774 research outputs found
Galaxy Assembly Bias on the Red Sequence
Using samples drawn from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, we study the
relationship between local galaxy density and the properties of galaxies on the
red sequence. After removing the mean dependence of average overdensity (or
"environment") on color and luminosity, we find that there remains a strong
residual trend between luminosity-weighted mean stellar age and environment,
such that galaxies with older stellar populations favor regions of higher
overdensity relative to galaxies of like color and luminosity (and hence of
like stellar mass). Even when excluding galaxies with recent star-formation
activity (i.e., younger mean stellar ages) from the sample, we still find a
highly significant correlation between stellar age and environment at fixed
stellar mass. This residual age-density relation provides direct evidence for
an assembly bias on the red sequence such that galaxies in higher-density
regions formed earlier than galaxies of similar mass in lower-density
environments. We discuss these results in the context of the age-metallicity
degeneracy and in comparison to previous studies at low and intermediate
redshift. Finally, we consider the potential role of assembly bias in
explaining recent results regarding the evolution of post-starburst (or
post-quenching) galaxies and the environmental dependence of the type Ia
supernova rate.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
‘Ought Implies Can’: Not So Pragmatic After All
Those who want to deny the ‘ought implies can’ principle often turn to weakened views to explain ‘ought implies can’ phenomena. The two most common versions of such views are that ‘ought’ presupposes ‘can’, and that ‘ought’ conversationally implicates ‘can’. This paper will reject both views, and in doing so, present a case against any pragmatic view of ‘ought implies can’. Unlike much of the literature, I won't rely on counterexamples, but instead will argue that each of these views fails on its own terms. ‘Ought’ and ‘can’ do not obey the negation test for presupposition, and they do not obey the calculability or the cancelability tests for conversational implicature. I diagnose these failures as partly a result of the importance of the contrapositive of ‘ought implies can’. I end with a final argument emphasizing the role the principle plays in moral thinking, and the fact that no pragmatic account can do it justice
Automated Morphological Classification of SDSS Red Sequence Galaxies
(abridged) In the last decade, the advent of enormous galaxy surveys has
motivated the development of automated morphological classification schemes to
deal with large data volumes. Existing automated schemes can successfully
distinguish between early and late type galaxies and identify merger
candidates, but are inadequate for studying detailed morphologies of red
sequence galaxies. To fill this need, we present a new automated classification
scheme that focuses on making finer distinctions between early types roughly
corresponding to Hubble types E, S0, and Sa. We visually classify a sample of
984 non-starforming SDSS galaxies with apparent sizes >14". We then develop an
automated method to closely reproduce the visual classifications, which both
provides a check on the visual results and makes it possible to extend
morphological analysis to much larger samples. We visually classify the
galaxies into three bulge classes (BC) by the shape of the light profile in the
outer regions: discs have sharp edges and bulges do not, while some galaxies
are intermediate. We separately identify galaxies with features: spiral arms,
bars, clumps, rings, and dust. We find general agreement between BC and the
bulge fraction B/T measured by the galaxy modeling package GIM2D, but many
visual discs have B/T>0.5. Three additional automated parameters -- smoothness,
axis ratio, and concentration -- can identify many of these high-B/T discs to
yield automated classifications that agree ~70% with the visual classifications
(>90% within one BC). Both methods are used to study the bulge vs. disc
frequency as a function of four measures of galaxy 'size': luminosity, stellar
mass, velocity dispersion, and radius. All size indicators show a fall in disc
fraction and a rise in bulge fraction among larger galaxies.Comment: 24 pages, 20 figures, MNRAS accepte
Concurrent enrollment in lecture and laboratory enhances student performance and retention
Laboratories have been a cornerstone in teaching and learning across multiple scientific disciplines for more than 100 years. At the collegiate level, science laboratories and their corresponding lectures are often offered as separate courses, and students may not be required to concurrently enroll in both. In this study, we provide evidence that enrolling in an introductory laboratory concurrently with the corresponding lecture course enhances learning gains and retention in comparison to students who enroll in the lecture alone. We examined the impact of concurrent versus nonconcurrent enrollment on 9,438 students' withdrawal rates from and final grades in the general chemistry lecture at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor using multiple linear and binary logistic regression analyses, respectively, at a significance level of 0.05. We found that concurrent enrollment in the lecture and laboratory positively impacts (1) the odds of retention in the lecture by 2.2 times on average and (2) final lecture grades by up to 0.19 grade points on a 4.0 scale for the lowest‐scoring students according to university‐level mathematics and chemistry placement exam scores. These data provide important results for consideration by curriculum advisors and course planners at universities that do not require concurrent enrollment in general chemistry as well as other science courses. In the face of current budget cuts that threaten to shorten or eliminate laboratory experiences altogether at multiple educational levels, this study demonstrates the value of laboratories in promoting science learning and retention. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Res Sci Teach 49: 659–682, 2012Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/91231/1/21016_ftp.pd
Galaxy Zoo: Passive Red Spirals
We study the spectroscopic properties and environments of red spiral galaxies
found by the Galaxy Zoo project. By carefully selecting face-on, disk dominated
spirals we construct a sample of truly passive disks (not dust reddened, nor
dominated by old stellar populations in a bulge). As such, our red spirals
represent an interesting set of possible transition objects between normal blue
spirals and red early types. We use SDSS data to investigate the physical
processes which could have turned these objects red without disturbing their
morphology. Red spirals prefer intermediate density regimes, however there are
no obvious correlations between red spiral properties and environment -
environment alone is not sufficient to determine if a spiral will become red.
