2,292 research outputs found
Alocação de recursos e rentabilidade das pesquisas originadas do Centro Nacional de Pesquisa de Soja.
Desenvolvimento da soja no Brasil; Beneficios gerados pela pesquisa no CNPSo; Propriedades da pesquisa e principais tecnologias geradas.bitstream/item/23241/1/Doc26.pd
Measurements of atmospheric aerosol in the Salentum Peninsula and its correlation with local meteorology
In this paper the results of measurements of Total Suspended Particles (TSP) and PM10 are presented. The samplings were carried out with a mobile laboratory in five locations on the Salentum peninsula situated in the southeastern part of Italy in Puglia. Measurements were taken discontinuously during the period 2002?2004. Some results of PM2.5 measurements taken only in 2004 are also presented. Up to now no systematic analyses of aerosol concentration in the Salentum peninsula have been presented in the scientific literature. This study is therefore a useful basis for assessing the local situation and for planning future monitoring and investigations. Measurements were performed using a standard European PM10 inlet (CEN?EN12341, 1998) and successive gravimetric detection of aerosol deposited over 24 hours periods on filters. The measurement sites can be considered representative of urban background for all the cases investigated. Results show concentrations in good agreement with lognormal distributions, indicating that the PM10 fraction is about 69% of TSP and PM2.5 is about 81% of PM10, which allows us to evaluate that the fraction of PM2.5 is about 56% of TSP. Concentration levels were correlated with local meteorological parameters, such as wind velocity, wind direction and precipitations. Results indicate that there is, on average, a substantial decrease of concentration levels in high wind conditions and on rainy days. They also suggest the possibility of a significant contribution 1 of African Dust to PM10 and TSP, especially in the summer season, which could be responsible for some periods of concentrations above the threshold imposed by the European legislation on PM10
About the initial mass function and HeII emission in young starbursts
We demonstrate that it is crucial to account for the evolution of the
starburst population in order to derive reliable numbers of O stars from
integrated spectra for burst ages t > 2 - 3 Myr. In these cases the method of
Vacca & Conti (1992) and Vacca (1994) systematically underestimates the number
of O stars. Therefore the current WR/O number ratios in Wolf-Rayet (WR)
galaxies are overestimated. This questions recent claims about flat IMF slopes
(alpha ~ 1-2) in these objects. If the evolution of the burst is properly
treated we find that the observations are indeed compatible with a Salpeter
IMF, in agreement with earlier studies.
Including recent predictions from non-LTE, line blanketed model atmospheres
which account for stellar winds, we synthesize the nebular and WR HeII 4686
emission in young starbursts. For metallicities 1/5 <= Z/Z_sun <= 1 we predict
a strong nebular HeII emission due to a significant fraction of WC stars in
early WR phases of the burst. For other metallicities broad WR emission will
always dominate the HeII emission. Our predictions of the nebular HeII
intensity agree well with the observations in WR galaxies and an important
fraction of the giant HII regions where nebular HeII is detected. We propose
further observational tests of our result.Comment: ApJ Letters, accepted. 8 pages LaTeX including 3 PostScript figures,
uses AASTeX and psfig macros. PostScript file also available at
ftp://ftp.stsci.edu/outside-access/out.going/schaerer/imf.p
A study on the multicolour evolution of Red Sequence galaxy populations: insights from hydrodynamical simulations and semi-analytical models
By means of our own cosmological-hydrodynamical simulation and
semi-analytical model we studied galaxy population properties in clusters and
groups, spanning over 10 different bands from UV to NIR, and their evolution
since redshift z=2. We compare our results in terms of galaxy red/blue
fractions and luminous-to-faint ratio (LFR) on the Red Sequence (RS) with
recent observational data reaching beyond z=1.5. Different selection criteria
were tested in order to retrieve galaxies belonging to the RS: either by their
quiescence degree measured from their specific SFR ("Dead Sequence"), or by
their position in a colour-colour plane which is also a function of sSFR. In
both cases, the colour cut and the limiting magnitude threshold were let
evolving with redshift, in order to follow the natural shift of the
characteristic luminosity in the LF.
We find that the Butcher-Oemler effect is wavelength-dependent, with the
fraction of blue galaxies increasing steeper in optical colours than in NIR.
Besides, only when applying a lower limit in terms of fixed absolute magnitude,
a steep BO effect can be reproduced, while the blue fraction results less
evolving when selecting samples by stellar mass or an evolving magnitude limit.
