2,144 results on '"Ho I"'
Search Results
2. Method of Average Vertical Earth Pressure for HFCCTs Based on Differential Settlement
- Author
-
Li, Sheng, He, Yongze, Ho, I.-Hsuan, Ma, Li, Yang, Wenbo, and Wang, Changdan
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The TYPHOON stellar population synthesis survey: I. The young stellar population of the Great Barred Spiral NGC 1365
- Author
-
Sextl, Eva, Kudritzki, Rolf-Peter, Burkert, Andreas, Ho, I-Ting, Zahid, H. Jabran, Seibert, Mark, Battisti, Andrew J., Madore, Barry F., and Rich, Jeffrey A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We analyze TYPHOON long slit absorption line spectra of the starburst barred spiral galaxy NGC 1365 obtained with the Progressive Integral Step Method covering an area of 15 square kpc. Applying a population synthesis technique, we determine the spatial distribution of ages and metallicity of the young and old stellar population together with star formation rates, reddening, extinction and the ratio R$_V$ of extinction to reddening. We detect a clear indication of inside-out growth of the stellar disk beyond 3 kpc characterized by an outward increasing luminosity fraction of the young stellar population, a decreasing average age and a history of mass growth, which was finished 2 Gyrs later in the outermost disk. The metallicity of the young stellar population is clearly super solar but decreases towards larger galactocentric radii with a gradient of -0.02 dex/kpc. On the other hand, the metal content of the old population does not show a gradient and stays constant at a level roughly 0.4 dex lower than that of the young population. In the center of NGC 1365 we find a confined region where the metallicity of the young population drops dramatically and becomes lower than that of the old population. We attribute this to infall of metal poor gas and, additionally, to interrupted chemical evolution where star formation is stopped by AGN and supernova feedback and then after several Gyrs resumes with gas ejected by stellar winds from earlier generations of stars. We provide a simple model calculation as support for the latter.
- Published
- 2023
4. Alternative pavement heating technique using renewable energy in North Dakota
- Author
-
Ho I-Hsuan, Li Sheng, and Ma Li
- Subjects
Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Hydronic heating pavement (HHP) is considered to be more sustainable and environmental-friendly for de-icing or pavement heating. The more efficient approach is to use deep direct-use geothermal energy due to the high temperature and clean. In western North Dakota, several aquifers have been identified to provide geothermal hot water ranging from 34°C to 140°C within 2300 m below the ground surface. The current technique has made it feasible to utilize the hot water for power generation. Besides drilling new wells, the higher temperature water exits from power plant still has up to 70ºC. This temperature enables the valuable applications to cascading use for other purposes such as space heating, snow-melting for transportation infrastructure etc. This paper mainly focuses on studying the challenges of an HHP using geothermal water. Parametric studies using finite element analysis were conducted. Considering the high heat demands in western North Dakota due to the extreme weather, the suitable water temperatures, pipes layouts, mechanical properties of piped pavement, volumetric flow rates and thermal conductivity of pavement were analysed. The optimization of the HHP subject to different weather conditions and new findings are summarized and discussed.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Insight to Potential of TiB2 and CeO2 Inoculants on Microstructural Evolution in Laser Powder Bed Fusion Processed Superalloy IN718
- Author
-
Ho, I-Ting, Tiparti, Dhruv, Liu, Zhuo, and Tin, Sammy
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Mass Metallicity Relationship of SDSS Star Forming Galaxies: Population Synthesis Analysis and Effects of Star Burst Length, Extinction Law, Initial Mass Function and Star Formation Rate
- Author
-
Sextl, Eva, Kudritzki, Rolf-Peter, Zahid, H. Jabran, and Ho, I-Ting
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We investigate the mass-metallicity relationship of star forming galaxies by analysing the absorption line spectra of $\sim$200,000 galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The galaxy spectra are stacked in bins of stellar mass and a population synthesis technique is applied yielding metallicities, ages and star formation history of the young and old stellar population together with interstellar reddening and extinction. We adopt different lengths of the initial starbursts and different initial mass functions for the calculation of model spectra of the single stellar populations contributing to the total integrated spectrum. We also allow for deviations of the ratio of extinction to reddening RV from 3.1 and determine the value from the spectral fit. We find that burst length and RV have a significant influence on the determination of metallicities whereas the effect of the initial mass function is small. RV values are larger than 3.1. The metallicities of the young stellar population agree with extragalactic spectroscopic studies of individual massive supergiant stars and are significantly higher than those of the older stellar population. This confirms galaxy evolution models where metallicity depends on the ratio of gas to stellar mass and where this ratio decreases with time. Star formation history is found to depend on galaxy stellar mass. Massive galaxies are dominated by stars formed at early times., Comment: 18 pages, 20 figures
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Effectiveness of Various Load Reduction Methods for Deeply Buried Structures Under Seismic Loads
- Author
-
Ma, Li, Lu, Yunhua, Ho, I-Hsuan, Li, Sheng, Yang, Wenbo, and Wang, Changdan
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. How Disability Performances Travel within Taiwan
- Author
-
Ho, I-Lien, primary
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The Gas-Star Formation Cycle in Nearby Star-forming Galaxies II. Resolved Distributions of CO and H$\alpha$ Emission for 49 PHANGS Galaxies
- Author
-
Pan, Hsi-An, Schinnerer, Eva, Hughes, Annie, Leroy, Adam, Groves, Brent, Barnes, Ashley Thomas, Belfiore, Francesco, Bigiel, Frank, Blanc, Guillermo A., Cao, Yixian, Chevance, Melanie, Congiu, Enrico, Dale, Daniel A., Eibensteiner, Cosima, Emsellem, Eric, Faesi, Christopher M., Glover, Simon C. O., Grasha, Kathryn, Herrera, Cinthya N., Ho, I-Ting, Klessen, Ralf S., Kruijssen, J. M. Diederik, Lang, Philipp, Liu, Daizhong, McElroy, Rebecca, Meidt, Sharon E., Murphy, Eric J., Pety, Jerome, Querejeta, Miguel, Razza, Alessandro, Rosolowsky, Erik, Saito, Toshiki, Santoro, Francesco, Schruba, Andreas, Sun, Jiayi, Tomicic, Neven, Usero, Antonio, Utomo, Dyas, and Williams, Thomas G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The relative distribution of molecular gas and star formation in galaxies gives insight into the physical processes and timescales of the cycle between gas and stars. In this work, we track the relative spatial configuration of CO and H$\alpha$ emission at high resolution in each of our galaxy targets, and use these measurements to quantify the distributions of regions in different evolutionary stages of star formation: from molecular gas without star formation traced by H$\alpha$ to star-forming gas, and to HII regions. The large sample, drawn from the Physics at High Angular resolution in Nearby GalaxieS ALMA and narrowband H$\alpha$ (PHANGS-ALMA and PHANGS-H$\alpha$) surveys, spans a wide range of stellar mass and morphological types, allowing us to investigate the dependencies of the gas-star formation cycle on global galaxy properties. At a resolution of 150 pc, the incidence of regions in different stages shows a dependence on stellar mass and Hubble type of galaxies over the radial range probed. Massive and/or earlier-type galaxies exhibit a significant reservoir of molecular gas without star formation traced by H$\alpha$, while lower-mass galaxies harbor substantial HII regions that may have dispersed their birth clouds or formed from low-mass, more isolated clouds. Galactic structures add a further layer of complexity to relative distribution of CO and H$\alpha$ emission. Trends between galaxy properties and distributions of gas traced by CO and H$\alpha$ are visible only when the observed spatial scale is $\ll$ 500 pc, reflecting the critical resolution requirement to distinguish stages of star formation process., Comment: 60 pages, 22 figures, 9 tables, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The Black Hole-Galaxy Connection: Interplay between Feedback, Obscuration, and Host Galaxy Substructure
- Author
-
Juneau, Stéphanie, Goulding, Andy D., Banfield, Julie, Bianchi, Stefano, Duc, Pierre-Alain, Ho, I-Ting, Dopita, Michael A., Scharwächter, Julia, Bauer, Franz E., Groves, Brent, Alexander, David M., Davies, Rebecca L., Elbaz, David, Freeland, Emily, Hampton, Elise, Kewley, Lisa J., Nikutta, Robert, Shastri, Prajval, Shu, Xinwen, Vogt, Frédéric P. A., Wang, Tao, Wong, O. Ivy, and Woo, Jong-Hak
