5,871 research outputs found
Birds in a partly clearfelled dry eucalypt forest on dolerite in southeastern Tasmania
An area of dry eucalypt forest on dolerite in southeastern Tasmania was clearfelled in 1981. A portion of this area was subsequently slash-burnt and aerially sown in 1982, whilst the rest of the area was left unburnt and unsown. A monthly bird census was conducted during 1983-1984 in surrounding uncut, mature forest and also on the clearfelled area. Species were recorded together with the habitat in which they occurred and the particular plant species being utilised. A total of 46 avian species were recorded during the monthly censuses, with most species and individuals being observed in the spring months. The numbers of species and individuals recorded on the burnt and unburnt clearfelled areas were low in comparison with those observed in the uncut forest. In general, those species able to utilise open-ground habitats tended to be the least affected by clearfelling followed by slash-burning. However, the unburnt clearfelled area provided foraging sites for certain species, in preference to the nearby slash-burnt area. Many individuals recorded in the clearfelled areas made use of trees left standing after logging. The use of fire in dry forest management practice and the importance of cull trees are discussed
OH spectral evolution of oxygen-rich late-type stars
We investigated the main-line spectral evolution with shell thickness of
oxygen rich AGB stars. The study is based on a sample of 30 sources distributed
along the IRAS colour-colour diagram. The sources were chosen to trace the
Miras with thick shells and the whole range of OH/IR stars. The Miras exhibit a
1665 MHz emission strength comparable to that at 1667 MHz. Even though the
Miras of the study have quite thick shells, their spectral characteristics in
both main lines attest to a strong heterogeneity in their OH shell with, in
particular, the presence of significant turbulence and acceleration. The
expansion velocity has been found to be about the same at 1665 and 1667 MHz,
taking into account a possible velocity turbulence of 1-2km/s at the location
of the main-line maser emission. An increase in the intensity ratio 1667/1665
with shell thickness has been found. A plausible explanation for such a
phenomenon is that competitive gain in favour of the 1667 MHz line increases
when the shell is getting thicker. There is an evolution in the spectral
profile shape with the appearance of a substantial inter-peak signal when the
shell is getting thicker. Also, inter-peak components are found and can be as
strong as the external standard peaks when the shell is very thick. This trend
for an increase of the signal in between the two main peaks is thought to be
the result of an increase of the saturation with shell thickness. All sources
but two - a Mira and an OH/IR star from the lower part of the colour-colour
diagram - are weakly polarized. The strong polarization observed for those two
particular objects is thought to be the result of perturbations in their
shells.Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The Evolution of the Optical and Near-Infrared Galaxy Luminosity Functions and Luminosity Densities to z~2
Using Hubble Space Telescope and ground-based U through K- band photometry
from the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS), we measure the
evolution of the luminosity function and luminosity density in the rest-frame
optical (UBR) to z ~ 2, bridging the poorly explored ``redshift desert''
between z~1 and z~2. We also use deep near-infrared observations to measure the
evolution in the rest-frame J-band to z~1. Compared to local measurements from
the SDSS, we find a brightening of the characteristic magnitude, (M*), by ~2.1,
\~0.8 and ~0.7 mag between z=0.1 and z=1.9, in U, B, and R bands, respectively.
The evolution of M* in the J-band is in the opposite sense, showing a dimming
between redshifts z=0.4 and z=0.9. This is consistent with a scenario in which
the mean star formation rate in galaxies was higher in the past, while the mean
stellar mass was lower, in qualitative agreement with hierarchical galaxy
formation models. We find that the shape of the luminosity function is strongly
dependent on spectral type and that there is strong evolution with redshift in
the relative contribution from the different spectral types to the luminosity
density.
We find good agreement in the luminosity function derived from an R-selected
and a K-selected sample at z~1, suggesting that optically selected surveys of
similar depth (R < 24) are not missing a significant fraction of objects at
this redshift relative to a near-infrared-selected sample. We compare the
rest-frame B-band luminosity functions from z~0--2 with the predictions of a
semi-analytic hierarchical model of galaxy formation, and find qualitatively
good agreement. In particular, the model predicts at least as many optically
luminous galaxies at z~1--2 as are implied by our observations.Comment: 43 pages; 15 Figures; 5 Tables, Accepted for publication in Ap.
