7,503 research outputs found
Identification of Bare-Airframe Dynamics from Closed-Loop Data Using Multisine Inputs and Frequency Responses
Amethod is presented for computing multiple-input multiple-output frequency responses of bare-airframe dynamics for systems excited using orthogonal phase-optimized multisines and including correlated data arising from control mixing or feedback control. The estimation was posed as the solution to an underdetermined system of linear equations, for which additional information was supplied using interpolation of the frequency responses. A simulation model of the NASA T-2 aircraft having two inputs and two outputs was used to investigate the method in the open-loop configuration and under closed-loop control. The method was also applied to flight test data from the X-56A aeroelastic demonstrator having five inputs and ten outputs and flying under closed-loop control with additional control allocation mixing. Results demonstrated that the proposed method accurately estimates the bare airframe frequency responses in the presence of correlated data from control mixing and feedback control. Results also agreed with estimates obtained using different methods that are less sensitive to correlated inputs
Survival of microorganisms in desert soil exposed to five years of continuous very high vacuum
Microorganism survivability in desert algal soil crust under continuous very high vacuu
Injunction Against Prosecution of Divorce Actions in Other States
Aims: The formation scenario of extended counter-rotating stellar disks in galaxies is still debated. In this paper, we study the S0 galaxy IC 719 known to host two large-scale counter-rotating stellar disks in order to investigate their formation mechanism.
Methods: We exploit the large field of view and wavelength coverage of the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) spectrograph to derive two-dimensional (2D) maps of the various properties of the counter-rotating stellar disks, such as age, metallicity, kinematics, spatial distribution, the kinematical and chemical properties of the ionized gas, and the dust map.
Results: Due to the large wavelength range, and in particular to the presence of the Calcium Triplet \u3bb\u3bb8498, 8542, 8662 \uc5 (CaT hereafter), the spectroscopic analysis allows us to separate the two stellar components in great detail. This permits precise measurement of both the velocity and velocity dispersion of the two components as well as their spatial distribution. We derived a 2D map of the age and metallicity of the two stellar components, as well as the star formation rate and gas-phase metallicity from the ionized gas emission maps.
Conclusions: The main stellar disk of the galaxy is kinematically hotter, older, thicker and with larger scale-length than the secondary disk. There is no doubt that the latter is strongly linked to the ionized gas component: they have the same kinematics and similar vertical and radial spatial distribution. This result is in favor of a gas accretion scenario over a binary merger scenario to explain the origin of counter-rotation in IC 719. One source of gas that may have contributed to the accretion process is the cloud that surrounds IC 719
Dissecting Kinematics and Stellar Populations of Counter-Rotating Galaxies with 2-Dimensional Spectroscopy
We present a spectral decomposition technique and its applications to a
sample of galaxies hosting large-scale counter-rotating stellar disks. Our
spectral decomposition technique allows to separate and measure the kinematics
and the properties of the stellar populations of both the two counter-rotating
disks in the observed galaxies at the same time. Our results provide new
insights on the epoch and mechanism of formation of these galaxies.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Contributed talk presented at the Conference
"Multi-Spin galaxies", September 30 - October 3, 2013, INAF-Astronomical
Observatory of Capodimonte, Naples, Italy. To be published in ASP Conf. Ser.,
Multi-Spin Galaxies, ed. E. Iodice & E. M. Corsini (San Francisco: ASP
Near-infrared spectroscopic indices for unresolved stellar populations: I. Template galaxy spectra
Context. A new generation of spectral synthesis models has been developed in recent years, but there is no matching set of template galaxy spectra, in terms of quality and resolution, for testing and refining the new models.
Aims: Our main goal is to find and calibrate new near-infrared spectral indices along the Hubble sequence of galaxies which will be used to obtain additional constraints to the population analysis based on medium-resolution integrated spectra of galaxies.
Methods: Spectra of previously studied and well-understood galaxies with relatively simple stellar populations (e.g., ellipticals or bulge dominated galaxies) are needed to provide a baseline data set for spectral synthesis models.
Results: X-shooter spectra spanning the optical and infrared wavelengths (350-2400 nm) of bright nearby elliptical galaxies with a resolving power of R \u2dc 4000-5400 were obtained. Heliocentric systemic velocity, velocity dispersion, and Mg, Fe, and H\u3b2 line-strength indices are presented.
Conclusions: We present a library of very-high-quality spectra of galaxies covering a large range of age, metallicity, and morphological type. Such a dataset of spectra will be crucial to addressing important questions of the modern investigation concerning galaxy formation and evolution
The pseudobulge of NGC 1292
The photometric and kinematic properties of Sb NGC 1292 suggest it hosts a
pseudobulge. The properties of the stellar population of such a pseudobulge are
consistent with a slow buildup within a scenario of secular evolution.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure to appear in the proceedings of "Formation and
Evolution of Galaxy Disks", Rome, October 2007, Eds. J. Funes and E. M.