We then find that also the RS-LFR behaviour, highly debated in the literature,
is strongly dependent on the galaxy selection function: in particular its very
mild evolution recovered when measured in terms of stellar mass, is in
agreement with values reported for some of the highest redshift confirmed
(proto)clusters. As to differences through environments, we find that normal
groups and (to a lesser extent) cluster outskirts present the highest values of
both star forming fraction and LFR at low z, while fossil groups and cluster
cores the lowest: this separation among groups begins after z~0.5, while
earlier all group star forming properties are undistinguishable.Comment: revised version, A&A accepted (11 pages, 6 figures
Integral field spectroscopy with SINFONI of VVDS galaxies. II. The mass-metallicity relation at 1.2 < z < 1.6
This work aims to provide a first insight into the mass-metallicity (MZ)
relation of star-forming galaxies at redshift z~1.4. To reach this goal, we
present a first set of nine VVDS galaxies observed with the NIR integral-field
spectrograph SINFONI on the VLT. Oxygen abundances are derived from empirical
indicators based on the ratio between strong nebular emission-lines (Halpha,
[NII]6584 and [SII]6717,6731). Stellar masses are deduced from SED fitting with
Charlot & Bruzual (2007) population synthesis models, and star formation rates
are derived from [OII]3727 and Halpha emission-line luminosities. We find a
typical shift of 0.2-0.4 dex towards lower metallicities for the z~1.4
galaxies, compared to the MZ-relation in the local universe as derived from
SDSS data. However, this small sample of eight galaxies does not show any clear
correlation between stellar mass and metallicity, unlike other larger samples
at different redshift (z~0, z~0.7, and z~2). Indeed, our galaxies lie just
under the relation at z~2 and show a small trend for more massive galaxies to
be more metallic (~0.1 logarithmic slope). There are two possible explanations
to account for these observations. First, the most massive galaxies present
higher specific star formation rates when compared to the global VVDS sample
which could explain the particularly low metallicity of these galaxies as
already shown in the SDSS sample. Second, inflow of metal-poor gas due to tidal
interactions could also explain the low metallicity of these galaxies as two of
these three galaxies show clear signatures of merging in their velocity fields.
Finally, we find that the metallicity of 4 galaxies is lower by ~0.2 to 0.4 dex
if we take into account the N/O abundance ratio in their metallicity estimate.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, accepted in A&A Comments: Comments: more accurate
results with better stellar mass estimate
The Massive Stellar Content in the Starburst NGC3049: A Test for Hot-Star Mode
We have obtained high-spatial resolution ultraviolet and optical STIS
spectroscopy and imaging of the metal-rich nuclear starburst in NGC3049. The
stellar continuum and the absorption line spectrum in the ultraviolet are used
to constrain the massive stellar population. The strong, blueshifted stellar
lines of CIV and SiIV detected in the UV spectra indicate a metal-rich,
compact, massive (1E6 Msol) cluster of age 3--4 Myr emitting the UV-optical
continuum. We find strong evidence against a depletion of massive stars in this
metal-rich cluster. The derived age and the upper mass-limit cut-off of the
initial mass function are also consistent with the detection of Wolf-Rayet (WR)
features at optical wavelengths. As a second independentconstraint on the
massive stellar content, the nebular emission-line spectrum is modeled with
photoionization codes using stellar spectra from evolutionary synthesis models.
However, the nebular lines are badly reproduced by 3--4 Myr instantaneous
bursts, as required by the UV line spectrum, when unblanketed WR and/or Kurucz
stellar atmospheres are used. The corresponding number of photons above 24 and
54 eV in the synthetic models is too high in comparison with values suggested
by the observed line ratios. Since the ionizing spectrum in this regime is
dominated by emission from WR stars, this discrepancy between observations and
models is most likely the result of incorrect assumptions about the WR stars.
Thus we conclude that the nebular spectrum of high-metallicity starbursts is
poorly reproduced by models for WR dominated populations. However, the new
model set of Smith et al. (2002) with blanketed WR and O atmospheres and
adjusted WR temperatures predicts a softer far-UV radiation field, providing a
better match to the data.Comment: To be published in ApJ, Dec. issue 17 figures, 3 in gif forma
Time-resolved single-photon detection module based on silicon photomultiplier: A novel building block for time-correlated measurement systems
We present the design and preliminary characterization of the first detection module based on Silicon Photomultiplier (SiPM) tailored for single-photon timing applications. The aim of this work is to demonstrate, thanks to the design of a suitable module, the possibility to easily exploit SiPM in many applications as an interesting detector featuring large active area, similarly to photomultipliers tubes, but keeping the advantages of solid state detectors (high quantum efficiency, low cost, compactness, robustness, low bias voltage, and insensitiveness to magnetic field). The module integrates a cooled SiPM with a total photosensitive area of 1 mm2 together with the suitable avalanche signal read-out circuit, the signal conditioning, the biasing electronics, and a Peltier cooler driver for thermal stabilization. It is able to extract the single-photon timing information with resolution better than 100 ps full-width at half maximum. We verified the effective stabilization in response to external thermal perturbations, thus proving the complete insensitivity of the module to environment temperature variations, which represents a fundamental parameter to profitably use the instrument for real-field applications. We also characterized the single-photon timing resolution, the background noise due to both primary dark count generation and afterpulsing, the single-photon detection efficiency, and the instrument response function shape. The proposed module can become a reliable and cost-effective building block for time-correlated single-photon counting instruments in applications requiring high collection capability of isotropic light and detection efficiency (e.g., fluorescence decay measurements or time-domain diffuse optics systems)
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