4,832 results on '"Santos, T"'
Search Results
202. The Herschel Comprehensive (U)LIRG Emission Survey (HerCULES): CO Ladders, fine structure lines, and neutral gas cooling
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Rosenberg, M. J. F., van der Werf, P. P., Aalto, S., Armus, L., Charmandaris, V., Díaz-Santos, T., Evans, A. S., Fischer, J., Gao, Y., González-Alfonso, E., Greve, T. R., Harris, A. I., Henkel, C., Israel, F. P., Isaak, K. G., Kramer, C., Meijerink, R., Naylor, D. A., Sanders, D. B., Smith, H. A., Spaans, M., Spinoglio, L., Stacey, G. J., Veenendaal, I., Veilleux, S., Walter, F., Weiß, A., Wiedner, M. C., van der Wiel, M. H. D., and Xilouris, E. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
(Ultra) Luminous Infrared Galaxies ((U)LIRGs) are objects characterized by their extreme infrared (8-1000 $\mu$m) luminosities ($L_{LIRG}>10^{11} $L$_\odot$ and $L_{ULIRG}>10^{12}$ L$_\odot$). The Herschel Comprehensive ULIRG Emission Survey (HerCULES; PI van der Werf) presents a representative flux-limited sample of 29 (U)LIRGs that spans the full luminosity range of these objects (10$^{11}\leq L_\odot \geq10^{13}$). With the \emph{Herschel Space Observatory}, we observe [CII] 157 $\mu$m, [OI] 63 $\mu$m, and [OI] 145 $\mu$m line emission with PACS, CO J=4-3 through J=13-12, [CI] 370 $\mu$m, and [CI] 609 $\mu$m with SPIRE, and low-J CO transitions with ground-based telescopes. The CO ladders of the sample are separated into three classes based on their excitation level. In 13 of the galaxies, the [OI] 63 $\mu$m emission line is self absorbed. Comparing the CO excitation to the IRAS 60/100 $\mu$m ratio and to far infrared luminosity, we find that the CO excitation is more correlated to the far infrared colors. We present cooling budgets for the galaxies and find fine-structure line flux deficits in the [CII], [SiII], [OI], and [CI] lines in the objects with the highest far IR fluxes, but do not observe this for CO $4\leq J_{upp}\leq13$. In order to study the heating of the molecular gas, we present a combination of three diagnostic quantities to help determine the dominant heating source. Using the CO excitation, the CO J=1-0 linewidth, and the AGN contribution, we conclude that galaxies with large CO linewidths always have high-excitation CO ladders, and often low AGN contributions, suggesting that mechanical heating is important.
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- 2015
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203. Study of the $ 50$ kpc circumgalactic environment around the merger system J2057-0030 at $ z $ sim 4.6 using ALMA
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Fuentealba-Fuentes, M., primary, Lira, P., additional, Díaz-Santos, T., additional, Trakhtenbrot, B., additional, Netzer, H., additional, and Videla, L., additional
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- 2024
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204. CON-quest. II. Spatially and spectrally resolved HCN/HCO+ line ratios in local luminous and ultraluminous infrared galaxies
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Nishimura, Y., primary, Aalto, S., additional, Gorski, M. D., additional, König, S., additional, Onishi, K., additional, Wethers, C., additional, Yang, C., additional, Barcos-Muñoz, L., additional, Combes, F., additional, Díaz-Santos, T., additional, Gallagher, J. S., additional, García-Burillo, S., additional, González-Alfonso, E., additional, Greve, T. R., additional, Harada, N., additional, Henkel, C., additional, Imanishi, M., additional, Kohno, K., additional, Linden, S. T., additional, Mangum, J. G., additional, Martín, S., additional, Muller, S., additional, Privon, G. C., additional, Ricci, C., additional, Stanley, F., additional, van der Werf, P. P., additional, and Viti, S., additional
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- 2024
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205. Double, double, toil, and trouble
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Wethers, C. F., primary, Aalto, S., additional, Privon, G. C., additional, Stanley, F., additional, Gallagher, J., additional, Gorski, M., additional, König, S., additional, Onishi, K., additional, Sato, M., additional, Yang, C., additional, Beswick, R., additional, Barcos-Munoz, L., additional, Combes, F., additional, Diaz-Santos, T., additional, Evans, A. S., additional, Garcia-Bernete, I., additional, Henkel, C., additional, Imanishi, M., additional, Martín, S., additional, Muller, S., additional, Nishimura, Y., additional, Ricci, C., additional, Rigopoulou, D., additional, and Viti, S., additional
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- 2024
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206. Deconvolution of JWST/MIRI Images: Applications to an Active Galactic Nucleus Model and GATOS Observations of NGC 5728
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Leist, M. T., primary, Packham, C., additional, Rosario, D. J. V., additional, Hope, D. A., additional, Alonso-Herrero, A., additional, Hicks, E. K. S., additional, Hönig, S., additional, Zhang, L., additional, Davies, R., additional, Díaz-Santos, T., additional, González-Martín, O., additional, Bellocchi, E., additional, Boorman, P. G., additional, Combes, F., additional, García-Bernete, I., additional, García-Burillo, S., additional, García-Lorenzo, B., additional, Haidar, H., additional, Ichikawa, K., additional, Imanishi, M., additional, Jefferies, S. M., additional, Labiano, Á., additional, Levenson, N. A., additional, Nikutta, R., additional, Pereira-Santaella, M., additional, Ramos Almeida, C., additional, Ricci, C., additional, Rigopoulou, D., additional, Schaefer, W., additional, Stalevski, M., additional, Ward, M. J., additional, Fuller, L., additional, Izumi, T., additional, Rouan, D., additional, and Shimizu, T., additional
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- 2024
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207. Polysomnographic features of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy patients in a tertiary care facility in São Paulo
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Soares de Azevedo Sardano, B., primary, Costa de Oliveira, A. Stavitski, additional, Borginho, C. Pereira, additional, Santos, T. Brito, additional, Honorato, M., additional, Monazzi, A.C. Luvizotto, additional, Bueno, C., additional, and Soster, L. Azevedo, additional
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- 2024
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208. The role of religiosity/spirituality in the association of anxiety symptoms with sleep quality during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Mayara dos Santos, T., primary, Menezes-Junior, L., additional, Carraro, J., additional, Machado-Coelho, G., additional, and Meireles, A., additional
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- 2024
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209. Resistance Sources and Antixenotic Factors in Brazilian Bean Genotypes Against Bemisia tabaci
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Santos, T L B, Baldin, E L L, Ribeiro, L P, Souza, C M, Soares, M C E, Fanela, T L M, and Lourenção, A L
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- 2021
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210. MT1 and MT2 melatonin receptors play opposite roles in brain cancer progression
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Kinker, G. S., Ostrowski, L. H., Ribeiro, P. A. C., Chanoch, R., Muxel, S. M., Tirosh, I., Spadoni, G., Rivara, S., Martins, V. R., Santos, T. G., Markus, R. P., and Fernandes, P. A. C. M.
