644 results on '"Li, J. Z."'
Search Results
2. Review on Ventilation Efficiency and Planning of Urban Blocks in the Context of Carbon Neutrality
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Liu, X. Y., Wang, B., Qian, Y. T., Li, J. Z., Xue, Z. J., di Prisco, Marco, Series Editor, Chen, Sheng-Hong, Series Editor, Vayas, Ioannis, Series Editor, Kumar Shukla, Sanjay, Series Editor, Sharma, Anuj, Series Editor, Kumar, Nagesh, Series Editor, Wang, Chien Ming, Series Editor, Cui, Zhen-Dong, Series Editor, Papadikis, Konstantinos, editor, Zhang, Cheng, editor, Tang, Shu, editor, Liu, Engui, editor, and Di Sarno, Luigi, editor
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- 2024
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3. A CFD–DEM study on the suffusion and shear behaviors of gap-graded soils under stress anisotropy
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Hu, Z., Li, J. Z., Zhang, Y. D., Yang, Z. X., and Liu, J. K.
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- 2023
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4. Lifetime measurements of the first 2+ states in Te116,118
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Li, C. B., primary, Zheng, Y., additional, Li, T. X., additional, Wu, X. G., additional, Wu, H. Y., additional, Zheng, M., additional, Zhao, Z. H., additional, Li, Y. Q., additional, Hong, R., additional, He, Z. Y., additional, Li, J. Z., additional, Wang, J. L., additional, Guo, C. Y., additional, Zhou, Z. X., additional, Ni, L., additional, Li, G. S., additional, Zhou, X. H., additional, Guo, B., additional, Wang, S. Y., additional, Liu, M. L., additional, Zhang, Y. H., additional, He, C. Y., additional, Liu, F. L., additional, Wang, S., additional, and Zhu, L. H., additional
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- 2024
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5. Investigation of the treatment modality in primary lymphoma of the salivary glands
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Zhang, Y.-Y., Mao, M.-H., Feng, Z.-E., Li, J.-Z., Qin, L.-Z., and Han, Z.-X.
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- 2021
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6. The Coordination- and Photochemistry of a New Dinuclear Copper(I) Bis(diphenylphosphino)methane (1 : 2) Complex
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Liu, K. G., Gao, X. M., Li, J. Z., Wei, X. W., Wang, R., Huang, Y., and Yan, X. W.
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- 2020
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7. Herschel Observations of the W3 GMC: Clues to the Formation of Clusters of High-Mass Stars
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Rivera-Ingraham, A., Martin, P. G., Polychroni, D., Motte, F., Schneider, N., Bontemps, S., Hennemann, M., Menshchikov, A., Luong, Q. Nguyen, Andre, Ph., Arzoumanian, D., Bernard, J. -Ph., Di Francesco, J., Elia, D., Fallscheer, C., Hill, T., Li, J. Z., Minier, V., Pezzuto, S., Roy, A., Rygl, K. L. J., Sadavoy, S. I., Spinoglio, L., White, G. J., and Wilson, C. D.
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Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
The W3 GMC is a prime target for the study of the early stages of high-mass star formation. We have used Herschel data from the HOBYS key program to produce and analyze column density and temperature maps. Two preliminary catalogs were produced by extracting sources from the column density map and from Herschel maps convolved to the 500 micron resolution. Herschel reveals that among the compact sources (FWHM<0.45 pc), W3 East, W3 West, and W3 (OH) are the most massive and luminous and have the highest column density. Considering the unique properties of W3 East and W3 West, the only clumps with on-going high-mass star formation, we suggest a 'convergent constructive feedback' scenario to account for the formation of a cluster with decreasing age and increasing system/source mass toward the innermost regions. This process, which relies on feedback by high-mass stars to ensure the availability of material during cluster formation, could also lead to the creation of an environment suitable for the formation of Trapezium-like systems. In common with other scenarios proposed in other HOBYS studies, our results indicate that an active/dynamic process aiding in the accumulation, compression, and confinement of material is a critical feature of the high-mass star/cluster formation, distinguishing it from classical low-mass star formation. The environmental conditions and availability of triggers determine the form in which this process occurs, implying that high-mass star/cluster formation could arise from a range of scenarios: from large scale convergence of turbulent flows, to convergent constructive feedback or mergers of filaments., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2013
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8. A mapping study of L1174 with 13CO J=2-1 and 12CO J=3-2: star formation triggered by a Herbig Ae/Be star
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Yuan, J. H., Wu, Y., Li, J. Z., Yu, W., and Miller, M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We have carried out a comprehensive study of the molecular conditions and star-forming activities in dark cloud L1174 with multi-wavelength data. Mapping observations of L1174 in $^{13}$CO $J=2-1$ and $^{12}$CO $J=3-2$ were performed using the KOSMA 3-meter telescope. Six molecular cores with masses ranging from 5 to 31 $M_\odot$ and sizes ranging from 0.17 to 0.39 pc are resolved. Large area ahead of a Herbig Be star, HD 200775, is in expanding and core 1 is with collapse signature. Large line widths of $^{13}$CO $J=2-1$ indicate the ubiquity of turbulent motions in this region. Spectra of $^{12}$CO $J=3-2$ prevalently show conspicuously asymmetric double-peaked profiles. In a large area, red-skewed profiles are detected and suggestive of a scenario of global expansion. There is a large cavity around the Herbig Be star HD 200775, the brightest star in L1174. The gas around the cavity has been severely compressed by the stellar winds from HD 200775. Feedbacks from HD 200775 may have helped form the molecular cores around the cavity. Seventeen 2MASS potential young stellar objects were identified according to their 2MASS colour indices. The spatial distribution of the these 2MASS sources indicates that some of them have a triggered origin. All these suggest that feedbacks from a Herbig Ae/Be star may also have the potential to trigger star forming activities., Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures; Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2012
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9. The spine of the swan: A Herschel study of the DR21 ridge and filaments in Cygnus X
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Hennemann, M., Motte, F., Schneider, N., Didelon, P., Hill, T., Arzoumanian, D., Bontemps, S., Csengeri, T., Andre, Ph., Konyves, V., Louvet, F., Marston, A., Men'shchikov, A., Minier, V., Luong, Q. Nguyen, Palmeirim, P., Peretto, N., Sauvage, M., Zavagno, A., Anderson, L. D., Bernard, J. -Ph., Di Francesco, J., Elia, D., Li, J. Z., Martin, P. G., Molinari, S., Pezzuto, S., Russeil, D., Rygl, K. L. J., Schisano, E., Spinoglio, L., Sousbie, T., Ward-Thompson, D., and White, G. J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
