2,013 research outputs found
Efficient routing of single photons by one atom and a microtoroidal cavity
Single photons from a coherent input are efficiently redirected to a separate
output by way of a fiber-coupled microtoroidal cavity interacting with
individual Cesium atoms. By operating in an overcoupled regime for the
input-output to a tapered fiber, our system functions as a quantum router with
high efficiency for photon sorting. Single photons are reflected and excess
photons transmitted, as confirmed by observations of photon antibunching
(bunching) for the reflected (transmitted) light. Our photon router is robust
against large variations of atomic position and input power, with the observed
photon antibunching persisting for intracavity photon number 0.03 \lesssim n
\lesssim 0.7
The Origin of the Dust Arch in the Halo of NGC 4631: An Expanding Superbubble?
We study the nature and the origin of the dust arch in the halo of the
edge-on galaxy NGC 4631 detected by Neininger & Dumke (1999). We present CO
observations made using the new On-The-Fly mapping mode with the FCRAO 14m
telescope, and find no evidence for CO emission associated with the dust arch.
Our examination of previously published HI data shows that if previous
assumptions about the dust temperature and gas/dust ratio are correct, then
there must be molecular gas associated with the arch, below our detection
threshold. If this is true, then the molecular mass associated with the dust
arch is between 1.5 x 10^8 M(sun)and 9.7 x 10^8 M(sun), and likely towards the
low end of the range. A consequence of this is that the maximum allowed value
for the CO-to-H_2 conversion factor is 6.5 times the Galactic value, but most
likely closer to the Galactic value. The kinematics of the HI apparently
associated with the dust arch reveal that the gas here is not part of an
expanding shell or outflow, but is instead two separate features (a tidal arm
and a plume of HI sticking out into the halo) which are seen projected together
and appear as a shell. Thus there is no connection between the dust "arch" and
the hot X-ray emitting gas that appears to surround the galaxy Wang et al.
(2001).Comment: 14 pages, including 4 figures. Accepted by A.J. for March 200
A 180 Kpc Tidal Tail in the Luminous Infrared Merger Arp 299
We present VLA HI observations and UH88 deep optical B- and R-band
observations of the IR luminous merger Arp 299 (= NGC 3690 + IC 694). These
data reveal a gas-rich, optically faint tidal tail with a length of over 180
kpc. The size of this tidal feature necessitates an old interaction age for the
merger (~750 Myr since first periapse), which is currently experiencing a very
young star burst (~20 Myr). The observations reveal a most remarkable structure
within the tidal tail: it appears to be composed of two parallel filaments
separated by ~20 kpc. One of the filaments is gas rich with little if any
starlight, while the other is gas poor. We believe that this bifurcation
results from a warped disk in one of the progenitors. The quantities and
kinematics of the tidal HI suggest that Arp 299 results from the collision of a
retrograde Sab-Sb galaxy (IC 694) and a prograde Sbc-Sc galaxy (NGC 3690) that
occurred 750 Myr ago and which will merge into a single object in ~60 Myr. We
suggest that the present IR luminous phase in this system is due in part to the
retrograde spin of IC 694. Finally, we discuss the apparent lack of tidal dwarf
galaxies within the tail.Comment: LaTex, 14 pages, 11 figures, 4 tables, uses emulateapj.sty. Accepted
to AJ for July 1999. For version with full-resolution images see
http://www.cv.nrao.edu/~jhibbard/a299/HIpaper/a299HI.htm
Winter barley : a new factor in Missouri agriculture
Cover title.Includes bibliographical references
Soft Color Enhancement of the Production of J/psi's by Neutrinos
We calculate the production of J/psi mesons by neutrino-nucleon collisions in
fixed target experiments. Soft color, often referred to as color evaporation
effects, enhance production cross sections due to the contribution of color
octet states. Though still small, J/\psi production may be observable in
present and future experiments like NuTeV and muon colliders.Comment: 7 pages, Revtex, 4 postscript figures, uses epsfig.st
Spatially Resolved Spitzer-IRS Spectroscopy of the Central Region of M82
We present high spatial resolution (~ 35 parsec) 5-38 um spectra of the
central region of M82, taken with the Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph. From these
spectra we determined the fluxes and equivalent widths of key diagnostic
features, such as the [NeII]12.8um, [NeIII]15.5um, and H_2 S(1)17.03um lines,
and the broad mid-IR polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission features in
six representative regions and analysed the spatial distribution of these lines
and their ratios across the central region. We find a good correlation of the
dust extinction with the CO 1-0 emission. The PAH emission follows closely the
ionization structure along the galactic disk. The observed variations of the
diagnostic PAH ratios across M82 can be explained by extinction effects, within
systematic uncertainties. The 16-18um PAH complex is very prominent, and its
equivalent width is enhanced outwards from the galactic plane. We interpret
this as a consequence of the variation of the UV radiation field. The EWs of
the 11.3um PAH feature and the H_2 S(1) line correlate closely, and we conclude
that shocks in the outflow regions have no measurable influence on the H_2
emission. The [NeIII]/[NeII] ratio is on average low at ~0.18, and shows little
variations across the plane, indicating that the dominant stellar population is
evolved (5 - 6 Myr) and well distributed. There is a slight increase of the
ratio with distance from the galactic plane of M82 which we attribute to a
decrease in gas density. Our observations indicate that the star formation rate
has decreased significantly in the last 5 Myr. The quantities of dust and
molecular gas in the central area of the galaxy argue against starvation and
for negative feedback processes, observable through the strong extra-planar
outflows.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, 3 tables, ApJ, emulateap
New Measurements of Nucleon Structure Functions from CCFR/NuTeV
We report on the extraction of the structure functions F_2 and Delta xF_3 =
xF_3nu-xF_3nub from CCFR neutrino-Fe and antineutrino-Fe differential cross
sections. The extraction is performed in a physics model independent (PMI) way.
This first measurement for Delta xF_3, which is useful in testing models of
heavy charm production, is higher than current theoretical predictions. Within
5% the F_2 (PMI) values measured in neutrino and muon scattering are in
agreement with the predictions of Next-to-Leading-Order PDFs (using massive
charm production schemes), thus resolving the long-standing discrepancy between
the two measurements.Comment: 3 pages, Presented by Arie Bodek at DPF2000 Conference, Columbus,
Ohio, Aug. 200
Dust and gas in luminous infrared galaxies - results from SCUBA observations
We present new data taken at 850 m with SCUBA at the JCMT for a sample
of 19 luminous infrared galaxies. Fourteen galaxies were detected. We have used
these data, together with fluxes at 25, 60 and 100 m from IRAS, to model
the dust emission. We find that the emission from most galaxies can be
described by an optically thin, single temperature dust model with an exponent
of the dust extinction coefficient () of
. A lower is required to model the dust
emission from two of the galaxies, Arp 220 and NGC 4418. We discuss various
possibilities for this difference and conclude that the most likely is a high
dust opacity. In addition, we compare the molecular gas mass derived from the
dust emission, , with the molecular gas mass derived from the CO
emission, , and find that is on average a factor 3 higher than
.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, latex, with MN-macros, accepted by MNRAS -
revised version (changed flux values for some galaxies
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