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
There is growing evidence for physical influence between supermassive black holes and their host galaxies. We present a case study of nearby galaxy NGC 7582, for which we find evidence that galactic substructure plays an important role in affecting the collimation of ionized outflows as well as contributing to the heavy active galactic nucleus (AGN) obscuration. This result contrasts with a simple, small-scale AGN torus model, according to which AGN wind collimation may take place inside the torus itself, at subparsec scale. Using 3D spectroscopy with the MUSE instrument, we probe the kinematics of the stellar and ionized gas components as well as the ionization state of the gas from a combination of emission line ratios. We report for the first time a kinematically distinct core (KDC) in NGC 7582, on a scale of ~600pc. This KDC coincides spatially with dust lanes and starbursting complexes previously observed. We interpret it as a circumnuclear ring of stars and dusty, gas-rich material. We obtain a clear view of the outflowing cones over kpc scales, and demonstrate that they are predominantly photoionized by the central engine. We detect the back cone (behind the galaxy), and confirm previous results of a large nuclear obscuration of both the stellar continuum and HII regions. While we tentatively associate the presence of the KDC to a large-scale bar and/or a minor galaxy merger, we stress the importance of gaining a better understanding of the role of galaxy substructure in controlling the fueling, feedback and obscuration of AGN., Comment: 31 pages, 16 figures (including two animations), accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. For a preview of the animations, see https://noirlab.edu/science/videos/rotating-gas-disk-of-the-ngc-7582-galaxy for Figure 15, and see https://noirlab.edu/science/videos/black-hole-wind-from-the-ngc-7582-galaxy for Figure 16
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. PHANGS-MUSE: the HII region luminosity function of local star-forming galaxies
- Author
-
Santoro, Francesco, Kreckel, Kathryn, Belfiore, Francesco, Groves, Brent, Congiu, Enrico, Thilker, David A., Blanc, Guillermo A., Schinnerer, Eva, Ho, I-Ting, Kruijssen, J. M. Diederik, Meidt, Sharon, Klessen, Ralf S., Schruba, Andreas, Querejeta, Miguel, Pessa, Ismael, Chevance, Mélanie, Kim, Jaeyeon, Emsellem, Eric, McElroy, Rebecca, Barnes, Ashley T., Bigiel, Frank, Boquien, Médéric, Dale, Daniel A., Glover, Simon C. O., Grasha, Kathryn, Lee, Janice, Leroy, Adam K., Pan, Hsi-An, Rosolowsky, Erik, Saito, Toshiki, Sanchez-Blazquez, Patricia, Watkins, Elizabeth J., and Williams, Thomas G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We use an unprecedented sample of about 23,000 HII regions detected at an average physical resolution of 67pc in the PHANGS-MUSE sample to study the extragalactic HII region Ha luminosity function (LF). Our observations probe the star-forming disk of 19 nearby spiral galaxies with low inclination and located close to the star formation main sequence at z=0. The mean LF slope $\alpha$ in our sample is =1.73 with a $\sigma$ of 0.15. We find that $\alpha$ decreases with the galaxy's star formation rate surface density and argue that this is driven by an enhanced clustering of young stars at high gas surface densities. Looking at the HII regions within single galaxies we find that no significant variations occur between the LF of the inner and outer part of the star-forming disk, whereas the LF in the spiral arm areas is shallower than in the inter-arm areas for six out of the 13 galaxies with clearly visible spiral arms. We attribute these variations to the spiral arms increasing the molecular clouds arm--inter-arm mass contrast and find suggestive evidence that they are more evident for galaxies with stronger spiral arms. Furthermore, we find systematic variations in $\alpha$ between samples of HII regions with high and low ionization parameter q and argue that they are driven by the aging of HII regions., Comment: Accepted in A&A. Main text: 19 pages, 11 Figures, 4 Tables. Catalog including 23301 HII regions will be available in electronic form at the CDS upon official publication
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The PHANGS-MUSE survey -- Probing the chemo-dynamical evolution of disc galaxies
- Author
-
Emsellem, Eric, Schinnerer, Eva, Santoro, Francesco, Belfiore, Francesco, Pessa, Ismael, McElroy, Rebecca, Blanc, Guillermo A., Congiu, Enrico, Groves, Brent, Ho, I-Ting, Kreckel, Kathryn, Razza, Alessandro, Sanchez-Blazquez, Patricia, Egorov, Oleg, Faesi, Chris, Klessen, Ralf S., Leroy, Adam K., Meidt, Sharon, Querejeta, Miguel, Rosolowsky, Erik, Scheuermann, Fabian, Anand, Gagandeep S., Barnes, Ashley T., Bešlić, Ivana, Bigiel, Frank, Boquien, Médéric, Cao, Yixian, Chevance, Mélanie, Dale, Daniel A., Eibensteiner, Cosima, Glover, Simon C. O., Grasha, Kathryn, Henshaw, Jonathan D., Hughes, Annie, Koch, Eric W., Kruijssen, J. M. Diederik, Lee, Janice, Liu, Daizhong, Pan, Hsi-An, Pety, Jérôme, Saito, Toshiki, Sandstrom, Karin M., Schruba, Andreas, Sun, Jiayi, Thilker, David A., Usero, Antonio, Watkins, Elizabeth J., and Williams, Thomas G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the PHANGS-MUSE survey, a programme using the MUSE IFS at the ESO VLT to map 19 massive $(9.4 < \log(M_{*}/M_\odot) < 11.0)$ nearby (D < 20 Mpc) star-forming disc galaxies. The survey consists of 168 MUSE pointings (1'x1' each), a total of nearly 15 Million spectra, covering ~1.5 Million independent spectra. PHANGS-MUSE provides the first IFS view of star formation across different local environments (including galaxy centres, bars, spiral arms) in external galaxies at a median resolution of 50~pc, better than the mean inter-cloud distance in the ionised interstellar medium. This `cloud-scale' resolution allows detailed demographics and characterisations of HII regions and other ionised nebulae. PHANGS-MUSE further delivers a unique view on the associated gas and stellar kinematics, and provides constraints on the star formation history. The PHANGS-MUSE survey is complemented by dedicated ALMA CO(2-1) and multi-band HST observations, therefore allowing us to probe the key stages of the star formation process from molecular clouds to HII regions and star clusters. This paper describes the scientific motivation, sample selection, observational strategy, data reduction and analysis process of the PHANGS-MUSE survey. We present our bespoke automated data-reduction framework, which is built on the reduction recipes provided by ESO, but additionally allows for mosaicking and homogenisation of the point spread function. We further present a detailed quality assessment and a brief illustration of the potential scientific applications of the large set of PHANGS-MUSE data products generated by our data analysis framework. The data cubes and analysis data products described in this paper represent the basis for the first PHANGS-MUSE public data release and are available in the ESO archive and via the Canadian Astronomy Data Centre., Comment: 48 pages, 28 figures, 4 tables, accepted for pub in A&A, Dec 8, 2021. Data products released publicly at this address https://archive.eso.org/scienceportal/home?data_collection=PHANGS
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Ether phospholipids are required for mitochondrial reactive oxygen species homeostasis
- Author
-
Chen, Ziheng, Ho, I-Lin, Soeung, Melinda, Yen, Er-Yen, Liu, Jintan, Yan, Liang, Rose, Johnathon L., Srinivasan, Sanjana, Jiang, Shan, Edward Chang, Q., Feng, Ningping, Gay, Jason P., Wang, Qi, Wang, Jing, Lorenzi, Philip L., Veillon, Lucas J., Wei, Bo, Weinstein, John N., Deem, Angela K., Gao, Sisi, Genovese, Giannicola, Viale, Andrea, Yao, Wantong, Lyssiotis, Costas A., Marszalek, Joseph R., Draetta, Giulio F., and Ying, Haoqiang
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Structural and optical analyses for InGaN-based red micro-LED
- Author
-
Hsiao, Fu-He, Miao, Wen-Chien, Hong, Yu-Heng, Chiang, Hsin, Ho, I-Hung, Liang, Kai-Bo, Iida, Daisuke, Lin, Chun-Liang, Ahn, Hyeyoung, Ohkawa, Kazuhiro, Chang, Chiao-Yun, and Kuo, Hao-Chung
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Star formation scaling relations at ~100 pc from PHANGS: Impact of completeness and spatial scale
- Author
-