Red spirals are a small fraction of spirals at low masses, but are a
significant fraction at large stellar masses - massive galaxies are red
independent of morphology. We confirm that red spirals have older stellar popns
and less recent star formation than the main spiral population. While the
presence of spiral arms suggests that major star formation cannot have ceased
long ago, we show that these are not recent post-starbursts, so star formation
must have ceased gradually. Intriguingly, red spirals are ~4 times more likely
than normal spirals to host optically identified Seyfert or LINER, with most of
the difference coming from LINERs. We find a curiously large bar fraction in
the red spirals suggesting that the cessation of star formation and bar
instabilities are strongly correlated. We conclude by discussing the possible
origins. We suggest they may represent the very oldest spiral galaxies which
have already used up their reserves of gas - probably aided by strangulation,
and perhaps bar instabilities moving material around in the disk.Comment: MNRAS in press, 20 pages, 15 figures (v3
Quantitative Morphology of Galaxies from the SDSS I: Luminosity in Bulges and Disks
In the first paper of this series we use the publicly available code Gim2D to
model the r- and i-band images of all galaxies in a magnitude-limited sample of
roughly 1800 morphologically classified galaxies taken from the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey. The model is a concentric superposition of two components, each
with elliptical isophotes with constant flattening and position angle. The disk
luminosity profile is assumed exponential, while the bulge is assumed to have a
de Vaucouleurs or a Sersic profile. We find that the parameters returned by
Gim2D depend little on the waveband or bulge profile used; their formal
uncertainties are usually small. Nevertheless, for bright galaxies the measured
distribution of b/a, the apparent disk flattening, deviates strongly from the
expected uniform distribution, showing that the `disk' identified by the code
frequently corresponds to an intrinsically 3-dimensional structure rather than
to a true thin disk. We correct approximately for this systematic problem using
the observed statistics of the b/a distribution and estimate, as a function of
absolute magnitude, the mean fractions of galaxy light in disks and in `pure
bulge' systems (those with no detectable disk). For the brightest galaxies the
disk light fraction is about 10% and about 80% are `pure bulge' systems. For
faint galaxies most of the light is in disks and we do not detect a `pure
bulge' population. Averaging over the galaxy population as a whole, we find
that 54 \pm 2% of the local cosmic luminosity density at both r and i comes
from disks and 32 \pm 2% from `pure bulge' systems. The remaining 14 \pm 2%
comes from bulges in galaxies with detectable disks.Comment: Submitted to MNRAS (14 pages, 14 figures). For version with higher
quality figures, see
http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~tasca/MNRAS/Morph_paperI.p
Collaboration and knowledge exchange between scholars in Britain and the empire, 1830–1914
In recent years there has been a growing interest among historians in the British Empire as a space of knowledge production and circulation. Much of this work assumes that scholarly cooperation and collaboration between individuals and institutions within the Empire had the effect (and often also the aim) of strengthening both imperial ties and the idea of empire. This chapter argues, however, that many examples of scholarly travel, exchange, and collaboration were undertaken with very different goals in mind. In particular, it highlights the continuing importance of an ideal of scientific internationalism, which stressed the benefits of scholarship for the whole of humanity and prioritized the needs and goals of individual academic and scientific disciplines. As the chapter shows, some scholars even went on to develop nuanced critiques of the imperial project while using the very structures of empire to further their own individual, disciplinary and institutional goals
The role of stellar mass and environment for cluster blue fraction, AGN fraction and star-formation indicators from a targeted analysis of Abell 1691
We present an analysis of the galaxy population of the intermediate X-ray
luminosity galaxy cluster, Abell 1691, from SDSS and Galaxy Zoo data to
elucidate the relationships between environment and galaxy stellar mass for a
variety of observationally important cluster populations that include the
Butcher-Oemler blue fraction, the active galactic nucleus (AGN) fraction and
other spectroscopic classifications of galaxies. From 342 cluster members, we
determine a cluster recession velocity of 21257+/-54 km/s and velocity
dispersion of 1009^+40_-36 km/s and show that although the cluster is fed by
multiple filaments of galaxies it does not possess significant sub-structure in
its core. We identify the AGN population of the cluster from a BPT diagram and
show that there is a mild increase in the AGN fraction with radius from the
cluster centre that appears mainly driven by high mass galaxies (log(stellar
mass)>10.8). Although the cluster blue fraction follows the same radial trend,
it is caused primarily by lower mass galaxies (log(stellar mass)<10.8).
Significantly, the galaxies that have undergone recent star-bursts or are
presently star-bursting but dust-shrouded (spectroscopic e(a) class galaxies)
are also nearly exclusively driven by low mass galaxies. We therefore suggest
that the Butcher-Oemler effect may be a mass-dependant effect. We also examine
red and passive spiral galaxies and show that the majority are massive
galaxies, much like the rest of the red and spectroscopically passive cluster
population. We further demonstrate that the velocity dispersion profiles of low
and high mass cluster galaxies are different. Taken together, we infer that the
duty cycle of high and low mass cluster galaxies are markedly different, with a
significant departure in star formation and specific star formation rates
observed beyond r_200 and we discuss these findings.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures (one degraded due to size constraints), accepted
for publication in MNRA
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