208 research outputs found
The Effect of The Cerium Concentration On The Lattice Parameter of Cubic Cerium Tungsten Bronzes
Cerium tungsten bronzes, Cex, WO3 were prepared by the high temperature, solid state reaction of CeO2, W, and WO3. The intimately mixed reactants were sealed under a vacuum in quartz ampoules and heated for not less than 100 hours at 1050°C. The lattice parameter a0 of the cubic bronzes was determined from Debye-Scherrer X-ray powder patterns. The cerium content of the bronzes x was established by isotopic dilution techniques. Cerium tungsten bronzes of cubic symmetry were found to crystallize in the range 0.070 \u3c x \u3c 0.186. The lattice parameter a0 was found to increase linearly with x in the cubic range according to the relationship a0 = 0.2165x + 3.8008
The relationship between the optical Halpha filaments and the X-ray emission in the core of the Perseus cluster
NGC 1275 in the centre of the Perseus cluster of galaxies, Abell 426, is
surrounded by a spectacular filamentary Halpha nebula. Deep Chandra X-ray
imaging has revealed that the brighter outer filaments are also detected in
soft X-rays. This can be due to conduction and mixing of the cold gas in the
filaments with the hot, dense intracluster medium. We show the correspondence
of the filaments in both wavebands and draw attention to the relationship of
two prominent curved NW filaments to an outer, buoyant radio bubble seen as a
hole in the X-ray image. There is a strong resemblance in the shape of the hole
and the disposition of the filaments to the behaviour of a large air bubble
rising in water. If this is a correct analogy, then the flow is laminar and the
intracluster gas around this radio source is not turbulent. We obtain a limit
on the viscosity of this gas.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Giant Lya nebulae associated with high redshift radio galaxies
We report deep Keck narrow-band Lya images of the luminous z > 3 radio
galaxies 4C 41.17, 4C 60.07, and B2 0902+34. The images show giant, 100-200 kpc
scale emission line nebulae, centered on these galaxies, which exhibit a wealth
of morphological structure, including extended low surface brightness emission
in the outer regions, radially directed filaments, cone-shaped structures and
(indirect) evidence for extended Lya absorption. We discuss these features
within a general scenario where the nebular gas cools gravitationally in large
Cold Dark Matter (CDM) halos, forming stars and multiple stellar systems.
Merging of these ``building'' blocks triggers large scale starbursts, forming
the stellar bulges of massive radio galaxy hosts, and feeds super-massive black
holes which produce the powerful radio jets and lobes. The radio sources,
starburst superwinds and AGN radiation then disrupt the accretion process
limiting galaxy and black hole growth, and imprint the observed filamentary and
cone-shaped structures of the Lya nebulae.Comment: 36 Pages, including 8 Postscript figures. Accepted for publication in
the Astrophysical Journa
Ly-alpha excess in high redshift radio galaxies: a signature of star formation
About 54% of radio galaxies at z>3 and 8% of radio galaxies at 2<z<3 show
unusually strong Ly-alpha emission, compared with the general population of
high redshift (z>2) radio galaxies. These Ly-alpha excess objects (LAEs) show
Ly-alpha/HeII values consistent with or above standard photoionization model
predictions.
We show that the most successful explanation is the presence of a young
stellar population which provides the extra supply of ionizing photons required
to explain the Ly-alpha excess in at least the most extreme LAEs (probably in
all of them).
The measurement of unusually high Ly-alpha ratios in the extended gas of some
high redshift radio galaxies suggests that star formation activity occurs in
spatial scales of tens of kpc.
We argue that, although the fraction of LAEs may be incompletely determined,
both at 23, the much larger fraction of LAEs found at z>3 is a
genuine redshift evolution and not due to selection effects. Therefore, our
results suggest that the radio galaxy phenomenon is more often associated with
a massive starburst at z>3 than at z<3.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Patient Decision Aids for Colorectal Cancer Screening
Decision aids (DAs) prepare patients to make decisions about healthcare options consistent with their preferences. Helping patients choose among available options for colorectal cancer (CRC) screening is important because rates are lower than screening for other cancers. This systematic review describes studies evaluating patient DAs for CRC screening in average-risk adults and their impact on knowledge, screening intentions, and uptake
HST/ACS Emission Line Imaging of Low Redshift 3CR Radio Galaxies I: The Data
We present 19 nearby (z<0.3) 3CR radio galaxies imaged at low- and
high-excitation as part of a Cycle 15 Hubble Space Telescope snapshot survey
with the Advanced Camera for Surveys. These images consist of exposures of the
H-alpha (6563 \AA, plus [NII] contamination) and [OIII] 5007 \AA emission lines
using narrow-band linear ramp filters adjusted according to the redshift of the
target. To facilitate continuum subtraction, a single-pointing 60 s line-free
exposure was taken with a medium-band filter appropriate for the target's
redshift. We discuss the steps taken to reduce these images independently of
the automated recalibration pipeline so as to use more recent ACS flat-field
data as well as to better reject cosmic rays. We describe the method used to
produce continuum-free (pure line-emission) images, and present these images
along with qualitative descriptions of the narrow-line region morphologies we
observe. We present H-alpha+[NII] and [OIII] line fluxes from aperture
photometry, finding the values to fall expectedly on the redshift-luminosity
trend from a past HST/WFPC2 emission line study of a larger, generally higher
redshift subset of the 3CR. We also find expected trends between emission line
luminosity and total radio power, as well as a positive correlation between the
size of the emission line region and redshift. We discuss the associated
interpretation of these results, and conclude with a summary of future work
enabled by this dataset.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
Spatially extended absorption around the z=2.63 radio galaxy MRC 2025-218: outflow or infall?
