2,529 research outputs found
Tri-county pilot study
The author has identified the following significant results. An area inventory was performed for three southeast Texas counties (Montgomery, Walker, and San Jacinto) totaling 0.65 million hectares. The inventory was performed using a two level hierarchy. Level 1 was divided into forestland, rangeland, and other land. Forestland was separated into Level 2 categories: pine, hardwood, and mixed; rangeland was not separated further. Results consisted of area statistics for each county and for the entire study site for pine, hardwood, mixed, rangeland, and other land. Color coded county classification maps were produced for the May data set, and procedures were developed and tested
Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo: opportunities squandered
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/111079/1/nyas12721.pd
Improved orbital solution and masses for the very low-mass multiple system LHS 1070
We present a refined orbital solution for the components A, B, and C of the
nearby late-M type multiple system LHS 1070. By combining astrometric
datapoints from NACO/VLT, CIAO/SUBARU, and PUEO/CFHT, as well as a radial
velocity measurement from the newly commissioned near infrared high-resolution
spectrograph CRIRES/VLT, we achieve a very precise orbital solution for the B
and C components and a first realistic constraint on the much longer orbit of
the A-BC system. Both orbits appear to be co-planar. Masses for the B and C
components calculated from the new orbital solution (M_(B+C) = 0.157 +/- 0.009
M_sun) are in excellent agreement with theoretical models, but do not match
empirical mass-luminosity tracks. The preliminary orbit of the A-BC system
reveals no mass excess for the A component, giving no indication for a
previously proposed fourth (D) component in LHS 1070.Comment: published in A&A, 2008, 484, 429; added CFHT acknowledgemen
A framework for digital sunken relief generation based on 3D geometric models
Sunken relief is a special art form of sculpture whereby the depicted shapes are sunk into a given surface. This is traditionally created by laboriously carving materials such as stone. Sunken reliefs often utilize the engraved lines or strokes to strengthen the impressions of a 3D presence and to highlight the features which otherwise are unrevealed. In other types of reliefs, smooth surfaces and their shadows convey such information in a coherent manner. Existing methods for relief generation are focused on forming a smooth surface with a shallow depth which provides the presence of 3D figures. Such methods unfortunately do not help the art form of sunken reliefs as they omit the presence of feature lines. We propose a framework to produce sunken reliefs from a known 3D geometry, which transforms the 3D objects into three layers of input to incorporate the contour lines seamlessly with the smooth surfaces. The three input layers take the advantages of the geometric information and the visual cues to assist the relief generation. This framework alters existing techniques in line drawings and relief generation, and then combines them organically for this particular purpose
A dense disk of dust around the born-again Sakurai's object
In 1996, Sakurai's object (V4334 Sgr) suddenly brightened in the centre of a
faint Planetary Nebula (PN). This very rare event was interpreted as the
reignition of a hot white dwarf that caused a rapid evolution back to the cool
giant phase. From 1998 on, a copious amount of dust has formed continuously,
screening out the star which has remained embedded in this expanding high
optical depth envelope. The new observations, reported here, are used to study
the morphology of the circumstellar dust in order to investigate the hypothesis
that Sakurai's Object is surrounded by a thick spherical envelope of dust. We
have obtained unprecedented, high-angular resolution spectro-interferometric
observations, taken with the mid-IR interferometer MIDI/VLTI, which resolve the
dust envelope of Sakurai's object. We report the discovery of a unexpectedly
compact (30 x 40 milliarcsec, 105 x 140 AU assuming a distance of 3.5 kpc),
highly inclined, dust disk. We used Monte Carlo radiative-transfer simulations
of a stratified disk to constrain its geometric and physical parameters,
although such a model is only a rough approximation of the rapidly evolving
dust structure. Even though the fits are not fully satisfactory, some useful
and robust constraints can be inferred. The disk inclination is estimated to be
75+/-3 degree with a large scale height of 47+/-7 AU. The dust mass of the disk
is estimated to be 6 10^{-5} solar mass. The major axis of the disk (132+/-3
degree) is aligned with an asymmetry seen in the old PN that was
re-investigated as part of this study. This implies that the mechanism
responsible for shaping the dust envelope surrounding Sakurai's object was
already at work when the old PN formed.Comment: A&A Letter, accepte
Molecfit: A general tool for telluric absorption correction II. Quantitative evaluation on ESO-VLT X-Shooter spectra
Context: Absorption by molecules in the Earth's atmosphere strongly affects
ground-based astronomical observations. The resulting absorption line strength
and shape depend on the highly variable physical state of the atmosphere, i.e.
pressure, temperature, and mixing ratio of the different molecules involved.