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- 2021
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211. AVALIAÇÃO DA MIONECROSE NO MÚSCULO GASTROCNÊMIO PROMOVIDO PELA INJEÇÃO DE VENENO BRUTO DE BOTHROPS MOOJENI
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SANTOS, T. F, primary, Santos, Noé Mateus dos, additional, Tavares, Marco Antônio de Souza Borges, additional, Colli, Emillene de Holanda, additional, Goveia, Mellânia Rodrigues, additional, Torres, Josimar José, additional, Torres, Jouse Maiane Gonçalves, additional, Vasconcelos, Lanúbia Garcia de Araújo, additional, Dourado, Doroty mesquita, additional, Santos, Carlos Henrique Marques dos, additional, Moraes, Gleyson Murillo Aguilera, additional, and vasconcelos, Damerson Muriel Souza, additional
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- 2021
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212. ALMA Observations of Warm Dense Gas in NGC 1614 --- Breaking of Star Formation Law in the Central kpc
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Xu, C. K., Cao, C., Lu, N., Gao, Y., Diaz-Santos, T., Herrero-Illana, R., Meijerink, R., Privon, G., Zhao, Y. -H., Evans, A. S., König, S., Mazzarella, J. M., Aalto, S., Appleton, P., Armus, L., Charmandaris, V., Chu, J., Haan, S., Inami, H., Murphy, E. J., Sanders, D. B., Schulz, B., and van der Werf, P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present ALMA Cycle-0 observations of the CO (6-5) line emission and of the 435um dust continuum emission in the central kpc of NGC 1614, a local luminous infrared galaxy (LIRG) at a distance of 67.8 Mpc (1 arcsec = 329 pc). The CO emission is well resolved by the ALMA beam (0".26 x 0".20) into a circum-nuclear ring, with an integrated flux of f_{CO(6-5)} = 898 (+-153) Jy km/s, which is 63(+-12)% of the total CO(6-5) flux measured by Herschel. The molecular ring, located between 100pc < r < 350pc from the nucleus, looks clumpy and includes seven unresolved (or marginally resolved) knots with median velocity dispersion of 40 km/s. These knots are associated with strong star formation regions with \Sigma_{SFR} 100 M_\sun/yr/kpc^{2} and \Sigma_{Gas} 1.0E4 M_\sun/pc^{2}. The non-detections of the nucleus in both the CO (6-5) line emission and the 435um continuum rule out, with relatively high confidence, a Compton-thick AGN in NGC 1614. Comparisons with radio continuum emission show a strong deviation from an expected local correlation between \Sigma_{Gas} and \Sigma_{SFR}, indicating a breakdown of the Kennicutt-Schmidt law on the linear scale of 100 pc., Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures; accepted by ApJ
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- 2014
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213. A mid-infrared view of the inner parsecs of the Seyfert galaxy Mrk 1066 using CanariCam/GTC
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Almeida, C. Ramos, Alonso-Herrero, A., Esquej, P., Gonzalez-Martin, O., Riffel, R. A., Garcia-Bernete, I., Espinosa, J. M. Rodriguez, Packham, C., Levenson, N. A., Roche, P., Diaz-Santos, T., Aretxaga, I., and Alvarez, C.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present mid-infrared (MIR) imaging and spectroscopic data of the Seyfert 2 galaxy Mrk 1066 obtained with CanariCam (CC) on the 10.4 m Gran Telescopio CANARIAS (GTC). The galaxy was observed in imaging mode with an angular resolution of 0.24 arcsec (54 pc) in the Si-2 filter (8.7 micron). The image reveals a series of star-forming knots within the central ~400 pc, after subtracting the dominant active galactic nucleus (AGN) component. We also subtracted this AGN unresolved component from the 8-13 micron spectra of the knots and the nucleus, and measured equivalent widths (EWs) of the 11.3 micron Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon (PAH) feature which are typical of pure starburst galaxies. This EW is larger in the nucleus than in the knots, confirming that, at least in the case of Mrk 1066, the AGN dilutes, rather than destroys, the molecules responsible for the 11.3 micron PAH emission. By comparing the nuclear GTC/CC spectrum with the Spitzer/IRS spectrum of the galaxy, we find that the AGN component that dominates the continuum emission at wavelengths below 15 micron on scales of ~60 pc (90-100%) decreases to 35-50% when the emission of the central ~830 pc is considered. On the other hand, the AGN contribution dominates the 15-25 micron emission (75%) on the scales probed by Spitzer/IRS. We find a good match between the MIR morphology of Mrk 1066 and the extended Pab, Brg and [O III] emission. This coincidence implies that the 8.7 micron emission is probing star formation, dust in the narrow-line region, and the oval structure previously detected in the near-infrared. On the other hand, the Chandra soft X-ray morphology does not match any of the previous, contrary to what it is generally assumed for Seyfert galaxies., Comment: 16 pages including appendix, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2014
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214. Radio continuum properties of luminous infrared galaxies. Identifying the presence of an AGN in the radio
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Vardoulaki, E., Charmandaris, V., Murphy, E. J., Diaz-Santos, T., Armus, L., Evans, A., Mazzarella, J. M., Privon, G. C., Stierwalt, S., and Barcos-Munoz, L.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Luminous infrared galaxies are systems enshrouded in dust, which absorbs most of their optical/UV emission and re-radiates it in the mid- and far-infrared. Radio observations are largely unaffected by dust obscuration, enabling us to study the central regions of LIRGs in an unbiased manner. The main goal of this project is to examine how the radio properties of local LIRGs relate to their infrared spectral characteristics. Here we present an analysis of the radio continuum properties of a subset of the Great Observatories All-sky LIRG Survey (GOALS), which consists of 202 nearby systems (z<0.088). Our radio sample consists of 35 systems, or 46 individual galaxies, that were observed at both 1.49 and 8.44 GHz with the VLA with a resolution of about 1 arcsec (FWHM). The aim of the project is to use the radio imagery to probe the central kpc of these LIRGs in search of active galactic nuclei. We used the archival data at 1.49 and 8.44 GHz to create radio-spectral-index maps using the standard relation between flux density Sv and frequency v, S~v^-a, where a is the radio spectral index. By studying the spatial variations in a, we classified the objects as radio-AGN, radio-SB, and AGN/SB (a mixture). We identified the presence of an active nucleus using the radio morphology, deviations from the radio/infrared correlation, and spatially resolved spectral index maps, and then correlated this to the usual mid-infrared ([NeV]/[NeII] and [OIV]/[NeII] line ratios and EQW of the 6.2 um PAH feature) and optical (BPT diagram) AGN diagnostics. We find that 21 out of the 46 objects in our sample are radio-AGN, 9 are classified as starbursts (SB), and 16 are AGN/SB. After comparing to other AGN diagnostics we find 3 objects out of the 46 that are identified as AGN based on the radio analysis, but are not classified as such based on the mid-infrared and optical AGN diagnostics presented in this study., Comment: 33 pages, 7 figures, 5 tables, to appear in A&A
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- 2014
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215. Star formation relations and CO SLEDs across the J-ladder and redshift