In order to characterise the cloud structures responsible for the formation of high-mass stars, we present Herschel observations of the DR21 environment. Maps of the column density and dust temperature unveil the structure of the DR21 ridge and several connected filaments. The ridge has column densities larger than 1e23/cm^2 over a region of 2.3 pc^2. It shows substructured column density profiles and branching into two major filaments in the north. The masses in the studied filaments range between 130 and 1400 Msun whereas the mass in the ridge is 15000 Msun. The accretion of these filaments onto the DR21 ridge, suggested by a previous molecular line study, could provide a continuous mass inflow to the ridge. In contrast to the striations seen in e.g., the Taurus region, these filaments are gravitationally unstable and form cores and protostars. These cores formed in the filaments potentially fall into the ridge. Both inflow and collisions of cores could be important to drive the observed high-mass star formation. The evolutionary gradient of star formation running from DR21 in the south to the northern branching is traced by decreasing dust temperature. This evolution and the ridge structure can be explained by two main filamentary components of the ridge that merged first in the south., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication as a Letter in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2012
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10. The M16 molecular complex under the influence of NGC6611. Herschel's perspective of the heating effect on the Eagle Nebula
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Hill, T., Motte, F., Didelon, P., White, G. J., Marston, A. P., Luong, Q. Nguyen, Bontemps, S., André, Ph., Schneider, N., Hennemann, M., Sauvage, M., Di Francesco, J., Minier, V., Anderson, L. D., Bernard, J. P., Elia, D., Griffin, M. J., Li, J. Z., Peretto, N., Pezzuto, S., Polychroni, D., Roussel, H., Rygl, K. L. J., Schisano, E., Sousbie, T., Testi, L., Thompson, D. Ward, and Zavagno, A.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present Herschel images from the HOBYS key program of the Eagle Nebula (M16) in the far-infrared and sub-millimetre, using the PACS and SPIRE cameras at 70{\mu}m, 160{\mu}m, 250{\mu}m, 350{\mu}m, 500{\mu}m. M16, home to the Pillars of Creation, is largely under the influence of the nearby NGC6611 high-mass star cluster. The Herschel images reveal a clear dust temperature gradient running away from the centre of the cavity carved by the OB cluster. We investigate the heating effect of NGC6611 on the entire M16 star-forming complex seen by Herschel including the diffuse cloud environment and the dense filamentary structures identified in this region. In addition, we interpret the three-dimensional geometry of M16 with respect to the nebula, its surrounding environment, and the NGC6611 cavity. The dust temperature and column density maps reveal a prominent eastern filament running north-south and away from the high-mass star-forming central region and the NGC6611 cluster, as well as a northern filament which extends around and away from the cluster. The dust temperature in each of these filaments decreases with increasing distance from the NGC6611 cluster, indicating a heating penetration depth of \sim 10 pc in each direction in 3 - 6 \times 10^{22} cm-2 column density filaments. We show that in high-mass star-forming regions OB clusters impact the temperature of future star-forming sites, modifying the initial conditions for collapse and effecting the evolutionary criteria of protostars developed from spectral energy distributions. Possible scenarios for the origin of the morphology seen in this region are discussed, including a western equivalent to the eastern filament, which was destroyed by the creation of the OB cluster and its subsequent winds and radiation., Comment: 12 pages, including 3 appendix, 9 figures, accepted by A&A
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- 2012
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11. The discovery based on GLIMPSE data of a protostar driving a bipolar outflow
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Yuan, J. H., Li, J. Z., Huang, Y. F., Hsia, C. H., and Miao, J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery based on GLIMPSE data of a proto-stellar system driving a bipolar outflow . The bipolar outflow closely resembles the shape of an hourglass in the infrared. The total luminosity of L_total=5507 L_sun, derived from IRAS fluxes, indicates the ongoing formation of a massive star in this region. The spectral energy distribution (SED) of the driving source is fitted with an online SED fitting tool, which results in a spectral index of about 1.2. This, along with the presence of a bipolar outflow, suggests the detection of a Class I protostar. The driving source indicates prominent infrared excesses in color-color diagrams based on archived 2MASS and GLIMPSE data, which is in line with an early evolutionary stage of the system., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2012
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12. A 100-parsec elliptical and twisted ring of cold and dense molecular clouds revealed by Herschel around the Galactic Center
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Molinari, S., Bally, J., Noriega-Crespo, A., Compiègne, M., Bernard, J. P., Paradis, D., Martin, P., Testi, L., Barlow, M., Moore, T., Plume, R., Swinyard, B., Zavagno, A., Calzoletti, L., Di Giorgio, A. M., Elia, D., Faustini, F., Natoli, P., Pestalozzi, M., Pezzuto, S., Piacentini, F., Polenta, G., Polychroni, D., Schisano, E., Traficante, A., Veneziani, M., Battersby, C., Burton, M., Carey, S., Fukui, Y., Li, J. Z., Lord, S. D., Morgan, L., Motte, F., Schuller, F., Stringfellow, G. S., Tan, J. C., Thompson, M. A., Ward-Thompson, D., White, G., and Umana, G.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Thermal images of cold dust in the Central Molecular Zone of the Milky Way, obtained with the far-infrared cameras on-board the Herschel satellite, reveal a 3x10^7 solar masses ring of dense and cold clouds orbiting the Galactic Center. Using a simple toy-model, an elliptical shape having semi-major axes of 100 and 60 parsecs is deduced. The major axis of this 100-pc ring is inclined by about 40 degrees with respect to the plane-of-the-sky and is oriented perpendicular to the major axes of the Galactic Bar. The 100-pc ring appears to trace the system of stable x_2 orbits predicted for the barred Galactic potential. Sgr A* is displaced with respect to the geometrical center of symmetry of the ring. The ring is twisted and its morphology suggests a flattening-ratio of 2 for the Galactic potential, which is in good agreement with the bulge flattening ratio derived from the 2MASS data., Comment: ApJ Letters, accepted
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- 2011
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13. Herschel Observations of the W43 'mini-starburst'
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Bally, J., Anderson, L. D., Battersby, C., Calzoletti, L., DiGiorgio, A. M., Faustini, F., Ginsburg, A., Li, J. Z., Nguyen-Luong, Q., Molinari, S., Motte, F., Pestalozzi, M., Plume, R., Rodon, J., Schilke, P., Schlingman, W., Schneider-Bontemps, N., Shirley, Y., Stringfellow, G. S., Testi, L., Traficante, A., Veneziani, M., and Zavagno, A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Aims: To explore the infrared and radio properties of one of the closest Galactic starburst regions. Methods: Images obtained with the Herschel Space Observatory at wavelengths of 70, 160, 250, 350, and 500 microns using the PACS and SPIRE arrays are analyzed and compared with radio continuum VLA data and 8 micron images from the Spitzer Space Telescope. The morphology of the far-infrared emission is combined with radial velocity measurements of millimeter and centimeter wavelength transitions to identify features likely to be associated with the W43 complex. Results: The W43 star-forming complex is resolved into a dense cluster of protostars, infrared dark clouds, and ridges of warm dust heated by massive stars. The 4 brightest compact sources with L > 1.5 x 10^4 Lsun embedded within the Z-shaped ridge of bright dust emission in W43 remain single at 4" (0.1 pc) resolution. These objects, likely to be massive protostars or compact clusters in early stages of evolution are embedded in clumps with masses of 10^3 to 10^4 Msun, but contribute only 2% to the 3.6 x 10^6 Lsun far-IR luminosity of W43 measured in a 16 by 16 pc box. The total mass of gas derived from the far-IR dust emission inside this region is ~10^6 Msun. Cometary dust clouds, compact 6 cm radio sources, and warm dust mark the locations of older populations of massive stars. Energy release has created a cavity blowing-out below the Galactic plane. Compression of molecular gas in the plane by the older HII region near G30.684-0.260 and the bipolar structure of the resulting younger W43 HII region may have triggered the current mini-star burst., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for A&A Special Issue
