2,870 research outputs found
The Sloan Bright Arcs Survey : Six Strongly Lensed Galaxies at z=0.4-1.4
We present new results of our program to systematically search for strongly
lensed galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) imaging data. In this
study six strong lens systems are presented which we have confirmed with
follow-up spectroscopy and imaging using the 3.5m telescope at the Apache Point
Observatory. Preliminary mass models indicate that the lenses are group-scale
systems with velocity dispersions ranging from 466-878 km s^{-1} at z=0.17-0.45
which are strongly lensing source galaxies at z=0.4-1.4. Galaxy groups are a
relatively new mass scale just beginning to be probed with strong lensing. Our
sample of lenses roughly doubles the confirmed number of group-scale lenses in
the SDSS and complements ongoing strong lens searches in other imaging surveys
such as the CFHTLS (Cabanac et al 2007). As our arcs were discovered in the
SDSS imaging data they are all bright (), making them ideally
suited for detailed follow-up studies.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, submitted to ApJL, the Sloan Bright Arcs page is
located here: http://home.fnal.gov/~kubo/brightarcs.htm
The Sloan Bright Arcs Survey: Four Strongly Lensed Galaxies with Redshift >2
We report the discovery of four very bright, strongly-lensed galaxies found
via systematic searches for arcs in Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 5 and
6. These were followed-up with spectroscopy and imaging data from the
Astrophysical Research Consortium 3.5m telescope at Apache Point Observatory
and found to have redshift . With isophotal magnitudes
and 3\arcsec-diameter magnitudes , these systems are some of
the brightest and highest surface brightness lensed galaxies known in this
redshift range. In addition to the magnitudes and redshifts, we present
estimates of the Einstein radii, which range from 5.0 \arcsec to 12.7
\arcsec, and use those to derive the enclosed masses of the lensing galaxies
Assessing the Readiness of Atlanta Hotels to Host International Visitors During the \u2796 Summer Olympics
Three major areas were investigated to assess the readiness of Atlanta\u27s hotels to host international visitors during the summer Olympics of 1996. In the area of human resource development, hotels were asked if they planned to conduct language training and hire bilingual employees. In the area of services, hotels were asked if they plan to provide special services for international guests. In the area of marketing and sales, hotels were asked if they would provide promotional materials in different languages and advertising to attract international guests. International guests are expected by 83 percent of the respondents, and authors provide answers to these question
Local u'g'r'i'z' Standard Stars in the Chandra Deep Field-South
Because several observing programs are underway in various spectral regimes
to explore the Chandra Deep Field South (CDF-S), the value of local photometric
standards is obvious. As part of an NOAO Surveys Program to establish
u'g'r'i'z' standard stars in the southern hemisphere, we have observed the
central region of the CDF-S to create local standards for use by other
investigators using these filters. As a courtesy, we present the CDF-S
standards to the public now, although the main program will not finish until
mid-2005.Comment: Accepted by AJ (scheduled for October 2003 issue). 26 pages, 5
tables, 5 figures. High resolution version of Figure 7 available at
http://home.fnal.gov/~dtucker/Southern_ugriz/index.htm
The 8 o'clock Arc: A Serendipitous Discovery of a Strongly Lensed Lyman Break Galaxy in the SDSS DR4 Imaging Data
We report on the serendipitous discovery of the brightest Lyman Break Galaxy
(LBG) currently known, a galaxy at z=2.73 that is being strongly lensed by the
z=0.38 Luminous Red Galaxy (LRG) SDSS J002240.91+143110.4. The arc of this
gravitational lens system, which we have dubbed the "8 o'clock arc" due to its
time of discovery, was initially identified in the imaging data of the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey Data Release 4 (SDSS DR4); followup observations on the
Astrophysical Research Consortium (ARC) 3.5m telescope at Apache Point
Observatory confirmed the lensing nature of this system and led to the
identification of the arc's spectrum as that of an LBG. The arc has a spectrum
and a redshift remarkably similar to those of the previous record-holder for
brightest LBG (MS 1512-cB58, a.k.a "cB58"), but, with an estimated total
magnitude of (g,r,i) = (20.0,19.2,19.0) and surface brightness of
(mu_g,mu_r,mu_i) = (23.3, 22.5, 22.3) mag/arcsec^2, the 8 o'clock arc is thrice
as bright. The 8 o'clock arc, which consists of three lensed images of the LBG,
is 162deg (9.6arcsec) long and has a length-to-width ratio of 6:1. A fourth
image of the LBG -- a counter-image -- can also be identified in the ARC 3.5m
g-band images. A simple lens model for the system assuming a singular
isothermal ellipsoid potential yields an Einstein radius of 2.91+/-0.14 arcsec,
a total mass for the lensing LRG (within the (10.6+/-0.5)/h kpc enclosed by the
lensed images) of 1.04x10^12/h Msun, and a magnification factor for the LBG of
12.3(+15/-3.6). The LBG itself is intrinsically quite luminous (approximately
6L*) and shows indications of massive recent star formation, perhaps as high as
160/h Msun/year.Comment: 4 pages 5 figures, submitted to ApJ Letter
A Systematic Search for High Surface Brightness Giant Arcs in a Sloan Digital Sky Survey Cluster Sample
We present the results of a search for gravitationally-lensed giant arcs
conducted on a sample of 825 SDSS galaxy clusters. Both a visual inspection of
the images and an automated search were performed and no arcs were found. This
result is used to set an upper limit on the arc probability per cluster. We
present selection functions for our survey, in the form of arc detection
efficiency curves plotted as functions of arc parameters, both for the visual