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Greve, T. R., Leonidaki, I., Xilouris, E. M., Weiss, A., Zhang, Z. -Y., van der Werf, P., Aalto, S., Armus, L., Diaz-Santos, T., Evans, A. S., Fischer, J., Gao, Y., Gonzalez-Alfonso, E., Harris, A., Henkel, C., Meijerink, R., Naylor, D. A., Smith, H. A., Spaans, M., Stacey, G. J., Veilleux, S., and Walter, F.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present FIR-CO luminosity relations ($\log L_{\rm FIR} = \alpha \log L'_{\rm CO} + \beta$) for the full CO rotational ladder from J=1-0 to J=13-12 for 62 local (z < 0.1) (Ultra) Luminous Infrared Galaxies (LIRGs) using data from Herschel SPIRE-FTS and ground-based telescopes. We extend our sample to high redshifts (z > 1) by including 35 (sub)-millimeter selected dusty star forming galaxies from the literature with robust CO observations. The addition of luminous starbursts at high redshifts enlarge the range of the FIR-CO luminosity relations towards the high-IR-luminosity end while also significantly increasing the small amount of mid-/high-J CO line data available prior to Herschel. This new data-set (both in terms of IR luminosity and J-ladder) reveals linear FIR-CO luminosity relations ($\alpha \sim 1$) for J=1-0 up to J=5-4, with a nearly constant normalisation ($\beta \sim 2$). This is expected from the (also) linear FIR-(molecular line) relations found for the dense gas tracer lines (HCN and CS), as long as the dense gas mass fraction does not vary strongly within our (merger/starburst)-dominated sample. However from J=6-5 and up to J=13-12 we find an increasingly sub-linear slope and higher normalization constant with increasing J. We argue that these are caused by a warm (~100K) and dense ($>10^4{\rm cm^{-3}}$) gas component whose thermal state is unlikely to be maintained by star formation powered far-UV radiation fields (and thus is no longer directly tied to the star formation rate). We suggest that mechanical heating (e.g., supernova driven turbulence and shocks), and not cosmic rays, is the more likely source of energy for this component. The global CO spectral line energy distributions (SLEDs), which remain highly excited from J=6-5 up to J=13-12, are found to be a generic feature of the (U)LIRGs in our sample, and further support the presence of this gas component., Comment: (18 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ)
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- 2014
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216. Nuclear 11.3$\mu$m PAH emission in local active galactic nuclei
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Alonso-Herrero, A., Almeida, C. Ramos, Esquej, P., Roche, P. F., Hernan-Caballero, A., Hoenig, S. F., Gonzalez-Martin, O., Aretxaga, I., Mason, R. E., Packham, C., Levenson, N. A., Espinosa, J. M. Rodriguez, Siebenmorgen, R., Pereira-Santaella, M., Diaz-Santos, T., Colina, L., Alvarez, C., and Telesco, C. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present Gran Telescopio CANARIAS CanariCam 8.7$\mu$m imaging and 7.5-13$\mu$m spectroscopy of six local systems known to host an active galactic nucleus (AGN) and have nuclear star formation. Our main goal is to investigate whether the molecules responsible for the 11.3$\mu$m polyclyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) feature are destroyed in the close vicinity of an AGN. We detect 11.3$\mu$m PAH feature emission in the nuclear regions of the galaxies as well as extended PAH emission over a few hundred parsecs. The equivalent width (EW) of the feature shows a minimum at the nucleus but increases with increasing radial distances, reaching typical star-forming values a few hundred parsecs away from the nucleus. The reduced nuclear EW are interpreted as due to increased dilution from the AGN continuum rather than destruction of the PAH molecules. We conclude that at least those molecules responsible for the 11.3$\mu$m PAH feature survive in the nuclear environments as close as 10pc from the AGN and for Seyfert-like AGN luminosities. We propose that material in the dusty tori, nuclear gas disks, and/or host galaxies of AGN is likely to provide the column densities necessary to protect the PAH molecules from the AGN radiation field., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 19 pages, 13 figures
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- 2014
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217. Extended [CII] Emission in Local Luminous Infrared Galaxies
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Diaz-Santos, T., Armus, L., Charmandaris, V., Stacey, G., Murphy, E. J., Haan, S., Stierwalt, S., Malhotra, S., Appleton, P., Inami, H., Magdis, G. E., Elbaz, D., Evans, A. S., Mazzarella, J. M., Surace, J. A., van der Werf, P. P., Xu, C. K., Lu, N., Meijerink, R., Howell, J. H., Petric, A. O., Veilleux, S., and Sanders, D. B.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present Herschel/PACS observations of extended [CII]157.7{\mu}m line emission detected on ~ 1 - 10 kpc scales in 60 local luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs) from the Great Observatories All-sky LIRG Survey (GOALS). We find that most of the extra-nuclear emission show [CII]/FIR ratios >~ 4 x 10^-3, larger than the mean ratio seen in the nuclei, and similar to those found in the extended disks of normal star-forming galaxies and the diffuse inter-stellar medium (ISM) of our Galaxy. The [CII] "deficits" found in the most luminous local LIRGs are therefore restricted to their nuclei. There is a trend for LIRGs with warmer nuclei to show larger differences between their nuclear and extra-nuclear [CII]/FIR ratios. We find an anti-correlation between [CII]/FIR and the luminosity surface density, {\Sigma}_IR, for the extended emission in the spatially-resolved galaxies. However, there is an offset between this trend and that found for the LIRG nuclei. We use this offset to derive a beam filling-factor for the star-forming regions within the LIRG disks of ~ 6 % relative to their nuclei. We confront the observed trend to photo-dissociation region (PDR) models and find that the slope of the correlation is much shallower than the model predictions. Finally, we compare the correlation found between [CII]/FIR and {\Sigma}_IR with measurements of high-redshift starbursting IR-luminous galaxies., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters. 5 pages, 2 figures
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- 2014
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218. Warm Molecular Gas in Luminous Infrared Galaxies
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Lu, N., Zhao, Y., Xu, C. K., Gao, Y., Armus, L., Mazzarella, J. M., Isaak, K. G., Petric, A. O., Charmandaris, V., Diaz-Santos, T., Evans, A. S., Howell, J., Appleton, P., Inami, H., Iwasawa, K., Leech, J., Lord, S., Sanders, D. B., Schulz, B., Surace, J., and van der Werf, P. P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present our initial results on the CO rotational spectral line energy distribution (SLED) of the $J$ to $J$$-$1 transitions from $J=4$ up to $13$ from Herschel SPIRE spectroscopic observations of 65 luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs) in the Great Observatories All-Sky LIRG Survey (GOALS). The observed SLEDs change on average from one peaking at $J \le 4$ to a broad distribution peaking around $J \sim\,$6$-$7 as the IRAS 60-to-100 um color, $C(60/100)$, increases. However, the ratios of a CO line luminosity to the total infrared luminosity, $L_{\rm IR}$, show the smallest variation for $J$ around 6 or 7. This suggests that, for most LIRGs, ongoing star formation (SF) is also responsible for a warm gas component that emits CO lines primarily in the mid-$J$ regime ($5 \lesssim J \lesssim 10$). As a result, the logarithmic ratios of the CO line luminosity summed over CO (5$-$4), (6$-$5), (7$-$6), (8$-$7) and (10$-$9) transitions to $L_{\rm IR}$, $\log R_{\rm midCO}$, remain largely independent of $C(60/100)$, and show a mean value of $-4.13$ ($\equiv \log R^{\rm SF}_{\rm midCO}$) and a sample standard deviation of only 0.10 for the SF-dominated galaxies. Including additional galaxies from the literature, we show, albeit with small number of cases, the possibility that galaxies, which bear powerful interstellar shocks unrelated to the current SF, and galaxies, in which an energetic active galactic nucleus contributes significantly to the bolometric luminosity, have their $R_{\rm midCO}$ higher and lower than $R^{\rm SF}_{\rm midCO}$, respectively., Comment: Accepted for publication in the ApJ Letters; 5 pages, 4 figures
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- 2014
