46,155 research outputs found
The BHB stars in the Survey Fields of Rodgers et al. (1993): New Observations and Comparisons with other Recent Surveys
We study blue horizontal branch (BHB) and RR Lyrae stars in the Rogers et al.
(1993a) fields and compare their velocity and density distributions with other
surveys in the same part of the sky. Photometric data are given for 176
early-type stars in the northern field. We identify fourteen BHB stars and four
possible BHB stars, and determine the selection efficiency of the Century
Survey, the HK Survey, and the SDSS survey for BHB stars. We give light curves
and \gamma -radial velocities for three type-ab RR Lyrae stars in the northern
field; comparison with the nearby LONEOS Survey shows that there is likely to
be an equal number of lower-amplitude type-ab RR Lyrae stars that we do not
find. There are therefore at least twice as many BHB stars as type-ab RR Lyrae
stars in the northern field--similar to the ratio in the solar neighborhood.
The velocity distribution of the southern field shows no evidence for an
anomalous thick disk that was found by Gilmore et al. (2002); the halo velocity
peaks at a slightly prograde rotational velocity but there is also a
significant retrograde halo component in this field. The velocity distribution
in the northern field shows no evidence of Galactic rotation for |Z|>4 kpc and
a slight prograde motion for |Z|<4 kpc. The space densities of BHB stars in the
northern field agree with an extrapolation of the power-law distribution
recently derived by de Propris et al. (2010). For |Z|<4 kpc, however, we
observe an excess of BHB stars compared with this power-law. We conclude that
these BHB stars mostly belong to a spatially flattened, non-rotating inner halo
component of the Milky Way in confirmation of the Kinman et al. (2009) analysis
of Century Survey BHB stars.Comment: 24 pages, accepted in A
Recommended from our members
Graph-theoretical conditions for inscribability and Delaunay realizability
We present new graph-theoretical conditions for inscribable polyhedra and Delaunay triangulations. We establish several sufficient conditions of the following general form: if a polyhedron has a sufficiently rich collection of Hamiltonian subgraphs, then it is inscribable. These results have several consequences:All 4-connected polyhedra are inscribable.All simplical polyhedra in which all vertex degrees are between 4 and 6, inclusive, are inscribable.All triangulations without chords or nonfacial triangles are realizable as Delaunay triangulations.We also strengthen some earlier results about matchings in inscribable polyhedra. Specifically, we show that any nonbipartite inscribable polyhedron has a perfect matching containing any specified edge, and that any bipartite inscribable polyhedron has a perfect matching containing any two specified disjoint edges. We give examples showing that these results are best possible
New looks at and for Onespa, Buzyges, and Librita (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae: Hesperiinae), with new combinations and descriptions of a new genus and six new species
Thirteen species of skippers (six newly described; Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae: Hesperiinae: Hesperiini) from higher elevations of Mexico and Central America are reviewed. These are included in four genera (one newly described), some with proposed new combinations. Onespa Steinhauser, 1974, originally described as monotypic, is shown to include three species in addition to its type species, Onespa nubis Steinhauser, 1974. One of these, Atrytone gala Godman, 1900, that has been misplaced in several genera since its description, represents a new combination. The other two species, distributed in montane habitats in northwestern Mexico and in Costa Rica, are described as new. Buzyges Godman, 1900, distributed in Mexico and Central America and also formerly considered monotypic, is shown to embrace four species. Besides the type species, Buzyges idothea Godman, 1900, two species long placed in Poanes Scudder, 1872, Pamphila rolla Mabille, 1883, and Poanes benito Freeman, 1979, are included as new combinations. Another species, known only from Costa Rica, is described as new. These are united by several superficial characters, but especially by genital morphology of both sexes. Librita Evans, 1955, was described to include three species of which one, Librita raspa Evans, 1955, was subsequently removed. Augiades heras Godman, 1900 is here also removed from Librita and placed in a new genus with three previously undescribed species. This completes the disintegration of Librita, which is now monotypic. The four genera, although exhibiting similarities suggesting potential alliance, differ in their unique combinations of several superficial and genital traits from each other and other hesperiine skippers
Space capsule ejection assembly Patent
Describing assembly for opening stabilizing and decelerating flaps of flight capsules used in space researc
The type of Copaeodes chromis Skinner, 1919 (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae: Hesperiinae)
The holotype of Copaeodes chromis Skinner, 1919 (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae), housed at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History, is a typical specimen of Zariaspes mythecus Godman, 1900
Relative Evaporation Probabilities of 3He and 4He from the Surface of Superfluid 4He
We report a preliminary experiment which demonstrates that 3He atoms in
Andreev states are evaporated by high-energy (E/k_B ~ 10.2 K) phonons in a
quantum evaporation process similar to that which occurs in pure 4He. Under
conditions of low 3He coverage, high-energy phonons appear to evaporate 3He and
4He atoms with equal probability. However, we have not managed to detect any
3He atoms that have been evaporated by rotons, and conclude that the
probability of a roton evaporating a 3He atom is less than 2% of the
probability that it evaporates a 4He atom.Comment: 2 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to Proc. LT-22 (1999) Physica
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