Pessa, I., Schinnerer, E., Belfiore, F., Emsellem, E., Leroy, A. K., Schruba, A., Kruijssen, J. M. D., Pan, H. -A., Blanc, G. A., Sanchez-Blazquez, P., Bigiel, F., Chevance, M., Congiu, E., Dale, D., Faesi, C. M., Glover, S. C. O., Grasha, K., Groves, B., Ho, I., Jiménez-Donaire, M., Klessen, R., Kreckel, K., Koch, E. W., Liu, D., Meidt, S., Pety, J., Querejeta, M., Rosolowsky, E., Saito, T., Santoro, F., Sun, J., Usero, A., Watkins, E. J., and Williams, T. G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Aims: The complexity of star formation at the physical scale of molecular clouds is not yet fully understood. We investigate the mechanisms regulating the formation of stars in different environments within nearby star-forming galaxies from the PHANGS sample. Methods: Integral field spectroscopic data and radio-interferometric observations of 18 galaxies were combined to explore the existence of the resolved star formation main sequence (rSFMS), resolved Kennicutt-Schmidt relation (rKS), and resolved molecular gas main sequence (rMGMS), and we derived their slope and scatter at spatial resolutions from 100 pc to 1 kpc (under various assumptions). Results: All three relations were recovered at the highest spatial resolution (100 pc). Furthermore, significant variations in these scaling relations were observed across different galactic environments. The exclusion of non-detections has a systematic impact on the inferred slope as a function of the spatial scale. Finally, the scatter of the $\Sigma_\mathrm{mol. gas + stellar}$ versus $\Sigma_\mathrm{SFR}$ correlation is smaller than that of the rSFMS, but higher than that found for the rKS. Conclusions: The rMGMS has the tightest relation at a spatial scale of 100 pc (scatter of 0.34 dex), followed by the rKS (0.41 dex) and then the rSFMS (0.51 dex). This is consistent with expectations from the timescales involved in the evolutionary cycle of molecular clouds. Surprisingly, the rKS shows the least variation across galaxies and environments, suggesting a tight link between molecular gas and subsequent star formation. The scatter of the three relations decreases at lower spatial resolutions, with the rKS being the tightest (0.27 dex) at a spatial scale of 1 kpc. Variation in the slope of the rSFMS among galaxies is partially due to different detection fractions of $\Sigma_\mathrm{SFR}$ with respect to $\Sigma_\mathrm{stellar}$., Comment: 27 pages, 29 figures, Accepted in A&A
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. PHANGS-ALMA: Arcsecond CO(2-1) Imaging of Nearby Star-Forming Galaxies
- Author
-
Leroy, Adam K., Schinnerer, Eva, Hughes, Annie, Rosolowsky, Erik, Pety, Jérôme, Schruba, Andreas, Usero, Antonio, Blanc, Guillermo A., Chevance, Mélanie, Emsellem, Eric, Faesi, Christopher M., Herrera, Cinthya N., Liu, Daizhong, Meidt, Sharon E., Querejeta, Miguel, Saito, Toshiki, Sandstrom, Karin M., Sun, Jiayi, Williams, Thomas G., Anand, Gagandeep S., Barnes, Ashley T., Behrens, Erica A., Belfiore, Francesco, Benincasa, Samantha M., Bešlić, Ivana, Bigiel, Frank, Bolatto, Alberto D., Brok, Jakob S. den, Cao, Yixian, Chandar, Rupali, Chastenet, Jérémy, Chiang, I-Da, Congiu, Enrico, Dale, Daniel A., Deger, Sinan, Eibensteiner, Cosima, Egorov, Oleg V., García-Rodríguez, Axel, Glover, Simon C. O., Grasha, Kathryn, Henshaw, Jonathan D., Ho, I-Ting, Kepley, Amanda A., Kim, Jaeyeon, Klessen, Ralf S., Kreckel, Kathryn, Koch, Eric W., Kruijssen, J. M. Diederik, Larson, Kirsten L., Lee, Janice C., Lopez, Laura A., Machado, Josh, Mayker, Ness, McElroy, Rebecca, Murphy, Eric J., Ostriker, Eve C., Pan, Hsi-An, Pessa, Ismael, Puschnig, Johannes, Razza, Alessandro, Sánchez-Blázquez, Patricia, Santoro, Francesco, Sardone, Amy, Scheuermann, Fabian, Sliwa, Kazimierz, Sormani, Mattia C., Stuber, Sophia K., Thilker, David A., Turner, Jordan A., Utomo, Dyas, Watkins, Elizabeth J., and Whitmore, Bradley
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present PHANGS-ALMA, the first survey to map CO J=2-1 line emission at ~1" ~ 100pc spatial resolution from a representative sample of 90 nearby (d<~20 Mpc) galaxies that lie on or near the z=0 "main sequence" of star-forming galaxies. CO line emission traces the bulk distribution of molecular gas, which is the cold, star-forming phase of the interstellar medium. At the resolution achieved by PHANGS-ALMA, each beam reaches the size of a typical individual giant molecular cloud (GMC), so that these data can be used to measure the demographics, life-cycle, and physical state of molecular clouds across the population of galaxies where the majority of stars form at z=0. This paper describes the scientific motivation and background for the survey, sample selection, global properties of the targets, ALMA observations, and characteristics of the delivered ALMA data and derived data products. As the ALMA sample serves as the parent sample for parallel surveys with VLT/MUSE, HST, AstroSat, VLA, and other facilities, we include a detailed discussion of the sample selection. We detail the estimation of galaxy mass, size, star formation rate, CO luminosity, and other properties, compare estimates using different systems and provide best-estimate integrated measurements for each target. We also report the design and execution of the ALMA observations, which combine a Cycle~5 Large Program, a series of smaller programs, and archival observations. Finally, we present the first 1" resolution atlas of CO emission from nearby galaxies and describe the properties and contents of the first PHANGS-ALMA public data release., Comment: 76 pages, 33 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Supplement series. Full resolution version and the image atlas to appear as a figure set in the published version can be found https://sites.google.com/view/phangs/publications . Data release coming soon to the ALMA archive and CADC temporarily available at http://phangs.org/data
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Toward the Understanding of CoAl2O4 Additions on the Formation of Microstructure in Alloy 718 Processed by Laser Powder Bed Fusion
- Author
-
Ho, I-Ting, Chang, Kai-Chun, Tiparti, Dhruv, Yeh, An-Chou, and Tin, Sammy
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Measuring the mixing scale of the ISM within nearby spiral galaxies
- Author
-
Kreckel, Kathryn, Ho, I-Ting, Blanc, Guillermo A., Glover, Simon C. O., Groves, Brent, Rosolowsky, Erik, Bigiel, Frank, Boquien, Mederic, Chevance, Melanie, Dale, Daniel A., Deger, Sinan, Emsellem, Eric, Grasha, Kathryn, Kim, Jenny J., Klessen, Ralf S., Kruijssen, J. M. Diederik, Lee, Janice C., Leroy, Adam K., Liu, Daizhong, McElroy, Rebecca, Meidt, Sharon E., Pessa, Ismael, Sanchez-Blazquez, Patricia, Sandstrom, Karin, Santoro, Francesco, Scheuermann, Fabian, Schinnerer, Eva, Schruba, Andreas, Utomo, Dyas, Watkins, Elizabeth J., and Williams, Thomas G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The spatial distribution of metals reflects, and can be used to constrain, the processes of chemical enrichment and mixing. Using PHANGS-MUSE optical integral field spectroscopy, we measure the gas phase oxygen abundances (metallicities) across 7,138 HII regions in a sample of eight nearby disc galaxies. In Paper I (Kreckel et al. 2019) we measure and report linear radial gradients in the metallicities of each galaxy, and qualitatively searched for azimuthal abundance variations. Here, we examine the two-dimensional variation in abundances once the radial gradient is subtracted, Delta(O/H), in order to quantify the homogeneity of the metal distribution and to measure the mixing scale over which HII region metallicities are correlated. We observe low (0.03--0.05 dex) scatter in Delta(O/H) globally in all galaxies, with significantly lower (0.02--0.03 dex) scatter on small (<600 pc) spatial scales. This is consistent with the measurement uncertainties, and implies the two-dimensional metallicity distribution is highly correlated on scales of <600 pc. We compute the two point correlation function for metals in the disc in order to quantify the scale lengths associated with the observed homogeneity. This mixing scale is observed to correlate better with the local gas velocity dispersion (of both cold and ionized gas) than with the star formation rate. Selecting only HII regions with enhanced abundances relative to a linear radial gradient, we do not observe increased homogeneity on small scales. This suggests that the observed homogeneity is driven by the mixing introducing material from large scales rather than by pollution from recent and on-going star formation., Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Internal kinematics of giant H II regions in M101 with the Keck Cosmic Web Imager
- Author
-
Bresolin, Fabio, Rizzi, Luca, Ho, I-Ting, Terlevich, Roberto, Terlevich, Elena, Telles, Eduardo, Chavez, Ricardo, Basilakos, Spyros, and Plionis, Manolis
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We study the kinematics of the giant H II regions NGC 5455 and NGC 5471 located in the galaxy M101, using integral field observations that include the Hbeta and [O III] 5007 emission lines, obtained with the Keck Cosmic Web Imager. We analyse the line profiles using both single and multiple Gaussian curves, gathering evidence for the presence of several expanding shells and moving filaments. The line decomposition shows that a broad (sigma = 30-50 km/s) underlying component is ubiquitous, extending across hundreds of pc, while a large fraction of the narrow components have subsonic line widths. The supersonic turbulence inferred from the global line profiles is consistent with the velocity dispersion of the individual narrow components, i.e. the global profiles likely arise from the combined contribution of discrete gas clouds. We confirm the presence of very extended (400 - 1200 km/s) low-intensity line components in three bright star-forming cores in NGC 5471, possibly representing kinematic signatures of supernova remnants. For one of these, the known supernova remnant host NGC 5471 B, we find a significantly reduced [O III]/Hbeta line ratio relative to the surrounding photoionized gas, due to the presence of a radiative shock at low metallicity. We explore the systematic width discrepancy between H I and [O III] lines, present in both global and individual spaxel spectra. We argue that the resolution of this long-standing problem lies in the physics of the line-emitting gas rather than in the smearing effects induced by the different thermal widths., Comment: 20 pages, 20 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The lifecycle of molecular clouds in nearby star-forming disc galaxies
