457 research outputs found
Theoretical He I Emissivities in the Case B Approximation
We calculate the He I case B recombination cascade spectrum using improved
radiative and collisional data. We present new emissivities over a range of
electron temperatures and densities. The differences between our results and
the current standard are large enough to have a significant effect not only on
the interpretation of observed spectra of a wide variety of objects but also on
determinations of the primordial helium abundance.Comment: Accepted to ApJ
Recommended from our members
The Journey to R4D: An institutional history of an Australian Initiative on Food Security in Africa
Internal Revie
WHAM Observations of H-alpha from High-Velocity Clouds: Are They Galactic or Extragalactic?
It has been suggested that high velocity clouds may be distributed throughout
the Local Group and are therefore not in general associated with the Milky Way
galaxy. With the aim of testing this hypothesis, we have made observations in
the H-alpha line of high velocity clouds selected as the most likely candidates
for being at larger than average distances. We have found H-alpha emission from
4 out of 5 of the observed clouds, suggesting that the clouds under study are
being illuminated by a Lyman continuum flux greater than that of the
metagalactic ionizing radiation. Therefore, it appears likely that these clouds
are in the Galactic halo and not distributed throughout the Local Group.Comment: 12 pages, 5 eps figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Functional analysis of histone post-translational modifications by the polycomb group of transcriptional repressors
Dust and molecules in the Local Group galaxy NGC 6822. III. The first-ranked HII region complex Hubble V
We present maps of the first-ranked HII region complex Hubble V in the
metal-poor Local Group dwarf galaxy NGC 6822 in the first four transitions of
CO, the 158 micron transition of C+, the 21-cm line of HI, the Pa-beta line of
HII, and the continuum at 21 cm and 2.2 micron wavelengths. We have also
determined various integrated intensities, notably of HCO+ and near-IR H2
emission. Although Hubble X is located in a region of relatively strong HI
emission, our mapping failed to reveal any significant CO emission from it. The
relatively small CO cloud complex associated with Hubble V is comparable in
size to the ionized HII region. The CO clouds are hot (Tkin) = 150 K) and have
high molecular gas densities (n(H2) = 10**4 cm**-3) Molecular hydrogen probably
extends well beyond the CO boundaries. C+ column densities are more than an
order of magnitude higher than those of CO. The total mass of the complex is
about 10**6 M(sun) and molecular gas account for more than half of this. The
complex is excited by luminous stars reddened or obscured at visual, but
apparent at near-infrared wavelengths. The total embedded stellar mass may
account for about 10% of the total mass, and the mass of ionized gas for half
of that. Hubble V illustrates that modest star formation efficiencies may be
associated with high CO destruction efficiencies in low-metallicity objects.
The analysis of the Hubble V photon-dominated region (PDR) confirms in an
independent manner the high value of the CO-to-H2 conversion factor X found
earlier, characteristic of starforming low-metallicity regions.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Improving Predictions for Helium Emission Lines
We have combined the detailed He I recombination model of Smits with the
collisional transitions of Sawey & Berrington in order to produce new accurate
helium emissivities that include the effects of collisional excitation from
both the 2 (3)S and 2 (1) S levels. We present a grid of emissivities for a
range of temperature and densities along with analytical fits and error
estimates.
Fits accurate to within 1% are given for the emissivities of the brightest
lines over a restricted range for estimates of primordial helium abundance. We
characterize the analysis uncertainties associated with uncertainties in
temperature, density, fitting functions, and input atomic data. We estimate
that atomic data uncertainties alone may limit abundance estimates to an
accuracy of 1.5%; systematic errors may be greater than this. This analysis
uncertainty must be incorporated when attempting to make high accuracy
estimates of the helium abundance. For example, in recent determinations of the
primordial helium abundance, uncertainties in the input atomic data have been
neglected.Comment: ApJ, accepte
The journey to R4D: An institutional history of an Australian initiative on food Security in Africa
Improving Methods of Selecting Tropical Germplasm for Plant Breeding and Species Evaluation Studies
Tropical forage germplasm centres have now accumulated very large collections of grass and legume species. The current methods of selecting germplasm from these collections, however, are based on limited information and tend to restrict the total germplasm pool from which selections can be made. To improve the selection process, genetic resource centres need to develop research programmes which both improve our understanding of the relative importance of particular plant attributes and the diversity of these attributes within collections
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