A model for atomic and molecular interstellar gas: The Meudon PDR code
We present the revised ``Meudon'' model of Photon Dominated Region (PDR
code), presently available on the web under the Gnu Public Licence at:
http://aristote.obspm.fr/MIS. General organisation of the code is described
down to a level that should allow most observers to use it as an interpretation
tool with minimal help from our part. Two grids of models, one for low
excitation diffuse clouds and one for dense highly illuminated clouds, are
discussed, and some new results on PDR modelisation highlighted.Comment: accepted in ApJ sup
Physical properties of z~4 LBGs: differences between galaxies with and without Ly-alpha emission
We have analysed the physical properties of z~4 Lyman Break Galaxies observed
in the GOODS-S survey, in order to investigate the possible differences between
galaxies where the Ly-alpha is present in emission, and those where the line is
absent or in absorption. The objects have been selected from their optical
color and then spectroscopically confirmed by Vanzella et al. (2005). From the
public spectra we assessed the nature of the Ly-alpha emission and divided the
sample into galaxies with Ly-alpha in emission and objects without Ly-alpha
line (i.e. either absent or in absorption). We have then used the complete
photometry, from U band to mid infrared from the GOODS-MUSIC database, to study
the observational properties of the galaxies, such as UV spectral slopes and
optical to mid-infrared colors, and the possible differences between the two
samples. Finally through standard spectral fitting tecniques we have determined
the physical properties of the galaxies, such as total stellar mass, stellar
ages and so on, and again we have studied the possible differences between the
two samples. Our results indicate that LBG with Ly-alpha in emission are on
average a much younger and less massive population than the LBGs without
Ly-alpha emission. Both populations are forming stars very actively and are
relatively dust free, although those with line emission seem to be even less
dusty on average. We briefly discuss these results in the context of recent
models for the evolution of Lyman break galaxies and Ly-alpha emitters.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. Uses aa.cls, 6 pages, 3 figure
The evolution of clustering and bias in the galaxy distribution
This paper reviews the measurements of galaxy correlations at high redshifts,
and discusses how these may be understood in models of hierarchical
gravitational collapse. The clustering of galaxies at redshift one is much
weaker than at present, and this is consistent with the rate of growth of
structure expected in an open universe. If , this observation would
imply that bias increases at high redshift, in conflict with observed
values for known high- clusters. At redshift 3, the population of
Lyman-limit galaxies displays clustering which is of similar amplitude to that
seen today. This is most naturally understood if the Lyman-limit population is
a set of rare recently-formed objects. Knowing both the clustering and the
abundance of these objects, it is possible to deduce empirically the
fluctuation spectrum required on scales which cannot be measured today owing to
gravitational nonlinearities. Of existing physical models for the fluctuation
spectrum, the results are most closely matched by a low-density spatially flat
universe. This conclusion is reinforced by an empirical analysis of CMB
anisotropies, in which the present-day fluctuation spectrum is forced to have
the observed form. Open models are strongly disfavoured, leaving CDM
as the most successful simple model for structure formation.Comment: Invited review at the Royal Society Meeting `Large-scale structure in
the universe', London, March 1998. 20 Pages LaTe
Spitzer infrared spectrometer 16μm observations of the GOODS fields
We present Spitzer 16μm imaging of the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS) fields. We survey
150 arcmin^2 in each of the two GOODS fields (North and South), to an average 3σ depth of 40 and 65 μJy,
respectively. We detect ~1300 sources in both fields combined. We validate the photometry using the 3–24μm
spectral energy distribution of stars in the fields compared to Spitzer spectroscopic templates. Comparison with
ISOCAM and AKARI observations in the same fields shows reasonable agreement, though the uncertainties are
large. We provide a catalog of photometry, with sources cross-correlated with available Spitzer, Chandra, and
Hubble Space Telescope data. Galaxy number counts show good agreement with previous results from ISOCAM
and AKARI with improved uncertainties. We examine the 16–24μm flux ratio and find that for most sources it
lies within the expected locus for starbursts and infrared luminous galaxies. A color cut of S_(16)/S_(24) > 1.4 selects
mostly sources which lie at 1.1 < z < 1.6, where the 24μm passband contains both the redshifted 9.7 μm silicate
