278 research outputs found
Designing Warning Interfaces causing Discomfort for Awareness of Risks: Revisited
Making users aware of the risk by giving them a sense of discomfort and helping them not to access dangerous sites is crucial. Thus, we focus on developing a warning interface, causing discomfort, allowing smartphone users to be aware of danger and risks. We studied discomfort feelings while using smartphones and extracted five discomfort factors from a questionnaire survey and factor analysis. We implemented a prototype of warning interfaces for web browsing on a smartphone considering five factors. In the experiments, we have found that three factors out of the five, namely, âUnintended operation or display,â âSudden changes,â and âUnderstanding of the application,â are significant for risk awareness, while the other two are not. This paper reports on the findings of the study
Clustering Properties of Low-Luminosity Star-Forming galaxies at z = 0.24 and 0.40 in the Subaru Deep Field
We present our analysis on the clustering properties of star-forming galaxies
selected by narrow-band excesses in the Subaru Deep Field. Specifically we
focus on Halpha emitting galaxies at z = 0.24 and z = 0.40 in the same field,
to investigate possible evolutionary signatures of clustering properties of
star-forming galaxies. Based on the analysis on 228 Halpha emitting galaxies
with 39.8 < log L(Halpha) < 40.8 at z = 0.40, we find that their two-point
correlation function is estimated as xi = (r/1.62^{+0.64}_{-0.50} Mpc)^{-1.84
+/- 0.08}. This is similar to that of Halpha emitting galaxies in the same
Halpha luminosity range at z = 0.24, xi = (r/1.88^{+0.60}_{-0.49} Mpc)^{-1.89
+/- 0.07}. These correlation lengths are smaller than those for the brighter
galaxy sample studied by Meneux et al. (2006) in the same redshift range. The
evolution of correlation length between z = 0.24 and z = 0.40 is interpreted by
the gravitational growth of the dark matter halos.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, PASJ, Vol.60, No.6, in pres
An Intermediate-band imaging survey for high-redshift Lyman Alpha Emitters: The Mahoroba-11
We present results of our intermediate-band optical imaging survey for
high- Ly emitters (LAEs) using the prime focus camera, Suprime-Cam,
on the 8.2m Subaru Telescope. In our survey, we use eleven filters; four
broad-band filters (, , , and ) and seven
intermediate-band filters covering from 500 nm to 720 nm; we call this imaging
program as the Mahoroba-11. The seven intermediate-band filters are selected
from the IA filter series that is the Suprime-Cam intermediate-band filter
system whose spectral resolution is . Our survey has been made in a
sky area in the Subaru XMM Newton Deep Survey
field. We have found 409 IA-excess objects that provide us a large photometric
sample of strong emission-line objects. Applying the photometric redshift
method to this sample, we obtained a new sample of 198 LAE candidates at . We found that there is no evidence for evolution of the number density
and the star formation rate density for LAEs with between and 5.Comment: 46 pages, 15 figures, PASJ, Vol.57, No.6, in pres
A comparison of mean winds and gravity wave activity in the northern and southern polar MLT
Mean winds and waves observed in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere with MF radars located at Davis (69°S, 78°E) and Poker Flat (65°N, 147°W) are compared. Measurements covering the period from 1999 to mid 2000 show differences in the strength of the horizontal wind fields. In the southern hemisphere the zonal and meridional winds reach their maximum values near the summer solstice, but are delayed by 2â3 weeks in the northern hemisphere. Gravity wave variances also show significant differences, as do the strength of vertical velocities.Andrew Dowdy and Robert A. Vincent, Kiyoshi Igarashi and Yasuhiro Murayama, Damian J. Murph
Star-Forming Galaxies at z=0.24 in the Subaru Deep Field and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We make a search for Halpha emitting galaxies at z=0.24 in the Subaru Deep
Field (SDF) using the archival data set obtained with the Subaru Telescope. We
carefully select Halpha emitters in the narrowband filter NB816, using B, V,
Rc, i', and z' broad-band colors. We obtain a sample of 258 emitting galaxies