inspection and the automated search. The selection function is such that we are
sensitive only to long, high surface brightness arcs with g-band surface
brightness mu_g 10. Our upper limits on
the arc probability are compatible with previous arc searches. Lastly, we
report on a serendipitous discovery of a giant arc in the SDSS data, known
inside the SDSS Collaboration as Hall's arc.Comment: 34 pages,8 Fig. Accepted ApJ:Jan-200
Calcium Carbonate Suppresses Haem Toxicity Markers without Calcium Phosphate Side Effect on Colon Carcinogenesis
Red meat intake is associated with increased risk of colorectal cancer. We have previously shown that haemin, haemoglobin and red meat promote carcinogen-induced preneoplastic lesions, aberrant crypt foci, in the colon of rats. We have also shown that dietary calcium phosphate inhibits haemin-induced promotion, and normalizes faecal lipoperoxides and cytotoxicity. Unexpectedly, high-calcium phosphate control diet-fed rats had more preneoplastic lesions in the colon than low-calcium control diet-fed rats. The present study was designed to find a calcium supplementation with no adverse effect, by testing several doses and types of calcium salts. One in vitro study and two short-term studies in rats identified calcium carbonate as the most effective calcium salt to bind haem in vitro and to decrease faecal biomarkers previously associated with increased carcinogenesis: faecal water cytotoxicity, thiobarbituric acid reactive substances. A long term carcinogenesis study in dimethylhydrazine-injected rats demonstrated that a diet containing 100 µmol/g calcium carbonate did not promote aberrant crypt foci, in contrast with previously tested calcium phosphate diet. The results suggest that calcium carbonate, and not calcium phosphate, should be used to reduce haem-associated colorectal cancer risk in meat-eaters. They support the concept that the nature of the associated anion to a protective metal ion is important for chemoprevention
Discovery of A Very Bright, Strongly-Lensed z=2 Galaxy in the SDSS DR5
We report on the discovery of a very bright z = 2.00 star-forming galaxy that
is strongly lensed by a foreground z=0.422 luminous red galaxy (LRG). This
system was found in a systematic search for bright arcs lensed by LRGs and
brightest cluster galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 5
sample. Follow-up observations on the Subaru 8.2m telescope on Mauna Kea and
the Astrophysical Research Consortium 3.5m telescope at Apache Point
Observatory confirmed the lensing nature of this system. A simple lens model
for the system, assuming a singular isothermal ellipsoid mass distribution,
yields an Einstein radius of 3.82 +/- 0.03 arcsec or 14.8 +/- 0.1 kpc/h at the
lens redshift. The total projected mass enclosed within the Einstein radius is
2.10 +/- 0.03 x 10^12 M_sun/h, and the magnification factor for the source
galaxy is 27 +/- 1. Combining the lens model with our gVriz photometry, we find
an (unlensed) star formation rate for the source galaxy of 32 M_sun/h / yr,
adopting a fiducial constant star formation rate model with an age of 100 Myr
and E(B-V) = 0.25. With an apparent magnitude of r = 19.9, this system is among
the very brightest lensed z >= 2 galaxies, and provides an excellent
opportunity to pursue detailed studies of the physical properties of an
individual high-redshift star-forming galaxy.Comment: 31 pages, 12 figures, 4 tables, submitted to Ap
The Sloan Bright Arcs Survey: Ten Strong Gravitational Lensing Clusters and Evidence of Overconcentration
We describe ten strong lensing galaxy clusters of redshift 0.26-0.56 that
were found in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We present measurements of
richness, mass and velocity dispersion for the clusters. We find that in order
to use the mass-richness relation from Johnston et al. (2007), which was
established at mean redshift of 0.25, it is necessary to scale measured
richness values up by 1.47. We also present measurements of Einstein radius,
mass and velocity dispersion for the lensing systems. The Einstein radii are
all relatively small, between 5.4-13 arcseconds. Finally we consider if there
is evidence that our clusters are more concentrated than standard cosmology
would predict. We find that six of our clusters do not show evidence of
overconcentration, while four of our clusters do. We note a correlation between
overconcentration and mass, as the four clusters showing evidence of
overconcentration are all lower-mass clusters.Comment: 38 pages, 14 figures. To be published in The Astrophysical Journa
Loose Groups of Galaxies in the Las Campanas Redshift Survey
A ``friends-of-friends'' percolation algorithm has been used to extract a
catalogue of dn/n = 80 density enhancements (groups) from the six slices of the
Las Campanas Redshift Survey (LCRS). The full catalogue contains 1495 groups
and includes 35% of the LCRS galaxy sample. A clean sample of 394 groups has
been derived by culling groups from the full sample which either are too close
to a slice edge, have a crossing time greater than a Hubble time, have a
corrected velocity dispersion of zero, or contain a 55-arcsec ``orphan'' (a
galaxy with a mock redshift which was excluded from the original LCRS redshift
catalogue due to its proximity to another galaxy -- i.e., within 55 arcsec).
Median properties derived from the clean sample include: line-of-sight velocity
dispersion sigma_los = 164km/s, crossing time t_cr = 0.10/H_0, harmonic radius
R_h = 0.58/h Mpc, pairwise separation R_p = 0.64/h Mpc, virial mass M_vir =
(1.90x10^13)/h M_sun, total group R-band luminosity L_tot = (1.30x10^11)/h^2
L_sun, and R-band mass-to-light ratio M/L = 171h M_sun/L_sun; the median number
of observed members in a group is 3.Comment: 32 pages of text, 27 figures, 7 tables. Figures 1, 4, 6, 7, and 8 are
in gif format. Tables 1 and 3 are in plain ASCII format (in paper source) and
are also available at http://www-sdss.fnal.gov:8000/~dtucker/LCLG . Accepted
for publication in the September 2000 issue of ApJ
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