- Author
-
Chevance, Mélanie, Kruijssen, J. M. Diederik, Hygate, Alexander P. S., Schruba, Andreas, Longmore, Steven N., Groves, Brent, Henshaw, Jonathan D., Herrera, Cinthya N., Hughes, Annie, Jeffreson, Sarah M. R., Lang, Philipp, Leroy, Adam K., Meidt, Sharon E., Pety, Jérôme, Razza, Alessandro, Rosolowsky, Erik, Schinnerer, Eva, Bigiel, Frank, Blanc, Guillermo A., Emsellem, Eric, Faesi, Christopher M., Glover, Simon C. O., Haydon, Daniel T., Ho, I-Ting, Kreckel, Kathryn, Lee, Janice C., Liu, Daizhong, Querejeta, Miguel, Saito, Toshiki, Sun, Jiayi, Usero, Antonio, and Utomo, Dyas
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
It remains a major challenge to derive a theory of cloud-scale ($\lesssim100$ pc) star formation and feedback, describing how galaxies convert gas into stars as a function of the galactic environment. Progress has been hampered by a lack of robust empirical constraints on the giant molecular cloud (GMC) lifecycle. We address this problem by systematically applying a new statistical method for measuring the evolutionary timeline of the GMC lifecycle, star formation, and feedback to a sample of nine nearby disc galaxies, observed as part of the PHANGS-ALMA survey. We measure the spatially-resolved ($\sim100$ pc) CO-to-H$\alpha$ flux ratio and find a universal de-correlation between molecular gas and young stars on GMC scales, allowing us to quantify the underlying evolutionary timeline. GMC lifetimes are short, typically 10-30 Myr, and exhibit environmental variation, between and within galaxies. At kpc-scale molecular gas surface densities $\Sigma_{\rm H_2}\geqslant8$M$_{\odot}$pc$^{-2}$, the GMC lifetime correlates with time-scales for galactic dynamical processes, whereas at $\Sigma_{\rm H_2}\leqslant8$M$_{\odot}$pc$^{-2}$ GMCs decouple from galactic dynamics and live for an internal dynamical time-scale. After a long inert phase without massive star formation traced by H$\alpha$ (75-90% of the cloud lifetime), GMCs disperse within just 1-5 Myr once massive stars emerge. The dispersal is most likely due to early stellar feedback, causing GMCs to achieve integrated star formation efficiencies of 4-10% These results show that galactic star formation is governed by cloud-scale, environmentally-dependent, dynamical processes driving rapid evolutionary cycling. GMCs and HII regions are the fundamental units undergoing these lifecycles, with mean separations of 100-300 pc in star-forming discs. Future work should characterise the multi-scale physics and mass flows driving these lifecycles., Comment: 39 pages, 14 figures; resubmitted to MNRAS after a favourable referee report (November 6, 2019)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Mapping electron temperature variations across a spiral arm in NGC 1672
- Author
-
Ho, I-Ting, Kreckel, Kathryn, Meidt, Sharon E., Groves, Brent, Blanc, Guillermo A., Bigiel, Frank, Dale, Daniel A., Emsellem, Eric, Glover, Simon C. O., Grasha, Kathryn, Kewley, Lisa J., Kruijssen, J. M. Diederik, Lang, Philipp, McElroy, Rebecca, Kudritzki, Rolf-Peter, Sanchez-Blazquez, Patricia, Sandstrom, Karin, Santoro, Francesco, Schinnerer, Eva, and Schruba, Andreas
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report one of the first extragalactic observations of electron temperature variations across a spiral arm. Using MUSE mosaic observations of the nearby galaxy NGC 1672, we measure the [N II]5755 auroral line in a sample of 80 HII regions in the eastern spiral arm of NGC1672. We discover systematic temperature variations as a function of distance perpendicular to the spiral arm. The electron temperature is lowest on the spiral arm itself and highest on the downstream side. Photoionization models of different metallicity, pressure, and age of the ionizing source are explored to understand what properties of the interstellar medium drive the observed temperature variations. An azimuthally varying metallicity appears to be the most likely cause of the temperature variations. The electron temperature measurements solidify recent discoveries of azimuthal variations of oxygen abundance based on strong lines, and rule out the possibility that the abundance variations are artefacts of the strong-line calibrations., Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure, accepted to ApJ Letter
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Mapping metallicity variations across nearby galaxy disks
- Author
-
Kreckel, K., Ho, I. -T., Blanc, G. A., Groves, B., Santoro, F., Schinnerer, E., Bigiel, F., Chevance, M., Congiu, E., Emsellem, E., Faesi, C., Glover, S. C. O., Grasha, K., Kruijssen, J. M. D., Lang, P., Leroy, A. K., Meidt, S. E., McElroy, R., Pety, J., Rosolowsky, E., Saito, T., Sandstrom, K., Sanchez-Blazquez, P., and Schruba, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The distribution of metals within a galaxy traces the baryon cycle and the buildup of galactic disks, but the detailed gas phase metallicity distribution remains poorly sampled. We have determined the gas phase oxygen abundances for 7,138 HII regions across the disks of eight nearby galaxies using VLT/MUSE optical integral field spectroscopy as part of the PHANGS-MUSE survey. After removing the first order radial gradients present in each galaxy, we look at the statistics of the metallicity offset (Delta O/H) and explore azimuthal variations. Across each galaxy, we find low (sigma=0.03-0.05 dex) scatter at any given radius, indicative of efficient mixing. We compare physical parameters for those HII regions that are 1 sigma outliers towards both enhanced and reduced abundances. Regions with enhanced abundances have high ionization parameter, higher Halpha luminosity, lower Halpha velocity dispersion, younger star clusters and associated molecular gas clouds show higher molecular gas densities. This indicates recent star formation has locally enriched the material. Regions with reduced abundances show increased Halpha velocity dispersions, suggestive of mixing introducing more pristine material. We observe subtle azimuthal variations in half of the sample, but can not always cleanly associate this with the spiral pattern. Regions with enhanced and reduced abundances are found distributed throughout the disk, and in half of our galaxies we can identify subsections of spiral arms with clearly associated metallicity gradients. This suggests spiral arms play a role in organizing and mixing the ISM., Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, 4 Appendices including image atlases, ApJ accepted
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Protein kinase A-dependent Neuronal Nitric Oxide Synthase Activation Mediates the Enhancement of Baroreflex Response by Adrenomedullin in the Nucleus Tractus Solitarii of Rats
- Author
-
Ho I-Chun, Chiu Ying-Chen, Shen Yuh-Chiang, Chen Lih-Chi, Yen David HT, Lou Ya-Jou, Chen I-Chin, and Yen Jiin-Cherng
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Adrenomedullin (ADM) exerts its biological functions through the receptor-mediated enzymatic mechanisms that involve protein kinase A (PKA), or neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS). We previously demonstrated that the receptor-mediated cAMP/PKA pathway involves in ADM-enhanced baroreceptor reflex (BRR) response. It remains unclear whether ADM may enhance BRR response via activation of nNOS-dependent mechanism in the nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS). Methods Intravenous injection of phenylephrine was administered to evoke the BRR before and at 10, 30, and 60 min after microinjection of the test agents into NTS of Sprague-Dawley rats. Western blotting analysis was used to measure the level and phosphorylation of proteins that involved in BRR-enhancing effects of ADM (0.2 pmol) in NTS. The colocalization of PKA and nNOS was examined by immunohistochemical staining and observed with a laser confocal microscope. Results We found that ADM-induced enhancement of BRR response was blunted by microinjection of NPLA or Rp-8-Br-cGMP, a selective inhibitor of nNOS or protein kinase G (PKG) respectively, into NTS. Western blot analysis further revealed that ADM induced an increase in the protein level of PKG-I which could be attenuated by co-microinjection with the ADM receptor antagonist ADM22-52 or NPLA. Moreover, we observed an increase in phosphorylation at Ser1416 of nNOS at 10, 30, and 60 min after intra-NTS administration of ADM. As such, nNOS/PKG signaling may also account for the enhancing effect of ADM on BRR response. Interestingly, biochemical evidence further showed that ADM-induced increase of nNOS phosphorylation was prevented by co-microinjection with Rp-8-Br-cAMP, a PKA inhibitor. The possibility of PKA-dependent nNOS activation was substantiated by immunohistochemical demonstration of co-localization of PKA and nNOS in putative NTS neurons. Conclusions The novel finding of this study is that the signal transduction cascade that underlies the enhancement of BRR response by ADM in NTS is composed sequentially of cAMP/PKA and nNOS/PKG pathways.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Additive manufacturing of nickel-based superalloys: A state-of-the-art review on process-structure-defect-property relationship
