245 results on '"Tran, H. D."'
Search Results
2. Impacts of urbanization on heat in Ho Chi Minh, southern Vietnam using U-Net model and remote sensing
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Do, A. N. T., Tran, H. D., and Do, T. A. T.
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- 2024
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3. The potential impact of COVID-19 on male reproductive health
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Nguyen, T. T., Hulme, J., Tran, H. D., Vo, T. K., and Vo, G. V.
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- 2022
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4. Metadata and Data Management for the Keck Observatory Archive
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Tran, H. D., Holt, J., Goodrich, R. W., Mader, J. A., Swain, M., Laity, A. C., Kong, M., Gelino, C. R., and Berriman, G. B.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
A collaboration between the W. M. Keck Observatory (WMKO) in Hawaii and the NASA Exoplanet Science Institute (NExScI) in California, the Keck Observatory Archive (KOA) was commissioned in 2004 to archive observing data from WMKO, which operates two classically scheduled 10 m ground-based telescopes. The observing data from Keck is not suitable for direct ingestion into the archive since the metadata contained in the original FITS headers lack the information necessary for proper archiving. Coupled with different standards among instrument builders and the heterogeneous nature of the data inherent in classical observing, in which observers have complete control of the instruments and their observations, the data pose a number of technical challenges for KOA. We describe the methodologies and tools that we have developed to successfully address these difficulties, adding content to the FITS headers and "retrofitting" the metadata in order to support archiving Keck data, especially those obtained before the archive was designed. With the expertise gained from having successfully archived observations taken with all eight currently active instruments at WMKO, we have developed lessons learned from handling this complex array of heterogeneous metadata that help ensure a smooth ingestion of data not only for current but also future instruments, as well as a better experience for the archive user., Comment: 9 pages, SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation 2014: Software and Cyberinfrastructure for Astronomy III, Proc. SPIE 9152-92
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- 2014
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5. A Proposed Model for Breakthrough Curves of Methylene Blue Adsorption on Biochar
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Tran, H. D., Phuc, H. N., Phuong, P. V. H., Thien, L. N. P., Nguyen, T. L., Tran, U. P. N., Dang, V.-H., Tran, H. D., Phuc, H. N., Phuong, P. V. H., Thien, L. N. P., Nguyen, T. L., Tran, U. P. N., and Dang, V.-H.
- Abstract
Dye pollutants, mainly discharged from the textile industry, have caused severe risks to human health and the ecosystem because of their toxicity, non-biodegradability, and carcinogenicity. This study investigated the use of commercial biochar derived from melaleuca wood as an adsorbent for the removal of methylene blue (MB) using a packed-bed column. The selected biochar was characterized by nitrogen adsorption-desorption isotherms, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, and scanning electron microscopy. The experiments were performed to determine breakthrough curves (BTCs) with varying pH (3–9), inflow rate (5–20 mL min–1), bed height (16–65 cm), and initial MB concentration (0.75–9 mg L–1). The biochar (particle size of 1–2 mm) exhibited a low adsorption capacity for MB (~21 mg kg–1), resulting in a short breakthrough time. The Thomas, Bohart-Adams, Yoon-Nelson, and Bed Depth Service Time models were quite suitable for describing the experimental BTCs, with R2-values ranging from 0.92 to 0.98. The obtained BTCs were not in the typical S-shape, which characterizes diffusion-controlled adsorption. Therefore, a serial logistic-exponential model, which accounts for both the mass transfer and interaction contributions, was proposed. The experimental data effectively fit this proposed model, as indicated by high R2-values (>0.998). The dominant influence of mass transfer compared to interaction in controlling the adsorption rate of MB was highlighted. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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- 2024
6. Spectropolarimetry of Radio-Selected Broad Absorption Line Quasars
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DiPompeo, M. A., Brotherton, M. S., Becker, R. H., Tran, H. D., Gregg, M. D., White, R. L., and Laurent-Muehleisen, S. A.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We report spectropolarimetry of 30 radio-selected broad absorption line (BAL) quasars with the Keck Observatory, 25 from the sample of Becker et al. (2000). Both high and low-ionization BAL quasars are represented, with redshifts ranging from 0.5 to 2.5. The spectropolarimetric properties of radio-selected BAL quasars are very similar to those of radio-quiet BAL quasars: a sizeable fraction (20%) show large continuum polarization (2-10%) usually rising toward short wavelengths, emission lines are typically less polarized than the continuum, and absorption line troughs often show large polarization jumps. There are no significant correlations between polarization properties and radio properties, including those indicative of system orientation, suggesting that BAL quasars are not simply normal quasars seen from an edge-on perspective.
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- 2010
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7. The rediscovery of Dischidia hirsuta (Apocynaceae, Asclepiadoideae) in Singapore
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Rodda, M, Tran, H D, Chiew, P T, Liew, D, Leong-Škorničková, J, and BioStor
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- 2012
8. Curcuma vitellina (Zingiberaceae), a New Species from Vietnam
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Leong-Škorničková, J, Tran, H. D., Newman, M F, and BioStor
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- 2010
9. HST/ACS Multiband Coronagraphic Imaging of the Debris Disk around Beta Pictoris
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Golimowski, D. A., Ardila, D. R., Krist, J. E., Clampin, M., Ford, H. C., Illingworth, G. D., Bartko, F., Benitez, N., Blakeslee, J. P., Bouwens, R. J., Bradley, L. D., Broadhurst, T. J., Brown, R. A., Burrows, C. J., Cheng, E. S., Cross, N. J. G., Demarco, R., Feldman, P. D., Franx, M., Goto, T., Gronwall, C., Hartig, G. F., Holden, B. P., Homeier, N. L., Infante, L., Jee, M. J., Kimble, R. A., Lesser, M. P., Martel, A. R., Mei, S., Menanteau, F., Meurer, G. R., Miley, G. K., Motta, V., Postman, M., Rosati, P., Sirianni, M., Sparks, W. B., Tran, H. D., Tsvetanov, Z. I., White, R. L., Zheng, W., and Zirm, A. W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
(Abridged.) We present F435W (B), F606W (Broad V), and F814W (Broad I) coronagraphic images of the debris disk around Beta Pictoris obtained with HST's Advanced Camera for Surveys. We confirm that the previously reported warp in the inner disk is a distinct secondary disk inclined by ~5 deg from the main disk. The main disk's northeast extension is linear from 80 to 250 AU, but the southwest extension is distinctly bowed with an amplitude of ~1 AU over the same region. Both extensions of the secondary disk appear linear, but not collinear, from 80 to 150 AU. Within ~120 AU of the star, the main disk is ~50% thinner than previously reported. The surface-brightness profiles along the spine of the main disk are fitted with four distinct radial power laws between 40 and 250 AU, while those of the secondary disk between 80 and 150 AU are fitted with single power laws. These discrepancies suggest that the two disks have different grain compositions or size distributions. The F606W/F435W and F814W/F435W flux ratios of the composite disk are nonuniform and asymmetric about both projected axes of the disk. Within ~120 AU, the m_F435W-m_F606W and m_F435W-m_F814W colors along the spine of the main disk are ~10% and ~20% redder, respectively, than those of Beta Pic. These colors increasingly redden beyond ~120 AU, becoming 25% and 40% redder, respectively, than the star at 250 AU. We compare the observed red colors within ~120 AU with the simulated colors of non-icy grains having a radial number density ~r^-3 and different compositions, porosities, and minimum grain sizes. The observed colors are consistent with those of compact or moderately porous grains of astronomical silicate and/or graphite with sizes >0.15-0.20 um, but the colors are inconsistent with the blue colors expected from grains with porosities >90%., Comment: 38 pages (including 21 figures and 4 tables) in EmulateApJ format, accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal. Full-resolution figures and fully processed FITS images (with error maps) are available at http://acs.pha.jhu.edu/~dag/betapic Version 2: Added 4 references and some clarifying text. Basic facts and conclusions are unchanged
