1,766 research outputs found
OH yields from the CH3CO+O-2 reaction using an internal standard
Laser flash photolysis of CH3C(O)OH at 248 nm was used to create equal zero time yields of CH3CO and OH. The absolute OH yield from the CH3CO + O2 (+M) reaction was determined by following the OH temporal profile using the zero time
OH concentration as an internal standard. The OH yield from CH3CO + O2 (+M) was observed to decrease with increasing pressure with an extrapolated zero pressure yield
close to unity (1.1 ± 0.2, quoted uncertainties correspond to 95% confidence limits). The results are in quantitative agreement with those obtained from 248 nm acetone
photolysis in the presence of O2
The Distances of SNR W41 and overlapping HII regions
New HI images from the VLA Galactic Plane Survey show prominent absorption
features associated with the supernovae remnant G23.3-0.3 (SNR W41). We
highlight the HI absorption spectra and the CO emission spectra of eight
small regions on the face of W41, including four HII regions, three non-thermal
emission regions and one unclassified region. The maximum velocity of
absorption for W41 is 782 km/s and the CO cloud at radial velocity
955 km/s is behind W41. Because an extended TeV source, a diffuse X-ray
enhancement and a large molecular cloud at radial velocity 775 km/s are
also projected at the center of W41, these yield the kinematic distance of 3.9
to 4.5 kpc for W41. For HII regions, our analyses reveal that both G23.42-0.21
and G23.07+0.25 are at the far kinematic distances (9.9 kpc and
10.6 kpc respectively) of their recombination-line velocities (1030.5 km/s
and 89.62.1 km/s respectively), G23.07-0.37 is at the near kinematic
distance (4.40.3 kpc) of its recombination-line velocity (82.72.0
km/s), and G23.27-0.27 is probably at the near kinematic distance (4.10.3
kpc) of its recombination-line velocity (76.10.6 km/s).Comment: 11 pages, 3 figs., 2 tables, accepted by A
Interaction of laser generated ultrasonic waves with wedge-shaped samples
Wedge-shaped samples can be used as a model of acoustic interactions with samples ranging from ocean wedges, to angled defects such as rolling contact fatigue, to thickness measurements of samples with non-parallel faces. We present work on laser generated ultrasonic waves on metal samples; one can measure the dominant Rayleigh-wave mode, but longitudinal and shear waves are also generated. We present calculations, models, and measurements giving the dependence of the arrival times and amplitudes of these modes on the wedge apex angle and the separation of generation and detection points, and hence give a measure of the wedge characteristics
Fundamental Aspects of the ISM Fractality
The ubiquitous clumpy state of the ISM raises a fundamental and open problem
of physics, which is the correct statistical treatment of systems dominated by
long range interactions. A simple solvable hierarchical model is presented
which explains why systems dominated by gravity prefer to adopt a fractal
dimension around 2 or less, like the cold ISM and large scale structures. This
has direct relation with the general transparency, or blackness, of the
Universe.Comment: 6 pages, LaTeX2e, crckapb macro, no figure, uuencoded compressed tar
file. To be published in the proceeedings of the "Dust-Morphology"
conference, Johannesburg, 22-26 January, 1996, D. Block (ed.), (Kluwer
Dordrecht
The Interstellar Medium and Star Formation in Edge-On Galaxies. I. NGC 891
We analyze images of BIMA 12CO (J = 1 --> 0), VLA HI, and Spitzer 3.6 and 24
\mum emission toward the edge-on galaxy NGC 891 and derive the radial and
vertical distributions of gas and the radial distributions of stellar mass and
recent star formation. We describe our method of deriving radial profiles for
edge-on galaxies, assuming circular motion, and verify basic relationships
between star formation rate and gas and stellar content, and between the
molecular-to-atomic ratio and hydrostatic midplane pressure, that have been
found in other galaxy samples. The Schmidt law index we find for the total gas
(H2 + H I) is 0.85\pm0.55, but the Schmidt law provides a poor description of
the SFR in comparison to a model that includes the influence of the stellar
disk. Using our measurements of the thickness of the gas disk and the
assumption of hydrostatic equilibrium, we estimate volume densities and
pressures as a function of radius and height in order to test the importance of
pressure in controlling the {\rho}H2/{\rho}HI ratio. The gas pressure in two
dimensions P(r, z) using constant velocity dispersion does not seem to
correlate with the {\rho}H2/{\rho}HI ratio, but the pressure using varying
velocity dispersion appears to correlate with the ratio. We test the importance
of gravitational instability in determining the sites of massive star
formation, and find that the Q parameter using a radially varying gas velocity
dispersion is consistent with self-regulation (Q - 1) over a large part of the
disk.Comment: 19 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in A
The Galactic IMF: origin in the combined mass distribution functions of dust grains and gas clouds
We present here a theoretical model to account for the stellar IMF as a
result of the composite behaviour of the gas and dust distribution functions.
Each of these has previously been modelled and the models tested against
observations. The model presented here implies a relation between the
characteristic size of the dust grains and the characteristic final mass of the
stars formed within the clouds containing the grains, folded with the relation
between the mass of a gas cloud and the characteristic mass of the stars formed
within it. The physical effects of dust grain size are due to equilibrium
relations between the efficiency of grains in cooling the clouds, which is a
falling function of grain size, and the efficiency of grains in catalyzing the
production of molecular hydrogen, which is a rising function of grain size. We
show that folding in the effects of grain distribution can yield a reasonable
quantitative account of the IMF, while gas cloud mass function alone cannot do
so.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS accepted for publicatio
Ram-pressure stripped molecular gas in the Virgo spiral galaxy NGC 4522
IRAM 30m 12CO(1-0) and 12CO(2-1) HERA observations are presented for the
ram-pressure stripped Virgo spiral galaxy NGC 4522. The CO emission is detected
in the galactic disk and the extraplanar gas. The extraplanar CO emission
follows the morphology of the atomic gas closely but is less extended. The CO
maxima do not appear to correspond to regions where there is peak massive star
formation as probed by Halpha emission. The presence of molecular gas is a
necessary but not sufficient condition for star formation. Compared to the disk
gas, the molecular fraction of the extraplanar gas is 30% lower and the star
formation efficiency of the extraplanar gas is about 3 times lower. The
comparison with an existing dynamical model extended by a recipe for
distinguishing between atomic and molecular gas shows that a significant part
of the gas is stripped in the form of overdense arm-like structures. It is
argued that the molecular fraction depends on the square root of the total
large-scale density. Based on the combination of the CO/Halpha and an
analytical model, the total gas density is estimated to be about 4 times lower
than that of the galactic disk. Molecules and stars form within this dense gas
according to the same laws as in the galactic disk, i.e. they mainly depend on
the total large-scale gas density. Star formation proceeds where the local
large-scale gas density is highest. Given the complex 3D morphology this does
not correspond to the peaks in the surface density. In the absence of a
confining gravitational potential, the stripped gas arms will most probably
disperse; i.e. the density of the gas will decrease and star formation will
cease.Comment: 11 pages, 15 figures, A&A accepted for publicatio
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