3,894 research outputs found
WISE morphological study of Wolf-Rayet nebulae
We present a morphological study of nebulae around Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars
using archival narrow-band optical and Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer
(WISE) infrared images. The comparison among WISE images in different bands and
optical images proves to be a very efficient procedure to identify the nebular
emission from WR nebulae, and to disentangle it from that of the ISM material
along the line of sight. In particular, WR nebulae are clearly detected in the
WISE W4 band at 22 m. Analysis of available mid-IR Spitzer spectra shows
that the emission in this band is dominated by thermal emission from dust
spatially coincident with the thin nebular shell or most likely with the
leading edge of the nebula. The WR nebulae in our sample present different
morphologies that we classified into well defined WR bubbles (bubble -type nebulae), clumpy and/or disrupted shells (clumpy/disrupted -type nebulae), and material mixed with the diffuse medium (mixed -type nebulae). The variety of morphologies presented by WR nebulae shows a
loose correlation with the central star spectral type, implying that the
nebular and stellar evolutions are not simple and may proceed according to
different sequences and time-lapses. We report the discovery of an obscured
shell around WR35 only detected in the infrared.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, plus 23 appendix figures; to appear in Astronomy
and Astrophysic
Optical Absorptivity versus Molecular Composition of Model Organic Aerosol Matter
Aerosol particles affect the Earth’s energy balance by absorbing and scattering radiation according to their chemical composition, size, and shape. It is generally believed that their optical properties could be deduced from the molecular composition of the complex organic matter contained in these particles, a goal pursued by many groups via high-resolution mass spectrometry, although: (1) absorptivity is associated with structural chromophores rather than with molecular formulas, (2) compositional space is a small projection of structural space, and (3) mixtures of polar polyfunctional species usually exhibit supramolecular interactions. Here we report a suite of experiments showing that the photolysis of aqueous pyruvic acid (a proxy for aerosol α-dicarbonyls absorbing at λ > 300 nm) generates mixtures of identifiable aliphatic polyfunctional oligomers that develop absorptions in the visible upon standing in the dark. These absorptions and their induced fluorescence emissions can be repeatedly bleached and retrieved without carbon loss or ostensible changes in the electrospray mass spectra of the corresponding mixtures and display unambiguous signatures of supramolecular effects. The nonlinear additivity of the properties of the components of these mixtures supports the notion that full structural speciation is insufficient and possibly unnecessary for understanding the optical properties of aerosol particles and their responses to changing ambient conditions
Interference pattern in the collision of structures in the BEC dark matter model: comparison with fluids
In order to explore nonlinear effects on the distribution of matter during
collisions within the Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) dark matter model driven
by the Schr\"odinger-Poisson system of equations, we study the head-on
collision of structures and focus on the interference pattern formation in the
density of matter during the collision process. We explore the possibility that
the collision of two structures of fluid matter modeled with an ideal gas
equation of state also forms interference patterns and found a negative result.
Given that a fluid is the most common flavor of dark matter models, we conclude
that one fingerprint of the BEC dark matter model is the pattern formation in
the density during a collision of structures.Comment: 7 pages, 22 eps figure
Thermochromism of Model Organic Aerosol Matter
Laboratory experiments show that the optical absorptivity of model organic matter is not an intrinsic property, but a strong function of relative humidity, temperature, and insolation. Suites of representative polyfunctional C_(x)H_(y)O_(z) oligomers in water develop intense visible absorptions upon addition of inert electrolytes. The resulting mixtures reach mass absorption cross sections σ(532 nm) ~ 0.1 m^(2)/gC in a few hours, absorb up to 9 times more solar radiation than the starting material, can be half-bleached by noon sunlight in ~ 1 h, and can be repeatedly recycled without carbon loss. Visible absorptions red-shift and evolve increasingly faster in subsequent thermal aging cycles. Thermochromism and its strong direct dependences on ionic strength and temperature are ascribed to the dehydration of >CH−C(OH)C═C< unsaturations by a polar E1 mechanism, and bleaching to photoinduced retrohydration. These transformations are deemed to underlie the daily cycles of aerosol absorption observed in the field, and may introduce a key feedback in the earth’s radiative balance
The IRAM-30m line survey of the Horsehead PDR: III. High abundance of complex (iso-)nitrile molecules in UV-illuminated gas
Complex (iso-)nitrile molecules, such as CH3CN and HC3N, are relatively
easily detected in our Galaxy and in other galaxies. We constrain their
chemistry through observations of two positions in the Horsehead edge: the
photo-dissociation region (PDR) and the dense, cold, and UV-shielded core just