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- 2010
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14. The Herschel view of star formation in the Rosette molecular cloud under the influence of NGC 2244
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Schneider, N., Motte, F., Bontemps, S., Hennemann, M., DiFrancesco, J., Andr, Ph., Zavagno, A., Csengeri, T., Men'shchikov, A., Abergel, A., Baluteau, J. -P., Bernard, J. -Ph., Cox, P., Didelon, P., diGiorgio, A. -M, Gastaud, R., Griffin, M., Hargrave, P., Hill, T., Huang, M., Kirk, J., Konyves, V., Leeks, S., Li, J. Z., Marston, A., Martin, P., Minier, V., Molinari, S., Olofsson, G., Panuzzo, P., Persi, P., Pezzuto, S., Roussel, H., Russeil, D., Sadavoy, S., Saraceno, P., Sauvage, M., Sibthorpe, B., Spinoglio, L., Testi, L, Teyssier, D., Vavrek, R., Ward-Thompson, D., White, G., Wilson, C. D., and Woodcraf, A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Rosette molecular cloud is promoted as the archetype of a triggered star-formation site. This is mainly due to its morphology, because the central OB cluster NGC 2244 has blown a circular-shaped cavity into the cloud and the expanding HII-region now interacts with the cloud. Studying the spatial distribution of the different evolutionary states of all star-forming sites in Rosette and investigating possible gradients of the dust temperature will help to test the 'triggered star-formation' scenario in Rosette. We use continuum data obtained with the PACS (70 and 160 micron) and SPIRE instruments (250, 350, 500 micron) of the Herschel telescope during the Science Demonstration Phase of HOBYS. Three-color images of Rosette impressively show how the molecular gas is heated by the radiative impact of the NGC 2244 cluster. A clear negative temperature gradient and a positive density gradient (running from the HII-region/molecular cloud interface into the cloud) are detected. Studying the spatial distribution of the most massive dense cores (size scale 0.05 to 0.3 pc), we find an age-sequence (from more evolved to younger) with increasing distance to the cluster NGC 2244. No clear gradient is found for the clump (size-scale up to 1 pc) distribution. The existence of temperature and density gradients and the observed age-sequence imply that star formation in Rosette may indeed be influenced by the radiative impact of the central NGC 2244 cluster. A more complete overview of the prestellar and protostellar population in Rosette is required to obtain a firmer result., Comment: Letter in press for Astronomy & Astrophysics Herschel Special Issue
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- 2010
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15. Small-scale structure in the Rosette molecular cloud revealed by Herschel
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Di Francesco, J., Sadavoy, S., Motte, F., Schneider, N., Hennemann, M., Bontemps, S., Csengeri, T., Balog, Z., Zavagno, A., Andre, Ph., Saraceno, P., Griffin, M., Men'shchikov, A., Abergel, A., Baluteau, J. -P., Bernard, J. -Ph., Cox, P., Deharveng, L., Didelon, P., di Giorgio, A. -M., Hargrave, P., Huang, M., Kirk, J., Leeks, S., Li, J. Z., Marston, A., Martin, P., Minier, V., Molinari, S., Olofsson, G., Persi, P., Pezzuto, S., Russeil, D., Sauvage, M., Sibthorpe, B., Spinoglio, L., Testi, L., Teyssier, D., Vavrek, R., Ward-Thompson, D., White, G., Wilson, C., and Woodcraft, A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a preliminary analysis of the small-scale structure found in new 70-520 micron continuum maps of the Rosette molecular cloud (RMC), obtained with the SPIRE and PACS instruments of the Herschel Space Observatory. We find 473 clumps within the RMC using a new structure identification algorithm, with sizes up to ~1.0 pc in diameter. A comparison with recent Spitzer maps reveals that 371 clumps are "starless" (without an associated young stellar object), while 102 are "protostellar." Using the respective values of dust temperature, we determine the clumps have masses (M_C) over the range -0.75 <= log (M_C/M_sun) <= 2.50. Linear fits to the high-mass tails of the resulting clump mass spectra (CMS) have slopes that are consistent with those found for high-mass clumps identified in CO emission by other groups., Comment: 6 pages, to be published in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2010
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16. Clouds, filaments and protostars: the Herschel Hi-GAL Milky Way
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Molinari, S., Swinyard, B., Bally, J., Barlow, M., Bernard, J. P., Martin, P., Moore, T., Noriega-Crespo, A., Plume, R., Testi, L., Zavagno, A., Abergel, A., Ali, B., Anderson, L., André, P., Baluteau, J. P., Battersby, C., Beltrán, M. T., Benedettini, M., Billot, N., Blommaert, J., Bontemps, S., Boulanger, F., Brand, J., Brunt, C., Burton, M., Calzoletti, L., Carey, S., Caselli, P., Cesaroni, R., Cernicharo, J., Chakrabarti, S., Chrysostomou, A., Cohen, M., Compiegne, M., de Bernardis, P., de Gasperis, G., di Giorgio, A. M., Elia, D., Faustini, F., Flagey, N., Fukui, Y., Fuller, G. A., Ganga, K., Garcia-Lario, P., Glenn, J., Goldsmith, P. F., Griffin, M. J., Hoare, M., Huang, M., Ikhenaode, D., Joblin, C., Joncas, G., Juvela, M., Kirk, J. M., Lagache, G., Li, J. Z., Lim, T. L., Lord, S. D., Marengo, M., Marshall, D. J., Masi, S., Massi, F., Matsuura, M., Minier, V., Miville-Deschenes, M. A., Montier, L. A., Morgan, L., Motte, F., Mottram, J. C., Mueller, T. G., Natoli, P., Neves, J., Olmi, L., Paladini, R., Paradis, D., Parsons, H., Peretto, N., Pestalozzi, M., Pezzuto, S., Piacentini, F., Piazzo, L., Polychroni, D., Pomarès, M., Popescu, C. C., Reach, W. T., Ristorcelli, I., Robitaille, J. F., Robitaille, T., Rodón, J. A., Roy, A., Royer, P., Russeil, D., Saraceno, P., Sauvage, M., Schilke, P., Schisano, E., Schneider, N., Schuller, F., Schulz, B., Sibthorpe, B., Smith, H. A., Smith, M. D., Spinoglio, L., Stamatellos, D., Strafella, F., Stringfellow, G. S., Sturm, E., Taylor, R., Thompson, M. A., Traficante, A., Tuffs, R. J., Umana, G., Valenziano, L., Vavrek, R., Veneziani, M., Viti, S., Waelkens, C., Ward-Thompson, D., White, G., Wilcock, L. A., Wyrowski, F., Yorke, H. W., and Zhang, Q.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first results from the science demonstration phase for the Hi-GAL survey, the Herschel key-project that will map the inner Galactic Plane of the Milky Way in 5 bands. We outline our data reduction strategy and present some science highlights on the two observed 2{\deg} x 2{\deg} tiles approximately centered at l=30{\deg} and l=59{\deg}. The two regions are extremely rich in intense and highly structured extended emission which shows a widespread organization in filaments. Source SEDs can be built for hundreds of objects in the two fields, and physical parameters can be extracted, for a good fraction of them where the distance could be estimated. The compact sources (which we will call 'cores' in the following) are found for the most part to be associated with the filaments, and the relationship to the local beam-averaged column density of the filament itself shows that a core seems to appear when a threshold around A_V of about 1 is exceeded for the regions in the l=59{\deg} field; a A_V value between 5 and 10 is found for the l=30{\deg} field, likely due to the relatively larger distances of the sources. This outlines an exciting scenario where diffuse clouds first collapse into filaments, which later fragment to cores where the column density has reached a critical level. In spite of core L/M ratios being well in excess of a few for many sources, we find core surface densities between 0.03 and 0.5 g cm-2. Our results are in good agreement with recent MHD numerical simulations of filaments forming from large-scale converging flows., Comment: A&A, accepted
