476 research outputs found
Spontaneous activity in peripheral diaphragmatic lymphatic loops.
The spontaneous contractility of FITC-dextran-filled lymphatics at the periphery of the pleural diaphragm was documented for the first time “in vivo” in anesthetized Wistar rats. We found that lymphatic segments could be divided into four phenotypes: 1) active, displaying rhythmic spontaneous contractions (51.8% of 197 analyzed sites); 2) stretch-activated, whose contraction was triggered by passive distension of the vessel lumen (4.1%); 3) passive, which displayed a completely passive distension (4.5%); and 4) inert, whose diameter never changed over time (39.6%). Smooth muscle actin was detected by immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy in the vessel walls of active but also of inert sites, albeit with a very different structure within the vessel wall. Indeed, while in active segments, actin was arranged in a dense mesh completely surrounding the lumen, in inert segments actin decorated the vessels wall in sparse longitudinal strips. When located nearby along the same lymphatic loop, active, stretch-activated, and passive sites were always recruited in temporal sequence starting from the active contraction. The time delay was ∼0.35 s between active and stretch-activated and 0.54 s between stretch-activated and passive segments, promoting a uniform lymph flux of ∼150/200 pl/min. We conclude that, unlike more central diaphragmatic lymphatic vessels, loops located at the extreme diaphragmatic periphery do require an intrinsic pumping mechanism to propel lymph centripetally, and that such an active lymph propulsion is attained by means of a complex interplay among sites whose properties differ but are indeed able to organize lymph flux in an ordered fashion. </jats:p
Circumnuclear Gas in Seyfert 1 Galaxies: Morphology, Kinematics, and Direct Measurement of Black Hole Masses
(Abridged) The two-dimensional distribution and kinematics of the molecular,
ionized, and highly ionized gas in the nuclear regions of Seyfert 1 galaxies
have been measured using high spatial resolution (~0''.09) near-infrared
spectroscopy from NIRSPEC with adaptive optics on the Keck telescope. Molecular
hydrogen, H2, is detected in all nine Seyfert 1 galaxies and, in the majority
of galaxies, has a spatially resolved flux distribution. In contrast, the
narrow component of the BrG emission has a distribution consistent with that of
the K-band continuum. In general, the kinematics of H2 are consistent with thin
disk rotation, with a velocity gradient of over 100 km/s measured across the
central 0''.5 in three galaxies, and across the central 1''.5 in two galaxies.
The kinematics of BrG are in agreement with the H2 rotation, except in all four
cases the central 0''.5 is either blue- or redshifted by more than 75 km/s. The
highly ionized gas, measured with the [Ca VIII] and [Si VII] coronal lines, is
spatially and kinematically consistent with BrG in the central 0''.5. Dynamical
models have been fitted to the two-dimensional H2 kinematics, taking into
account the stellar mass distribution, the emission line flux distribution, and
the point spread function. For NGC 3227 the modeling indicates a black hole
mass of Mbh = 2.0{+1.0/-0.4} x 10^7 Msun, and for NGC 4151 Mbh =
3.0{+0.75/-2.2} x 10^7 Msun. In NGC 7469 the best fit model gives Mbh < 5.0 x
10^7 Msun. In all three galaxies, modeling suggests a near face-on disk
inclination angle, which is consistent with the unification theory of active
galaxies. The direct black hole mass estimates verify that masses determined
from the technique of reverberation mapping are accurate to within a factor of
three with no additional systematic errors.Comment: 43 pages, including 47 figures; Accepted for publication in ApJ. All
2-D maps (in high resolution) are available at
http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~ehicks . Minor changes to the text and updated
reverberation mapped black hole mass estimates; the conclusions are unchange
The Disks of Galaxies with Seyfert and Starburst Nuclei: II. Near-Infrared Structural Properties
We have derived the near-infrared structural components of a sample of
Seyfert and starburst (SBN) host galaxies by fitting the images of Hunt et al.
