5,985 research outputs found
How water and its use shaped the spatial development of Vienna
Telling an environmental history of Vienna’s urban waters, this paper advocates the compound study of the evolution of fluvial and urban form. It traces the structural permanence of diverse types of running waters in a period of massive urban transformation from early modern times to present. The focus on the material effects, side-effects and afterlives of socio-natural processes offers novel perspectives to the reconstruction of city development. The featured cases show that long-term studies are vital in understanding the genesis of urban water bodies and urban form as a product of socio-natural processes. They inform us about the inertia of arrangements and the unforeseen perpetuation of site-specific effects of interventions. Societal interaction with natural elements such as Vienna’s waters, we conclude, reverberates in the material and immaterial realm alike
Spitzer observations of Bow Shocks and Outflows in RCW 38
We report Spitzer observations of five newly identified bow shocks in the
massive star-forming region RCW 38. Four are visible at IRAC wavelengths, the
fifth is visible only at 24 microns. Chandra X-ray emission indicates that
winds from the central O5.5 binary, IRS~2, have caused an outflow to the NE and
SW of the central subcluster. The southern lobe of hot ionised gas is detected
in X-rays; shocked gas and heated dust from the shock-front are detected with
Spitzer at 4.5 and 24 microns. The northern outflow may have initiated the
present generation of star formation, based on the filamentary distribution of
the protostars in the central subcluster. Further, the bow-shock driving star,
YSO 129, is photo-evaporating a pillar of gas and dust. No point sources are
identified within this pillar at near- to mid-IR wavelengths.
We also report on IRAC 3.6 & 5.8 micron observations of the cluster
DBS2003-124, NE of RCW 38, where 33 candidate YSOs are identified. One star
associated with the cluster drives a parsec-scale jet. Two candidate HH objects
associated with the jet are visible at IRAC and MIPS wavelengths. The jet
extends over a distance of ~3 pc. Assuming a velocity of 100 km/s for the jet
material gives an age of about 30,000 years, indicating that the star (and
cluster) are likely to be very young, with a similar or possibly younger age
than RCW 38, and that star formation is ongoing in the extended RCW 38 region.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figures, accepted to Ap
X-Atlas: An Online Archive of Chandra's Stellar High Energy Transmission Gratings Observations
The high-resolution X-ray spectroscopy made possible by the 1999 deployment
of the Chandra X-ray Observatory has revolutionized our understanding of
stellar X-ray emission. Many puzzles remain, though, particularly regarding the
mechanisms of X-ray emission from OB stars. Although numerous individual stars
have been observed in high-resolution, realizing the full scientific potential
of these observations will necessitate studying the high-resolution Chandra
dataset as a whole. To facilitate the rapid comparison and characterization of
stellar spectra, we have compiled a uniformly processed database of all stars
observed with the Chandra High Energy Transmission Grating (HETG). This
database, known as X-Atlas, is accessible through a web interface with
searching, data retrieval, and interactive plotting capabilities. For each
target, X-Atlas also features predictions of the low-resolution ACIS spectra
convolved from the HETG data for comparison with stellar sources in archival
ACIS images. Preliminary analyses of the hardness ratios, quantiles, and
spectral fits derived from the predicted ACIS spectra reveal systematic
differences between the high-mass and low-mass stars in the atlas and offer
evidence for at least two distinct classes of high-mass stars. A high degree of
X-ray variability is also seen in both high and low-mass stars, including
Capella, long thought to exhibit minimal variability. X-Atlas contains over 130
observations of approximately 25 high-mass stars and 40 low-mass stars and will
be updated as additional stellar HETG observations become public. The atlas has
recently expanded to non-stellar point sources, and Low Energy Transmission
Grating (LETG) observations are currently being added as well
A Combined Spitzer and Chandra Survey of Young Stellar Objects in the Serpens Cloud Core
We present Spitzer and Chandra observations of the nearby (~260 pc) embedded
stellar cluster in the Serpens Cloud Core. We observed, using Spitzer's IRAC
and MIPS instruments, in six wavelength bands from 3 to 70 , to detect
thermal emission from circumstellar disks and protostellar envelopes, and to
classify stars using color-color diagrams and spectral energy distributions
(SEDs). These data are combined with Chandra observations to examine the
effects of circumstellar disks on stellar X-ray properties. Young diskless
stars were also identified from their increased X-ray emission. We have
identified 138 YSOs in Serpens: 22 class 0/I, 16 flat spectrum, 62 class II, 17
transition disk, and 21 class III stars; 60 of which exhibit X-ray emission.