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219. Renormalizability of Yang-Mills theory with Lorentz violation and gluon mass generation
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Santos, T. R. S. and Sobreiro, R. F.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
We show that pure Yang-Mills theories with Lorentz violation are renormalizable to all orders in perturbation theory. To do this, we employ the algebraic renormalization technique. Specifically, we control the breaking terms with a suitable set of external sources which, eventually, attain certain physical values. The Abelian case is also analyzed as a starting point. The main result is that the renormalizability of the usual Maxwell and Yang-Mills sectores are both left unchanged. Furthermore, in contrast to Lorentz violating QED, the odd CPT violation sector of Yang-Mills theories renormalizes independently. Moreover, the method induces, in a natural way, mass terms for the gauge field while the photon remains massless (at least n the sense of a Proca-like term). The entire analysis is carried out at the Landau gauge., Comment: 20 pages. No figures. To appear at the PRD
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- 2014
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220. ALMA Observations of Warm Molecular Gas and Cold Dust in NGC 34
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Xu, C. K., Cao, C., Lu, N., Gao, Y., Van Der Werf, P., Evans, A. S., Mazzarella, J. M., Chu, J., Haan, S., Diaz-Santos, T., Meijerink, R., Zhao, Y. -H., Appleton, P., Armus, L., Charmandaris, V., Lord, S., Murphy, E. J., Sanders, D. B., Schulz, B., and Stierwalt, S.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present ALMA Cycle-0 observations of the CO (6-5) line emission (rest-frame frequency = 691.473 GHz) and of the 435$\mu m$ dust continuum emission in the nuclear region of NGC 34, a local luminous infrared galaxy (LIRG) at a distance of 84 Mpc (1" = 407 pc) which contains a Seyfert 2 active galactic nucleus (AGN) and a nuclear starburst. The CO emission is well resolved by the ALMA beam ($\rm 0."26\times 0."23$), with an integrated flux of $\rm f_{CO~(6-5)} = 1004\; (\pm 151) \; Jy\; km\; s^{-1}$. Both the morphology and kinematics of the CO (6-5) emission are rather regular, consistent with a compact rotating disk with a size of 200 pc. A significant emission feature is detected on the red-shifted wing of the line profile at the frequency of the $\rm H^{13}CN\; (8-7)$ line, with an integrated flux of $\rm 17.7 \pm 2.1 (random) \pm 2.7 (sysmatic)\; Jy\;km\; s^{-1}$. However, it cannot be ruled out that the feature is due to an outflow of warm dense gas with a mean velocity of $\rm 400\; km\; s^{-1}$. The continuum is resolved into an elongated configuration, and the observed flux corresponds to a dust mass of $\rm M_{dust} = 10^{6.97\pm 0.13}\; M_{sun}$. An unresolved central core ($\rm radius \simeq 50\; pc$) contributes $28\%$ of the continuum flux and $19\%$ of the CO (6-5) flux, consistent with insignificant contributions of the AGN to both emissions. Both the CO (6-5) and continuum spatial distributions suggest a very high gas column density ($\rm >= 10^4\; M_{sun}\; pc^{-2}$) in the nuclear region at $\rm radius <= 100\; pc$., Comment: 10 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal
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- 2014
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221. A far-IR view of the starburst driven superwind in NGC 2146
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Kreckel, K., Armus, L., Groves, B., Lyubenova, M., Diaz-Santos, T., Schinnerer, E., Appleton, P., Croxall, K. V., Dale, D. A., Hunt, L. K., Beirao, P., Bolatto, A. D., Calzetti, D., Meyer, J. Donovan, Draine, B. T., Hinz, J., Kennicutt, R. C., Meidt, S., Murphy, E. J., Smith, J. D. T., Tabatabaei, F. S., and Walter, F.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
NGC 2146, a nearby luminous infrared galaxy (LIRG), presents evidence for outflows along the disk minor axis in all gas phases (ionized, neutral atomic and molecular). We present an analysis of the multi-phase starburst driven superwind in the central 5 kpc as traced in spatially resolved spectral line observations, using far-IR Herschel PACS spectroscopy, to probe the effects on the atomic and ionized gas, and optical integral field spectroscopy to examine the ionized gas through diagnostic line ratios. We observe an increased ~250 km/s velocity dispersion in the [OI] 63 micron, [OIII] 88 micron, [NII] 122 micron and [CII] 158 micron fine-structure lines that is spatially coincident with high excitation gas above and below the disk. We model this with a slow ~200 km/s shock and trace the superwind to the edge of our field of view 2.5 kpc above the disk. We present new SOFIA 37 micron observations to explore the warm dust distribution, and detect no clear dust entrainment in the outflow. The stellar kinematics appear decoupled from the regular disk rotation seen in all gas phases, consistent with a recent merger event disrupting the system. We consider the role of the superwind in the evolution of NGC 2146 and speculate on the evolutionary future of the system. Our observations of NGC 2146 in the far-IR allow an unobscured view of the wind, crucial for tracing the superwind to the launching region at the disk center, and provide a local analog for future ALMA observations of outflows in high redshift systems., Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2014
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222. Herschel observations of Hickson compact groups of galaxies: Unveiling the properties of cold dust
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Bitsakis, T., Charmandaris, V., Appleton, P. N., Diaz-Santos, T., Floc'h, E. Le, da Cunha, E., Alatalo, K., and Cluver, M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a Herschel far-IR and sub-mm study of a sample of 120 galaxies in 28 Hickson Compact Groups. Fitting their UV to sub-mm spectral energy distributions with the model of da Cunha et al. (2008), we accurately estimate the dust masses, luminosities and temperatures of the individual galaxies. We find that nearly half of the late-type galaxies in dynamically "old" groups, those with more than 25% of early-type members and redder UV-optical colours, have also significantly lower dust-to-stellar mass ratios compared to those of actively star-forming galaxies of the same mass found both in HCGs and the field. Examining their dust-to-gas mass ratios we conclude that dust was stripped out of these systems as a result of the gravitational and hydrodynamic interactions, experienced due to previous encounters with other group members. About 40% of the early-type galaxies (mostly lenticulars), in dynamically "old" groups, display dust properties similar to those of the UV-optical red late-type galaxies. Given their stellar masses, star formation rates and UV-optical colours, we suggest that red late-type and dusty lenticular galaxies represent transition populations between blue star-forming disk galaxies and quiescent early-type ellipticals. [...ABRIDGED...] Our deep Herschel observations also allow us to detect the presence of diffuse cold intragroup dust in 4 HCGs. We also find that the fraction of 250micron emission which is located outside of the main bodies of the red late-type galaxies as well as of the dusty lenticulars is 15-20% of their integrated emission at this band. All these findings are consistent with an evolutionary scenario in which gas dissipation, shocks and turbulence in addition to tidal interactions, shape the evolution of galaxies in compact groups., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. Figure resolution degraded for arXiv limits, full resolution paper available at http://users.physics.uoc.gr/~bitsakis/paper_dust_bitsakis.pdf
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- 2014
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223. Assessing Risks from Harbor Dredging to the Northernmost Population of Diamondback Terrapins Using Acoustic Telemetry
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Castro-Santos, T., Bolus, M., and Danylchuk, A. J.