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- 2006
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10. An Overdensity of Galaxies near the Most Distant Radio-Loud Quasar
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Zheng, W., Overzier, R., Bouwens, R. J., White, R. L., Ford, H. C., Benitez, N., Blakeslee, J. P., Bradley, L. D., Jee, M. K., Martel, A. R., Mei, S., Zirm, A. W., Illingworth, G. D., Clampin, M., Hartig, G. F., Ardila, D. R., Bartko, F., Broadhurst, T. J., Brown, R. A., Burrows, C. J., Cheng, E. S., Cross, N. J. G., Demarco, R., Feldman, P. D., Franx, M., Golimowski, D. A., Goto, T., Gronwall, C., Holden, B., Homeier, N., Infante, L., Kimble, R. A., Krist, J. E., Lesser, M. P., Menanteau, F., Meurer, G. R., Miley, G. K., Motta, V., Postman, M., Rosati, P., Sirianni, M., Sparks, W. B., Tran, H. D., and Tsvetanov, Z. I.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
A five square arcminute region around the luminous radio-loud quasar SDSS J0836+0054 (z=5.8) hosts a wealth of associated galaxies, characterized by very red (1.3 < i_775 - z_{850} < 2.0) color. The surface density of these z~5.8 candidates is approximately six times higher than the number expected from deep ACS fields. This is one of the highest galaxy overdensities at high redshifts, which may develop into a group or cluster. We also find evidence for a substructure associated with one of the candidates. It has two very faint companion objects within two arcseconds, which are likely to merge. The finding supports the results of a recent simulation that luminous quasars at high redshifts lie on the most prominent dark-matter filaments and are surrounded by many fainter galaxies. The quasar activity from these regions may signal the buildup of a massive system., Comment: Four figures. The Astrophysical Journal: in press
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- 2005
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11. A Dynamical Simulation of the Debris Disk Around HD 141569A
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Ardila, D. R., Lubow, S. H., Golimowski, D. A., Krist, J. E., Clampin, M., Ford, H. C., Hartig, G. F., Illingworth, G. D., Bartko, F., Benitez, N., Blakeslee, J. P., Bouwens, R. J., Bradley, L. D., Broadhurst, T. J., Brown, R. A., Burrows, C. J., Cheng, E. S., Cross, N. J. G., Feldman, P. D., Franx, M., Goto, T., Gronwall, C., Holden, B., Homeier, N., Infante, L., Kimble, R. A., Lesser, M. P., Martel, A. R., Menanteau, F., Meurer, G. R., Miley, G. K., Postman, M., Sirianni, M., Sparks, W. B., Tran, H. D., Tsvetanov, Z. I., White, R. L., Zheng, W., and Zirm, A. W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the dynamical origin of the structures observed in the scattered-light images of the resolved debris disk around HD 141569A. We explore the roles of radiation pressure from the central star, gas drag from the gas disk, and the tidal forces from two nearby stars in creating and maintaining these structures. We use a simple one-dimensional axisymmetric model to show that the presence of the gas helps confine the dust and that a broad ring of dust is produced if a central hole exists in the disk. This model also suggests that the disk is in a transient, excited dynamical state, as the observed dust creation rate applied over the age of the star is inconsistent with submillimeter mass measurements. We model in two dimensions the effects of a fly-by encounter between the disk and a binary star in a prograde, parabolic, coplanar orbit. We track the spatial distribution of the disk's gas, planetesimals, and dust. We conclude that the surface density distribution reflects the planetesimal distribution for a wide range of parameters. Our most viable model features a disk of initial radius 400 AU, a gas mass of 50 M_earth, and beta = 4 and suggests that the system is being observed within 4000 yr of the fly-by periastron. The model reproduces some features of HD 141569A's disk, such as a broad single ring and large spiral arms, but it does not reproduce the observed multiple spiral rings or disk asymmetries nor the observed clearing in the inner disk. For the latter, we consider the effect of a 5 M_Jup planet in an eccentric orbit on the planetesimal distribution of HD 141569A., Comment: Accepted to ApJ
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- 2005
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12. The Luminosity Functions of the Galaxy Cluster MS1054-0321 at z=0.83 based on ACS Photometry
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Goto, Tomotsugu, Postman, Marc, Cross, Nicholas J. G., Illingworth, G. D., Tran, K., Magee, D., Franx, M., Benitez, N., Bouwens, R. J., Demarco, R., Ford, H. C., Homeier, N. L., Martel, A. R., Menanteau, F., Clampin, M., Hartig, G. F., Ardila, D. R., Bartko, F., Blakeslee, J. P., Bradley, L. D., Broadhurst, T. J., Brown, R. A., Burrows, C. J., Cheng, E. S., Feldman, P. D., Golimowski, D. A., Gronwall, C., Holden, B., Infante, L., Jee, M. J., Krist, J. E., Lesser, M. P., Mei, S., Meurer, G. R., Miley, G. K., Motta, V., Overzier, R., Sirianni, M., Sparks, W. B., Tran, H. D., Tsvetanov, Z. I., White, R. L., Zheng, W., and Zirm, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present new measurements of the galaxy luminosity function (LF) and its dependence on local galaxy density, color, morphology, and clustocentric radius for the massive z=0.83 cluster MS1054-0321. Our analyses are based on imaging performed with the ACS onboard the HST in the F606W, F775W and F850LP passbands and extensive spectroscopic data obtained with the Keck LRIS. Our main results are based on a spectroscopically selected sample of 143 cluster members with morphological classifications derived from the ACS observations. Our three primary findings are (1) the faint-end slope of the LF is steepest in the bluest filter, (2) the LF in the inner part of the cluster (or highest density regions) has a flatter faint-end slope, and (3) the fraction of early-type galaxies is higher at the bright end of the LF, and gradually decreases toward fainter magnitudes. These characteristics are consistent with those in local galaxy clusters, indicating that, at least in massive clusters, the common characteristics of cluster LFs are established at z=0.83. We also find a 2sigma deficit of intrinsically faint, red galaxies (i-z>0.5, Mi>-19) in this cluster. This trend may suggest that faint, red galaxies (which are common in z<0.1 rich clusters) have not yet been created in this cluster at z=0.83. The giant-to-dwarf ratio in MS1054-0321 starts to increase inwards of the virial radius or when Sigma>30 Mpc^-2, coinciding with the environment where the galaxy star formation rate and the morphology-density relation start to appear. (abridged), Comment: ApJ in press, references updated
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- 2004
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13. Dust and Ionized Gas in Nine Nearby Early-Type Galaxies Imaged with the HST Advanced Camera for Surveys
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Martel, A. R., Ford, H. C., Bradley, L. D., Tran, H. D., Menanteau, F., Tsvetanov, Z. I., Illingworth, G. D., Hartig, G. F., and Clampin, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present $V$ and $I$ continuum images and H$\alpha$+[N II] maps of nine early-type galaxies observed with the Wide Field Channel of the Advanced Camera for Surveys on the Hubble Space Telescope. Dust and ionized gas are detected in all galaxies. The optical nebulae are primarily concentrated on the nuclei and extend out to radii of a few hundred parsecs, in compact clumps, filaments, or disks. Two galaxies, NGC 6166 and NGC 6338, also possess diffuse, ionized filaments on kiloparsec scales. The ionized gas is entirely contained within the nuclear disks of ESO 208-G021, NGC 3078, and NGC 7720. In the radio-loud galaxy NGC 6166, emission-line filaments are detected along the radio lobes, possibly as a result of shock ionization. A wide range of ionized gas masses, $M_g\approx7\times10^2-3\times10^6$ $M_\odot$, are calculated from the observed fluxes. Even in this small sample, the orientation of the ionized material correlates well with the major or minor axis of the galaxies, consistent with an external origin for the dust and gas., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal, to appear Dec 4, 2004. 14 pages, 4 figures