(1997,ApJS,108,229) with a new two-dimensional decomposition algorithm. An
analysis of the fitted parameters shows that Seyfert 1 and SBN bulges resemble
normal early-type bulges in structure and color, with (J-K)^c_b about 0.1 mag
redder than disk (J-K)^c_d. Seyfert 2 bulges, instead, are bluer than normal
with (J-K)^c_b ~ (J-K)^c_d. Seyfert disks (especially Type 1), but not those of
SBNs, are abnormally bright (in surface brightness), significantly more so than
even the brightest normal disks. Seyfert disks are also compact, but similar to
those in normal early-type spirals. For a given mass, Seyferts and especially
SBNs are abnormally rich in neutral hydrogen, and there is strong, albeit
indirect, evidence for lower mass-to-light (M/L) ratios in Seyfert and SBN
disks, but for normal M/Ls in their bulges. In Seyferts and SBNs, HI mass
fractions and M/L ratios are anticorrelated, and we attribute the high gas mass
fractions and low M/Ls in SBNs and several Seyferts to ongoing star formation.
Such abundant gas in Seyferts would be expected to inhibit bar formation, which
may explain why active galaxies are not always barred.Comment: 25 pgs (two-column, single-spaced) including 8 incorporated figures
and 2 tables (aas2pp4, amssym, epsfig). Accepted for publication in Ap
The Radio/Optical Catalog of the SSA13 Field
We present a 1.4-GHz catalog of 810 radio sources (560 sources in the
complete sample) with 1.8" resolution found within a 17' radius in the SSA13
field (RA=13h12m,DEC=42d38'). The radio image from the VLA has an rms noise
level of 4.82 microJy/beam at the field center, and Subaru optical images in
r-band (6300A) and z-band (9200A) have a three-sigma detection magnitude of
26.1 and 24.9, respectively. 88% of the radio sources are identified with an
optical counterpart, and there is significantly more reddening for objects
fainter than 24-mag. The radio and optical parameters are tabulated, and source
morphologies are displayed by radio contours overlaying optical false-color
images. The radio structures show a wealth of complexity and these are
classified into a small number of categories. About one-third of the radio
sources are larger than 1.2" and their orientation is often similar to that of
the associated galaxy or binary-galaxy system. The density of sources in the
SSA13 field above 75 microJy is 0.40 per square arcmin, with a slope of -2.43
in the differential counts. The radio spectral index may steepen for sources
below 75 microJy. We estimate that at most 40% of the microJansky radio sources
are dominated by AGN processes.Comment: 50 pages, 14 figures of which fig 6 contains 33 parts. In press,
Astrophysical Journal, Supp
The Clustering of Extragalactic Extremely Red Objects
We have measured the angular and spatial clustering of 671 K5
Extremely Red Objects (EROs) from a 0.98 square degree sub-region of the NOAO
Deep Wide-Field Survey (NDWFS). Our study covers nearly 5 times the area and
has twice the sample size of any previous ERO clustering study. The wide field
of view and BwRIK passbands of the NDWFS allow us to place improved constraints
on the clustering of z=1 EROs. We find the angular clustering of EROs is
slightly weaker than in previous measurements, and w(1')=0.25+/-0.05 for
K<18.40 EROs. We find no significant correlation of ERO spatial clustering with
redshift, apparent color or absolute magnitude, although given the
uncertainties, such correlations remain plausible. We find the spatial
clustering of K5 EROs is well approximated by a power-law, with
r_0=9.7+/-1.1 Mpc/h in comoving coordinates. This is comparable to the
clustering of 4L* early-type galaxies at z<1, and is consistent with the
brightest EROs being the progenitors of the most massive ellipticals. There is
evidence of the angular clustering of EROs decreasing with increasing apparent
magnitude, when NDWFS measurements of ERO clustering are combined with those
from the literature. Unless the redshift distribution of K>20 EROs is very
broad, the spatial clustering of EROs decreases from r_0=9.7+/-1.1 Mpc/h for
K20 EROs.Comment: Accepted for publication in the ApJ. 29 pages with 10 figures. The
NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey Bootes data release is available online at
http://www.noao.edu/noao/noaodeep
Very Red and Extremely Red Galaxies in the Fields of z ~ 1.5 Radio-Loud Quasars
We previously identified an excess of mostly red galaxies around 31 RLQs at
z=1-2. These fields have an ERO (extremely red object, R-K>6) density 2.7 times
higher than the field. Assuming the EROs are passively evolved galaxies at the
quasar redshifts, they have characteristic luminosities of only ~L^*. We also