Corsin
The Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF) spectral library: spectral diagnostics for cool stars
The near-infrared (NIR) wavelength range offers some unique spectral
features, and it is less prone to the extinction than the optical one.
Recently, the first flux calibrated NIR library of cool stars from the NASA
Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF) have become available, and it has not been
fully exploited yet. We want to develop spectroscopic diagnostics for stellar
physical parameters based on features in the wavelength range 1-5 micron. In
this work we test the technique in the I and K bands. The study of the Y, J, H,
and L bands will be presented in the following paper. An objective method for
semi-empirical definition of spectral features sensitive to various physical
parameters is applied to the spectra. It is based on sensitivity map--i.e.,
derivative of the flux in the spectra with respect to the stellar parameters at
a fixed wavelength. New optimized indices are defined and their equivalent
widths (EWs) are measured. A number of sensitive features to the effective
temperature and surface gravity are re-identified or newly identified clearly
showing the reliability of the sensitivity map analysis. The sensitivity map
allows to identify the best bandpass limits for the line and nearby continuum.
It reliably predicts the trends of spectral features with respect to a given
physical parameter but not their absolute strengths. Line blends are easy to
recognize when blended features have different behavior with respect to some
physical stellar parameter. The use of sensitivity map is therefore
complementary to the use of indices. We give the EWs of the new indices
measured for the IRTF star sample. This new and homogeneous set of EWs will be
useful for stellar population synthesis models and can be used to get
element-by-element abundances for unresolved stellar population studies in
galaxies.Comment: 46 pages, 27 figures, accepted for publication on Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Stellar populations in the bulges of isolated galaxies
open7siWe present photometry and long-slit spectroscopy for 12 S0 and spiral galaxies selected
from the Catalogue of Isolated Galaxies. The structural parameters of the sample galaxies are
derived from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey i-band images by performing a two-dimensional
photometric decomposition of the surface brightness distribution. This is assumed to be the
sum of the contribution of a Sersic bulge, an exponential disc, and a Ferrers bar characterized
by elliptical and concentric isophotes with constant ellipticity and position angles. The rotation
curves and velocity dispersion profiles of the stellar component are measured from the spectra
obtained along the major axis of galaxies. The radial profiles of the Hβ, Mg and Fe line-
strength indices are derived too. Correlations between the central values of the Mg2
and Fe line-strength indices and the velocity dispersion are found. The mean age, total metallicity
and total α/Fe enhancement of the stellar population in the centre and at the radius, where the
bulge gives the same contribution to the total surface brightness as the remaining components,
are obtained using stellar population models with variable element abundance ratios. We
identify intermediate-age bulges with solar metallicity and old bulges with a large spread in
metallicity. Most of the sample bulges display supersolar α/Fe enhancement, no gradient in
age and negative gradients of metallicity and α/Fe enhancement. These findings support a
formation scenario via dissipative collapse where environmental effects are remarkably less
important than in the assembly of bulges of galaxies in groups and clusters.openMorelli, Lorenzo; Parmiggiani, Marco; Corsini, ENRICO MARIA; Costantin, Luca; DALLA BONTA', Elena; Méndez Abreu, J.; Pizzella, AlessandroMorelli, Lorenzo; Parmiggiani, Marco; Corsini, ENRICO MARIA; Costantin, Luca; DALLA BONTA', Elena; Méndez Abreu, J.; Pizzella, Alessandr
Polar bulges and polar nuclear discs: the case of NGC 4698
The early-type spiral NGC 4698 is known to host a nuclear disc of gas and
stars which is rotating perpendicularly with respect to the galaxy main disc.
In addition, the bulge and main disc are characterised by a remarkable
geometrical decoupling. Indeed they appear elongated orthogonally to each
other. In this work the complex structure of the galaxy is investigated by a
detailed photometric decomposition of optical and near-infrared images. The
intrinsic shape of the bulge was constrained from its apparent ellipticity, its
twist angle with respect to the major axis of the main disc, and the
inclination of the main disc. The bulge is actually elongated perpendicular to
the main disc and it is equally likely to be triaxial or axisymmetric. The
central surface brightness, scalelength, inclination, and position angle of the
nuclear disc were derived by assuming it is infinitesimally thin and
exponential. Its size, orientation, and location do not depend on the observed
passband. These findings support a scenario in which the nuclear disc is the
end result of the acquisition of external gas by the pre-existing triaxial
bulge on the principal plane perpendicular to its shortest axis and
perpendicular to the galaxy main disc. The subsequent star formation either
occurred homogeneously all over the extension of the nuclear disc or through an
inside-out process that ended more than 5 Gyr ago.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
- …