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- 2004
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14. The Luminosity Function of Early-Type Galaxies at z~0.75
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Cross, N. J. G., Bouwens, R., Benitez, N., Blakeslee, J. P., Menanteau, F., Ford, H. C., Goto, T., Holden, B., Martel, A. R., Overzier, R., Gronwall, C., Homeier, N., Ardila, D. R., Bartko, F., Broadhurst, T. J., Brown, R. A., Burrows, C. J., Cheng, E. S., Clampin, M., Feldman, P. D., Franx, M., Golimowski, D. A., Hartig, G. F., Illingworth, G. D., Infante, L., Kimble, R. A., Krist, J. E., Lesser, M. P., Meurer, G. R., Miley, G. K., Postman, M., Rosati, P., Sirianni, M., Sparks, W. B., Tran, H. D., Tsvetanov, Z. I., White, R. L., and Zheng, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We measure the luminosity function of morphologically selected E/S0 galaxies from $z=0.5$ to $z=1.0$ using deep high resolution Advanced Camera for Surveys imaging data. Our analysis covers an area of $48\Box\arcmin$ (8$\times$ the area of the HDF-N) and extends 2 magnitudes deeper ($I\sim24$ mag) than was possible in the Deep Groth Strip Survey (DGSS). At $0.5
1.7$, E/S0 galaxies at brighter luminosities ($M_B<-20.1$), but are increasingly different at fainter magnitudes where `blue' galaxies are both smaller and have lower Sersic parameters. Fits of the colors to stellar population models suggest that most E/S0 galaxies have short star-formation time scales ($\tau<1$ Gyr), and that galaxies have formed at an increasing rate from $z\sim8$ until $z\sim2$ after which there has been a gradual decline., Comment: 39 pages, 21 figures, accepted in AJ - Published
- 2004
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15. Ultra Compact Dwarf galaxies in Abell 1689: a photometric study with the ACS
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Mieske, S., Infante, L., Benitez, N., Coe, D., Blakeslee, J. P., Zekser, K., Ford, H., Broadhurst, T. J., Illingworth, G. D., Hartig, G. F., Clampin, M., Ardila, D. R., Bartko, F., Bouwens, R. J., Brown, R. A., Burrows, C. J., Cheng, E. S., Cross, N. J. G., Feldman, P. D., Franx, M., Golimowski, D. A., Goto, T., Gronwall, C., Holden, B., Homeier, N., Kimble, R. A., Krist, J. E., Lesser, M. P., Martel, A. R., Menanteau, F., Meurer, G. R., Miley, G. K., Postman, M., Rosati, P., Sirianni, M., Sparks, W. B., Tran, H. D., Tsvetanov, Z. I., White, R. L., and Zheng, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The properties of Ultra Compact Dwarf (UCD) galaxy candidates in Abell 1689 (z=0.183) are investigated, based on deep high resolution ACS images. A UCD candidate has to be unresolved, have i<28 (M_V<-11.5) mag and satisfy color limits derived from Bayesian photometric redshifts. We find 160 UCD candidates with 2226.8 mag, the radial and luminosity distribution of the UCD candidates can be explained well by Abell 1689's globular cluster (GC) system. For i<26.8 mag, there is an overpopulation of 15 +/- 5 UCD candidates with respect to the GC luminosity function. For i<26 mag, the radial distribution of UCD candidates is more consistent with the dwarf galaxy population than with the GC system of Abell 1689. The UCD candidates follow a color-magnitude trend with a slope similar to that of Abell 1689's genuine dwarf galaxy population, but shifted fainter by about 2-3 mag. Two of the three brightest UCD candidates (M_V ~ -17 mag) are slightly resolved. At the distance of Abell 1689, these two objects would have King-profile core radii of ~35 pc and r_eff ~300 pc, implying luminosities and sizes 2-3 times those of M32's bulge. Additional photometric redshifts obtained with late type stellar and elliptical galaxy templates support the assignment of these two resolved sources to Abell 1689. Our findings imply that in Abell 1689 there are at least 10 UCDs with M_V<-12.7 mag. Compared to the UCDs in the Fornax cluster they are brighter, larger and have colors closer to normal dwarf galaxies. This suggests that they may be in an intermediate stage of the stripping process. Spectroscopy is needed to definitely confirm the existence of UCDs in Abell 1689., Comment: 29 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in the October 2004 issue of the Astronomical Journal
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- 2004
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16. Internal Color Properties of Resolved Spheroids in the Deep HST/ACS field of UGC 10214
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Menanteau, F., Ford, H. C., Illingworth, G. D., Sirianni, M., Blakeslee, J. P., Meurer, G. R., Martel, A. R., Benitez, N., Postman, M., Franx, M., Ardila, D. R., Bartko, F., Bouwens, R. J., Broadhurst, T. J., Brown, R. A., Burrows, C. J., Cheng, E. S., Clampin, M., Cross, N. J. G., Feldman, P. D., Golimowski, D. A., Gronwall, C., Hartig, G. F., Infante, L., Kimble, R. A., Krist, J. E., Lesser, M. P., Miley, G. K., Rosati, P., Sparks, W. B., Tran, H. D., Tsvetanov, Z. I., and Zheng, R. L. White W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
(Abridged) We study the internal color properties of a morphologically selected sample of spheroidal galaxies taken from HST/ACS ERO program of UGC 10214 (``The Tadpole''). By taking advantage of the unprecedented high resolution of the ACS in this very deep dataset we are able to characterize spheroids at sub-arcseconds scales. Using the V_606W and I_814W bands, we construct V-I color maps and extract color gradients for a sample of spheroids at I_814W < 24 mag. We investigate the existence of a population of morphologically classified spheroids which show extreme variation in their internal color properties similar to the ones reported in the HDFs. These are displayed as blue cores and inverse color gradients with respect to those accounted from metallicity variations. Following the same analysis we find a similar fraction of early-type systems (~30%-40%) that show non-homologous internal colors, suggestive of recent star formation activity. We present two statistics to quantify the internal color variation in galaxies and for tracing blue cores, from which we estimate the fraction of non-homogeneous to homogeneous internal colors as a function of redshift up to z<1.2. We find that it can be described as about constant as a function of redshift, with a small increase with redshift for the fraction of spheroids that present strong color dispersions. The implications of a constant fraction at all redshifts suggests the existence of a relatively permanent population of evolving spheroids up to z~1. We discuss the implications of this in the context of spheroidal formation., Comment: Fixed URL for high resolution version. 13 Pages, 10 Figures. Accepted for Publication in ApJ. Sep 1st issue. Higher resolution version and complete table3B at http://acs.pha.jhu.edu/~felipe/e-prints/Tadpole
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- 2004
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17. Discovery of Globular Clusters in the Proto-Spiral NGC2915: Implications for Hierarchical Galaxy Evolution
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Meurer, G. R., Blakeslee, J. P., Sirianni, M., Ford, H. C., Illingworth, G. D., Benitez, N., Clampin, M., Menanteau, F., Tran, H. D., Kimble, R. A., Hartig, G. F., Ardila, D. R., Bartko, F., Bouwens, R. J., Broadhurst, T. J., Brown, R. A., Burrows, C. J., Cheng, E. S., Cross, N. J. G., Feldman, P. D., Golimowski, D. A., Gronwall, C., Infante, L., Krist, J. E., Lesser, M. P., Martel, A. R., Miley, G. K., Postman, M., Rosati, P., Sparks, W. B., Tsvetanov, Z. I., White, R. L., and Zheng, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have discovered three globular clusters beyond the Holmberg radius in Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys images of the gas-rich dark matter dominated blue compact dwarf galaxy NGC2915. The clusters, all of which start to resolve into stars, have M_{V606} = -8.9 to -9.8 mag, significantly brighter than the peak of the luminosity function of Milky Way globular clusters. Their colors suggest a metallicity [Fe/H] ~ -1.9 dex, typical of metal-poor Galactic globular clusters. The specific frequency of clusters is at a minimum normal, compared to spiral galaxies. However, since only a small portion of the system has been surveyed it is more likely that the luminosity and mass normalized cluster content is higher, like that seen in elliptical galaxies and galaxy clusters. This suggests that NGC2915 resembles a key phase in the early hierarchical assembly of galaxies - the epoch when much of the old stellar population has formed, but little of the stellar disk. Depending on the subsequent interaction history, such systems could go on to build-up larger elliptical galaxies, evolve into normal spirals, or in rare circumstances remain suspended in their development to become systems like NGC2915., Comment: ApJ Letters accepted; 6 pages, 2 figures, 3 tables
