5,010 research outputs found
Comparison of Magnetic Anomalies of Lithospheric Origin Measured by Satellite and Airborne Magnetometers over Western Canada
Crustal magnetic anomaly data from the OGO 2, 4 and 6 (Pogo) satellites are compared with upward-continued aeromagnetic data between 50 deg -85 deg N latitude and 220 deg - 260 deg E longitude. Agreement is good both in anomaly location and in amplitude, giving confidence that it is possible to proceed with the derivation and interpretation of satellite anomaly maps in all parts of the globe. The data contain a magnetic high over the Alpha ridge suggesting continental composition and a magnetic low over the southern Canada basin and northern Canadian Arctic islands (Sverdrup basin). The low in the Sverdrup basin corresponds to a region of high heat flow, suggesting a shallow Curie isotherm. A ridge of high field, with two distinct peaks in amplitude, is found over the northern portion of the platform deposits and a relative high is located in the central portion of the Churchill province. No features are present to indicate a magnetic boundary between Slave and Bear provinces, but a trend change is evident between Slave and Churchill provinces. South of 60 deg latitude a broad magnetic low is located over very thick (40-50 km) crust, interpreted to be a region of low magnetization
The Cluster Distribution as a Test of Dark Matter Models. IV: Topology and Geometry
We study the geometry and topology of the large-scale structure traced by
galaxy clusters in numerical simulations of a box of side 320 Mpc, and
compare them with available data on real clusters. The simulations we use are
generated by the Zel'dovich approximation, using the same methods as we have
used in the first three papers in this series. We consider the following models
to see if there are measurable differences in the topology and geometry of the
superclustering they produce: (i) the standard CDM model (SCDM); (ii) a CDM
model with (OCDM); (iii) a CDM model with a `tilted' power
spectrum having (TCDM); (iv) a CDM model with a very low Hubble
constant, (LOWH); (v) a model with mixed CDM and HDM (CHDM); (vi) a
flat low-density CDM model with and a non-zero cosmological
term (CDM). We analyse these models using a variety of
statistical tests based on the analysis of: (i) the Euler-Poincar\'{e}
characteristic; (ii) percolation properties; (iii) the Minimal Spanning Tree
construction. Taking all these tests together we find that the best fitting
model is CDM and, indeed, the others do not appear to be consistent
with the data. Our results demonstrate that despite their biased and extremely
sparse sampling of the cosmological density field, it is possible to use
clusters to probe subtle statistical diagnostics of models which go far beyond
the low-order correlation functions usually applied to study superclustering.Comment: 17 pages, 7 postscript figures, uses mn.sty, MNRAS in pres
Bias and Hierarchical Clustering
It is now well established that galaxies are biased tracers of the
distribution of matter, although it is still not known what form this bias
takes. In local bias models the propensity for a galaxy to form at a point
depends only on the overall density of matter at that point. Hierarchical
scaling arguments allow one to build a fully-specified model of the underlying
distribution of matter and to explore the effects of local bias in the regime
of strong clustering. Using a generating-function method developed by
Bernardeau & Schaeffer (1992), we show that hierarchical models lead one
directly to the conclusion that a local bias does not alter the shape of the
galaxy correlation function relative to the matter correlation function on
large scales. This provides an elegant extension of a result first obtained by
Coles (1993) for Gaussian underlying fields and confirms the conclusions of
Scherrer & Weinberg (1998) obtained using a different approach. We also argue
that particularly dense regions in a hierarchical density field display a form
of bias that is different from that obtained by selecting such peaks in
Gaussian fields: they are themselves hierarchically distributed with scaling
parameters . This kind of bias is also factorizable, thus in
principle furnishing a simple test of this class of models.Comment: Latex, accepted for publication in ApJL; moderate revision
A low CMB variance in the WMAP data
We have estimated the CMB variance from the three-year WMAP data, finding a
value which is significantly lower than the one expected from Gaussian
simulations using the WMAP best-fit cosmological model, at a significance level
of 98.7 per cent. This result is even more prominent if we consider only the
north ecliptic hemisphere (99.8 per cent). Different analyses have been
performed in order to identify a possible origin for this anomaly. In
particular we have studied the behaviour of single radiometers and single year
data as well as the effect of residual foregrounds and 1/f noise, finding that
none of these possibilities can explain the low value of the variance. We have
also tested the effect of varying the cosmological parameters, finding that the
estimated CMB variance tends to favour higher values of than the one of
the WMAP best-fit model. In addition, we have also tested the consistency
between the estimated CMB variance and the actual measured CMB power spectrum
of the WMAP data, finding a strong discrepancy. A possible interpretation of
this result could be a deviation from Gaussianity and/or isotropy of the CMB.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures. Some new tests added. Section 5 largely
modified. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Thermal Tolerance in Tropical Versus Subtropical Pacific Reef Corals
Upper lethal temperature tolerances of reef corals in Hawaii and at
Enewetak, Marshall Islands, were determined in the field and under controlled
laboratory conditions. Enewetak corals survived in situ temperatures of nearly
34° C, whereas 32° C was lethal to Hawaiian corals for similar short-term exposures.