behind it. We systematically searched for lines of CH3CN, HC3N, C3N, and some
of their isomers in our sensitive unbiased line survey at 3, 2, and 1mm. We
derived column densities and abundances through Bayesian analysis using a large
velocity gradient radiative transfer model. We report the first clear detection
of CH3NC at millimeter wavelength. We detected 17 lines of CH3CN at the PDR and
6 at the dense core position, and we resolved its hyperfine structure for 3
lines. We detected 4 lines of HC3N, and C3N is clearly detected at the PDR
position. We computed new electron collisional rate coefficients for CH3CN, and
we found that including electron excitation reduces the derived column density
by 40% at the PDR position. While CH3CN is 30 times more abundant in the PDR
than in the dense core, HC3N has similar abundance at both positions. The
isomeric ratio CH3NC/CH3CN is 0.15+-0.02. In the case of CH3CN, pure gas phase
chemistry cannot reproduce the amount of CH3CN observed in the UV-illuminated
gas. We propose that CH3CN gas phase abundance is enhanced when ice mantles of
grains are destroyed through photo-desorption or thermal-evaporation in PDRs,
and through sputtering in shocks. (abridged)Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Multi-component symmetry-projected approach for molecular ground state correlations
The symmetry-projected Hartree--Fock ansatz for the electronic structure
problem can efficiently account for static correlation in molecules, yet it is
often unable to describe dynamic correlation in a balanced manner. Here, we
consider a multi-component, systematically-improvable approach, that accounts
for all ground state correlations. Our approach is based on linear combinations
of symmetry-projected configurations built out of a set of non-orthogonal,
variationally optimized determinants. The resulting wavefunction preserves the
symmetries of the original Hamiltonian even though it is written as a
superposition of deformed (broken-symmetry) determinants. We show how short
expansions of this kind can provide a very accurate description of the
electronic structure of simple chemical systems such as the nitrogen and the
water molecules, along the entire dissociation profile. In addition, we apply
this multi-component symmetry-projected approach to provide an accurate
interconversion profile among the peroxo and bis(-oxo) forms of
[CuO], comparable to other state-of-the-art quantum chemical
methods
On the Space Time of a Galaxy
We present an exact solution of the averaged Einstein's field equations in
the presence of two real scalar fields and a component of dust with spherical
symmetry. We suggest that the space-time found provides the characteristics
required by a galactic model that could explain the supermassive central object
and the dark matter halo at once, since one of the fields constitutes a central
oscillaton surrounded by the dust and the other scalar field distributes far
from the coordinate center and can be interpreted as a halo. We show the
behavior of the rotation curves all along the background. Thus, the solution
could be a first approximation of a ``long exposition photograph'' of a galaxy.Comment: 8 pages REVTeX, 11 eps figure
Excited electronic states from a variational approach based on symmetry-projected Hartree--Fock configurations
Recent work from our research group has demonstrated that symmetry-projected
Hartree--Fock (HF) methods provide a compact representation of molecular ground
state wavefunctions based on a superposition of non-orthogonal Slater
determinants. The symmetry-projected ansatz can account for static correlations
in a computationally efficient way. Here we present a variational extension of
this methodology applicable to excited states of the same symmetry as the
ground state. Benchmark calculations on the C dimer with a modest basis
set, which allows comparison with full configuration interaction results,
indicate that this extension provides a high quality description of the
low-lying spectrum for the entire dissociation profile. We apply the same
methodology to obtain the full low-lying vertical excitation spectrum of
formaldehyde, in good agreement with available theoretical and experimental
data, as well as to a challenging model insertion pathway for BeH.
The variational excited state methodology developed in this work has two
remarkable traits: it is fully black-box and will be applicable to fairly large
systems thanks to its mean-field computational cost
Internal Kinematics of Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies
We describe the dynamical properties which may be inferred from HST/STIS
spectroscopic observations of luminous compact blue galaxies (LCBGs) between
0.1<z<0.7. While the sample is homogeneous in blue rest-frame color, small size
and line-width, and high surface-brightness, their detailed morphology is
eclectic. Here we determine the amplitude of rotation versus random, or
disturbed motions of the ionized gas. This information affirms the accuracy of
dynamical mass and M/L estimates from Keck integrated line-widths, and hence
also the predictions of the photometric fading of these unusual galaxies. The
resolved kinematics indicates this small subset of LCBGs are dynamically hot,
and unlikely to be embedded in disk systems.Comment: To appear in "Starbursts: from 30 Doradus to Lyman Break Galaxies"
2005, eds. R. de Grijs and R. M. Gonzalez Delgado (Kluwer
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