1,084 research outputs found
Biophysicochemical interaction of a clinical pulmonary surfactant with nano-alumina
We report on the interaction of pulmonary surfactant composed of
phospholipids and proteins with nanometric alumina (Al2O3) in the context of
lung exposure and nanotoxicity. We study the bulk properties of
phospholipid/nanoparticle dispersions and determine the nature of their
interactions. The clinical surfactant Curosurf, both native and extruded, and a
protein-free surfactant are investigated. The phase behavior of mixed
surfactant/particle dispersions was determined by optical and electron
microscopy, light scattering and zeta potential measurements. It exhibits broad
similarities with that of strongly interacting nanosystems such as polymers,
proteins or particles, and supports the hypothesis of electrostatic
complexation. At a critical stoichiometry, micron sized aggregates arising from
the association between oppositely charged vesicles and nanoparticles are
formed. Contrary to the models of lipoprotein corona or of particle wrapping,
our work shows that vesicles maintain their structural integrity and trap the
particles at their surfaces. The agglomeration of particles in surfactant phase
is a phenomenon of importance since it could change the interactions of the
particles with lung cells.Comment: 19 pages 9 figure
Very High-Redshift Lensed Galaxies
We review in this paper the main results recently obtained on the
identification and study of very high-z galaxies usinglensing clusters as
natural gravitational telescopes. We present in detail our pilot survey with
ISAAC/VLT, aimed at the detection of z>7 sources. Evolutionary synthesis models
for extremely metal-poor and PopIII starbursts have been used to derive the
observational properties expected for these high-z galaxies, such as expected
magnitudes and colors, line fluxes for the main emission lines, etc. These
models have allowed to define fairly robust selection criteria to find z~7-10
galaxies based on broad-band near-IR photometry in combination with the
traditional Lyman drop-out technique. The first results issued from our
photometric and spectroscopic survey are discussed, in particular the
preliminary confirmation rate, and the global properties of our high-z
candidates, including the latest results on the possible z=10.0 candidate
A1835-1916. The search efficiency should be significantly improved by the
future near-IR multi-object ground-based and space facilities. However, strong
lensing clusters remain a factor of ~5-10 more efficient than blank fields in
this redshift domain, within the FOV of a few arcminutes around the cluster
core, for the typical depth required for this survey project.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, Proceedings of IAU Symposium No. 225: The Impact
of Gravitational Lensing on Cosmology, Y. Mellier and G. Meylan, Ed
ISAAC/VLT observations of a lensed galaxy at z=10.0
We report the first likely spectroscopic confirmation of a z 10.0 galaxy from
our ongoing search for distant galaxies with ISAAC/VLT. Galaxy candidates at z
>~ 7 are selected from ultra-deep JHKs images in the core of gravitational
lensing clusters for which deep optical imaging is also available, including
HST data. The object reported here, found behind Abell 1835, exhibits a faint
emission line detected in the J band, leading to z=10.0 when identified as
Ly-a, in excellent agreement with the photometric redshift determination.
Redshifts z < 7 are very unlikely for various reasons we discuss. The object is
located on the critical lines corresponding to z=9 to 11. The magnification
factor \mu ranges from 25 to 100. For this object we estimate SFR(Ly-a)
(0.8-2.2) Msun/yr and SFR(UV) (47-75) Msun/yr, both uncorrected for lensing.
The steep UV slope indicates a young object with negligible dust extinction.
SED fits with young low-metallicity stellar population models yield (adopting
mu=25) a lensing corrected stellar mass of M*~8.e+6 Msun, and luminosities of
2.e+10 Lsun, corresponding to a dark matter halo of a mass of typically M_tot>~
5.e+8 Msun. In general our observations show that under excellent conditions
and using strong gravitational lensing direct observations of galaxies close to
the ``dark ages'' are feasible with ground-based 8-10m class telescopes.Comment: To be published in A&A, Vol. 416, p. L35. Press release information,
additional figures and information available at http://obswww.unige.ch/sfr
and http://webast.ast.obs-mip.fr/galaxie
A ring galaxy at z=1 lensed by the cluster Abell 370
We present a study of a very peculiar object found in the field of the
cluster-lens Abell 370. This object displays, in HST imaging, a spectacular
morphology comparable to nearby ring-galaxies. From spectroscopic observations
at the CFHT, we measured a redshift of based on the identification of
[O ii] 3727 \AA and [Ne v] 3426 \AA emission lines. These emission lines are
typical of starburst galaxies hosting a central active nucleus and are in good
agreement with the assumption that this object is a ring-galaxy. This object is
also detected with ISO in the LW2 and LW3 filters, and the mid Infra-Red (MIR)
flux ratio favors a Seyfert 1 type. The shape of the ring is gravitationally
distorted by the cluster-lens, and most particularly by a nearby cluster
elliptical galaxy. Using the cluster mass model, we can compute its intrinsic
shape. Requiring that the outer ring follows an ellipse we put constraints on
the M/L ratio of the nearby galaxy and derive a magnification factor of 2.5
0.2. The absolute luminosities of the source are then $L_B = 1.3 \
10^{12} L_{B \odot}\nu_\nu \simeq 4. 10^{10}_\odot$ in the
mid-IR.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, uses aa.cls, accepted to A&A Letters. Minor
changes, Figure 1 revisited and typos adde
Effect of Gravitational Lensing on Measurements of the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect
The Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effect of a cluster of galaxies is usually
measured after background radio sources are removed from the cluster field.
Gravitational lensing by the cluster potential leads to a systematic deficit in
the residual intensity of unresolved sources behind the cluster core relative
to a control field far from the cluster center. As a result, the measured
decrement in the Rayleigh-Jeans temperature of the cosmic microwave background
is overestimated. We calculate the associated systematic bias which is
inevitably introduced into measurements of the Hubble constant using the SZ
effect. For the cluster A2218, we find that observations at 15 GHz with a beam
radius of 0'.4 and a source removal threshold of 100 microJy underestimate the
Hubble constant by 6-10%. If the profile of the gas pressure declines more
steeply with radius than that of the dark matter density, then the ratio of
lensing to SZ decrements increases towards the outer part of the cluster.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, submitted to ApJ
On the filamentary environment of galaxies
The correlation between the large-scale distribution of galaxies and their
spectroscopic properties at z=1.5 is investigated using the Horizon MareNostrum
cosmological run.
We have extracted a large sample of 10^5 galaxies from this large
hydrodynamical simulation featuring standard galaxy formation physics. Spectral
synthesis is applied to these single stellar populations to generate spectra
and colours for all galaxies. We use the skeleton as a tracer of the cosmic web
and study how our galaxy catalogue depends on the distance to the skeleton. We
show that galaxies closer to the skeleton tend to be redder, but that the
effect is mostly due to the proximity of large haloes at the nodes of the
skeleton, rather than the filaments themselves.
This effects translate into a bimodality in the colour distribution of our
sample. The origin of this bimodality is investigated and seems to follow from
the ram pressure stripping of satellite galaxies within the more massive
clusters of the simulation.
The virtual catalogues (spectroscopical properties of the MareNostrum
galaxies at various redshifts) are available online at
http://www.iap.fr/users/pichon/MareNostrum/cataloguesComment: 18 pages, 27 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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