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- 2019
224. A support tool for planning classrooms considering social distancing between students
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Bortolete, J. C., Bueno, L. F., Butkeraites, R., Chaves, A. A., Collaço, G., Magueta, M., Pelogia, F. J. R., Neto, L. L. Salles, Santos, T. S., Silva, T. S., Sobral, F. N. C., and Yanasse, H. H.
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- 2022
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225. Electronic and Phonon Instabilities in Bilayer Graphene under Applied External Bias
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Silva, E.L., Santos, M.C., Skelton, J.M., Yang, Tao, Santos, T., Parker, S.C., and A.Walsh
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- 2020
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226. Strategies for Improving Anesthesia Ready Time in the Obstetric Operating Room
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Zbeidy, R., Franklin Dos Santos, T., Patel, R., and Souki, F.G.
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- 2022
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227. Nandrolone decanoate in induced fracture nonunion with vascular deficit in rat model: morphological aspects
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Senos, R., Roberto-Rodrigues, M., Fernandes, R. M. P., Santos, T. M. P., Viana, L. P., Lima, I., Guzman-Silva, M. A., Gomes, M. S., Rici, R. E. G., and Kfoury Júnior, J. R.
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- 2020
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228. Early weaning alters the thermogenic capacity of brown adipose tissue in adult male and female rats
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Peixoto, T. C., Pietrobon, C. B., Bertasso, I. M., Caramez, F. A. H., Calvino, C., Santos, T. R., Oliveira, E., Moura, E. G., and Lisboa, P. C.
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- 2020
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229. Modeling dynamic spherical cavity expansion in elasto-viscoplastic media
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dos Santos, T., Brezolin, A., Rossi, R., and Rodríguez-Martínez, J. A.
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- 2020
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230. How does women’s bone health recover after lactation? A systematic review and meta-analysis
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Grizzo, F. M. F., Alarcão, A. C. J., Dell’ Agnolo, C. M., Pedroso, R. B., Santos, T. S., Vissoci, J. R. N., Pinheiro, M. M., Carvalho, M. D. B., and Pelloso, S. M.
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- 2020
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231. Variscan Metamorphism
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Ribeiro, M. L., Reche, J., López-Carmona, A., Aguilar, C., Bento dos Santos, T., Chichorro, M., Dias da Silva, Í., Díez-Montes, A., González-Clavijo, E., Gutiérrez-Alonso, G., Leal, N., Liesa, M., Martínez, F. J., Mateus, A., Mendes, M. H., Moita, P., Pedro, J., Quesada, C., Santos, J. F., Solá, A. R., Valverde-Vaquero, P., Oberhänsli, Roland, Series Editor, de Wit, Maarten J., Series Editor, Roure, François M., Series Editor, Quesada, Cecilio, editor, and Oliveira, José Tomás, editor
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- 2019
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232. The Impact of Health Technology Management for the National Policy on Technological Innovation in Health – PNITS
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Toscas, F. S., Júnior, V. G. B., Santos, T. R., Nascimento, M. A. C., Magjarevic, Ratko, Series Editor, Ładyżyński, Piotr, Associate Editor, Ibrahim, Fatimah, Associate Editor, Lackovic, Igor, Associate Editor, Rock, Emilio Sacristan, Associate Editor, Costa-Felix, Rodrigo, editor, Machado, João Carlos, editor, and Alvarenga, André Victor, editor
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- 2019
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233. Uncovering the deeply embedded AGN activity in the nuclear regions of the interacting galaxy Arp299
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Alonso-Herrero, A., Roche, P. F., Esquej, P., Gonzalez-Martin, O., Pereira-Santaella, M., Almeida, C. Ramos, Levenson, N. A., Packham, C., Ramos, A. Asensio, Mason, R. E., Espinosa, J. M. Rodriguez, Alvarez, C., Colina, L., Aretxaga, I., Diaz-Santos, T., Perlman, E., and Telesco, C. M.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present mid-infrared (MIR) 8-13micron spectroscopy of the nuclear regions of the interacting galaxy Arp299 (IC694+NGC3690) obtained with CanariCam (CC) on the 10.4m Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC). The high angular resolution (~0.3-0.6arcsec) of the data allows us to probe nuclear physical scales between 60 and 120pc, which is a factor of 10 improvement over previous MIR spectroscopic observations of this system. The GTC/CC spectroscopy displays evidence of deeply embedded Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) activity in both nuclei. The GTC/CC nuclear spectrum of NGC3690/Arp299-B1 can be explained as emission from AGN-heated dust in a clumpy torus with both a high covering factor and high extinction along the line of sight. The estimated bolometric luminosity of the AGN in NGC3690 is 3.2(+/-0.6)x10^44 erg/s. The nuclear GTC/CC spectrum of IC694/Arp299-A shows 11.3micron polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission stemming from a deeply embedded (A_V~24mag) region of less than 120pc in size. There is also a continuum-emitting dust component. If associated with th putative AGN in IC694, we estimate that it would be approximately 5 times less luminous than the AGN in NGC3690. The presence of dual AGN activity makes Arp299 a good example to study such phenomenon in the early coalescence phase of interacting galaxies., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
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- 2013
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234. Nuclear star formation activity and black hole accretion in nearby Seyfert galaxies
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Esquej, P., Alonso-Herrero, A., González-Martín, O., Hönig, S. F., Caballero, A. Hernán, Roche, P. F., Almeida, C. Ramos, Mason, R. E., Díaz-Santos, T., Levenson, N. A., Aretxaga, I., Espinosa, J. M. Rodríguez, and Packham, C.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Recent theoretical and observational works indicate the presence of a correlation between the star formation rate (SFR) and the active galactic nuclei (AGN) luminosity (and, therefore, the black hole accretion rate) of Seyfert galaxies. This suggests a physical connection between the gas forming stars on kpc scales and the gas on sub-pc scales that is feeding the black hole. We compiled the largest sample of Seyfert galaxies to date with high angular resolution (0.4-0.8 arcsec) mid-infrared (8-13 micron) spectroscopy. The sample includes 29 Seyfert galaxies drawn from the AGN Revised Shapley-Ames catalogue. At a median distance of 33 Mpc, our data allow us to probe nuclear regions on scales of 65 pc (median value). We found no general evidence of suppression of the 11.3 micron polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission in the vicinity of these AGN, and used this feature as a proxy for the SFR. We detected the 11.3 micron PAH feature in the nuclear spectra of 45% of our sample. The derived nuclear SFRs are, on average, five times lower than those measured in circumnuclear regions of 600 pc in size (median value). However, the projected nuclear SFR densities are a factor of 20 higher than those measured on circumnuclear scales. This indicates that the SF activity per unit area in the central 65 pc of Seyfert galaxies is much higher than at larger distances from their nuclei. We studied the connection between the nuclear SFR and the black hole accretion rate and showed that numerical simulations reproduce fairly well our observed relation., Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2013