Usually, supplementary observations of so-called telluric standard stars (TSS)
are needed to correct for this effect, which is expensive in terms of telescope
time. We have developed the software package molecfit to provide synthetic
transmission spectra based on parameters obtained by fitting narrow ranges of
the observed spectra of scientific objects. These spectra are calculated by
means of the radiative transfer code LBLRTM and an atmospheric model. In this
way, the telluric absorption correction for suitable objects can be performed
without any additional calibration observations of TSS. Aims: We evaluate the
quality of the telluric absorption correction using molecfit with a set of
archival ESO-VLT X-Shooter visible and near-infrared spectra. Methods: Thanks
to the wavelength coverage from the U to the K band, X-Shooter is well suited
to investigate the quality of the telluric absorption correction with respect
to the observing conditions, the instrumental set-up, input parameters of the
code, the signal-to-noise of the input spectrum, and the atmospheric profiles.
These investigations are based on two figures of merit, I_off and I_res, that
describe the systematic offsets and the remaining small-scale residuals of the
corrections. We also compare the quality of the telluric absorption correction
achieved with moelcfit to the classical method based on a telluric standard
star. (Abridged)Comment: Acc. by A&A; Software available via ESO:
http://www.eso.org/sci/software/pipelines/skytools
A High-Resolution Atlas of Uranium-Neon in the H Band
We present a high-resolution (R ~ 50 000) atlas of a uranium-neon (U/Ne)
hollow-cathode spectrum in the H-band (1454 nm to 1638 nm) for the calibration
of near-infrared spectrographs. We obtained this U/Ne spectrum simultaneously
with a laser-frequency comb spectrum, which we used to provide a first-order
calibration to the U/Ne spectrum. We then calibrated the U/Ne spectrum using
the recently-published uranium line list of Redman et al. (2011), which is
derived from high-resolution Fourier transform spectrometer measurements. These
two independent calibrations allowed us to easily identify emission lines in
the hollow cathode lamp that do not correspond to known (classified) lines of
either uranium or neon, and to compare the achievable precision of each source.
Our frequency comb precision was limited by modal noise and detector effects,
while the U/Ne precision was limited primarily by the signal-to-noise ratio
(S/N) of the observed emission lines and our ability to model blended lines.
The standard deviation in the dispersion solution residuals from the
S/N-limited U/Ne hollow cathode lamp were 50% larger than the standard
deviation of the dispersion solution residuals from the modal-noise-limited
laser frequency comb. We advocate the use of U/Ne lamps for precision
calibration of near-infrared spectrographs, and this H-band atlas makes these
lamps significantly easier to use for wavelength calibration.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures, submitted and accepted in ApJSS. Online-only
material to be published online by ApJS
The Ever Changing Circumstellar Nebula Around UW Centauri
We present new images of the reflection nebula surrounding the R Coronae
Borealis Star, UW Cen. This nebula, first detected in 1990, has changed its
appearance significantly. At the estimated distance of UW Cen, this nebula is
approximately 0.6 ly in radius so the nebula cannot have physically altered in
only 8 years. Instead, the morphology of the nebula appears to change as
different parts are illuminated by light from the central star modulated by
shifting thick dust clouds near its surface. These dust clouds form and
dissipate at irregular intervals causing the well-known declines in the R
Coronae Borealis (RCB) stars. In this way, the central star acts like a
lighthouse shining through holes in the dust clouds and lighting up different
portions of the nebula. The existence of this nebula provides clues to the
evolutionary history of RCB stars possibly linking them to the Planetary
Nebulae and the final helium shell flash stars.Comment: To be published in ApJ Letters. 5 pages, 3 figures (2 in color
An adaptive prefix-assignment technique for symmetry reduction
This paper presents a technique for symmetry reduction that adaptively
assigns a prefix of variables in a system of constraints so that the generated
prefix-assignments are pairwise nonisomorphic under the action of the symmetry
group of the system. The technique is based on McKay's canonical extension
framework [J.~Algorithms 26 (1998), no.~2, 306--324]. Among key features of the
technique are (i) adaptability---the prefix sequence can be user-prescribed and
truncated for compatibility with the group of symmetries; (ii)
parallelizability---prefix-assignments can be processed in parallel
independently of each other; (iii) versatility---the method is applicable
whenever the group of symmetries can be concisely represented as the
automorphism group of a vertex-colored graph; and (iv) implementability---the
method can be implemented relying on a canonical labeling map for
vertex-colored graphs as the only nontrivial subroutine. To demonstrate the
practical applicability of our technique, we have prepared an experimental
open-source implementation of the technique and carry out a set of experiments
that demonstrate ability to reduce symmetry on hard instances. Furthermore, we
demonstrate that the implementation effectively parallelizes to compute
clusters with multiple nodes via a message-passing interface.Comment: Updated manuscript submitted for revie
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