Our primary results are the following: 1.) ten protostars detected previously
in the sub-millimeter are detected at lambda < 24 microns, seven at lambda < 8
microns, 2.) the protostars are more closely grouped than more evolved YSOs
(median separation : ~0.024 pc, and 3.) the luminosity and temperature of the
X-ray emitting plasma around these YSOs does not show any significant
dependence on evolutionary class. We combine the infrared derived values of AK
and X-ray values of NH for 8 class III objects and find that the column density
of hydrogen gas per mag of extinctions is less than half the standard
interstellar value, for AK > 1. This may be the result of grain growth through
coagulation and/or the accretion of volatiles in the Serpens cloud core.Comment: 69 pages, 16 figures, accepted to ApJ. Higher Resolution Figures at:
http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~ewinston
Variability in Proto-Planetary Nebulae: I. Light Curve Studies of 12 Carbon-Rich Objects
We have carried out long-term (14 years) V and R photometric monitoring of 12
carbon-rich proto-planetary nebulae. The light and color curves display
variability in all of them. The light curves are complex and suggest multiple
periods, changing periods, and/or changing amplitudes, which are attributed to
pulsation. A dominant period has been determined for each and found to be in
the range of ~150 d for the coolest (G8) to 35-40 d for the warmest (F3). A
clear, linear inverse relationship has been found in the sample between the
pulsation period and the effective temperature and also an inverse linear
relationship between the amplitude of light variation and the effective
temperature. These are consistent with the expectation for a pulsating post-AGB
star evolving toward higher temperature at constant luminosity. The published
spectral energy distributions and mid-infrared images show these objects to
have cool (200 K), detached dust shells and published models imply that
intensive mass loss ended a few thousand years ago. The detection of periods as
long as 150 d in these requires a revision in the published post-AGB evolution
models that couple the pulsation period to the mass loss rate and that assume
that intensive mass loss ended when the pulsation period had decreased to 100
d. This revision will have the effect of extending the time scale for the early
phases of post-AGB evolution. It appears that real time evolution in the
pulsation periods of individual objects may be detectable on the time scale of
two decades
IRAS 20050+2720: Anatomy of a young stellar cluster
IRAS 20050+2720 is young star forming region at a distance of 700 pc without
apparent high mass stars. We present results of our multiwavelength study of
IRAS 20050+2720 which includes observations by Chandra and Spitzer, and 2MASS
and UBVRI photometry. In total, about 300 YSOs in different evolutionary stages
are found. We characterize the distribution of young stellar objects (YSOs) in
this region using a minimum spanning tree (MST) analysis. We newly identify a
second cluster core, which consists mostly of class II objects, about 10 arcmin
from the center of the cloud. YSOs of earlier evolutionary stages are more
clustered than more evolved objects. The X-ray luminosity function (XLF) of
IRAS 20050+2720 is roughly lognormal, but steeper than the XLF of the more
massive Orion nebula complex. IRAS 20050+2720 shows a lower N_H/A_K ratio
compared with the diffuse ISM.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, accepted by A
The Properties of X-ray Luminous Young Stellar Objects in the NGC 1333 and Serpens Embedded Clusters
We present Chandra X-ray data of the NGC 1333 embedded cluster, combining
these data with existing Chandra data, Sptizer photometry and ground based
spectroscopy of both the NGC 1333 & Serpens North clusters to perform a
detailed study of the X-ray properties of two of the nearest embedded clusters
to the Sun. In NGC 1333, a total of 95 cluster members are detected in X-rays,
of which 54 were previously identified with Spitzer. Of the Spitzer sources, we
detect 23% of the Class I protostars, 53% of the Flat Spectrum sources, 52% of
the Class II, and 50% of the Transition Disk YSOs. Forty-one Class III members
of the cluster are identified, bringing the total identified YSO population to
178. The X-ray Luminosity Functions (XLFs) of the NGC 1333 and Serpens clusters
are compared to each other and the Orion Nebula Cluster. Based on this
comparison, we obtain a new distance for the Serpens cluster of 360+22/-13 pc.
The X-ray luminosity was found to depend on the bolometric luminosity as in
previous studies of other clusters, and that Lx depends primarily on the
stellar surface area. In the NGC 1333 cluster, the Class III sources have a
somewhat higher X-ray luminosity for a given surface area. We also find
evidence in NGC 1333 for a jump in the X-ray luminosity between spectral types
of M0 and K7, we speculate that this may result from the presence of radiative
zones in the K-stars. The gas column density vs. extinction in the NGC 1333 was
found to be N_H = 0.89 +/- 0.13 x 10^22 A_K, this is lower than expected of the
standard ISM but similar to that found previously in the Serpens Cloud Core.Comment: 58 pages, 14 figures, accepted by A
Study of the B +→ J / ψ Λ ¯ p decay in proton-proton collisions at √s = 8 TeV
A study of the B +→ J / ψ Λ ¯ p decay using proton-proton collision data collected at s = 8 TeV by the CMS experiment at the LHC, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 19.6 fb−1, is presented. The ratio of branching fractions B(B+→J/ψΛ¯p)/B(B+→J/ψK∗(892)+) is measured to be (1.054 ± 0.057(stat) ± 0.035(syst) ± 0.011(B))%, where the last uncertainty reflects the uncertainties in the world-average branching fractions of Λ ¯ and K*(892) + decays to reconstructed final states. The invariant mass distributions of the J / ψ Λ ¯ , J/ψp, and Λ ¯ p systems produced in the B +→ J / ψ Λ¯ p decay are investigated and found to be inconsistent with the pure phase space hypothesis. The analysis is extended by using a model-independent angular amplitude analysis, which shows that the observed invariant mass distributions are consistent with the contributions from excited kaons decaying to the Λ ¯ p system. [Figure not available: see fulltext.
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