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235. Mid-Infrared Atomic Fine-Structure Emission Line Spectra of Luminous Infrared Galaxies: Spitzer/IRS Spectra of the GOALS Sample
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Inami, H., Armus, L., Charmandaris, V., Groves, B., Kewley, L., Petric, A., Stierwalt, S., Díaz-Santos, T., Surace, J., Rich, J., Haan, S., Howell, J., Evans, A., Mazzarella, J., Marshall, J., Appleton, P., Lord, S., Spoon, H., Frayer, D., Matsuhara, H., and Veilleux, S.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the data and our analysis of MIR fine-structure emission lines detected in Spitzer/IRS high-res spectra of 202 local LIRGs observed as part of the GOALS project. We detect emission lines of [SIV], [NeII], [NeV], [NeIII], [SIII]18.7, [OIV], [FeII], [SIII]33.5, and [SiII]. Over 75% of our galaxies are classified as starburst (SB) sources in the MIR. We compare ratios of the emission line fluxes to stellar photo- and shock-ionization models to constrain the gas properties in the SB nuclei. Comparing the [SIV]/[NeII] and [NeIII]/[NeII] ratios to the Starburst99-Mappings III models with an instantaneous burst history, the line ratios suggest that the SB in our LIRGs have ages of 1-4.5Myr, metallicities of 1-2Z_sun, and ionization parameters of 2-8e7cm/s. Based on the [SIII]/[SIII] ratios, the electron density in LIRG nuclei has a median electron density of ~300cm-3 for sources above the low density limit. We also find that strong shocks are likely present in 10 SB sources. A significant fraction of the GOALS sources have resolved neon lines and 5 show velocity differences of >200km/s in [NeIII] or [NeV] relative to [NeII]. Furthermore, 6 SB and 5 AGN LIRGs show a trend of increasing line width with ionization potential, suggesting the possibility of a compact energy source and stratified ISM in their nuclei. We confirm a strong correlation between the [NeII]+[NeIII] emission, as well as [SIII]33.5, with both the IR luminosity and the 24um warm dust emission measured from the spectra. Finally, we find no correlation between the hardness of the radiation field or the line width and the ratio of the total IR to 8um emission (IR8). This may be because the IR luminosity and the MIR fine-structure lines are sensitive to different timescales over the SB, or that IR8 is more sensitive to the geometry of the warm dust region than the radiation field producing the HII region emission., Comment: 18 pages, 17 figures, Accepted for publication in the ApJ
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- 2013
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236. Explaining the [CII]158um Deficit in Luminous Infrared Galaxies - First Results from a Herschel/PACS Study of the GOALS Sample
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Diaz-Santos, T., Armus, L., Charmandaris, V., Stierwalt, S., Murphy, E. J., Haan, S., Inami, H., Malhotra, S., Meijerink, R., Stacey, G., Petric, A. O., Evans, A. S., Veilleux, S., van der Werf, P. P., Lord, S., Lu, N., Howell, J. H., Appleton, P., Mazzarella, J. M., Surace, J. A., Xu, C. K., Schulz, B., Sanders, D. B., Bridge, C., Chan, B. H. P., Frayer, D. T., Iwasawa, K., Melbourne, J., and Sturm, E.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first results of a survey of the [CII]158um emission line in 241 luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs) comprising the Great Observatories All-sky Survey (GOALS) sample, obtained with the PACS instrument on board Herschel. The [CII] luminosities of the LIRGs in GOALS range from ~10^7 to 2x10^9 Lsun. We find that LIRGs show a tight correlation of [CII]/FIR with far-IR flux density ratios, with a strong negative trend spanning from ~10^-2 to 10^-4, as the average temperature of dust increases. We find correlations between the [CII]/FIR ratio and the strength of the 9.7um silicate absorption feature as well as with the luminosity surface density of the mid-IR emitting region (Sigma_MIR), suggesting that warmer, more compact starbursts have substantially smaller [CII]/FIR ratios. Pure star-forming (SF) LIRGs have a mean [CII]/FIR ~ 4x10^-3, while galaxies with low 6.2um PAH equivalent widths (EWs), indicative of the presence of active galactic nuclei (AGN), span the full range in [CII]/FIR. However, we show that even when only pure SF galaxies are considered, the [CII]/FIR ratio drops by an order of magnitude, from 10^-2 to 10^-3, with Sigma_MIR and Sigma_IR, implying that the [CII] luminosity is not a good indicator of the star formation rate (SFR) for most LIRGs, for it does not scale linearly with the warm dust emission. Moreover, even in LIRGs in which we detect an AGN in the mid-IR, the majority (2/3) of galaxies show [CII]/FIR >= 10^-3 typical of high 6.2um PAH EW sources, suggesting that most AGNs do not contribute significantly to the far-IR emission. We provide an empirical relation between the [CII]/FIR and the specific SFR (SSFR) for SF LIRGs. Finally, we present predictions for the starburst size based on the observed [CII] and far-IR luminosities which should be useful for comparing with results from future surveys of high-redshift galaxies with ALMA and CCAT., Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ. Table 1 will be available in the electronic version of the paper and also soon at http://goals.ipac.caltech.edu
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- 2013
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237. The Build-Up of Nuclear Stellar Cusps in Extreme Starburst Galaxies and Major Mergers
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Haan, S., Armus, L., Surace, J. A., Charmandaris, V., Evans, A. S., Diaz-Santos, T., Melbourne, J. L., Mazzarella, J. M., Howell, J. H., Stierwalt, S., Kim, D. C., Vavilkin, T., Sanders, D. B., Petric, A., Murphy, E. J., Braun, R., Bridge, C. R., and Inami, H.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Nuclear stellar cusps are defined as central excess light component in the stellar light profiles of galaxies and are suggested to be stellar relics of intense compact starbursts in the central ~100-500 pc region of gas-rich major mergers. Here we probe the build-up of nuclear cusps during the actual starburst phase for a complete sample of Luminous Infrared Galaxy systems (85 LIRGs, with 11.4
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- 2013
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238. Speed limit of FePt spin dynamics on femtosecond timescales
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Mendil, J., Nieves, P. C., Chubykalo-Fesenko, O., Walowski, J., Münzenberg, M., Santos, T., and Pisana, S.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Magnetization manipulation is becoming an indispensable tool for both basic and applied research. Theory predicts two types of ultrafast demagnetization dynamics classified as type I and type II. In type II materials, a second slower process takes place after the initial fast drop of magnetization. In this letter we investigate this behavior for FePt recording materials with perpendicular anisotropy. The magnetization dynamics have been simulated using a thermal micromagnetic model based on the Landau-Lifshitz-Bloch equation. We identify a transition to type II behavior and relate it to the electron temperatures reached by the laser heating. This slowing down is a fundamental limit to reconding speeds in heat assisted reversal., Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures
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- 2013
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239. From $SL(5,\mathbb{R})$ Yang-Mills theory to induced gravity
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Assimos, T. S., Pereira Jr, A. D., Santos, T. R. S., Sobreiro, R. F., Tomaz, A. A., and Otoya, V. J. Vasquez
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
From pure Yang-Mills action for the $SL(5,\mathbb{R})$ group in four Euclidean dimensions we obtain a gravity theory in the first order formalism. Besides the Einstein-Hilbert term, the effective gravity has a cosmological constant term, a curvature squared term, a torsion squared term and a matter sector. To obtain such geometrodynamical theory, asymptotic freedom and the Gribov parameter (soft BRST symmetry breaking) are crucial. Particularly, Newton and cosmological constant are related to these parameters and they also run as functions of the energy scale. One-loop computations are performed and the results are interpreted., Comment: 19 pp. 3 figures. Title changed. Text with several changes. Latest version accepted in the IJMPD