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- 2010
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17. Filamentary structures and compact objects in the Aquila and Polaris clouds observed by Herschel
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Men'shchikov, A., André, Ph., Didelon, P., Könyves, V., Schneider, N., Motte, F., Bontemps, S., Arzoumanian, D., Attard, M., Abergel, A., Baluteau, J. -P., Bernard, J. -Ph., Cambrésy, L., Cox, P., Di Francesco, J., di Giorgio, A. M., Griffin, M., Hargrave, P., Huang, M., Kirk, J., Li, J. Z., Martin, P., Minier, V., Miville-Deschênes, M. -A., Molinari, S., Olofsson, G., Pezzuto, S., Roussel, H., Russeil, D., Saraceno, P., Sauvage, M., Sibthorpe, B., Spinoglio, L., Testi, L., Ward-Thompson, D., White, G., Wilson, C. D., Woodcraft, A., and Zavagno, A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Our PACS and SPIRE images of the Aquila Rift and part of the Polaris Flare regions, taken during the science demonstration phase of Herschel discovered fascinating, omnipresent filamentary structures that appear to be physically related to compact cores. We briefly describe a new multi-scale, multi-wavelength source extraction method used to detect objects and measure their parameters in our Herschel images. All of the extracted starless cores (541 in Aquila and 302 in Polaris) appear to form in the long and very narrow filaments. With its combination of the far-IR resolution and sensitivity, Herschel directly reveals the filaments in which the dense cores are embedded; the filaments are resolved and have deconvolved widths of 35 arcsec in Aquila and 59 arcsec in Polaris (9000 AU in both regions). Our first results of observations with Herschel enable us to suggest that in general dense cores may originate in a process of fragmentation of complex networks of long, thin filaments, likely formed as a result of an interplay between gravity, interstellar turbulence, and magnetic fields. To unravel the roles of the processes, one has to obtain additional kinematic and polarization information; these follow-up observations are planned., Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics, Herschel Special Issue.
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- 2010
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18. Herschel observations of embedded protostellar clusters in the Rosette Molecular Cloud
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Hennemann, M., Motte, F., Bontemps, S., Schneider, N., Csengeri, T., Balog, Z., Di Francesco, J., Zavagno, A., André, Ph., Men'shchikov, A., Abergel, A., Ali, B., Baluteau, J. -P., Bernard, J. -Ph., Cox, P., Didelon, P., di Giorgio, A. -M., Griffin, M., Hargrave, P., Hill, T., Horeau, B., Huang, M., Kirk, J., Leeks, S., Li, J. Z., Marston, A., Martin, P., Molinari, S., Luong, Q. Nguyen, Olofsson, G., Persi, P., Pezzuto, S., Russeil, D., Saraceno, P., Sauvage, M., Sibthorpe, B., Spinoglio, L., Testi, L., Ward-Thompson, D., White, G., Wilson, C., and Woodcraft, A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Herschel OB young stellar objects survey (HOBYS) has observed the Rosette molecular cloud, providing an unprecedented view of its star formation activity. These new far-infrared data reveal a population of compact young stellar objects whose physical properties we aim to characterise. We compiled a sample of protostars and their spectral energy distributions that covers the near-infrared to submillimetre wavelength range. These were used to constrain key properties in the protostellar evolution, bolometric luminosity, and envelope mass and to build an evolutionary diagram. Several clusters are distinguished including the cloud centre, the embedded clusters in the vicinity of luminous infrared sources, and the interaction region. The analysed protostellar population in Rosette ranges from 0.1 to about 15 Msun with luminosities between 1 and 150 Lsun, which extends the evolutionary diagram from low-mass protostars into the high-mass regime. Some sources lack counterparts at near- to mid-infrared wavelengths, indicating extreme youth. The central cluster and the Phelps & Lada 7 cluster appear less evolved than the remainder of the analysed protostellar population. For the central cluster, we find indications that about 25% of the protostars classified as Class I from near- to mid-infrared data are actually candidate Class 0 objects. As a showcase for protostellar evolution, we analysed four protostars of low- to intermediate-mass in a single dense core, and they represent different evolutionary stages from Class 0 to Class I. Their mid- to far-infrared spectral slopes flatten towards the Class I stage, and the 160 to 70um flux ratio is greatest for the presumed Class 0 source. This shows that the Herschel observations characterise the earliest stages of protostellar evolution in detail., Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics letter, 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in the Special Issue for Herschel first results
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- 2010
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19. The Aquila prestellar core population revealed by Herschel
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Könyves, V., André, Ph., Men'shchikov, A., Schneider, N., Arzoumanian, D., Bontemps, S., Attard, M., Motte, F., Didelon, P., Maury, A., Abergel, A., Ali, B., Baluteau, J. -P., Bernard, J. -Ph., Cambrésy, L., Cox, P., Di Francesco, J., di Giorgio, A. M., Griffin, M. J., Hargrave, P., Huang, M., Kirk, J., Li, J. Z., Martin, P., Minier, V., Molinari, S., Olofsson, G., Pezzuto, S., Russeil, D., Roussel, H., Saraceno, P., Sauvage, M., Sibthorpe, B., Spinoglio, L., Testi, L., Ward-Thompson, D., White, G., Wilson, C. D., Woodcraft, A., and Zavagno, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The origin and possible universality of the stellar initial mass function (IMF) is a major issue in astrophysics. One of the main objectives of the Herschel Gould Belt Survey is to clarify the link between the prestellar core mass function (CMF) and the IMF. We present and discuss the core mass function derived from Herschel data for the large population of prestellar cores discovered with SPIRE and PACS in the Aquila Rift cloud complex at d ~ 260 pc. We detect a total of 541 starless cores in the entire ~11 deg^2 area of the field imaged at 70-500 micron with SPIRE/PACS. Most of these cores appear to be gravitationally bound, and thus prestellar in nature. Our Herschel results confirm that the shape of the prestellar CMF resembles the stellar IMF, with much higher quality statistics than earlier submillimeter continuum ground-based surveys.