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- 2003
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18. Faint Galaxies in deep ACS observations
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Benitez, N., Ford, H., Bouwens, R., Menanteau, F., Blakeslee, J., Gronwall, C., Illingworth, G., Meurer, G., Broadhurst, T. J., Clampin, M., Franx, M., Hartig, G., Magee, D., Sirianni, M., Ardila, D. R., Bartko, F., Brown, R. A., Burrows, C. J., Cheng, E. S., Cross, N. J. G., Feldman, P. D., Golimowski, D. A., Infante, L., Kimble, R. A., Krist, J. E., Lesser, M. P., Levay, Z., Martel, A. R., Miley, G. K., Postman, M., Rosati, P., Sparks, W. B., Tran, H. D., Tsvetanov, Z. I., White, R. L., and Zheng, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the analysis of the faint galaxy population in the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) Early Release Observation fields VV 29 (UGC 10214) and NGC 4676. Here we attempt to thoroughly consider all aspects relevant for faint galaxy counting and photometry, developing methods which are based on public software and that are easily reproducible by other astronomers. Using simulations we determine the best SExtractor parameters for the detection of faint galaxies in deep HST observations, paying special attention to the issue of deblending, which significantly affects the normalization and shape of the number count distribution. We confirm, as claimed by Bernstein, Freedman and Madore (2002), that Kron-like magnitudes, such as the ones generated by SExtractor, can miss more than half of the light of faint galaxies, what dramatically affects the slope of the number counts. We present catalogs for the VV 29 and NGC 4676 fields with photometry in the g,V and I bands. We also show that combining the bayesian software BPZ with superb ACS data and new spectral templates enables us to estimate reliable photometric redshifts for a significant fraction of galaxies with as few as three filters. After correcting for selection effects, we measure slopes of 0.32+- 0.01 for 22 < g < 28, 0.34+-0.01 for 22< V <27.5 and 0.33+-0.01 for 22 < I < 27. The counts do not flatten (except perhaps in the g-band), up to the depth of our observations. We find that the faint counts m_{AB}> 25.5 can be well approximated in all our filters by a passive luminosity evolution model based on the COMBO-17 luminosity function (\alpha=-1.5), with a strong merging rate following the prescription of Glazebrook et al. (1994), \phi^*\propto (1+Qz), with Q=4., Comment: 21 pages, 20 figures, to appear in ApJS. Several figures heavily degraded to fit astro-ph size limit. Please download full resolution version from http://acs.pha.jhu.edu/~txitxo/FaintGalaxies.ps.gz
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- 2003
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19. Star Formation at z~6: i-dropouts in the ACS GTO fields
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Bouwens, R. J., Illingworth, G. D., Rosati, P., Lidman, C., Broadhurst, T., Franx, M., Ford, H. C., Magee, D., Benitez, N., Blakeslee, J. P., Meurer, G. R., Clampin, M., Hartig, G. F., Ardila, D. R., Bartko, F., Brown, R. A., Burrows, C. J., Cheng, E. S., Cross, N. J. G., Feldman, P. D., Golimowski, D. A., Gronwall, C., Infante, L., Kimble, R. A., Krist, J. E., Lesser, M. P., Martel, A. R., Menanteau, F., Miley, G. K., Postman, M., Sirianni, M., Sparks, W. B., Tran, H. D., Tsvetanov, Z. I., White, R. L., and Zheng, W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Using an i-z dropout criterion, we determine the space density of z~6 galaxies from two deep ACS GTO fields with deep optical-IR imaging. A total of 23 objects are found over 46 arcmin^2, or ~0.5 objects/arcmin^2 down to z~27.3 (6 sigma; all AB mag) (including one probable z~6 AGN). Combining deep ISAAC data for our RDCS1252-2927 field (J~25.7 and Ks~25.0 (5 sigma)) and NICMOS data for the HDF North (JH~27.3 (5 sigma)), we verify that these dropouts have flat spectral slopes. i-dropouts in our sample range in luminosity from ~1.5 L* (z~25.6) to ~0.3 L* (z~27.3) with the exception of one very bright candidate at z~24.2. The half-light radii vary from 0.09" to 0.29", or 0.5 kpc to 1.7 kpc. We derive the z~6 rest-frame UV luminosity density using three different procedures, each utilizing simulations based on a CDF South V dropout sample. First, we compare our findings with a no-evolution projection of this V-dropout sample. We find 23+/-25% more i-dropouts than we predict. Adopting previous results to z~5, this works out to a 20+/-29% drop in the luminosity density from z~3 to z~6. Second, we use these same V-dropout simulations to derive a selection function for our i-dropout sample and compute the UV-luminosity density (7.2+/-2.5 x 10^25 ergs/s/Hz/Mpc^3 down to z~27). We find a 39+/-21% drop over the same redshift range. This is our preferred value and suggests a star formation rate of 0.0090+/-0.0031 M_sol/yr/Mpc^3 to z~27, or ~0.036+/- 0.012 M_sol/yr/Mpc^3 extrapolating the LF to the faint limit. Third, we follow a very similar procedure, but assume no incompleteness, finding a luminosity density which is ~2-3X lower. This final estimate constitutes a lower limit. All three estimates are within the canonical range of luminosity densities necessary for reionization of the universe at this epoch. (abridged), Comment: 36 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ, postscript version with high-resolution figures can be downloaded at http://www.ucolick.org/~bouwens/idropout.ps
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- 2003
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20. HST/ACS Coronagraphic Imaging of the Circumstellar Disk around HD1415659A
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Clampin, M., Krist, J. E., Ardila, D. R., Golimowski, D. A., Hartig, G. F., Ford, H. C., Illingworth, G. D., Bartko, F., Benitez, N., Blakeslee, J. P., Bouwens, R. J., Broadhurst, T. J., Brown, R. A., Burrows, C. J., Cheng, E. S., Cross, N. J. G., Feldman, P. D., Franx, M., Gronwall, C., Infante, L., Kimble, R. A., Lesser, M. P., Martel, A. R., Menanteau, F., Meurer, G. R., Miley, G. K., Postman, M., Rosati, P., Sirianni, M., Sparks, W. B., Tran, H. D., Tsvetanov, Z. I., White, R. L., and Zheng, W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Multicolor coronagraphic images of the circumstellar disk around HD141569A have been obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Advanced Camera for Surveys. B, V, and I images show that the disk's previously-described multiple-ring structure is actually a continuous distribution of dust with a tightly-wound spiral structure. Two, more open spiral arms extend from the disk, one of which appears to reach the nearby binary star HD141569BC. Diffuse dust is seen up to 1200AU from HD141569A. Although planets may exist in the inner region of the disk, tidal interaction with HD141569BC seems more likely to be the cause of these phenomena. The disk appears redder than the star (B-V = 0.21 and V-I = 0.25), and its color is spatially uniform. A scattering asymmetry factor of g = 0.25-0.35 is derived. The azimuthal density distribution is asymmetric, varying by a factor of ~3 at some radii., Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted in the Astronomical Journal
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- 2003
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21. Discovery of Two Distant Type Ia Supernovae in the Hubble Deep Field North with the Advanced Camera for Surveys