present new observations of four z~1.54 RLQ fields: (1) Wide-field J & Ks data
confirm an Abell richness ~2 excess within 140" of Q0835+580 but an excess only
within 50" of Q1126+101. (2) In 3 fields we present deep narrow-band redshifted
H-alpha observations. We detect five candidate galaxies at the quasar
redshifts, a surface density 2.5x higher than the field. (3) SCUBA sub-mm
observations of 3 fields detect 2 quasars and 2 galaxies with SEDs best fit as
highly reddened galaxies at the quasar z. (4) H-band adaptive optics (AO)
imaging is used to estimate redshifts for 2 red, bulge-dominated galaxies using
the Kormendy relation. Both have structural redshifts foreground to the quasar,
but these are not confirmed by photometric redshifts, possibly because their
optical photometry is corrupted by scattered light from the AO guidestar. (5)
We use quantitative SED fits to constrain the photometric redshifts z_ph for
some galaxies. Most galaxies near Q0835+580 are consistent with being at its
redshift, including a candidate very old passively evolving galaxy. Many very &
extremely red objects have z_ph z_q, and dust reddening is required to fit most
of them, including many objects whose fits also require relatively old stellar
populations. Large reddenings of E(B-V)~0.6 are required to fit four J-K
selected EROs, though all but one of them have best-fit z_ph>z_q. These objects
may represent a population of dusty high-z galaxies underrepresented in
optically selected samples. (Abridged)Comment: Missing object 1126.424 added to Table 4; title changed to save
people the apparent trouble of reading the abstract. 38 pages, 16 figures, 2
in color; all-PostScript figure version available from
http://astro.princeton.edu/~pathall/tp3.ps.g
Molecular Gas in the Lensed Lyman Break Galaxy cB58
We have used the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer to map CO(3-2) emission
from the gravitationally lensed Lyman break galaxy MS1512-cB58. This is the
first detection of a molecular emission line in any Lyman break system; its
integrated intensity implies a total molecular gas mass of 6.6e9 Msun, while
its width implies a dynamical mass of 1.0e10 csc^2i Msun (for a flat Lambda=0.7
cosmology). These estimates are in excellent concordance with nearly all
parameters of the system measured at other wavelengths, and yield a consistent
picture of past and future star formation with no obvious discrepancies
requiring explanation by differential lensing. In particular, we find that the
age and remaining lifetime of the current episode of star formation are likely
to be similar; the surface densities of star formation and molecular gas mass
are related by a Schmidt law; and the fraction of baryonic mass already
converted into stars is sufficient to account for the observed enrichment of
the interstellar medium to 0.4 Zsun. Barring substantial gas inflow or a major
merger, the stars forming in the current episode will have mass and coevality
at z=0 similar to those of a spiral bulge. Assuming cB58 is a typical Lyman
break galaxy apart from its magnification, its global parameters suggest that
the prescriptions for star formation used in some semi-analytic models of
galaxy evolution require moderate revision, although the general prediction
that gas mass fraction should increase with redshift is validated. [abridged]Comment: 41 pages, 6 figures, accepted by Ap
Morphology of the 12-micron Seyfert Galaxies: II. Optical and Near-Infrared Image Atlas
We present 263 optical and near-infrared (NIR) images for 42 Seyfert 1s and
48 Seyfert 2s, selected from the Extended 12-micron Galaxy Sample.
Elliptically-averaged profiles are derived from the images, and isophotal radii
and magnitudes are calculated from these. We also report virtual aperture
photometry, that judging from comparison with previous work, is accurate to
roughly 0.05mag in the optical, and 0.07mag in the NIR. Our B-band isophotal
magnitude and radii, obtained from ellipse fitting, are in good agreement with
those of RC3. When compared with the B band, V, I, J, and K isophotal diameters
show that the colors in the outer regions of Seyferts are consistent with the
colors of normal spirals. Differences in the integrated isophotal colors and
comparison with a simple model show that the active nucleus+bulge is stronger
and redder in the NIR than in the optical. Finally, roughly estimated Seyfert
disk surface brightnesses are significantly brighter in B and K than those in
normal spirals of similar morphological type.Comment: 17 pgs including figures; Table 2 is a separate file. Complete Figure
1 is available by contacting the authors. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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