- Author
-
Mostafaei, Amir, Ghiaasiaan, Reza, Ho, I-Ting, Strayer, Seth, Chang, Kai-Chun, Shamsaei, Nima, Shao, Shuai, Paul, Santanu, Yeh, An-Chou, Tin, Sammy, and To, Albert C.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. SIGNALS: I. Survey Description
- Author
-
Rousseau-Nepton, L., Martin, R. P., Robert, C., Drissen, L., Amram, P., Prunet, S., Martin, T., Moumen, I., Adamo, A., Alarie, A., Barmby, P., Boselli, A., Bresolin, F., Bureau, M., Chemin, L., Fernandes, R. C., Combes, F., Crowder, C., Della Bruna, L., Egusa, F., Epinat, B., Ksoll, V. F., Girard, M., Llanos, V. Gómez, Gouliermis, D., Grasha, K., Higgs, C., Hlavacek-Larrondo, J., Ho, I. -T., Iglesias-Páramo, J., Joncas, G., Kam, Z. S., Karera, P., Kennicutt, R. C., Klessen, R. S., Lianou, S., Liu, L., Liu, Q., de Amorim, A. Luiz, Lyman, J. D., Martel, H., Mazzilli-Ciraulo, B., McLeod, A. F., Melchior, A-L., Millan, I., Mollá, M., Momose, R., Morisset, C., Pan, H. -A., Pati, A. K., Pellerin, A., Pellegrini, E., Pérez, I., Petric, A., Plana, H., Rahner, D., Lara, T. Ruiz, Sánchez-Menguiano, L., Spekkens, K., Stasińska, G., Takamiya, M., Asari, N. Vale, and Vílchez, J. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
SIGNALS, the Star formation, Ionized Gas, and Nebular Abundances Legacy Survey, is a large observing program designed to investigate massive star formation and HII regions in a sample of local extended galaxies. The program will use the imaging Fourier transform spectrograph SITELLE at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope. Over 355 hours (54.7 nights) have been allocated beginning in fall 2018 for eight consecutive semesters. Once completed, SIGNALS will provide a statistically reliable laboratory to investigate massive star formation, including over 50 000 resolved HII regions : the largest, most complete, and homogeneous database of spectroscopically and spatially resolved extragalactic HII regions ever assembled. For each field observed, three datacubes covering the spectral bands of the filters SN1 (363 -386 nm), SN2 (482 - 513 nm), and SN3 (647 - 685 nm) are gathered. The spectral resolution selected for each spectral band is 1000, 1000, and 5000, respectively. As defined, the project sample will facilitate the study of small-scale nebular physics and many other phenomena linked to star formation at a mean spatial resolution of 20 pc. This survey also has considerable legacy value for additional topics including planetary nebulae, diffuse ionized gas, andsupernova remnants. The purpose of this paper is to present a general outlook of the survey, notably the observing strategy, galaxy sample, and science requirements., Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, submitted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. K-series approximation of vectorial optical fields for designing diffractive optical elements with subwavelength feature sizes
- Author
-
Ho, I-Lin
- Subjects
Physics - Optics - Abstract
Diffractive optical elements (DOEs) are widely applied as compact solutions for desired light manipulations via wavefront shaping. Recent advanced chip applications further require their feature sizes to move down to the subwavelength, which inevitably brings forth vectorial effects of optical fields and makes the typical scalar-based theory invalid. However, simulating and optimizing their vectorial fields, which are associated with billions of adjustable parameters in the optical element, are difficult to do, because of the issues of numerical stability and the highly-demanding computational cost. To address this problem, this research proposes an applicable algorithm by means of a wave-vector (k) series approximation of vectorial optical fields. On the basis of the semi-analytical rigorous coupled wave analysis (RCWA), an adequate selection scheme on k-series enables computationally efficient yet still predictive calculations for DOEs. The performance estimations for exemplary designs by the finite difference time domain (FDTD) method show that the predicted intensity profiles by the proposed algorithm agree with the target by just a fractional error. Together with optimizing the geometrical degrees of freedom (e.g., DOE depth h) as compensation for errors from the truncation of k-series, the algorithm demonstrates its outperformance by one or two orders of magnitude in accuracy versus the scalar-based model, and demands only a reasonable computational resource., Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Excitation transport in quantum devices: analytical time-dependent non-equilibrium green function algorithm
- Author
-
Ho, I-Lin
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
This research demonstrates analytical time-dependent non-equilibrium green function (TD-NEGF) algorithms to investigate dynamical functionalities of quantum devices, especially for photon-assisted transports. Together with the lumped element model, we also study the effects of transiently-transferring charges to reflect the non-conservation of charges in open quantum systems, and implement numerical calculations in hetero-junction systems composed of functional quantum devices and electrode-contacts (to the environment). The results show that (i) the current calculation by the analytical algorithms, versus those by conventional numerical integrals, presents superior numerical stability on a large-time scale, (ii) the correction of charge transfer effects can better clarify non-physical transport issues, e.g. the blocking of AC signaling under the assumption of constant device charges, (iii) the current in the long-time limit validly converges to the steady value obtained by standard time-independent density functional calculations, and (iv) the occurrence of the photon-assisted transport is well-identified., Comment: 16 figures, 26 pages. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1810.02577
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The Effects of Diffuse Ionized Gas and Spatial Resolution on Metallicity Gradients: TYPHOON Two-Dimensional Spectrophotometry of M83
- Author
-
Poetrodjojo, Henry, D'Agostino, Joshua J., Groves, Brent, Kewley, Lisa, Ho, I-Ting, Rich, Jeff, Madore, Barry F., and Seibert, Mark
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a systematic study of the diffuse ionized gas (DIG) in M83 and its effects on the measurement of metallicity gradients at varying resolution scales. Using spectrophotometric data cubes of M83 obtained at the 2.5m duPont telescope at Las Campanas Observatory as part of the TYPHOON program, we separate the HII regions from the DIG using the [SII]/H$\alpha$ ratio, HIIphot (HII finding algorithm) and the H$\alpha$ surface brightness. We find that the contribution to the overall H$\alpha$ luminosity is approximately equal for the HII and DIG regions. The data is then rebinned to simulate low-resolution observations at varying resolution scales from 41 pc up to 1005 pc. Metallicity gradients are measured using five different metallicity diagnostics at each resolution. We find that all metallicity diagnostics used are affected by the inclusion of DIG to varying degrees. We discuss the reasons of why the metallicity gradients are significantly affected by DIG using the HII dominance and emission line ratio radial profiles. We find that applying the [SII]/H$\alpha$ cut will provide a closer estimate of the true metallicity gradient up to a resolution of 1005 pc for all metallicity diagnostics used in this study., Comment: 26 pages, 12 figures + Appendix/Supplementary Material, accepted for publication by MNRAS
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Mapping Gas Phase Abundances and Enrichment Patterns Across Galaxy Disks
- Author
-
Kreckel, Kathryn, Berg, Danielle, Blanc, Guillermo A., Ho, I-Ting, James, Bethan, Katsianis, Antonios, Kollmeier, Juna A., Krumholz, Mark, Law, David R., Rousseau-Nepton, Laurie, Sandstrom, Karin, Skillman, Evan, Ting, Yuan-Sen, Yan, Renbin, and Zaritsky, Dennis
