3,792 research outputs found
Alternative Work Arrangements: An Examination of Job Sharing, Compressed Workweeks, and Flextime
Alternative working arrangements have become increasingly popular in workplaces across America and the world. One segment of alternative work arrangements is schedule flexibility. The three types of flexible schedules examined include: job sharing, compressed workweeks, and flextime. Each arrangement will be examined individually. First, a definition and background information will be given. Then, the benefits of the arrangement will be discussed. Next, the risks and challenges of the arrangement will be examined. Finally, there will be analysis of what conditions are necessary for the arrangement to be successful
Interferometric Observations of the Nuclear Region of Arp220 at Submillimeter Wavelengths
We report the first submillimeter interferometric observations of an
ultraluminous infrared galaxy. We observed Arp220 in the CO J=3-2 line and
342GHz continuum with the single baseline CSO-JCMT interferometer consisting of
the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory (CSO) and the James Clerk Maxwell
Telescope (JCMT). Models were fit to the measured visibilities to constrain the
structure of the source. The morphologies of the CO J=3-2 line and 342GHz
continuum emission are similar to those seen in published maps at 230 and
110GHz. We clearly detect a binary source separated by about 1 arcsec in the
east-west direction in the 342GHz continuum. The CO J=3-2 visibility
amplitudes, however, indicate a more complicated structure, with evidence for a
compact binary at some velocities and rather more extended structure at others.
Less than 30% of the total CO J=3-2 emission is detected by the interferometer,
which implies the presence of significant quantities of extended gas. We also
obtained single-dish CO J=2-1, CO J=3-2 and HCN J=4-3 spectra. The HCN J=4-3
spectrum, unlike the CO spectra, is dominated by a single redshifted peak. The
HCN J=4-3/CO J=3-2, HCN J=4-3/HCN J=1-0 and CO J=3-2/2-1 line ratios are larger
in the redshifted (eastern) source, which suggests that the two sources may
have different physical conditions. This result might be explained by the
presence of an intense starburst that has begun to deplete or disperse the
densest gas in the western source, while the eastern source harbors undispersed
high density gas.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, 4 Tables. accepted by Ap
High resolution mid-infrared spectroscopy of ultraluminous infrared galaxies
(Abridged) We present R~600, 10-37um spectra of 53 ULIRGs at z<0.32, taken
using the IRS on board Spitzer. All of the spectra show fine structure emission
lines of Ne, O, S, Si and Ar, as well as molecular Hydrogen lines. Some ULIRGs
also show emission lines of Cl, Fe, P, and atomic Hydrogen, and/or absorption
features from C_2H_2, HCN, and OH. We employ diagnostics based on the
fine-structure lines, as well as the EWs and luminosities of PAH features and
the strength of the 9.7um silicate absorption feature (S_sil), to explore the
power source behind the infrared emission in ULIRGs. We show that the IR
emission from the majority of ULIRGs is powered mostly by star formation, with
only ~20% of ULIRGs hosting an AGN with a comparable or greater IR luminosity
than the starburst. The detection of the 14.32um [NeV] line in just under half
the sample however implies that an AGN contributes significantly to the mid-IR
flux in ~42% of ULIRGs. The emission line ratios, luminosities and PAH EWs are
consistent with the starbursts and AGN in ULIRGs being more extincted, and for
the starbursts more compact, versions of those in lower luminosity systems. The
excitations and electron densities in the NLRs of ULIRGs appear comparable to
those of lower luminosity starbursts, though there is evidence that the NLR gas
in ULIRGs is more dense. We show that the combined luminosity of the 12.81um
[NeII] and 15.56um [NeIII] lines correlates with both IR luminosity and the
luminosity of the 6.2 micron and 11.2 micron PAH features in ULIRGs, and use
this to derive a calibration between PAH luminosity and star formation rate.