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Blakeslee, John P., Tsvetanov, Zlatan I., Riess, Adam G., Ford, Holland C., Illingworth, Garth D., Magee, Daniel, Tonry, John L., Benitez, N., Clampin, M., Hartig, G. F., Meurer, G. R., Sirianni, M., Ardila, D. R., Bartko, F., Bouwens, R., Broadhurst, T., Cross, N., Feldman, P. D., Franx, M., Golimowski, D. A., Gronwall, C., Kimble, R., Krist, J., Martel, A. R., Menanteau, F., Miley, G., Postman, M., Rosati, P., Sparks, W., Strolger, L. -G., Tran, H. D., White, R. L., and Zheng, W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present observations of the first two supernovae discovered with the recently installed Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) on the Hubble Space Telescope. The supernovae were found in Wide Field Camera images of the Hubble Deep Field North taken with the F775W, F850LP, and G800L optical elements as part of the ACS guaranteed time observation program. Spectra extracted from the ACS G800L grism exposures confirm that the objects are Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) at redshifts z=0.47 and z=0.95. Follow-up HST observations have been conducted with ACS in F775W and F850LP and with NICMOS in the near-infrared F110W bandpass, yielding a total of 9 flux measurements in the 3 bandpasses over a period of 50 days in the observed frame. We discuss many of the important issues in doing accurate photometry with the ACS. We analyze the multi-band light curves using two different fitting methods to calibrate the supernovae luminosities and place them on the SNe Ia Hubble diagram. The resulting distances are consistent with the redshift-distance relation of the accelerating universe model, although evolving intergalactic grey dust remains as a less likely possibility. The relative ease with which these SNe Ia were found, confirmed, and monitored demonstrates the potential ACS holds for revolutionizing the field of high-redshift SNe Ia, and therefore of testing the accelerating universe cosmology and constraining the "epoch of deceleration"., Comment: 11 pages, 8 embedded figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2003
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22. Calibration of Geometric Distortion in the ACS Detectors
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Meurer, G. R., Lindler, D., Blakeslee, J. P., Cox, C., Martel, A. R., Tran, H. D., Bouwens, R. J., Ford, H. C., Clampin, M., Hartig, G. F., Sirianni, M., and de Marchi, G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The off-axis location of the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) is the chief (but not sole) cause of strong geometric distortion in all detectors: the Wide Field Camera (WFC), High Resolution Camera (HRC), and Solar Blind Camera (SBC). Dithered observations of rich star cluster fields are used to calibrate the distortion. We describe the observations obtained, the algorithms used to perform the calibrations and the accuracy achieved., Comment: to appear in "Proceedings of the 2002 HST Calibration Workshop", S. Arribas, A. Koekemoer, and B. Whitmore, eds.; 4 pages, 2 figures each containing two panels
- Published
- 2002
23. Dusty Nuclear Disks and Filaments in Early Type Galaxies
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Tran, H. D., Tsvetanov, Z., Ford, H. C., Davies, J., Jaffe, W., Bosch, F. C. van den, and Rest, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We examine the dust properties of a nearby distance-limited sample of early type galaxies using the WFPC2 of the Hubble Space Telescope. Dust is detected in 29 out of 67 galaxies (43%), including 12 with small nuclear dusty disks. In a separate sample of 40 galaxies biased for the detection of dust by virtue of their detection in the IRAS 100 micron band, dust is found in ~78% of the galaxies, 15 of which contain dusty disks. In those galaxies with detectable dust, the apparent mass of the dust correlates with radio and far infrared luminosity, becoming more significant for systems with filamentary dust. A majority of IRAS and radio detections are also associated with dusty galaxies rather than dustless galaxies. This indicates that thermal emission from clumpy, filamentary dust is the main source of the far-IR radiation in early type galaxies. Dust in small disk-like morphology tends to be well aligned with the major axis of the host galaxies, while filamentary dust appears to be more randomly distributed with no preference for alignment with any major galactic structure. This suggests that, if the dusty disks and filaments have a common origin, the dust originates externally and requires time to dynamically relax and settle in the galaxy potential in the form of compact disks. More galaxies with visible dust than without dust display emission lines, indicative of ionized gas, although such nuclear activity does not show a preference for dusty disk over filamentary dust. There appears to be a weak relationship between the mass of the dusty disks and central velocity dispersion of the galaxy, suggesting a connection with a similar recently recognized relationship between the latter and the black hole mass., Comment: 17 pages, including 10 figures & 7 tables, to be published in the Astronomical Journal
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- 2001
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24. Polarimetry and Unification of Low-Redshift Radio Galaxies
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Cohen, M. H., Ogle, P. M., Tran, H. D., Goodrich, R. W., and Miller, J. S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have made high-quality measurements of the polarization spectra of 13 FR II radio galaxies and taken polarization images for 11 of these with the Keck telescopes. Seven of the eight narrow-line radio galaxies (NLRG) are polarized, and six of the seven show prominent broad Balmer lines in polarized light. The broad lines are also weakly visible in total flux. Some of the NLRG show bipolar regions with roughly circumferential polarization vectors, revealing a large reflection nebula illuminated by a central source. Our observations powerfully support the hidden quasar hypothesis for some NLRG. Classification as NLRG, broad-line radio galaxy (BLRG), or quasar therefore depends on orientation. However, not all objects fit into this unification scheme. Our sample is biased towards objects known in advance to be polarized, but the combination of our results with those of Hill, Goodrich and DePoy (1996) show that at least 6 out of a complete, volume and flux-limited sample of 9 FR II NLRG have broad lines, seen either in polarization or P_alpha., Comment: To appear in November 1999 Astronomical Journal. 49 pages, 13 figures
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- 1999
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25. Polarized Narrow-Line Emission from the Nucleus of NGC 4258
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Barth, A. J., Tran, H. D., Brotherton, M. S., Filippenko, A. V., Ho, L. C., van Breugel, W., Antonucci, R., and Goodrich, R. W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The detection of polarized continuum and line emission from the nucleus of NGC 4258 by Wilkes et al. (1995) provides an intriguing application of the unified model of Seyfert nuclei to a galaxy in which there is known to be an edge-on, rotating disk of molecular gas surrounding the nucleus. Unlike most Seyfert nuclei, however, NGC 4258 has strongly polarized narrow emission lines. To further investigate the origin of the polarized emission, we have obtained spectropolarimetric observations of the NGC 4258 nucleus at the Keck-II telescope. The narrow-line polarizations range from 1.0% for [S II] 6716 to 13.9% for the [O II] 7319,7331 blend, and the position angle of polarization is oriented nearly parallel to the projected plane of the masing disk. A correlation between critical density and degree of polarization is detected for the forbidden lines, indicating that the polarized emission arises from relatively dense (n_e > 10^4 cm^-3) gas. An archival Hubble Space Telescope narrow-band [O III] image shows that the narrow-line region has a compact, nearly unresolved core, implying a FWHM size of <2.5 pc. We discuss the possibility that the polarized emission might arise from the accretion disk itself and become polarized by scattering within the disk atmosphere. A more likely scenario is an obscuring torus or strongly warped disk surrounding the inner portion of a narrow-line region which is strongly stratified in density. The compact size of the narrow-line region implies that the obscuring structure must be smaller than ~2.5 pc in diameter., Comment: To appear in the Astronomical Journal. 13 pages, including 1 table and 4 figures. Uses emulateapj.sty
- Published
- 1999
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26. Polarization of Broad Absorption Line QSOs I. A Spectropolarimetric Atlas