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The distribution of gas-phase abundances in galaxy disks encodes the history of nucleosynthesis and transport through the interstellar medium (ISM) over cosmic time. Multi-object and high resolution integral-field spectroscopy have started to measure these distributions across hundreds of HII regions individually resolved at $\lesssim 100$ pc scales in a handful of objects, but in the coming decade these studies will expand to larger samples of galaxies. This will allow us to understand the role of feedback and turbulence in driving the mixing and diffusion of metals in the ISM, and statistically assess the role of galaxy environment and disk dynamics in modifying how mixing proceeds. Detailed searches for over- and under-enriched regions can address to what extent star formation is triggered by previous generations of star formation and by pristine and recycled gas flows. Local galaxies, for which these detailed measurements will be possible within the next decade, will inform the interpretation of integrated measurements at high-z, where very different dynamical gas-rich environments are found in early disk galaxies. Currently, progress in the field is severely hampered by the 0.2-0.3 dex level systematic uncertainties plaguing nebular abundance diagnostics. Improving our detailed understanding of ionized nebulae at $<$20 pc scales will help us find a solution to this problem, which will prove key to the study of metal enrichment and mixing across the galaxy population in the next decade., Comment: Submitted to the Astro2020 call for science white papers
- Published
- 2019
30. A Machine Learning Artificial Neural Network Calibration of the Strong-Line Oxygen Abundance
- Author
-
Ho, I-Ting
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The HII region oxygen abundance is a key observable for studying chemical properties of galaxies. Deriving oxygen abundances using optical spectra often relies on empirical strong-line calibrations calibrated to the direct method. Existing calibrations usually adopt linear or polynomial functions to describe the non-linear relationships between strong line ratios and Te oxygen abundances. Here, I explore the possibility of using an artificial neural network model to construct a non-linear strong-line calibration. Using about 950 literature HII region spectra with auroral line detections, I build multi-layer perceptron models under the machine learning framework of training and testing. I show that complex models, like the neural network, are preferred at the current sample size and can better predict oxygen abundance than simple linear models. I demonstrate that the new calibration can reproduce metallicity gradients in nearby galaxies and the mass-metallicity relationship. Finally, I discuss the prospects of developing new neural network calibrations using forthcoming large samples of HII region and also the challenges faced., Comment: 12 pages, 15 figures. Accepted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Calibrating star-formation rate prescriptions at different scales (10 pc to 1 kpc) in M31
- Author
-
Tomicic, Neven, Ho, I-Ting, Kreckel, Kathryn, Schinnerer, Eva, Leroy, Adam, Groves, Brent, Sandstrom, Karin, Blanc, Guillermo A., Jarrett, Thomas, Thilker, David, Kapala, Maria, and McElroy, Rebecca
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We calibrate commonly used star formation rate (SFR) prescriptions using observations in five kpc-sized fields in the nearby galaxy Andromeda (M31) at 10\,pc spatial resolution. Our observations at different scales enable us to resolve the star-forming regions and to distinguish them from non star-forming components. We use extinction corrected H$\alpha$ from optical integral field spectroscopy as our reference tracer and have verified its reliability via tests. It is used to calibrate monochromatic and hybrid (H$\alpha$+a$\times$IR and FUV+b$\times$IR) SFR prescriptions, which use FUV (GALEX), 22\,$\mu$m (WISE) and 24\,$\mu$m (MIPS). Additionally, we evaluate other multi-wavelength infra-red tracers. Our results indicate that the SFR prescriptions do not change (in M31) with spatial scales or with subtraction of the diffuse component. For the calibration factors in the hybrid SFR prescriptions, we find a$\approx$0.2 and b$\approx$22 in M31, which are a factor of 5 higher than in the literature. As the fields in M31 exhibit high attenuation and low dust temperatures, lie at large galacto-centric distances, and suffer from high galactic inclination compared to measurements in other galaxies, we propose that the fields probe a dust layer extended along the line of sight that is not directly spatially associated with star-forming regions. This (vertically) extended dust component increases the attenuation and alters the SFR prescriptions in M31 compared to literature measurements. We recommend that SFR prescriptions should be applied with caution at large galacto-centric distances and in highly inclined galaxies, due to variations in the relative (vertical) distribution of dust and gas., Comment: 17 pages of the main text, 28 pages in total, 19 figures (13 figures in the main text), 5 tables (3 tables in the main text)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. A fast model based on muffin-tin approximation to study charge transfer effects in time-dependent quantum transport simulations: doped Si-SiO2 quantum-dot systems
- Author
-
Ho, I-Lin
- Subjects
Physics - Popular Physics - Abstract
In order to quickly study quantum devices in transient problems, this work demonstrates an analytical algorithm to solve the Hartree potential associated with charge fluctuations in the time-dependent non-equilibrium green function (TDNEGF) method. We implement the calculations in the heterojunction system of gold metals and silicon quantum dots for applications of photoelectric semiconductors in the future. Numerical results for the transient solutions are shown to be valid by comparing with the steady solutions calculated by the standard time-independent density functional method., Comment: 29 pages, 13 figures
- Published
- 2018
33. Isolated conductance channels inside the bandgap of GaAs nanowires of zincblende and wurtzite heterostructures
- Author
-
Ho, I Lin and Chang, Yia Chung
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Melt pool geometry dependent microstructural evolution induced by inoculants in IN718 processed by selective laser melting
- Author
-
Ho, I-Ting, Tiparti, Dhruv, and Tin, Sammy
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The effects of CoAl2O4 on the microstructural evolution of Inconel 718 processed by direct energy deposition
- Author
-
Tiparti, Dhruv, Ho, I.-ting, Buergel, Tilo, Carter, Fred, and Tin, Sammy
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Associations between stroke risk factors and left atrial low-voltage areas in patients with atrial fibrillation undergoing catheter ablation from the REAL-AF registry
- Author
-
Nguyen, A, primary, Pulaski, M, additional, Thorne, C, additional, Nauffal, V, additional, Osorio, J, additional, Singleton, M J, additional, Zadeh, A, additional, Zei, P, additional, Ho, I, additional, Rajendra, A, additional, Mareddy, C, additional, Lee, K, additional, Metzl, M, additional, and Zaman, J A B, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. First-time catheter ablation outcomes for atrial fibrillation are dependent on low-voltage areas rather than paroxysmal vs. persistent classifications: a REAL-AF study
- Author
-
Nguyen, A, primary, Pulaski, M, additional, Thorne, C, additional, Nauffal, V, additional, Osorio, J, additional, Singleton, M J, additional, Zadeh, A, additional, Zei, P, additional, Ho, I, additional, Rajendra, A, additional, Mareddy, C, additional, Lee, K, additional, Metzl, M, additional, and Zaman, J A B, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Analysis of Time-Dependent Soil Behavior Above High-Filled Cut-and-Cover Tunnels Using Discrete Element Method
- Author
-
Li, Sheng, Han, Guoqiang, Ho, I-Hsuan, Ma, Li, Muhunthan, Balasingam, Wang, Qicai, and Wang, Changdan
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Study of wide-spectrum and high-resolution diffraction optical elements by stacks of binary phase gratings
- Author
-
Ho, I-Lin and Li, Wang-Yang
- Subjects
Physics - Optics ,Physics - Popular Physics - Abstract
This work theoretically investigates wide-spectrum and high-resolution diffraction optical elements (DOE) that are made of stacks of low-resolution binary phase gratings, whereby the two-dimensional grids in different grating layers are arranged with specified displacements. We remodel the common Kinoform algorithm for this multi-scale architecture. Numerical computations show that, by increasing the number of stacking layers, the resolution of diffraction fields can be improved and that the stability of optical elements within broad spectrums is significantly enhanced. Practical concern on largely increasing the number of grating layers are efficiency of the optical designs in theory and the manufacture of stacks of ultra-thin grating films., Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, submitting
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Azimuthal variations of gas-phase oxygen abundance in NGC 2997
- Author
-