Finally, we show that ULIRGs with 0.8 < S_sil < 2.4 are likely to be powered
mainly by star formation, but that ULIRGs with S_sil < 0.8, and possibly those
with S_sil > 2.4, contain an IR-luminous AGN.Comment: 62 pages in preprint format, 4 tables, 23 figures. ApJ accepte
The Mid-IR Properties of Starburst Galaxies from Spitzer-IRS Spectroscopy
We present 5-38um mid-infrared spectra at a spectral resolution of R~65-130
of a large sample of 22 starburst nuclei taken with the Infrared Spectrograph
IRS on board the Spitzer Space Telescope. The spectra show a vast range in
starburst SEDs. The silicate absorption ranges from essentially no absorption
to heavily obscured systems with an optical depth of tau(9.8um)~5. The spectral
slopes can be used to discriminate between starburst and AGN powered sources.
The monochromatic continuum fluxes at 15um and 30um enable a remarkably
accurate estimate of the total infrared luminosity of the starburst. We find
that the PAH equivalent width is independent of the total starburst luminosity
L_IR as both continuum and PAH feature scale proportionally. However, the
luminosity of the 6.2um feature scales with L_IR and can be used to approximate
the total infrared luminosity of the starburst. Although our starburst sample
covers about a factor of ten difference in the [NeIII]/[NeII] ratio, we found
no systematic correlation between the radiation field hardness and the PAH
equivalent width or the 7.7um/11.3um PAH ratio. These results are based on
spatially integrated diagnostics over an entire starburst region, and local
variations may be ``averaged out''. It is presumably due to this effect that
unresolved starburst nuclei with significantly different global properties
appear spectrally as rather similar members of one class of objects.Comment: 22 pages, accepted for publication in ApJ, a high-resolution version
is available from http://www.strw.leidenuniv.nl/~brandl/IRS_starbursts.pd
Mapping IR Enhancements in Closely Interacting Spiral-Spiral Pairs. I. ISO~CAM and ISO~SWS Observations
Mid-infrared (MIR) imaging and spectroscopic observations are presented for a
well defined sample of eight closely interacting (CLO) pairs of spiral galaxies
that have overlapping disks and show enhanced far-infrared (FIR) emission. The
goal is to study the star formation distribution in CLO pairs, with special
emphasis on the role of 'overlap starbursts'. Observations were made with the
Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) using the CAM and SWS instruments. The ISO~CAM
maps, tracing the MIR emission of warm dust heated by young massive stars, are
compared to new ground based H and R-band images. We identify three
possible subgroups in the sample, classified according to the star formation
morphology: (1) advanced mergers (Arp~157, Arp~244 and Arp~299), (2) severely
disturbed systems (Arp~81 and Arp~278), and (3) less disturbed systems
(Arp~276, KPG 347 and KPG 426). Localized starbursts are detected in the
overlap regions in all five pairs of subgroups (1) and (2), suggesting that
they are a common property in colliding systems. Except for Arp~244, the
'overlap starburst' is usually fainter than the major nuclear starburst in CLO
pairs. Star formation in 'less disturbed systems' is often distributed
throughout the disks of both galaxies with no 'overlap starburst' detected in
any of them. These systems also show less enhanced FIR emission, suggesting
that they are in an earlier interaction stage than pairs of the other two
subgroups where the direct disk collisions have probably not yet occurred.Comment: 27 pages text, 4 JPEG figures, 3 PS figures. To be accepted by ApJ.
High quality figures (included in a PS file of the paper) can be found in
http://spider.ipac.caltech.edu/staff/cxu/papers/ss_iso.ps.g
Ancient Blue Spruce Hiding Among Engelmann Spruce
Results of research in forest health and forest futures in Uta
Fungi Benefit Limber Pine and Bristlecone Pine
Results of research in forest health and forest futures in Uta
Large Trees Promote Belowground Fungal Diversity
Results of research in forest health and forest futures in Uta
Variable Fire Behavior Causes Greater Bacterial and Fungal Richness
Results of research in forest health and forest futures in Utah.
Key Results
1. Fire reduces microbial richness
Nine years after fire, burned soils had 19 - 31% lower richness, compared to unburned refugia.
2. Pathogens like it hot?
Pathogens made up a larger proportion of burned communities compared to unburned refugia.
3. Unburned refugia communities are tough
Refugia communities had greater resistance to disturbance than burned communities
Pine Seedlings Regenerate Close to Large Deadwood and Mature Trees
Results of research in forest health and forest futures in Uta
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