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- 2013
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240. Hubble Space Telescope ACS Imaging of the GOALS Sample: Quantitative Structural Properties of Nearby Luminous Infrared Galaxies with L_IR > 10^{11.4} L_sun
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Kim, D. -C., Evans, A. S., Vavilkin, T., Armus, L., Mazzarella, J. M., Sheth, K., Surace, J. A., Haan, S., Howell, J. H., Díaz-Santos, T., Petric, A., Iwasawa, K., Privon, G. C., and Sanders, D. B.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
A {\it Hubble Space Telescope} ({\it HST}) / Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) study of the structural properties of 85 luminous and ultraluminous ($L_{\rm IR} > 10^{11.4}$ L$_\odot$) infrared galaxies (LIRGs and ULIRGs) in the Great Observatories All-sky LIRG Survey (GOALS) sample is presented. Two-dimensional GALFIT analysis has been performed on F814W "{\it I}-band" images to decompose each galaxy, as appropriate, into bulge, disk, central PSF and stellar bar components. The fraction of bulge-less disk systems is observed to be higher in LIRGs (35%) than in ULIRGs (20%), with the disk+bulge systems making up the dominant fraction of both LIRGs (55%) and ULIRGs (45%). Further, bulge+disk systems are the dominant late-stage merger galaxy type and are the dominant type for LIRGs and ULIRGs at almost every stage of galaxy-galaxy nuclear separation. The mean {\it I}-band host absolute magnitude of the GOALS galaxies is $-22.64\pm$0.62 mag (1.8$^{+1.4}_{-0.4}$ L$^*_I$), and the mean bulge absolute magnitude in GOALS galaxies is about 1.1 magnitude fainter than the mean host magnitude. Almost all ULIRGs have bulge magnitudes at the high end (-20.6 to - 23.5 mag) of the GOALS bulge magnitude range. Mass ratios in the GOALS binary systems are consistent with most of the galaxies being the result of major mergers, and an examination of the residual-to-host intensity ratios in GOALS binary systems suggests that smaller companions suffer more tidal distortion than the larger companions. We find approximately twice as many bars in GOALS disk+bulge systems (32.8%) than in pure-disk mergers (15.9%) but most of the disk+bulge systems that contain bars are disk-dominated with small bulges. The bar-to-host intensity ratio, bar half-light radius, and bar ellipticity in GOALS galaxies are similar to those found in nearby spiral galaxies.(abridged), Comment: ApJ, accepted
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- 2013
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241. Mid-Infrared Properties of Nearby Luminous Infrared Galaxies I: Spitzer IRS Spectra for the GOALS Sample
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Stierwalt, S., Armus, L., Surace, J. A., Inami, H., Petric, A. O., Diaz-Santos, T., Haan, S., Charmandaris, V., Howell, J., Kim, D. C., Marshall, J., Mazzarella, J. M., Spoon, H. W. W., Veilleux, S., Evans, A., Sanders, D. B., Appleton, P., Bothun, G., Bridge, C. R., Chan, B., Frayer, D., Iwasawa, K., Kewley, L. J., Lord, S., Madore, B. F., Melbourne, J. E., Murphy, E. J., Rich, J. A., Schulz, B., Sturm, E., U, V., Vavilkin, T., and Xu, K.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The Great Observatories All-Sky LIRG Survey (GOALS) is a multiwavelength study of luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs) in the local universe. Here we present low resolution Spitzer spectra covering 5-38um and provide a basic analysis of the mid-IR spectral properties for nearby LIRGs. In a companion paper, we discuss detailed fits to the spectra. The GOALS sample of 244 nuclei in 180 luminous and 22 ultraluminous IR galaxies represents a complete subset of the IRAS RBGS and covers a range of merger stages, morphologies and spectral types. The majority (>60%) of GOALS LIRGs have high 6.2um PAH equivalent widths (EQW > 0.4um) and low levels of silicate absorption (s_9.7um >-1.0). There is a general trend among the U/LIRGs for silicate depth and MIR slope to increase with LIR. U/LIRGs in the late stages of a merger also have on average steeper MIR slopes and higher levels of dust obscuration. Together these trends suggest that as gas & dust is funneled towards the center of a coalescing merger, the nuclei become more compact and obscured. The sources that depart from these correlations have very low PAH EQW (EQW < 0.1um) consistent with their MIR emission being dominated by an AGN. The most heavily dust obscured sources are the most compact in their MIR emission, suggesting that the obscuring (cool) dust is associated with the outer regions of the starburst. As the merger progresses a marked decline is seen for the fraction of high EQW (star formation dominated) sources while the fraction of composite sources increases but the fraction of AGN-dominated sources remains low. When compared to the MIR spectra of submillimeter galaxies (SMGs) at z~2, the average GOALS LIRG is more absorbed at 9.7um and has more PAH emission. However, when the AGN contributions to both the local LIRGs and the high-z SMGs are removed, the average local starbursting LIRG closely resembles the starbursting SMGs., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJS
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- 2013
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242. A Herschel Survey of the [N II] 205 micron Line in Local Luminous Infrared Galaxies --- The [N II] 205 micron Emission as a Star Formation Rate Indicator
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Zhao, Yinghe, Lu, Nanyao, Xu, C. Kevin, Gao, Yu, Lord, S., Howell, J., Isaak, K. G., Charmandaris, V., Diaz-Santos, T., Appleton, P., Evans, A., Iwasawa, K., Leech, J., Mazzarella, J., Petric, A. O., Sanders, D. B., Schulz, B., Surace, J., and van der Werf, P. P.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present, for the first time, a statistical study of [N II] 205 mciron line emission for a large sample of local luminous infrared galaxies using Herschel Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver Fourier Transform Spectrometer (SPIRE FTS) data. For our sample of galaxies, we investigate the correlation between the [N II] luminosity (LNII) and the total infrared luminosity (LIR), as well as the dependence of LNII/LIR ratio on LIR, far infrared colors (IRAS $f_{60}/f_{100}$) and the [O III] 88 micron to [N II] luminosity ratio. We find that LNII correlates almost linearly with LIR for non AGN galaxies (all having $L_{IR} < 10^{12} L_solar$) in our sample, which implies that LNII can serve as a SFR tracer which is particularly useful for high redshift galaxies which will be observed with forthcoming submm spectroscopic facilities such as the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array. Our analysis shows that the deviation from the mean LNII-LIR relation correlates with tracers of the ionization parameter, which suggests the scatter in this relation is mainly due to the variations in the hardness, and/or ionization parameter, of the ambient galactic UV field among the sources in our sample., Comment: 6 emulateapj pages, 3 figures; ApJ Letter accepted
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- 2013
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243. Response of broiler chickens to xylanase and butyrate supplementation
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González-Ortiz, G, dos Santos, T T, Vienola, K, Vartiainen, S, Apajalahti, J, and Bedford, M R
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- 2019
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244. Gluconate action in the hydration of calcium aluminate cements: Theoretical study, processing of aqueous suspensions and hydration reactivation
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dos Santos, T., Jr., Pereira, C.I., Gonçalves, R., Salvini, V.R., Zetterström, C., Wöhrmeyer, C., Parr, C., and Pandolfelli, V.C.
