3,652 research outputs found
Cosmic Dawn: Studies of the Earliest Galaxies and Their Role in Cosmic Reionization
I review recent progress and challenges in studies of the earliest galaxies,
seen when the Universe was less than 1 billion years old. Can they be used as
reliable tracers of the physics of cosmic reionization thereby complementing
other, more direct, probes of the evolving neutrality of the intergalactic
medium? Were star-forming galaxies the primary agent in the reionization
process and what are the future prospects for identifying the earliest systems
devoid of chemical enrichment? Ambitious future facilities are under
construction for exploring galaxies and the intergalactic medium in the
redshift range 6 to 20, corresponding to what we now consider the heart of the
reionization era. I review what we can infer about this period from current
observations and in the near-future with existing facilities, and conclude with
a list of key issues where future work is required.Comment: Proceedings of the 26th Solvay Conference on Physics: "Astrophysics
and Cosmology", R. Blandford and A. Sevrin, eds., World Scientifi
Faint Blue Galaxies
The physical properties of the faint blue galaxy population are reviewed in
the context of observational progress made via deep spectroscopic surveys and
Hubble Space Telescope imaging of field galaxies at various limits, and
theoretical models for the integrated star formation history of the Universe.
Notwithstanding uncertainties in the properties of the local population of
galaxies, convincing evidence has emerged from several independent studies for
a rapid decline in the volume-averaged star formation rate of field galaxies
since a redshift z~1. Together with the small angular sizes and modest mean
redshift of the faintest detectable sources, these results can be understood in
hierarchical models where the bulk of the star formation occurred at redshifts
between z~1-2. The physical processes responsible for the subsequent demise of
the faint blue galaxy population remains unclear. Considerable progress will be
possible when the evolutionary trends can be monitored in the context of
independent physical parameters such as the underlying galactic mass.Comment: 42 pages with 10 embedded figures available in gzipped postscript
from ftp://ftp.ast.cam.ac.uk/pub/rse/annrev97.ps.gz To appear in Annual
Reviews Astron. Astrophys. Vol 35, (1997
Nonequivalent ensembles and metastability
This paper reviews a number of fundamental connections that exist between
nonequivalent microcanonical and canonical ensembles, the appearance of
first-order phase transitions in the canonical ensemble, and thermodynamic
metastable behavior.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, 1 figure. Contribution to the Proceedings of the
31st Workshop of the International School of Solid State Physics
``Complexity, Metastability and Nonextensivity'', held at the Ettore Majorana
Foundation and Centre for Scientific Culture, Erice, Sicily, Italy, July
2004. Edited by C. Tsallis, A. Rapisarda and C. Beck. To be published by
World Scientific, 200
Refined Asymptotics of the Finite-Size Magnetization via a New Conditional Limit Theorem for the Spin
We study the fluctuations of the spin per site around the thermodynamic
magnetization in the mean-field Blume-Capel model. Our main theorem generalizes
the main result in a previous paper (Ellis, Machta, and Otto) in which the
first rigorous confirmation of the statistical mechanical theory of finite-size
scaling for a mean-field model is given. In that paper our goal is to determine
whether the thermodynamic magnetization is a physically relevant estimator of
the finite-size magnetization. This is done by comparing the asymptotic
behaviors of these two quantities along parameter sequences converging to
either a second-order point or the tricritical point in the mean-field
Blume-Capel model. The main result is that the thermodynamic magnetization and
the finite-size magnetization are asymptotic when the parameter
governing the speed at which the sequence approaches criticality is below a
certain threshold . Our main theorem in the present paper on the
fluctuations of the spin per site around the thermodynamic magnetization is
based on a new conditional limit theorem for the spin, which is closely related
to a new conditional central limit theorem for the spin.Comment: 78 pages, 2 figure
Keck Spectroscopy of Faint 3 < z < 7 Lyman Break Galaxies: III. The Mean Ultraviolet Spectrum at z=4
We present and discuss the mean rest-frame ultraviolet spectrum for a sample
of 81 Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) selected to be B-band dropouts with a mean
redshift of z=3.9 and apparent magnitudes z_AB<26. Most of the individual
spectra are drawn from our ongoing survey in the GOODS fields with the Keck
DEIMOS spectrograph, and we have augmented our sample with published data taken
with FORS2 on the VLT. In general we find similar trends in the spectral
diagnostics to those found in the earlier, more extensive survey of LBGs at z=3
undertaken by Shapley et al (2003). Specifically, we find low-ionization
absorption lines which trace the presence of neutral outflowing gas are weaker
in galaxies with stronger Lyman-alpha emission, bluer UV spectral slopes, lower
stellar masses, lower UV luminosities and smaller half-light radii. This is
consistent with a physical picture whereby star formation drives outflows of
neutral gas which scatters Lyman-alpha and gives rise to strong low-ionization
absorption lines, while increasing the stellar mass, size, metallicity, and
dust content of galaxies. Typical galaxies are thus expected to have stronger
Lyman-alpha emission and weaker low-ionization absorption at earlier times
(higher redshifts). Indeed, our mean spectrum at z=4 shows somewhat weaker
low-ionization absorption lines than at z=3 and available data at higher
redshift indicates a rapid decrease in low-ionization absorption strength with
redshift. We argue that the reduced low-ionization absorption is likely caused
by a decrease in the covering fraction and/or velocity range of outflowing
neutral gas at earlier epochs. Our continuing survey will enable us to extend
these diagnostics more reliably to higher redshift and determine the
implications for the escape fraction of ionizing photons which governs the role
of early galaxies in cosmic reionization. [Abridged]Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, submitted to ApJ. Comments welcom
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