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- 2010
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20. From filamentary clouds to prestellar cores to the stellar IMF: Initial highlights from the Herschel Gould Belt survey
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André, Ph., Men'shchikov, A., Bontemps, S., Könyves, V., Motte, F., Schneider, N., Didelon, P., Minier, V., Saraceno, P., Ward-Thompson, D., Di Francesco, J., White, G., Molinari, S., Testi, L., Abergel, A., Griffin, M., Henning, Th., Royer, P., Merín, B., Vavrek, R., Attard, M., Arzoumanian, D., Wilson, C. D., Ade, P., Aussel, H., Baluteau, J. -P., Benedettini, M., Bernard, J. -Ph., Blommaert, J. A. D. L., Cambrésy, L., Cox, P., Di Giorgio, A., Hargrave, P., Hennemann, M., Huang, M., Kirk, J., Krause, O., Launhardt, R., Leeks, S., Pennec, J. Le, Li, J. Z., Martin, P., Maury, A., Olofsson, G., Omont, A., Peretto, N., Pezzuto, S., Prusti, T., Roussel, H., Russeil, D., Sauvage, M., Sibthorpe, B., Sicilia-Aguilar, A., Spinoglio, L., Waelkens, C., Woodcraft, A., and Zavagno, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We summarize the first results from the Gould Belt survey, obtained toward the Aquila Rift and Polaris Flare regions during the 'science demonstration phase' of Herschel. Our 70-500 micron images taken in parallel mode with the SPIRE and PACS cameras reveal a wealth of filamentary structure, as well as numerous dense cores embedded in the filaments. Between ~ 350 and 500 prestellar cores and ~ 45-60 Class 0 protostars can be identified in the Aquila field, while ~ unbound starless cores and no protostars are observed in the Polaris field. The prestellar core mass function (CMF) derived for the Aquila region bears a strong resemblance to the stellar initial mass function (IMF), already confirming the close connection between the CMF and the IMF with much better statistics than earlier studies. Comparing and contrasting our Herschel results in Aquila and Polaris, we propose an observationally-driven scenario for core formation according to which complex networks of long, thin filaments form first within molecular clouds, and then the densest filaments fragment into a number of prestellar cores via gravitational instability., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics, Herschel Special Issue
- Published
- 2010
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21. A Herschel study of the properties of starless cores in the Polaris Flare dark cloud region using PACS and SPIRE
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Ward-Thompson, D., Kirk, J. M., André, P., Saraceno, P., Didelon, P., Könyves, V., Schneider, N., Abergel, A., Baluteau, J. -P., Bernard, J. -Ph., Bontemps, S., Cambrésy, L., Cox, P., Di Francesco, J., Di Giorgio, A. M., Griffin, M., Hargrave, P., Huang, M., Li, J. Z., Martin, P., Men'shchikov, A., Minier, V., Molinari, S., Motte, F., Olofsson, G., Pezzuto, S., Russeil, D., Sauvage, M., Sibthorpe, B., Spinoglio, L., Testi, L., White, G., Wilson, C., Woodcraft, A., and Zavagno, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Polaris Flare cloud region contains a great deal of extended emission. It is at high declination and high Galactic latitude. It was previously seen strongly in IRAS Cirrus emission at 100 microns. We have detected it with both PACS and SPIRE on Herschel. We see filamentary and low-level structure. We identify the five densest cores within this structure. We present the results of a temperature, mass and density analysis of these cores. We compare their observed masses to their virial masses, and see that in all cases the observed masses lie close to the lower end of the range of estimated virial masses. Therefore, we cannot say whether they are gravitationally bound prestellar cores. Nevertheless, these are the best candidates to be potentialprestellar cores in the Polaris cloud region., Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted by A&A
- Published
- 2010
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22. A Herschel study of YSO evolutionary stages and formation timelines in two fields of the Hi-GAL survey
- Author
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Elia, D., Schisano, E., Molinari, S., Robitaille, T., Anglés-Alcázar, D., Bally, J., Battersby, C., Benedettini, M., Billot, N., Calzoletti, L., Di Giorgio, A. M., Faustini, F., Li, J. Z., Martin, P., Morgan, L., Motte, F., Mottram, J. C., Natoli, P., Olmi, L., Paladini, R., Piacentini, F., Pestalozzi, M., Pezzuto, S., Polychroni, D., Smith, M. D., Strafella, F., Stringfellow, G. S., Testi, L., Thompson, M. A., Traficante, A., and Veneziani, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a first study of the star-forming compact dust condensations revealed by Herschel in the two 2 \times 2 \degr Galactic Plane fields centered at [l;b] = [30\degr; 0 \degr] and [l;b] = [59\degr; 0 \degr], respectively, and observed during the Science Demonstration Phase for the Herschel infrared Galactic Plane survey (Hi-GAL) Key-Project. Compact source catalogs extracted for the two fields in the five Hi-GAL bands (70, 160, 250, 350 and 500 $\mu$m) were merged based on simple criteria of positional association and spectral energy distribution (SED) consistency into a final catalog which contains only coherent SEDs with counterparts in at least three adjacent Herschel bands. These final source lists contain 528 entries for the l = 30\degr field, and 444 entries for the l = 59\degr field. The SED coverage has been augmented with ancillary data at 24 $\mu$m and 1.1 mm. SED modeling for the subset of 318 and 101 sources (in the two fields, respectively) for which the distance is known was carried out using both a structured star/disk/envelope radiative transfer model and a simple isothermal grey-body. Global parameters like mass, luminosity, temperature and dust properties have been estimated. The Lbol/Menv ratio spans four orders of magnitudes from values compatible with the pre-protostellar phase to embedded massive zero-age main sequence stars. Sources in the l = 59\degr field have on average lower L/M, possibly outlining an overall earlier evolutionary stage with respect to the sources in the l = 30\degr field. Many of these cores are actively forming high-mass stars, although the estimated core surface densities appear to be an order of magnitude below the 1 g cm$^{-2}$ critical threshold for high-mass star formation., Comment: To appear in A&A
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- 2010
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23. Protostellar fountains do shape the regional core mass function?