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Ogle, P. M., Cohen, M. H., Miller, J. S., Tran, H. D., Goodrich, R. W., and Martel, A. R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a spectropolarimetric survey of 36 broad absorption line quasi-stellar objects (BAL QSOs). The continuum, absorption trough, and emission line polarization of BAL QSOs yield clues about their structure. We confirm that BAL QSOs are in general more highly polarized than non-BAL QSOs, consistent with a more equatorial viewing direction for the former than the latter. We have identified two new highly-polarized QSOs in our sample (1232+1325 and 1333+2840). The polarization rises weakly to the blue in most objects, perhaps due to scattering and absorption by dust particles. We find that a polarization increase in the BAL troughs is a general property of polarized BAL QSOs, indicating an excess of scattered light relative to direct light, and consistent with the unification of BAL QSOs and non-BAL QSOs. We have also discovered evidence of resonantly scattered photons in the red wing of the C IV broad emission lines of a few objects. In most cases, the broad emission lines have lower polarization and a different position angle than the continuum. The polarization characteristics of low-ionization BAL QSOs are similar to those of high-ionization BAL QSOs, suggesting a similar BAL wind geometry., Comment: 39 pages, 6 figures (20 .gif files), accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Supplements
- Published
- 1999
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27. Hidden Quasars in Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies
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Tran, H. D., Brotherton, M. S., Stanford, S. A., and van Breugel, W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Many ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) are powered by quasars hidden in the center, but many are also powered by starbursts. A simply diagnostic diagram is proposed that can identify obscured quasars in ULIRGs by their high-ionization emission lines ([O III] 5007/Hbeta >~ 5), and ``warm'' IR color (f_{25}/f_{60} >~ 0.25)., Comment: 2 pages including 2 postscript figures to be published in the proceedings of the IAU Symposium No. 194: "Activity in Galaxies and Related Phenomena", held in Byurakan, Armenia, 17-21 August 1998
- Published
- 1998
28. Optical continuum structure of Cygnus A
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Fosbury, R. A. E., Vernet, J., Villar-Martin, M., Cohen, M. H., Ogle, P. M., Tran, H. D., and Hook, R. N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
As a prerequisite for interpreting new observations of the most distant radio galaxies, we make an optical study of the closest powerful radio source, Cygnus A. Using Keck imaging- and spectro-polarimetry in conjunction with HST, WFPC2 broad and narrow band imaging, we are able to identify specific geometrical structures in the galaxy with optical continuum components distinguished by both colour and polarimetric properties. A 4 kpc diameter dusty ring of young stars forms the equator of a double ionization cone which is co-axial with the radio jets., Comment: 11 pages in PDF format. Last page is a colour plate. To be published in the KNAW colloquium on: "The most distant radio galaxies", Amsterdam, 15-17 October 1997, Roettgering, Best and Lehnert, eds, Reidel
- Published
- 1998
29. PKS 0116+082: An Optically Variable Compact Steep-Spectrum Source in an NLRG
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Cohen, M. H., Vermeulen, R. C., Ogle, P. M., Tran, H. D., and Goodrich, R. W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Polarimetry of the narrow-line radio galaxy PKS 0116+082 at the W.M. Keck telescope shows that it has high and variable optical polarization, presumably due to synchrotron radiation. It is not a BL Lac object because it has strong narrow lines, and it is not an OVV quasar because it has no broad lines and the extended galaxy is prominent. VLA and VLBA images show that it is a compact steep-spectrum radio source with most of the emission coming from a region less than 100 milli-arcsec in size. Of the 25 compact steep-spectrum or gigahertz peaked-spectrum sources measured polarimetrically, four have high optical polarization. One of these has been observed only once but in the other three the polarization is variable. This gives an intriguing hint that variability may be a general property of these objects., Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, to appear in July 1997 ApJ
- Published
- 1997
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30. Scattered Nuclear Continuum and Broad H-alpha in Cygnus A
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Ogle, P. M., Cohen, M. H., Miller, J. S., Tran, H. D., Fosbury, R. A. E., and Goodrich, R. W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have discovered scattered broad Balmer emission lines in the spectrum of Cygnus A, using the Keck II telescope. Broad H-alpha appears in polarized flux from components on either side of the nucleus, and to a lesser extent in the nucleus. The full-width at half-maximum of broad H-alpha is 26,000 km/s, comparable to the widest emission lines seen in broad-line radio galaxies. Scattered AGN light provides a significant contribution to the total flux at 3800 Angstroms (rest) of the western component, where the polarization rises to 16%. The spatially integrated flux of Cygnus A at 5500 Angstroms can be decomposed into an elliptical galaxy fraction (Fg=0.70), a highly polarized blue component (FC1=0.15), a less polarized red component (FC=0.09), and a contribution from the nebular continuum (0.06). Imaging polarimetry shows a double fan of polarization vectors with circular symmetry which corresponds to the ionization cone seen in HST images. Our results are consistent with scattering of light from a hidden quasar of modest luminosity by an extended, dusty narrow-line region., Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, Latex, to appear in ApJ Letters
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- 1997
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31. Implementation of a HITL-Enabled High Autonomy Drone Architecture on a Photo-Realistic Simulator
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Huynh, D. M., primary, Nguyen, A. D., additional, Nguyen, H. N., additional, Tran, H. D., additional, Ngo, D. A., additional, Pestana, J., additional, and Nguyen, A. Q., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Implications of tropical cyclones on damage and potential recovery and restoration of logged forests in Vietnam
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Stas, S. M., primary, Spracklen, B. D., additional, Willetts, P. D., additional, Le, T. C., additional, Tran, H. D., additional, Le, T. T., additional, Ngo, D. T., additional, Le, A. V., additional, Le, H. T., additional, Rutishauser, E., additional, Schwendike, J., additional, Marsham, J. H., additional, van Kuijk, M., additional, Jew, E. K. K., additional, Phillips, O. L., additional, and Spracklen, D. V., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Usefulness of day-one chest X-ray score for predicting mortality and ICU admission in COVID-19 patients
- Author
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HOANG, T, primary, Tran, H D, additional, Tran, D T, additional, Dang, M C, additional, Ton-Nu, T, additional, Trinh, L H M, additional, Le, H H N, additional, Le Thi, N M, additional, Tran Cong, T, additional, Dong, D N N, additional, and Dinh-Xuan, A, additional
- Published
- 2022
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34. Optical Polarization of 3C 265
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Cohen, M. H., Tran, H. D., Ogle, P. M., Goodrich, R. W., Ekers, R., editor, Fanti, C., editor, and Padrielli, L., editor
- Published
- 1996
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35. Value of Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography in Acute Stroke Therapeutic Trials
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Grotta, J. C., Hanson, S. K., Pasteur, W., Rhoades, H., Tran, H. D., Lamki, L. M., Barron, B. J., Taylor, W.J, Yamaguchi, Takenori, editor, Mori, Etsuro, editor, Minematsu, Kazuo, editor, and del Zoppo, Gregory J., editor
- Published
- 1995
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36. Supplementary Figures from Implications of tropical cyclones on damage and potential recovery and restoration of logged forests in Vietnam
- Author
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Stas, S. M., Spracklen, B. D., Willetts, P. D., Le, T. C., Tran, H. D., Le, T. T., Ngo, D. T., Le, A. V., Le, H. T., Rutishauser, E., Schwendike, Juliane, Marsham, John H., van Kuijk, M., Jew, E. K. K., Phillips, O. L., and Spracklen, D. V.