with observed equivalent widths of (Halpha+[NII]6548,6584) greater than 12
angstrom. We also analyze a sample of Halpha emitters taken from the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to constrain the luminous end of Halpha luminosity
function. Using the same selection criteria as for the SDF, and after excluding
AGNs, we obtain 317 Halpha emitting star-forming galaxies. Combining these two
samples of Halpha emitters found in both SDF and SDSS, we derive a Halpha
luminosity function with best-fit Schechter function parameters of alpha =
-1.31^+0.17_-0.17, log phi^* = -2.46^+0.34_-0.40 Mpc^-3, log L^* =
41.99^+0.08_-0.07 ergs s^-1. An extinction-corrected Halpha luminosity density
is 4.45^+2.96_-1.75 x 10^39 ergs s^-1 Mpc^-3. Using the Kennicutt relation
between the Halpha luminosity and star formation rate, the star formation rate
density in the survey volume is estimated as 0.035^+0.024_-0.014 M_sun yr^-1
Mpc^-3. The angular two-point correlation function of Halpha emitters over 875
arcmin^2 at z = 0.24 is well fitted by a power-law form with w(theta) =
0.047^+0.017_-0.013 theta^-0.66 +- 0.08, corresponding to the correlation
function of xi(r) = (r/2.6^+1.0_-0.8 Mpc)^(-1.66 +- 0.08). The small
correlation length of Halpha emitters may imply the weak clustering of active
star-forming galaxies.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures, PASJ, Vol.60, No.6 in pres
Calibration of CRL all-sky imagers using an integrating sphere
As part of an international collaboration with the Geophysical Institute of the University of Alaska, we have developed two all-sky imagers (CRL-ASIs). A sensitivity calibration of the CRL-ASIs was performed using an integrating sphere belonging to the National Institute of Polar Research (NIPR). The two-dimensional sensitivities of the CRL-ASIs produced symmetrical distributions. Using this sensitivity data, we converted airglow/aurora images into two-dimensional distributions of absolute intensity. The sensitivity of the CRL-ASIs was measured for 13 wavelengths between 427.8 nm and 866.5 nm, and the relationship between the sensitivity and the wavelength was investigated for both imagers. The peak sensitivity occurred at about 550 nm
New Supporting Evidence for the Overdensity of Galaxies around the Radio-Loud Quasar SDSS J0836+0054 at z =5.8
Recently, Zheng et al. (2005) found evidence for an overdensity of galaxies
around a radio-loud quasar, SDSS J0836+0054, at z=5.8 (a five arcmin
region). We have examined our deep optical imaging data (B, V, r', i', z', and
NB816) taken with the Suprime-Cam on the Subaru Telescope. The NB816
narrow-band filter (lambda_c = 815 nm and nm) is suitable
for searching for Ly emitters at . We have found a new
strong Ly emitter at close to object B identified by
Zheng et al. Further, the non detection of the nine objects selected by Zheng
et al. (2005) in our B, V, and r' images provides supporting evidence that they
are high-z objects.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, accepted for PAS
Strong Emission-Line Galaxies at Low Redshift in the Field around the Quasar SDSSp J104433.04-012502.2
We discuss observational properties of strong emission-line galaxies at low
redshift found by our deep imaging survey for high-redshift Ly alpha emitters.
In our surveys, we used the narrowband filter, NB816 (lambda_center=8150A with
FWHM = 120A), and the intermediate-band filter, IA827 (lambda_center = 8270A
with FWHM = 340A). In this survey, 62 NB816-excess (> 0.9 mag) and 21
IA827-excess (> 0.8 mag) objects were found. Among them, we found 20
NB816-excess and 4 IA827-excess Ly alpha emitter candidates. Therefore, it
turns out that 42 NB816-excess and 17 IA827-excess objects are strong
emission-line objects at lower redshift. Since 4 objects in the two low-z
samples are common, the total number of strong low-z emitters is 55. Applying
our photometric redshift technique, we identify 7 H alpha emitters at z~0.24,
20 H beta-[OIII] ones at z~0.65, and 11 [OII] ones at z~1.19. However, we
cannot determine reliable photometric redshifts of the remaining 17 emitters.
The distributions of their rest frame equivalent widths are consistently
understood with recent studies of galaxy evolution from z~1 to z~0.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figures, PASJ, Vol. 58, No. 1, in pres
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