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Li, J. Z., Smith, M. D., Huang, M., and Qin, S. -L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Paper withdrawn, sorry for any inconvenience raised!, Comment: 3 figures
- Published
- 2008
24. A Golden Standard Type Ia Supernova SN 2005cf: Observations from the Ultraviolet to the Near-Infrared Wavebands
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Wang, Xiaofeng, Li, Weidong, Filippenko, Alexei V., Foley, R. J., Kirshner, R. P., Modjaz, M., Bloom, J., Brown, P. J., Carter, D., Friedman, A. S., Gal-Yam, A., Ganeshalingam, M., Hicken, M., Krisciunas, K., Milne, P., Suntzeff, N. B., Wood-Vasey, W. M., Cenko, S. B., Challis, P., Fox, D. B., Kirkman, D., Li, J. Z., Li, T. P., Malkan, M. A., Reitzel, D. B., Rich, R. M., Serduke, F., Shang, R. C., Silverman, J. M., Steele, T. N., Swift, B. J., Tao, C., Wong, D. S., and Zhang, S. N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present extensive photometry at ultraviolet (UV), optical, and near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths, as well as dense sampling of optical spectra, for the normal type Ia supernova (SN Ia) 2005cf. From the well-sampled light curves, we find that SN 2005cf reached a B-band maximum at 13.63+/-0.02 mag, with an observed luminosity decline rate dm_15(B) = 1.05+/-0.03 mag. The correlations between the decline rate and various color indexes, recalibrated on the basis of an expanded SN Ia sample, yielded E(B-V)_host=0.09+/-0.03 mag for SN2005cf. The UV photometry was obtained with the HST and the Swift Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope, and the results match each other to within 0.1-0.2 mag. The UV light curves show similar evolution to the broadband U, with an exception in the 2000-2500 Angstrom spectral range (corresponding to the F220W/uvm2 filters), where the light curve appears broader and much fainter than that on either side (likely owing to the intrinsic spectral evolution). Combining the UV data with the ground-based optical and NIR data, we establish the generic UV-optical-NIR bolometric light curve for SN 2005cf and derive the bolometric corrections in the absence of UV and/or NIR data. The overall spectral evolution of SN 2005cf is similar to that of a normal SN Ia, but with variety in the strength and profile of the main feature lines. The spectra at early times displayed strong, detached high-velocity (HV) features in the Ca II H&K doublet and NIR triplet. Similar HV features may exist in the SiII 6355 absorption line which evolved rapidly from a flat-bottomed feature in the earliest phase to a triangular shape one week before maximum, and may be common in other normal SNe Ia. The possible origin of the HV absorption features is briefly discussed (abridged)., Comment: 31 pages, 24 figures, 13 tables, emulateapj; submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2008
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25. The Rosette Eye: the key transition phase in the birth of a massive star
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Li, J. Z., Smith, M. D., Gredel, R., Davis, C. J., and Rector, T. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Massive protostars dramatically influence their surroundings via accretion-induced outflows and intense radiation fields. They evolve rapidly, the disk and infalling envelope being evaporated and dissipated in $\sim$ 10$^5$ years. Consequently, they are very rare and investigating this important phase of early stellar evolution is extremely difficult. Here we present the discovery of a key transient phase in the emergence of a massive young star, in which ultraviolet radiation from the new-born giant has just punctured through its natal core. The massive young stellar object AFGL 961 II is readily resolved in the near infrared. Its morphology closely resembles a cat's eye and is here dubbed as the Rosette Eye. Emerging ionized flows blow out an hourglass shaped nebula, which, along with the existence of strong near-infrared excess, suggests the existence of an accretion disk in the perpendicular direction. The lobes of the hourglass, however, are capped with arcs of static H$_{2}$ emission produced by fluorescence. This study has strong implications for our understanding of how massive stars embark on their formation., Comment: 3 figures
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- 2008
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26. Fast transition between Classical and Weak lined T Tauri stars due to external UV dissipation
- Author
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Li, J. Z. and Rector, T. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The discovery of optical jets immersed in the strong UV radiation field of the Rosette Nebula sheds new light on, but meanwhile poses challenges to, the study of externally irradiated jets. The jet systems in the Rosette are found to have a high state of ionization and show unique features. In this paper, we investigate the evolutionary status of the jet driving sources for young solar-like stars. To our surprise, these jet sources indicate unexpected near infrared properties with no excess emission. They are bathed in harsh external UV radiation such that evaporation leads to a fast dissipation of their circumstellar material. This could represent a transient phase of evolution of young solar-like stars between classical and weak lined T Tauri stars. Naked T Tauri stars formed in this way have indistinguishable evolutionary ages from those of classical T Tauri stars resulting from the same episode of star formation. However, it would be hard for such sources to be identified if they are not driving an irradiated jet in a photoionized medium., Comment: 3 figures
- Published
- 2007
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27. The dissolving Rosette HH2 jet bathed in harsh UV radiation of the Rosette Nebula
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Li, J. Z., Chu, Y. -H., and Gruendl, R. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Herbig-Haro flows discovered in photoionized medium forms a separate category and detailed studies of which become one of the key issues to our understanding of jet production and evolution. The Rosette HH2 jet is the second of such flows that immersed in the spectacular HII region of the Rosette Nebula. However, its disconnected jet components are detached from the proposed energy source, have additional unusual properties and thus a disputable nature. In this paper, we investigate through high-quality echelle spectrographs the physical nature of the jet system. The jet shows distinctly different velocity components. It is believed to be composed of a fast neutral jet with an approaching velocity of -39.5 km $^{-1}$ as respect to the systemic rest frame, and likely an extensive, photoevaporated envelope dissolving at roughly the sound speed. This led us to infer a fast dissipating nature of the jet system being bathed in the fully photoionized medium of Rosette. In addition, time series photometric observations provide evidence that the energy source is highly variable, with amplitudes of up to ${>}$ 1 mag in R & I. This is consistent well with an early evolutionary status of the jet driving star with a red, late type spectrum in the optical., Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2006
28. Effects of Natural Aging and Post-processed Heat Treatment on the Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Friction Stir Processed Al-7B04
- Author
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Chen, Y., Ding, H., Li, J. Z., Meyers, Marc André, editor, Benavides, Hector Alfredo Calderon, editor, Brühl, Sonia P, editor, Colorado, Henry A, editor, Dalgaard, Elvi, editor, Elias, Carlos Nelson, editor, Figueiredo, Roberto B, editor, Garcia-Rincon, Omar, editor, Kawasaki, Megumi, editor, Langdon, Terence G., editor, Mangalaraja, R.V., editor, Marroquin, Mery Cecilia Gomez, editor, da Cunha Rocha, Adriana, editor, Schoenung, Julie M, editor, Costa e Silva, Andre, editor, Wells, Mary, editor, and Yang, Wen, editor
- Published
- 2017
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29. Multi-seeded multi-mode formation of embedded clusters in the RMC: Structured star formation toward the south-east boundary
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Li, J. Z. and Smith, M. D.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The Rosette Molecular Complex contains embedded clusters with diverse properties and origins. We have previously explored the shell mode of formation in the north (Regions A & B) and the massive concentrations in the ridge (Region C). Here, we explore star formation towards the south of the complex, Region D, based on data from the spatially complete 2 Micron All Sky Survey. We find that stars are forming prolifically throughout this region in a highly structured mode with both clusters and loose aggregates detected. The most prominent cluster (Region D1) lies in the north-center. This cluster is over 20 pc to the south of the Monoceros ridge, the interface of the emerging young OB cluster NGC 2244 with its ambient molecular clouds. In addition, there are several branches stemming from AFGL 961 in Region C and extending to the south-east boundary of the cloud. We invoke a tree model to interpret this pattern, corresponding to probable tracks of abrupt turbulent excitation and subsequent decay. Alternatively, we discuss gravoturbulent collapse scenarios based on numerical simulations. Relative stellar ages and gas flow directions will differentiate between these mechanisms., Comment: 9 figures, the 4th of a series of papers