We present an investigation into the absorber in front of the z=2.63 radio
galaxy MRC 2025-218, using integral field spectroscopy obtained at the Very
Large Telescope, and long slit spectroscopy obtained at the Keck II telescope.
The properties of MRC 2025-218 are particularly conducive to study the nature
of the absorbing gas, i.e., this galaxy shows bright and spatially extended
Ly-alpha emission, along with bright continuum emission from the active
nucleus. Ly-alpha absorption is detected across ~40x30 kpc^2, has a covering
factor of ~1, and shows remarkably little variation in its properties across
its entire spatial extent. This absorber is kinematically detached from the
extended emission line region (EELR). Its properties suggest that the absorber
is outside of the EELR. We derive lower limits to the HI, HII and H column
densities for this absorber of 3x10^16, 7x10^17 and 2x10^18 cm^-2,
respectively. Moreover, the relatively bright emission from the active nucleus
has allowed us to measure a number of metal absorption lines: CI, CII, CIV, NV,
OI, SiII, SiIV, AlII and AlIII. The column density ratios are most naturally
explained using photoionization by a hard continuum, with an ionization
parameter U~0.0005-0.005. Shocks or photoionization by young stars cannot
reproduce satisfactorily the measured column ratios. Using the ratio between
the SiII* and SiII column densities, we derive a lower limit of >10 cm^-3 for
the electron density of the absorber. The data do not allow useful constraints
to be placed on the metallicity of the absorber. We consider two possibilities
for the nature of this absorber: the cosmological infall of gas, and an outflow
driven by supernovae or the radio-jets.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Gas Accretion and Giant Lyman-alpha Nebulae
Several decades of observations and discoveries have shown that high-redshift
AGN and massive galaxies are often surrounded by giant Lyman-alpha nebulae
extending in some cases up to 500 kpc in size. In this review, I discuss the
properties of the such nebulae discovered at z>2 and their connection with gas
flows in and around the galaxies and their halos. In particular, I show how
current observations are used to constrain the physical properties and origin
of the emitting gas in terms of the Lyman-alpha photon production processes and
kinematical signatures. These studies suggest that recombination radiation is
the most viable scenario to explain the observed Lyman-alpha luminosities and
Surface Brightness for the large majority of the nebulae and imply that a
significant amount of dense, ionized and cold clumps should be present within
and around the halos of massive galaxies. Spectroscopic studies suggest that,
among the giant Lyman-alpha nebulae, the one associated with radio-loud AGN
should have kinematics dominated by strong, ionized outflows within at least
the inner 30-50 kpc. Radio-quiet nebulae instead present more quiescent
kinematics compatible with stationary situation and, in some cases, suggestive
of rotating structures. However, definitive evidences for accretion onto
galaxies of the gas associated with the giant Lyman-alpha emission are not
unambiguously detected yet. Deep surveys currently ongoing using other bright,
non-resonant lines such as Hydrogen H-alpha and HeII1640 will be crucial to
search for clearer signatures of cosmological gas accretion onto galaxies and
AGN.Comment: Invited review to appear in Gas Accretion onto Galaxies, Astrophysics
and Space Science Library, eds. A. J. Fox & R. Dave', to be published by
Springe
A New Population of High Redshift, Dusty Lyman-Alpha Emitters and Blobs Discovered by WISE
We report a new technique to select 1.6<z<4.6 dusty Lyman-alpha emitters
(LAEs), over a third of which are `blobs' (LABs) with emission extended on
scales of 30-100kpc. Combining data from the NASA Wide-field Infrared Survey
Explorer (WISE) mission with optical spectroscopy from the W.M. Keck telescope,
we present a color criteria that yields a 78% success rate in identifying rare,
dusty LAEs of which at least 37% are LABs. The objects have a surface density
of only ~0.1 per square degree, making them rare enough that they have been
largely missed in narrow surveys. We measured spectroscopic redshifts for 92 of
these WISE-selected, typically radio-quiet galaxies and find that the LAEs
(LABs) have a median redshift of 2.3 (2.5). The WISE photometry coupled with
data from Herschel reveals that these galaxies have extreme far-infrared
luminosities (L_IR>10^{13-14}L_sun) and warm colors, typically larger than
submillimeter-selected galaxies (SMGs) and dust-obscured galaxies (DOGs). These
traits are commonly associated with the dust being energized by intense AGN
activity. We hypothesize that the combination of spatially extended
Lyman-alpha, large amounts of warm IR-luminous dust, and rarity (implying a
short-lived phase) can be explained if the galaxies are undergoing strong
`feedback' transforming them from an extreme dusty starburst to a QSO.Comment: Submitted to ApJ Letters, 6 pages, 4 figures. Comments welcom
- âŠ