- Abstract
Many natural forests in Southeast Asia are degraded following decades of logging. Restoration of these forests is delayed by ongoing logging and tropical cyclones, but the implications for recovery are largely uncertain. We analysed meteorological, satellite and forest inventory plot data to assess the effect of Typhoon Doksuri, a major tropical cyclone, on the forest landscapes of central Vietnam consisting of natural forests and plantations. We estimated the return period for a cyclone of this intensity to be 40 years. Plantations were almost twice as likely to suffer cyclone damage compared to natural forests. Logged natural forests (9–12 years after cessation of government-licensed logging) were surveyed before and after the storm with 2 years between measurements and remained a small biomass carbon sink (0.1 ± 0.3 Mg C ha−1 y−1) over this period. The cyclone reduced the carbon sink of recovering natural forests by an average of 0.85 Mg C ha−1 y−1, less than the carbon loss due to ongoing unlicensed logging. Restoration of forest landscapes in Southeast Asia requires a reduction in unlicensed logging and prevention of further conversion of degraded natural forests to plantations, particularly in landscapes prone to tropical cyclones where natural forests provide a resilient carbon sink.This article is part of the theme issue ‘Understanding forest landscape restoration: reinforcing scientific foundations for the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration’.
- Published
- 2022
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37. Implications of tropical cyclones on damage and potential recovery and restoration of logged forests in Vietnam.
- Author
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Stas, S. M., Spracklen, B. D., Willetts, P. D., Le, T. C., Tran, H. D., Le, T. T., Ngo, D. T., Le, A. V., Le, H. T., Rutishauser, E., Schwendike, J., Marsham, J. H., van Kuijk, M., Jew, E. K. K., Phillips, O. L., and Spracklen, D. V.
- Abstract
Many natural forests in Southeast Asia are degraded following decades of logging. Restoration of these forests is delayed by ongoing logging and tropical cyclones, but the implications for recovery are largely uncertain. We analysed meteorological, satellite and forest inventory plot data to assess the effect of Typhoon Doksuri, a major tropical cyclone, on the forest landscapes of central Vietnam consisting of natural forests and plantations. We estimated the return period for a cyclone of this intensity to be 40 years. Plantations were almost twice as likely to suffer cyclone damage compared to natural forests. Logged natural forests (9-12 years after cessation of government-licensed logging) were surveyed before and after the storm with 2 years between measurements and remained a small biomass carbon sink (0.1 ± 0.3 Mg C ha
-1 yr-1 ) over this period. The cyclone reduced the carbon sink of recovering natural forests by an average of 0.85 Mg C ha-1 yr-1 , less than the carbon loss due to ongoing unlicensed logging. Restoration of forest landscapes in Southeast Asia requires a reduction in unlicensed logging and prevention of further conversion of degraded natural forests to plantations, particularly in landscapes prone to tropical cyclones where natural forests provide a resilient carbon sink. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. MORPHOMETRICS AND BODY CONDITION OF GLOSSOGOBIUS OLIVACEUS IN MANGROVE FORESTS OF NORTHERN VIETNAM.
- Author
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Ta, T. T., Chu, N. H., Nguyen, N. T., Tran, H. D., Tran, T. T., and Ha, L. M.
- Subjects
MANGROVE forests ,MANGROVE plants ,MORPHOMETRICS ,TREE growth ,BODY weight ,SEX ratio - Abstract
Little is known on growth and size relationships of Glossogobius olivaceus, a high-value commercial species in northern Vietnam. This study aimed to explore morphometric relationships, growth and condition factor of G. olivaceus from mangrove forests of the Ba Lat estuary, the Red River in northern Vietnam. Analysis of 679 G. olivaceus collected monthly from March 2018 to February 2019 showed a sex ratio of approximately 1:1. The mean total length and body weight were not significantly different between females and males. Length-weight relationships (LWR) for G. olivaceus showed high correlations that varied slightly by season. This species presented a positive allometric growth pattern as the slope b of the LWR which was significantly higher than the cubic value of 3. Estimates of condition factor (K) were not different from the value of 1, implying a favorable nutritional condition of specimens collected. Both the LWR (b slope) and condition factor (K) of G. olivaceus from our study varied by sex, and seasons indicated that G. olivaceus lives across variable environmental conditions. Furthermore, shifts in growth patterns between the breeding (b - 3) and nonbreeding season (b > 3) potentially suggest that this species has an adaptation strategy to monthly/seasonal environmental variability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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39. P03 Reducing toxic N-terminal huntingtin fragments in HD using exon skipping
- Author
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Evers, MM, Tran, H-D, Zalachoras, L, den Dunnen, JT, van Ommen, G-JB, Meijer, OC, Aartsma-Rus, A, and van Roon-Mom, WMC
- Published
- 2012
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40. The potential for REDD+ to reduce forest degradation in Vietnam
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Ngo, D T, primary, Le, A V, additional, Le, H T, additional, Stas, S M, additional, Le, T C, additional, Tran, H D, additional, Pham, T, additional, Le, T T, additional, Spracklen, B D, additional, Langan, C, additional, Cuthbert, R, additional, Buermann, W, additional, Phillips, O L, additional, Jew, E K K, additional, and Spracklen, D V, additional
- Published
- 2020
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41. The potential for REDD+ to reduce forest degradation in Vietnam
- Author
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Ngo, D T, Le, A V, Le, H T, Stas, S M, Le, T C, Tran, H D, Pham, T, Le, T T, Spracklen, B D, Langan, C, Cuthbert, R, Buermann, W, Phillips, O L, Jew, E K K, Spracklen, D V, Ngo, D T, Le, A V, Le, H T, Stas, S M, Le, T C, Tran, H D, Pham, T, Le, T T, Spracklen, B D, Langan, C, Cuthbert, R, Buermann, W, Phillips, O L, Jew, E K K, and Spracklen, D V
- Published
- 2020
42. Accuracy and clinical utility of the mini-dose 14C-urea breath test in the evaluation of Helicobacter pylori infection
- Author
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JENSEN, G., FRIEDENBERG, F., LEVINE, G., ZAERI, N., BRAITMAN, L. E., TRAN, H. D., GUJRAL, N., and PROENZA, J.
- Published
- 1998
43. Value of Single-Photon Emission-Computed Tomography in Acute Stroke Therapeutic Trials
- Author
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Hanson, S. K., Grotta, J. C., Rhoades, H., Tran, H. D., Lamki, L. M., Barron, B. J., and Taylor, W. J.
- Published
- 1993
44. Assessing a method of bamboo treatment and its effects on the durability and mechanical performance
- Author
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Tran, H. D., Bui, Q. B., and Grillet, A. C.
- Abstract
Bamboo is a natural material having a fast reproduction and excellent mechanical properties. However, when a natural material in general and bamboo in particular are expected to be a construction material, their durability is always questionable. Indeed, it is well known that these materials do not possess the same performance at the long-term, comparing to industrial materials. A sustainable solution for the bamboo treatment still needs to be investigated. The present study explores the oil-heated treatment with different types of oils like flax or sunflower oils. The present investigation concentrates on mechanical properties and durability of treated bamboos, to assess the effectiveness of this treatment approach. First, bamboo specimens were treated with perspective to increase their durability. Eleven sets with different conditions of treatment were tested: treatment at 100°C or 180°C; with flax oil or sunflower oil, or without oil; treatment time of 1h, 2h or 3h; different cooling methods and cooling times. Then, mechanical and durability tests were carried out on untreated and treated bamboos: uniaxial compression tests, 3 points bending tests, water immersion tests and humidity tests. The results showed that some tested treatment method could increase both the durability and the compressive strength of treated specimens, compared to untreated bamboo., Academic Journal of Civil Engineering, Vol 35 No 2 (2017): Special Issue - ICBBM 2017
- Published
- 2017
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45. Treatment and reuse of coalmine wastewater in Vietnam: application of microfiltration
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Dang, H. T. T., primary, Tran, H. D., primary, Tran, S. H., primary, Sasakawa, M., primary, and Narbaitz, R. M., primary
- Published
- 2018
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46. The Design and Development of the NIRSPEC Data Reduction Pipeline for the Keck Observatory Archive
- Author
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Mader, J. A., Tran, H. D., Cohen, R., Colson, A., Berriman, G. B., Gelino, C. R., Kong, M., Laity, A. C., Swain, M. A., Wang, C., Goodrich, R., Holt, J., Lorente, Nuria P. F., Shortridge, Keith, and Wayth, Randall
- Abstract
The Keck Observatory Archive, a collaboration between the NASA Exoplanet Science Institute and the W. M. Keck Observatory, serves science and calibration data for all current and retired instruments from the twin Keck Telescopes. In addition to the raw data, we publicly serve quick-look, reduced data products for four instruments (HIRES, LWS, NIRC2 and OSIRIS), so that KOA users can easily assess the quality and scientific content of the data. In this paper we present the design and implementation of the NIRSPEC data reduction pipeline (DRP) for KOA. We will discuss the publicly available reduction packages for NIRSPEC, the challenges encountered when designing this fully automated DRP and the algorithm used to determine wavelength calibration from sky lines. The reduced data products from the NIRSPEC DRP are expected to be available in KOA by mid-2016.