Laboratory determinations indicate that the upper thermal limits of Hawaiian corals
are approximately 2° C less than congeners from the tropical Pacific. Differences in
coral thermal tolerances correspond to differences in the ambient temperature
patterns between geographic areas
A Test of the Particle Paradigm in N-Body Simulations
We present results of tests of the evolution of small ``fluid elements'' in
cosmological N--body simulations, to examine the validity of their treatment as
particles. We find that even very small elements typically collapse along one
axis while expanding along another, often to twice or more their initial
comoving diameter. This represents a possible problem for high--resolution uses
of such simulations.Comment: Uses aasms4.sty; accepted for publication in ApJ Letters. Files
available also at ftp://kusmos.phsx.ukans.edu/preprints/ates
Theory of Parabolic Arcs in Interstellar Scintillation Spectra
Our theory relates the secondary spectrum, the 2D power spectrum of the radio
dynamic spectrum, to the scattered pulsar image in a thin scattering screen
geometry. Recently discovered parabolic arcs in secondary spectra are generic
features for media that scatter radiation at angles much larger than the rms
scattering angle. Each point in the secondary spectrum maps particular values
of differential arrival-time delay and fringe rate (or differential Doppler
frequency) between pairs of components in the scattered image. Arcs correspond
to a parabolic relation between these quantities through their common
dependence on the angle of arrival of scattered components. Arcs appear even
without consideration of the dispersive nature of the plasma. Arcs are more
prominent in media with negligible inner scale and with shallow wavenumber
spectra, such as the Kolmogorov spectrum, and when the scattered image is
elongated along the velocity direction. The arc phenomenon can be used,
therefore, to constrain the inner scale and the anisotropy of scattering
irregularities for directions to nearby pulsars. Arcs are truncated by finite
source size and thus provide sub micro arc sec resolution for probing emission
regions in pulsars and compact active galactic nuclei. Multiple arcs sometimes
seen signify two or more discrete scattering screens along the propagation
path, and small arclets oriented oppositely to the main arc persisting for long
durations indicate the occurrence of long-term multiple images from the
scattering screen.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figures, submitted to the Astrophysical Journa
Analytical modeling of large-angle CMBR anisotropies from textures
We propose an analytic method for predicting the large angle CMBR temperature
fluctuations induced by model textures. The model makes use of only a small
number of phenomenological parameters which ought to be measured from simple
simulations. We derive semi-analytically the -spectrum for together with its associated non-Gaussian cosmic variance error bars. A
slightly tilted spectrum with an extra suppression at low is found, and we
investigate the dependence of the tilt on the parameters of the model. We also
produce a prediction for the two point correlation function. We find a high
level of cosmic confusion between texture scenarios and standard inflationary
theories in any of these quantities. However, we discover that a distinctive
non-Gaussian signal ought to be expected at low , reflecting the prominent
effect of the last texture in these multipoles
Extreme value statistics and return intervals in long-range correlated uniform deviates
We study extremal statistics and return intervals in stationary long-range
correlated sequences for which the underlying probability density function is
bounded and uniform. The extremal statistics we consider e.g., maximum relative
to minimum are such that the reference point from which the maximum is measured
is itself a random quantity. We analytically calculate the limiting
distributions for independent and identically distributed random variables, and
use these as a reference point for correlated cases. The distributions are
different from that of the maximum itself i.e., a Weibull distribution,
reflecting the fact that the distribution of the reference point either
dominates over or convolves with the distribution of the maximum. The
functional form of the limiting distributions is unaffected by correlations,
although the convergence is slower. We show that our findings can be directly
generalized to a wide class of stochastic processes. We also analyze return
interval distributions, and compare them to recent conjectures of their
functional form
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