absorption and the minimum between polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon emission peaks. We measure the integrated
galaxy light of 16μm sources and find a lower limit on the galaxy contribution to the extragalactic background
light at this wavelength to be 2.2 ± 0.2 nW m^(−2) sr^(−1)
The Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey - VLT/VIMOS Spectroscopy in the GOODS-South Field: Part II
We present the full data set of the VIMOS spectroscopic campaign of the
ESO/GOODS program in the CDFS, which complements the FORS2 ESO/GOODS
spectroscopic campaign. The GOODS/VIMOS spectroscopic campaign is structured in
two separate surveys using two different VIMOS grisms. The VIMOS Low Resolution
Blue (LR-Blue) and Medium Resolution (MR) orange grisms have been used to cover
different redshift ranges. The LR-Blue campaign is aimed at observing galaxies
mainly at 1.8<z<3.5, while the MR campaign mainly aims at galaxies at z<1 and
Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) at z>3.5. The full GOODS/VIMOS spectroscopic
campaign consists of 20 VIMOS masks. This release adds 8 new masks to the
previous release (12 masks, Popesso et al. 2009). In total we obtained 5052
spectra, 3634 from the 10 LR-Blue masks and 1418 from the 10 MR masks. A
significant fraction of the extracted spectra comes from serendipitously
observed sources: ~21% in the LR-Blue and ~16% in the MR masks. We obtained
2242 redshifts in the LR-Blue campaign and 976 in the MR campaign for a total
success rate of 62% and 69% respectively, which increases to 66% and 73% if
only primary targets are considered. The typical redshift uncertainty is
estimated to be ~0.0012 (~255 km/s) for the LR-Blue grism and ~0.00040 (~120
km/s) for the MR grism. By complementing our VIMOS spectroscopic catalog with
all existing spectroscopic redshifts publicly available in the CDFS, we
compiled a redshift master catalog with 7332 entries, which we used to
investigate large scale structures out to z~3.7. We produced stacked spectra of
LBGs in a few bins of equivalent width (EW) of the Ly-alpha and found evidence
for a lack of bright LBGs with high EW of the Ly-alpha. Finally, we obtained
new redshifts for 12 X-ray sources of the CDFS and extended-CDFS.Comment: 22 pages, 20 figures, accepted for publication on Astronomy and
Astrophysics, catalogs and data products are available at
http://archive.eso.org/cms/eso-data/data-packages/goods-vimos-spectroscopy-data-release-version-2.0/,
for ESO-GOODS related material consult
http://www.eso.org/sci/activities/projects/goods
ZEN2: A narrow J-band search for z~9 Lya emitting galaxies directed towards three lensing clusters
We present the results of a continuing survey to detect Lya emitting galaxies
at redshifts z~9: the ZEN ("z equals nine'') survey. We have obtained deep
VLT/ISAAC observations in the narrow J-band filter NB119 directed towards three
massive lensing clusters: Abell clusters 1689, 1835, and 114. The foreground
clusters provide a magnified view of the distant universe and permit a
sensitive test for the presence of very high-redshift galaxies. We search for
z~9 Lya emitting galaxies displaying a significant narrow-band excess relative
to accompanying J-band observations that remain undetected in HST/ACS optical
images of each field. No sources consistent with this criterion are detected
above the unlensed 90% point-source flux limit of the narrow-band image,
F_NB=3.7e-18 ergs/s/cm2. To date, the total coverage of the ZEN survey has
sampled a volume at z~9 of approximately 1700 co-moving Mpc3 to a Lya emission
luminosity of 1e43 erg/s. We conclude by considering the prospects for
detecting z~9 Lya emitting galaxies in light of both observed galaxy properties
at z7.Comment: 7 pages, MNRAS accepte
A recent rebuilding of most spirals ?
Re-examination of the properties of distant galaxies leads to the evidence
that most present-day spirals have built up half of their stellar masses during
the last 8 Gyr, mostly during several intense phases of star formation during
which they took the appearance of luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs). Distant
galaxy morphologies encompass all of the expected stages of galaxy merging,
central core formation and disk growth, while their cores are much bluer than
those of present-day bulges. We have tested a spiral rebuilding scenario, for
which 75+/-25% of spirals have experienced their last major merger event less
than 8 Gyr ago. It accounts for the simultaneous decreases, during that period,
of the cosmic star formation density, of the merger rate, of the number
densities of LIRGs and of compact galaxies, while the densities of ellipticals
and large spirals are essentially unaffected.Comment: (1) GEPI, Obs. Meudon, France ;(2)Max-Planck Institut fuer
Astronomie, Germany (3) National Astronomical Observatories, CAS, China. Five
pages, 1 figure. To be published in "Starbursts: From 30 Doradus to Lyman
Break Galaxies", held in Cambridge, ed. R. de Grijs & R. M. Gonzalez Delgado
(Dordrecht: Kluwer
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