoing photoevaporation, have provided a clear proof
about the role of the externally induced photoevaporation in the evolution of
circumstellar disks. NGC 6611 is an open cluster suitable to study disk
photoevaporation, thanks to its large population of massive members and of
stars with disk. In a previous work, we obtained evidence of the influence of
the strong UV field generated by the massive cluster members on the evolution
of disks around low-mass Pre-Main Sequence members. That work was based on a
multi-band BVIJHK and X-ray catalog purposely compiled to select the cluster
members with and without disk. Aims: in this paper we complete the list of
candidate cluster members, using data at longer wavelengths obtained with
Spitzer/IRAC, and we revisit the issue of the effects of UV radiation on the
evolution of disks in NGC 6611. Methods: we select the candidate members with
disks of NGC 6611, in a field of view of 33'x34' centered on the cluster, using
IRAC color-color diagrams and suitable reddening-free color indices. Besides,
using the X-ray data to select Class III cluster members, we estimate the disks
frequency vs. the intensity of the incident radiation emitted by massive
members. Results: we identify 458 candidate members with circumstellar disks,
among which 146 had not been revealed in our previous work. Comparing of the
various color indices we used to select the cluster members with disk, we claim
that they detect the excesses due to the emission of the same physical region
of the disk: the inner rim at the dust sublimation radius. Our new results
confirm that UV radiation from massive stars affects the evolution of nearby
circumstellar disks.Comment: Accepted for publication at Astronomy & Astrophysic
Empirical Constraints on Turbulence in Protoplanetary Accretion Disks
We present arcsecond-scale Submillimeter Array observations of the CO(3-2)
line emission from the disks around the young stars HD 163296 and TW Hya at a
spectral resolution of 44 m/s. These observations probe below the ~100 m/s
turbulent linewidth inferred from lower-resolution observations, and allow us
to place constraints on the turbulent linewidth in the disk atmospheres. We
reproduce the observed CO(3-2) emission using two physical models of disk
structure: (1) a power-law temperature distribution with a tapered density
distribution following a simple functional form for an evolving accretion disk,
and (2) the radiative transfer models developed by D'Alessio et al. that can
reproduce the dust emission probed by the spectral energy distribution. Both
types of models yield a low upper limit on the turbulent linewidth (Doppler
b-parameter) in the TW Hya system (<40 m/s), and a tentative (3-sigma)
detection of a ~300 m/s turbulent linewidth in the upper layers of the HD
163296 disk. These correspond to roughly <10% and 40% of the sound speed at
size scales commensurate with the resolution of the data. The derived
linewidths imply a turbulent viscosity coefficient, alpha, of order 0.01 and
provide observational support for theoretical predictions of subsonic
turbulence in protoplanetary accretion disks.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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