- Published
- 2016
47. Pollutant removal by Canna Generalis in tropical constructed wetlands for domestic wastewater treatment.
- Author
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Tran, H. D., Vi, H. M. T., Dang, H. T. T., and Narbaitz, R. M.
- Subjects
CONSTRUCTED wetlands ,PHRAGMITES australis ,HYBRID systems ,WETLAND restoration ,ADVECTION ,POLLUTANTS - Abstract
Constructed wetlands have not been commonly used in Vietnam due to the lack of information in the selection of proper types of constructed wetlands, type of reeds, design parameters and performance efficiency, in tropical climates. This paper focuses on Canna generalis, which is a common reed and easy to grow both in water and wet land conditions. Two kinds of hybrid constructed wetlands were employed, including Facultative pond combined with free water sub-surface constructed wetlands system and horizontal subsurface flow combined with Aerobic pond system. It was found that the ponds played an important role in the hybrid system performance and enhanced the performance of constructed wetlands. The pollutant removal efficiencies of the hybrid systems were all higher than the single constructed wetlands. The BOD5, TSS, NH4-N and PO4-P removal efficiencies averaged 81%, 85%, 93% and 77%, respectively for the hybrid horizontal subsurface flow constructed wetlands system operated at a hydraulic loading rate of 0.075 m/day, while they were 89%, 97%, 97%, and 68%, respectively for the hybrid free water sub-surface constructed wetlands system operated at a hydraulic loading rate of 0.1 m/day. The removal rate constants (k
BOD5 , kNH4-N , kPO4-P ) of the experimental hybrid constructed wetlands were similar to those in previous studies. However, these constants were higher for the hybrid free water subsurface constructed wetlands because of the modified structure flow of the free water subsurface constructed wetlands applied in this study, compared to conventional ones, as well as the additional benefits of the ponds in the hybrid systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Design and Implementation of Data Reduction Pipelines for the Keck Observatory Archive
- Author
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Gelino, Christopher R., Berriman, G. B., Kong, M., Laity, A. C., Swain, M. A., Campbell, R., Goodrich, R. W., Holt, J., Lyke, J., Mader, J. A., Tran, H. D., Barlow, T., Taylor, A. R., and Rosolowsky, E.
- Abstract
The Keck Observatory Archive (KOA), a collaboration between the NASA Exoplanet Science Institute and the W. M. Keck Observatory, serves science and calibration data for all active and inactive instruments from the twin Keck Telescopes located near the summit of Mauna Kea, Hawaii. In addition to the raw data, we produce and provide quick look reduced data for four instruments (HIRES, LWS, NIRC2, and OSIRIS) so that KOA users can more easily assess the scientific content and the quality of the data, which can often be difficult with raw data. The reduced products derive from both publicly available data reduction packages (when available) and KOA-created reduction scripts. The automation of publicly available data reduction packages has the benefit of providing a good quality product without the additional time and expense of creating a new reduction package, and is easily applied to bulk processing needs. The downside is that the pipeline is not always able to create an ideal product, particularly for spectra, because the processing options for one type of target (eg., point sources) may not be appropriate for other types of targets (eg., extended galaxies and nebulae). In this poster we present the design and implementation for the current pipelines used at KOA and discuss our strategies for handling data for which the nature of the targets and the observers' scientific goals and data taking procedures are unknown. We also discuss our plans for implementing automated pipelines for the remaining six instruments.
- Published
- 2015
49. Data and Metadata Management at the Keck Observatory Archive
- Author
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Berriman, G. B., Holt, J. M., Mader, J. A., Tran, H. D., Goodrich, R. W., Gelino, C. R., Laity, A. C., Kong, M., Swain, M. A., Taylor, A. R., and Rosolowsky, E.
- Abstract
A collaboration between the W. M. Keck Observatory (WMKO) in Hawaii and the NASA Exoplanet Science Institute (NExScI) in California, the Keck Observatory Archive (KOA) was commissioned in 2004 to archive data from WMKO, which operates two classically scheduled 10 m ground-based telescopes. The data from Keck are not suitable for direct ingestion into the archive since the metadata contained in the original FITS headers lack the information necessary for proper archiving. The data pose a number of challenges for KOA: different instrument builders used different standards, and the nature of classical observing, where observers have complete control of the instruments and their observations, lead to heterogeneous data sets. For example, it is often difficult to determine if an observation is a science target, a sky frame, or a sky flat. It is also necessary to assign the data to the correct owners and observing programs, which can be a challenge for time-domain and target-of-opportunity observations, or on split nights, during which two or more principle investigators share a given night. In addition, having uniform and adequate calibrations is important for the proper reduction of data. Therefore, KOA needs to distinguish science files from calibration files, identify the type of calibrations available, and associate the appropriate calibration files with each science frame. We describe the methodologies and tools that we have developed to successfully address these difficulties, adding content to the FITS headers and “retrofitting" the metadata in order to support archiving Keck data, especially those obtained before the archive was designed. With the expertise gained from having successfully archived observations taken with all eight currently active instruments at WMKO, we have developed lessons learned from handling this complex array of heterogeneous metadata. These lessons help ensure a smooth ingestion of data not only for current but also future instruments, as well as a better experience for the archive user.
- Published
- 2015
50. Data reduction pipelines for the Keck Observatory Archive
- Author
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Peck, Alison B., Seaman, Robert L., Benn, Chris R., Tran, H. D., Cohen, R., Colson, A., Mader, J. A., Swain, M., Laity, A. C., Kong, M., Gelino, C. R., Berriman, G. B., Peck, Alison B., Seaman, Robert L., Benn, Chris R., Tran, H. D., Cohen, R., Colson, A., Mader, J. A., Swain, M., Laity, A. C., Kong, M., Gelino, C. R., and Berriman, G. B.
- Abstract
The Keck Observatory Archive (KOA) currently serves ~ 42 TB of data spanning over 20 years from all ten past and current facility instruments at Keck. Although most of the available data are in the raw form, for four instruments (HIRES, NIRC2, OSIRIS, LWS), quick-look, browse products generated by automated pipelines are also offered to facilitate assessment of the scientific content and quality of the data. KOA underwrote the update of the MAKEE package to support reduction of the CCD upgrade to HIRES, developed scripts for reduction of NIRC2 data and automated the existing OSIRIS and LWS data reduction packages. We describe in some detail the recently completed automated pipeline for NIRSPEC, which will be used to create browse products in KOA and made available for quicklook of the data by the observers at the telescope. We review the currently available data reduction tools for Keck data, and present our plans and anticipated priorities for the development of automated pipelines and release of reduced data products for the rest of the current and future instruments. We also anticipate that Keck's newest instrument, NIRES, which will be delivered with a fully automated pipeline, will be the first to have both raw and level-1 data ingested at commissioning.
- Published
- 2016
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