Ho, I-Ting, Meidt, Sharon E., Kudritzki, Rolf-Peter, Groves, Brent A., Seibert, Mark, Madore, Barry F., Schinnerer, Eva, Rich, Jeffrey A., Kobayashi, Chiaki, and Kewley, Lisa J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The azimuthal variation of the HII region oxygen abundance in spiral galaxies is a key observable for understanding how quickly oxygen produced by massive stars can be dispersed within the surrounding interstellar medium. Observational constraints on the prevalence and magnitude of such azimuthal variations remain rare in the literature. Here, we report the discovery of pronounced azimuthal variations of HII region oxygen abundance in NGC 2997, a spiral galaxy at approximately 11.3 Mpc. Using 3D spectroscopic data from the TYPHOON Program, we study the HII region oxygen abundance at a physical resolution of 125 pc. Individual HII regions or complexes are identified in the 3D optical data and their strong emission line fluxes measured to constrain their oxygen abundances. We find 0.06 dex azimuthal variations in the oxygen abundance on top of a radial abundance gradient that is comparable to those seen in other star-forming disks. At a given radial distance, the oxygen abundances are highest in the spiral arms and lower in the inter-arm regions, similar to what has been reported in NGC 1365 using similar observations. We discuss whether the azimuthal variations could be recovered when the galaxy is observed at worse physical resolutions and lower signal-to-noise ratios., Comment: 13 pages, 17 figures, accepted to A&A
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Starburst-AGN mixing: TYPHOON observations of NGC 1365, NGC 1068, and the effect of spatial resolution on the AGN fraction
- Author
-
D'Agostino, Joshua J., Poetrodjojo, Henry, Ho, I-Ting, Groves, Brent, Kewley, Lisa, Madore, Barry F., Rich, Jeff, and Seibert, Mark
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We demonstrate a robust method of resolving the star-formation and AGN contributions to emission lines using two very well known AGN systems: NGC 1365, and NGC 1068, using the high spatial resolution data from the TYPHOON/PrISM survey. We expand the previous method of calculating the AGN fraction by using theoretical-based model grids rather than empirical points. The high spatial resolution of the TYPHOON/PrISM observations show evidence of both star formation and AGN activity occurring in the nuclei of the two galaxies. We rebin the data to the lower resolutions, typically found in other integral field spectroscopy surveys such as SAMI, MaNGA, and CALIFA. The results show that when rebinned from the native resolution of TYPHOON (< 200 pc/pixel) to 1 kpc/pixel, the effects include a roughly 3 kpc increase in the radius of measured AGN activity, and a factor of 2 to 7 increase in the detection of low surface brightness features such as shocks. All of this information is critical, because information on certain physical processes may be lost at varying resolutions. We make recommendations for analysing data at current IFU survey resolutions., Comment: 30 pages, 28 figures, accepted for publication by MNRAS
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Spatially resolved electron density in the Narrow Line Region of z<0.02 radio AGNs
- Author
-
Kakkad, D., Groves, B., Dopita, M., Thomas, Adam D., Davies, Rebecca L., Mainieri, V., Kharb, Preeti, Scharwächter, J., Hampton, E. J., and Ho, I-Ting
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Although studying outflows in the host galaxies of AGN have become the forefront of extra-galactic astronomy in recent years, estimating the energy associated with these outflows have been a major challenge. Determination of the energy associated with an outflow often involves an assumption of uniform density in the NLR, which span a wide range in literature leading to large systematic uncertainties in energy estimation. In this paper, we present electron density maps for a sample of outflowing and non-outflowing Seyfert galaxies at z<0.02 drawn from the S7 survey and understand the origin and values of the observed density structures to reduce the systematic uncertainties in outflow energy estimation. We use the ratio of the [SII]6716,6731 emission lines to derive spatially resolved electron densities (<50-2000 cm$^{-3}$). Using optical IFU observations, we are able to measure densities across the central 2-5 kpc of the selected AGN host galaxies. We compare the density maps with the positions of the HII regions derived from the narrow H$\alpha$ component, ionization maps from [OIII], and spatially resolved BPT diagrams, to infer the origin of the observed density structures. We also use the electron density maps to construct density profiles as a function of distance from the central AGN. We find a spatial correlation between the sites of high star formation and high electron density for targets without an active ionized outflow. The non-outflowing targets also show an exponential drop in the electron density as a function of distance from the center, with a mean exponential index of ~0.15. The correlation between the star forming sites and electron density ceases for targets with an outflow. The density within the outflowing medium is not uniform and shows both low and high density sites, most likely due to the presence of shocks and highly turbulent medium., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 16 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The SAMI Galaxy Survey: Spatially Resolving the Main Sequence of Star Formation
- Author
-
Medling, Anne M., Cortese, Luca, Croom, Scott M., Green, Andrew W., Groves, Brent, Hampton, Elise, Ho, I-Ting, Davies, Luke J. M., Kewley, Lisa J., Moffett, Amanda J., Schaefer, Adam L., Taylor, Edward, Zafar, Tayyaba, Bekki, Kenji, Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Bloom, Jessica V., Brough, Sarah, Bryant, Julia J., Catinella, Barbara, Cecil, Gerald, Colless, Matthew, Couch, Warrick J., Drinkwater, Michael J., Driver, Simon P., Federrath, Christoph, Foster, Caroline, Goldstein, Gregory, Goodwin, Michael, Hopkins, Andrew, Lawrence, J. S., Leslie, Sarah K., Lewis, Geraint F., Lorente, Nuria P. F., Owers, Matt S., McDermid, Richard, Richards, Samuel N., Sharp, Robert, Scott, Nicholas, Sweet, Sarah M., Taranu, Dan S., Tescari, Edoardo, Tonini, Chiara, van de Sande, Jesse, Walcher, C. Jakob, and Wright, Angus
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the ~800 star formation rate maps for the SAMI Galaxy Survey based on H{\alpha} emission maps, corrected for dust attenuation via the Balmer decrement, that are included in the SAMI Public Data Release 1. We mask out spaxels contaminated by non-stellar emission using the [O III]/H{\beta}, [N II]/H{\alpha}, [S II]/H{\alpha}, and [O I]/H{\alpha} line ratios. Using these maps, we examine the global and resolved star-forming main sequences of SAMI galaxies as a function of morphology, environmental density, and stellar mass. Galaxies further below the star-forming main sequence are more likely to have flatter star formation profiles. Early-type galaxies split into two populations with similar stellar masses and central stellar mass surface densities. The main sequence population has centrally-concentrated star formation similar to late-type galaxies, while galaxies >3{\sigma} below the main sequence show significantly reduced star formation most strikingly in the nuclear regions. The split populations support a two-step quenching mechanism, wherein halo mass first cuts off the gas supply and remaining gas continues to form stars until the local stellar mass surface density can stabilize the reduced remaining fuel against further star formation. Across all morphologies, galaxies in denser environments show a decreased specific star formation rate from the outside in, supporting an environmental cause for quenching, such as ram-pressure stripping or galaxy interactions., Comment: accepted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Deciphering microstructure-defect-property relationships of vacuum-sintered binder jetted fine 316 L austenitic stainless steel powder
- Author
-
Jamalkhani, Mohammad, Asherloo, Mohammadreza, Gurlekce, Omer, Ho, I-Ting, Heim, Mike, Nelson, Dave, and Mostafaei, Amir
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Syndecan-2 regulates PAD2 to exert antifibrotic effects on RA-ILD fibroblasts
- Author
-
Tsoyi, Konstantin, Esposito, Anthony J., Sun, Bo, Bowen, Ryan G., Xiong, Kevin, Poli, Fernando, Cardenas, Rafael, Chu, Sarah G., Liang, Xiaoliang, Ryter, Stefan W., Beeton, Christine, Doyle, Tracy J., Robertson, Matthew J., Celada, Lindsay J., Romero, Freddy, El-Chemaly, Souheil Y., Perrella, Mark A., Ho, I.-Cheng, and Rosas, Ivan O.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The SAMI Galaxy Survey: understanding observations of large-scale outflows at low redshift with EAGLE simulations
- Author
-
Tescari, E., Cortese, L., Power, C., Wyithe, J. S. B., Ho, I. -T., Crain, R. A., Bland-Hawthorn, J., Croom, S. M., Kewley, L. J., Schaye, J., Bower, R. G., Theuns, T., Schaller, M., Barnes, L., Brough, S., Bryant, J. J., Goodwin, M., Gunawardhana, M. L. P., Lawrence, J. S., Leslie, S. K., López-Sánchez, Á. R., Lorente, N. P. F., Medling, A. M., Richards, S. N., Sweet, S. M., and Tonini, C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