- Published
- 2005
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30. Multi-seeded multi-mode formation of embedded clusters in the RMC: Clusters baked in swept-up shells
- Author
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Li, J. Z. and Smith, M. D.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
This is the first of a series of three papers on clustered star formation in the Rosette Molecular Complex. Here we investigate star formation in the interfacing layers between the expanding Rosette Nebula and its surrounding cloud, based on an analysis of the spatially complete and unbiased 2MASS data. Two medium-mass infrared clusters with ages of around 1 Myr are identified in the south and south-east arcs of the fragmented shell. The majority of the candidate cluster members in these radiation and pressure-confined regions are found to be almost uniformly distributed, roughly following the compression layers traced by the distribution of optical depth at 100 $\mu$m, and may well develop into gravitationally unbound systems upon their emergence from the parental cloud. These expanding shells are believed to be playing important roles in impeding the emerging young open cluster NGC 2244 from intruding immediately and deeply into the ambient molecular cloud, where sequential formation of massive clusters is taking place., Comment: 6 figures
- Published
- 2005
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31. Discovery of multi-seeded multi-mode formation of embedded clusters in the Rosette Molecular Complex
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Li, J. Z. and Smith, M. D.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
An investigation based on data from the spatially complete 2MASS Survey reveals that a remarkable burst of clustered star formation is taking place throughout the south-east quadrant of the Rosette Molecular Cloud. Compact clusters are forming in a multi-seeded mode, in parallel and at various places. In addition, sparse aggregates of embedded young stars are extensively distributed. In this study, we report the primary results and implications for high-mass and clustered star formation in giant molecular clouds. In particular, we incorporate for the first time the birth of medium to low-mass stars into the scenario of sequential formation of OB clusters. Following the emergence of the young OB cluster NGC 2244, a variety of manifestations of forming clusters of medium to high mass appear in the vicinity of the swept-up layer of the H{\small II} region as well as further into the molecular cloud. The embedded clusters appear to form in a structured manner, which suggests they follow tracks laid out by the decay of macroturbulence. We address the possible origins of the turbulence. This leads us to propose a tree model to interpret the neat spatial distribution of clusters within a large section of the Rosette complex. Prominent new generation OB clusters are identified at the root of the tree pattern., Comment: 5 figures
- Published
- 2005
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32. Numerical Study on Crack Propagation Characteristics Under Different Loading Conditions by FRACOD2D Approach
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Sun, X. Z. and Li, J. Z.
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- 2019
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33. Altered Cortical Glutamatergic and GABAergic Signal Transmission with Glial Involvement in Depression
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Choudary, P. V., Molnar, M., Evans, S. J., Tomita, H., Li, J. Z., Vawter, M. P., Myers, R. M., Akil, H., Watson, S. J., and Jones, E. G.
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- 2005
34. Dysregulation of the Fibroblast Growth Factor System in Major Depression
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Evans, S. J., Choudary, P. V., Neal, C. R., Li, J. Z., Vawter, M. P., Tomita, H., Lopez, J. F., Thompson, R. C., Meng, F., Stead, J. D., Walsh, D. M., Myers, R. M., Bunney, W. E., Watson, S. J., Jones, E. G., and Akil, H.
- Published
- 2004
35. A CFD–DEM study on the suffusion and shear behaviors of gap-graded soils under stress anisotropy
- Author
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Hu, Z., primary, Li, J. Z., additional, Zhang, Y. D., additional, Yang, Z. X., additional, and Liu, J. K., additional
- Published
- 2022
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36. Development of a Multi‐Region Power System Risk Management Model for Supporting China's Carbon Neutrality Ambition in 2060s
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Li, J. Z., primary, Huang, G. H., additional, Li, Y. P., additional, Chen, J. P., additional, and He, C. Y., additional
- Published
- 2022
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37. Genetic variants in SCNN1B and AHCYL1 are associated with eggshell quality in Chinese domestic laying ducks (Anas platyrhynchos)
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Liao, C.-M., primary, Tan, G.-H., additional, You, M.-F., additional, Li, J.-Z., additional, Wu, L., additional, Qin, Yuan-Yu, additional, and Zhang, Yi-Yu, additional
- Published
- 2022
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38. Development of an Energy Storage and Return Knee Brace
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Cheong, C. H., Chen, K. Z., Lee, T., Li, J. Z., Tan, H. N., Seng, K. Y., Magjarevic, Ratko, editor, Lim, C. T., editor, and Goh, J. C. H., editor
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- 2010
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39. A Finite Element Study of The Response of Thoracolumbar Junction to Accidental Mine Blast Scenario
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Zhang, Q. H., Li, J. Z., Serena Tan, H. N., Teo, E. C., Magjarevic, R., editor, Nagel, J. H., editor, Peng, Yi, editor, and Weng, Xiaohong, editor
- Published
- 2008
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40. Effects of Natural Aging and Post-processed Heat Treatment on the Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Friction Stir Processed Al-7B04
- Author
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Chen, Y., primary, Ding, H., additional, and Li, J. Z., additional
- Published
- 2017
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41. Influence of Sulfur on Transcription of Genes Involved in Arsenic Accumulation in Rice Grains
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Zhang, J., Zhao, C.-Y., Liu, J., Song, R., Du, Y.-X., Li, J.-Z., Sun, H.-Z., Duan, G.-L., and Zhao, Q.-Z.
- Published
- 2016
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42. Glucosamine: fructose-6-phosphate amidotransferase in the white shrimp Litopenaeus vannamei: characterization and regulation under alkaline and cadmium stress
- Author
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Liu, Y., Cai, D. X., Wang, L., Li, J. Z., and Wang, W. N.
- Published
- 2015
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43. Genetic variants in SCNN1B and AHCYL1 are associated with eggshell quality in Chinese domestic laying ducks (Anas platyrhynchos)
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Liao, C.-M., Tan, G.-H., You, M.-F., Li, J.-Z., Wu, L., Qin, Yuan-Yu, and Zhang, Yi-Yu
- Abstract
1. The objective of this study was to investigate the evolution of SCNN1B and AHCYL1 proteins among 10 domestic avian and mammalian animal species, to uncover the expression patterns of SCNN1B and AHCYL1 genes in ducks, identify the genetic variants of the SCNN1B and AHCYL1 genes and analyse their effects on eggshell quality. 2. Expression profiles of the SCNN1B and AHCYL1 genes in Sansui female ducks were determined using real-time fluorescence quantitative PCR to identify SNPs. The duck SCNN1B and AHCYL1 genes were amplified to identify SNPs. A total of 502 Sansui female ducks were genotyped by sequencing, and the associations between the mRNA expression/SNP genotypes and 6 eggshell quality indices were analysed using PASW Statistics 18.0. 3. The results showed that the SCNN1B and AHCYL1 proteins are highly conserved in different mammalian or domestic animals, especially the AHCYL1 protein. The SCNN1B and AHCYL1 genes were widely expressed in different tissues of male and female ducks, and expression level in the uterus was greater than in other tissues. The expression of SCNN1B and AHCYL1 during the oviposition cycle indicated that expression levels were related to the eggshell mineralisation stage. 4. The mRNA expression levels of the uterine SCNN1B and AHCYL1 genes were positively correlated with eggshell strength (ESS), percentage (ESP) and weight (ESW) (P < 0.05), respectively. Ten novel SNPs in SCNN1B and AHCYL1 genes from Chinese domestic laying ducks were identified through PCR amplicon sequencing. 5. Genetic association analysis indicated g.797509 C > T, g.797573 C > T and g.797834 C > T in SCNN1B gene and g.169244 T > A, g.169265 T > C and g.175311 T > C in AHCYL1 gene had a significant effect on eggshell quality. Correlation analysis between the SNP genotype and SCNN1B and AHCYL1 genes expression in the uterus showed that the genotypes of g.797509 C > T, g.797573 C > T, g.797834 C > T, g.169244 T > A and g.175311 T > C sites affected the expression of SCNN1B and AHCYL1 genes in utero (P < 0.05). 6. The study indicated SCNN1B and AHCYL1 as candidate genes to improve eggshell traits in ducks.