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- 2019
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245. Dynamic spherical cavity expansion in Gurson materials with uniform and non-uniform distributions of porosity
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dos Santos, T., N’souglo, K.E., and Rodríguez-Martínez, J.A.
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- 2019
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246. Microwave versus conventional porcelain firing: Temperature measurement
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Santos, T., Hennetier, L., Costa, V.A.F., and Costa, L.C.
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- 2019
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247. Self-rated health and health-related quality of life are related with adolescents' healthy lifestyle
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Marques, A., Peralta, M., Santos, T., Martins, J., and Gaspar de Matos, M.
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- 2019
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248. 1-Deoxysphingolipids
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Lone, M.A., Santos, T., Alecu, I., Silva, L.C., and Hornemann, T.
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- 2019
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249. Dust in active galactic nuclei. Mid-infrared T-ReCS/Gemini spectra using the new RedCan pipeline
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Gonzalez-Martin, O., Rodriguez-Espinosa, J. M., Diaz-Santos, T., Packham, C., Alonso-Herrero, A., Esquej, P., Almeida, C. Ramos, Mason, R., and Telesco, C.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The unified model of active galactic nuclei (AGN) claims that the properties of AGN depend on the viewing angle of the observer with respect to a toroidal distribution of dust surrounding the nucleus. Both the mid-infrared (MIR) attenuation and continuum luminosity are expected to be related to dust associated with the torus. Therefore, isolating the nuclear component is essential to study the MIR emission of AGN. We have compiled all the T-ReCS spectra (Gemini observatory) available in the N-band for 22 AGN: 5 Type-1 and 17 Type-2 AGN. The high angular resolution of the T-ReCs spectra allows us to probe physical regions of 57 pc (median). We have used a novel pipeline called RedCan capable of producing flux- and wavelength-calibrated spectra for the CanariCam (GTC) and T-ReCS (Gemini) instruments. We have measured the fine-structure [SIV] at 10.5 microns and the PAH at 11.3 microns line strengths together with the silicate absorption/emission features. We have also compiled Spitzer/IRS spectra to understand how spatial resolution influences the results. The 11.3 microns PAH feature is only clearly detected in the nuclear spectra of two AGN, while it is more common in the Spitzer data. For those two objects the AGN emission in NGC7130 accounts for more than 80% of the MIR continuum at 12 microns while in the case of NGC1808 the AGN is not dominating the MIR emission. This is confirmed by the correlation between the MIR and X-ray continuum luminosities. The [SIV] emission line at 10.5 microns, which is believed to originate in the narrow line region, is detected in most AGN. We have found an enhancement of the optical depth at 9.7 microns in the high-angular resolution data for higher values of NH. Clumpy torus models reproduce the observed values only if the host-galaxy properties are taken into account., Comment: 8 figures, 16 pages, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2012
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250. Evidence for CO shock excitation in NGC 6240 from Herschel SPIRE spectroscopy
- Author
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Meijerink, R., Kristensen, L. E., Weiss, A., van der Werf, P. P., Walter, F., Spaans, M., Loenen, A. F., Fischer, J., Israel, F. P., Isaak, K., Papadopoulos, P. P., Aalto, S., Armus, L., Charmandaris, V., Dasyra, K. M., Diaz-Santos, T., Evans, A., Gao, Y., Gonzalez-Alfonso, E., Guesten, R., Henkel, C., Kramer, C., Lord, S., Martin-Pintado, J., Naylor, D., Sanders, D. B., Smith, H., Spinoglio, L., Stacey, G., Veilleux, S., and Wiedner, M. C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present Herschel SPIRE FTS spectroscopy of the nearby luminous infrared galaxy NGC 6240. In total 20 lines are detected, including CO J=4-3 through J=13-12, 6 H2O rotational lines, and [CI] and [NII] fine-structure lines. The CO to continuum luminosity ratio is 10 times higher in NGC 6240 than Mrk 231. Although the CO ladders of NGC 6240 and Mrk 231 are very similar, UV and/or X-ray irradiation are unlikely to be responsible for the excitation of the gas in NGC 6240. We applied both C and J shock models to the H2 v=1-0 S(1) and v=2-1 S(1) lines and the CO rotational ladder. The CO ladder is best reproduced by a model with shock velocity v_s=10 km s^-1 and a pre-shock density n_H=5 * 10^4 cm^-3. We find that the solution best fitting the H2 lines is degenerate: The shock velocities and number densities range between v_s = 17 - 47 km s^-1 and n_H=10^7 - 5 * 10^4 cm^-3, respectively. The H2 lines thus need a much more powerful shock than the CO lines. We deduce that most of the gas is currently moderately stirred up by slow (10 km s^-1) shocks while only a small fraction (< 1 percent) of the ISM is exposed to the high velocity shocks. This implies that the gas is rapidly loosing its highly turbulent motions. We argue that a high CO line-to-continuum ratio is a key diagnostic for the presence of shocks., Comment: Accepted by Astrophysical Journal Letters
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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