This work presents a study of galactic outflows driven by stellar feedback. We extract main sequence disc galaxies with stellar mass $10^9\le$ M$_{\star}/$M$_{\odot} \le 5.7\times10^{10}$ at redshift $z=0$ from the highest resolution cosmological simulation of the Evolution and Assembly of GaLaxies and their Environments (EAGLE) set. Synthetic gas rotation velocity and velocity dispersion ($\sigma$) maps are created and compared to observations of disc galaxies obtained with the Sydney-AAO Multi-object Integral field spectrograph (SAMI), where $\sigma$-values greater than $150$ km s$^{-1}$ are most naturally explained by bipolar outflows powered by starburst activity. We find that the extension of the simulated edge-on (pixelated) velocity dispersion probability distribution depends on stellar mass and star formation rate surface density ($\Sigma_{\rm SFR}$), with low-M$_{\star}/$low-$\Sigma_{\rm SFR}$ galaxies showing a narrow peak at low $\sigma$ ($\sim30$ km s$^{-1}$) and more active, high-M$_{\star}/$high-$\Sigma_{\rm SFR}$ galaxies reaching $\sigma>150$ km s$^{-1}$. Although supernova-driven galactic winds in the EAGLE simulations may not entrain enough gas with T $<10^5$ K compared to observed galaxies, we find that gas temperature is a good proxy for the presence of outflows. There is a direct correlation between the thermal state of the gas and its state of motion as described by the $\sigma$-distribution. The following equivalence relations hold in EAGLE: $i)$ low-$\sigma$ peak $\,\Leftrightarrow\,$ disc of the galaxy $\,\Leftrightarrow\,$ gas with T $<10^5$ K; $ii)$ high-$\sigma$ tail $\,\Leftrightarrow\,$ galactic winds $\,\Leftrightarrow\,$ gas with T $\ge 10^5$ K., Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Stellar Absorption Line Analysis of Local Star-Forming Galaxies: The Relation Between Stellar Mass, Metallicity, Dust Attenuation and Star Formation Rate
- Author
-
Zahid, H. Jabran, Kudritzki, Rolf-Peter, Conroy, Charlie, Andrews, Brett, and Ho, I-Ting
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Physics - General Physics - Abstract
We analyze the optical continuum of star-forming galaxies in SDSS by fitting stacked spectra with stellar population synthesis models to investigate the relation between stellar mass, stellar metallicity, dust attenuation and star formation rate. We fit models calculated with star formation and chemical evolution histories that are derived empirically from multi-epoch observations of the stellar mass---star formation rate and the stellar mass---gas-phase metallicity relations, respectively. We also fit linear combinations of single burst models with a range of metallicities and ages. Star formation and chemical evolution histories are unconstrained for these models. The stellar mass---stellar metallicity relations obtained from the two methods agree with the relation measured from individual supergiant stars in nearby galaxies. These relations are also consistent with the relation obtained from emission line analysis of gas-phase metallicity after accounting for systematic offsets in the gas-phase-metallicity. We measure dust attenuation of the stellar continuum and show that its dependence on stellar mass and star formation rate is consistent with previously reported results derived from nebular emission lines. However, stellar continuum attenuation is smaller than nebular emission line attenuation. The continuum-to-nebular attenuation ratio depends on stellar mass and is smaller in more massive galaxies. Our consistent analysis of stellar continuum and nebular emission lines paves the way for a comprehensive investigation of stellar metallicities of star-forming and quiescent galaxies., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The Chemical Evolution Carousel of Spiral Galaxies: Azimuthal Variations of Oxygen Abundance in NGC1365
- Author
-
Ho, I-Ting, Seibert, Mark, Meidt, Sharon E., Kudritzki, Rolf-Peter, Kobayashi, Chiaki, Groves, Brent A., Kewley, Lisa J., Madore, Barry F., Rich, Jeffrey A., Schinnerer, Eva, D'Agostino, Joshua, and Poetrodjojo, Henry
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The spatial distribution of oxygen in the interstellar medium of galaxies is the key to understanding how efficiently metals that are synthesized in massive stars can be redistributed across a galaxy. We present here a case study in the nearby spiral galaxy NGC1365 using 3D optical data obtained in the TYPHOON Program. We find systematic azimuthal variations of the HII region oxygen abundance imprinted on a negative radial gradient. The 0.2 dex azimuthal variations occur over a wide radial range of 0.3 to 0.7 R25 and peak at the two spiral arms in NGC1365. We show that the azimuthal variations can be explained by two physical processes: gas undergoes localized, sub-kpc scale self-enrichment when orbiting in the inter-arm region, and experiences efficient, kpc scale mixing-induced dilution when spiral density waves pass through. We construct a simple chemical evolution model to quantitatively test this picture and find that our toy model can reproduce the observations. This result suggests that the observed abundance variations in NGC1365 are a snapshot of the dynamical local enrichment of oxygen modulated by spiral-driven, periodic mixing and dilution., Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures. Accepted to ApJ
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The SAMI Galaxy Survey: Data Release One with Emission-line Physics Value-Added Products
- Author
-
Green, Andrew W., Croom, Scott M., Scott, Nicholas, Cortese, Luca, Medling, Anne M., D'Eugenio, Francesco, Bryant, Julia J., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Allen, J. T., Sharp, Rob, Ho, I-Ting, Groves, Brent, Drinkwater, Michael J., Mannering, Elizabeth, Harischandra, Lloyd, van de Sande, Jesse, Thomas, Adam D., O'Toole, Simon, McDermid, Richard M., Vuong, Minh, Sealey, Katrina, Bauer, Amanda E., Brough, S., Catinella, Barbara, Cecil, Gerald, Colless, Matthew, Couch, Warrick J., Driver, Simon P., Federrath, Christoph, Foster, Caroline, Goodwin, Michael, Hampton, Elise J., Hopkins, A. M., Jones, D. Heath, Konstantopoulos, Iraklis S., Lawrence, J. S., Leon-Saval, Sergio G., Liske, Jochen, Lopez-Sanchez, Angel R., Lorente, Nuria P. F., Mould, Jeremy, Obreschkow, Danail, Owers, Matt S., Richards, Samuel N., Robotham, Aaron S. G., Schaefer, Adam L., Sweet, Sarah M., Taranu, Dan S., Tescari, Edoardo, Tonini, Chiara, and Zafar, T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first major release of data from the SAMI Galaxy Survey. This data release focuses on the emission-line physics of galaxies. Data Release One includes data for 772 galaxies, about 20% of the full survey. Galaxies included have the redshift range 0.004 < z < 0.092, a large mass range (7.6 < log(Mstellar/M$_\odot$) < 11.6), and star-formation rates of 10^-4 to 10^1\ M$_\odot$/yr. For each galaxy, we include two spectral cubes and a set of spatially resolved 2D maps: single- and multi-component emission-line fits (with dust extinction corrections for strong lines), local dust extinction and star-formation rate. Calibration of the fibre throughputs, fluxes and differential-atmospheric-refraction has been improved over the Early Data Release. The data have average spatial resolution of 2.16 arcsec (FWHM) over the 15~arcsec diameter field of view and spectral (kinematic) resolution R=4263 (sigma=30km/s) around Halpha. The relative flux calibration is better than 5\% and absolute flux calibration better than $\pm0.22$~mag, with the latter estimate limited by galaxy photometry. The data are presented online through the Australian Astronomical Observatory's Data Central., Comment: Submitted to MNRAS. SAMI DR1 data products available from http://datacentral.aao.gov.au/asvo/surveys/sami/
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The SAMI Galaxy Survey: Disk-halo interactions in radio-selected star-forming galaxies
- Author
-
Leslie, S. K., Bryant, J. J., Ho, I. -T., Sadler, E. M., Medling, A. M., Groves, B., Kewley, L. J., Bland-Hawthorn, J., Croom, S. M., Wong, O. I., Brough, S., Tescari, E., Sweet, S. M., Sharp, R., Green, A. W., López-Sánchez, A. R., Allen, J. T., Fogarty, L. M. R., Goodwin, M., Lawrence, J. S., Konstantopoulos, I. S., Owers, M. S., and Richards, S. N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
In this paper, we compare the radio emission at 1.4 GHz with optical outflow signatures of edge-on galaxies. We report observations of six edge-on star-forming galaxies in the Sydney-AAO Multi-object Integral-field spectrograph (SAMI) Galaxy Survey with 1.4 GHz luminosities $> 1\times10^{21}$ W Hz$^{-1}$. Extended minor axis optical emission is detected with enhanced \nii/H$\alpha$ line ratios and velocity dispersions consistent with galactic winds in three of six galaxies. These galaxies may host outflows driven by a combination of thermal and cosmic ray processes. We find that galaxies with the strongest wind signatures have extended radio morphologies. Our results form a baseline for understanding the driving mechanisms of galactic winds., Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures. Published in MNRAS July 2017
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.