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- 2022
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44. Stimulated Raman Scattering of Solid Hydrogen in the Strong-Coupling Regime
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Hakuta, K., Katsuragawa, M., Li, J. Z., Liang, J. Q., Suzuki, M., Xu, Zhizhan, editor, Xie, Shengwu, editor, Zhu, Shi-Yao, editor, and Scully, Marlan Orvil, editor
- Published
- 2000
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45. Influence of Component Injury on Dynamic Characteristics on the Spine Using Finite Element Method
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Li, J. Z., Tan, Serena H. N., Cheong, C. H., Teo, E. C., Guo, L. X., Seng, K. Y., Magjarevic, R., editor, Nagel, J. H., editor, Lim, Chwee Teck, editor, and Goh, James C. H., editor
- Published
- 2009
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46. Pd/In/Ni/Au contact to N-polar n-type GaN fabricated by laser lift-off
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Ma, J., Chen, Z. Z., Jiang, S., Jiao, Q. Q., Li, J. Z., Jiang, S. X., Feng, Y. L., Yu, T. J., and Zhang, G. Y.
- Published
- 2015
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47. Circadian dysregulation of clock genes: clues to rapid treatments in major depressive disorder
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Bunney, B G, Li, J Z, Walsh, D M, Stein, R, Vawter, M P, Cartagena, P, Barchas, J D, Schatzberg, A F, Myers, R M, Watson, S J, Akil, H, and Bunney, W E
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- 2015
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48. Rice leaf heterogeneity in chlorophyll fluorescence parameters under short-term osmotic stress
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Li, J. Z., Chen, Y. P., Teng, K. Q., Qin, L. Z., Du, Y. X., Zhang, J., and Zhao, Q. Z.
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- 2015
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49. Hi-GAL: The Herschel Infrared Galactic Plane Survey
- Author
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Molinari, S., Swinyard, B., Bally, J., Barlow, M., Bernard, J.-P., Martin, P., Moore, T., Noriega-Crespo, A., Plume, R., Testi, L., Zavagno, A., Abergel, A., Ali, B., André, P., Baluteau, J.-P., Benedettini, M., Berné, O., Billot, N. P., Blommaert, J., Bontemps, S., Boulanger, F., Brand, J., Brunt, C., Burton, M., Campeggio, L., Carey, S., Caselli, P., Cesaroni, R., Cernicharo, J., Chakrabarti, S., Chrysostomou, A., Codella, C., Cohen, M., Compiegne, M., Davis, C. J., de Bernardis, P., de Gasperis, G., Di Francesco, J., di Giorgio, A. M., Elia, D., Faustini, F., Fischera, J. F., Fukui, Y., Fuller, G. A., Ganga, K., Garcia-Lario, P., Giard, M., Giardino, G., Glenn, J:, Goldsmith, P., Griffin, M., Hoare, M., Huang, M., Jiang, B., Joblin, C., Joncas, G., Juvela, M., Kirk, J., Lagache, G., Li, J. Z., Lim, T. L., Lord, S. D., Lucas, P. W., Maiolo, B., Marengo, M., Marshall, D., Masi, S., Massi, F., Matsuura, M., Meny, C., Minier, V., Miville-Deschênes, M.-A., Montier, L., Motte, F., Müller, T. G., Natoli, P., Neves, J., Olmi, L., Paladini, R., Paradis, D., Pestalozzi, M., Pezzuto, S., Piacentini, F., Pomarès, M., Popescu, C. C., Reach, W. T., Richer, J., Ristorcelli, I., Roy, A., Royer, P., Russeil, D., Saraceno, P., Sauvage, M., Schilke, P., Schneider-Bontemps, N., Schuller, F., Schultz, B., Shepherd, D. S., Sibthorpe, B., Smith, H. A., Smith, M. D., Spinoglio, L., Stamatellos, D., Strafella, F., Stringfellow, G., Sturm, E., Taylor, R., Thompson, M. A., Tuffs, R. J., Umana, G., Valenziano, L., Vavrek, R., Viti, S., Waelkens, C., Ward-Thompson, D., White, G., Wyrowski, F., Yorke, H. W., and Zhang, Q.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. STUDY ON SOIL QUALITY CHARACTERISTICS AND SPATIAL DIFFERENCE OF THE WALNUT PRODUCING AREA IN HUBEI PROVINCE OF CHINA.
- Author
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Li, M., Xu, Y. J., Wang, H., Yuan, L. Y., Wang, X. R., Li, J. Z., Zhang, D. J., and Huang, F. X.
- Subjects
SOIL quality ,WALNUT ,SOIL fertility ,PHOSPHATE fertilizers ,ORCHARD management ,SOIL sampling - Abstract
To study the soil pH value, quality characteristics of organic matter, and available elements in intensive cultivation of walnut orchards in different areas of Hubei Province, and to provide the scientific basis for the soil management of walnut orchards in different areas, the distribution frequency and correlation of the pH value, organic matter and alkalescence N, available P, available K, available Ca, available Mg, available S, available Fe, available Zn, andavailable B in 135 walnut orchards from 6 walnut production areas in Hubei Province were analyzed by a typical sampling method. The differences and main sources of comprehensive fertility coefficients in different production areas were also analyzed. The distribution frequency of organic matter and available elements in walnut orchards were unbalanced. Available P was the most skewed with 55.67%. The soil organic matter content was significantly correlated with the contents of alkalescence N, available P, available K, available Mg, available Fe, available Zn and available B. The comprehensive soil fertility coefficient ranged from 1.21 to 1.84, with an average of 1.52, which was the general fertility level. The maximum limiting factor of soil fertility was available S, followed by alkalescence N and available P. There were significant differences in comprehensive soil fertility among different walnut production areas. 92.67% of the differences came from within the production areas, and 7.33% from between production areas. The highest differentiation coefficients were available K and available P, which were 26.20% and 10.79%, respectively. The contents of alkalescence N and P were elements that affect the soil fertility of walnut production areas in Hubei Province. And the skew amounts and differentiation coefficients of P were larger than other elements. In view of the significant positive correlation between organic matter content and most soil elements, in order to improve the comprehensive soil fertility, it is suggested that soil management should focus on increasing soil organic matter, the application of phosphorus fertilizer and improving the availability of phosphorus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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