11,264 research outputs found
Algebraic chromatic homotopy theory for -comodules
In this paper, we study the global structure of an algebraic avatar of the
derived category of ind-coherent sheaves on the moduli stack of formal groups.
In analogy with the stable homotopy category, we prove a version of the
nilpotence theorem as well as the chromatic convergence theorem, and construct
a generalized chromatic spectral sequence. Furthermore, we discuss analogs of
the telescope conjecture and chromatic splitting conjecture in this setting,
using the local duality techniques established earlier in joint work with
Valenzuela.Comment: All comments welcom
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From the Editors - Diverse People, Diverse Approaches
We are proud to announce Praxisâ second volume as a peer-reviewed journal. Our call for articles addressing diversity in the writing center fielded a record number of submissions. We thank all of the authors who submitted careful, insightful, creative and challenging work. We also want to thank our external review board and our editorial team as well as the administrative staff at the Undergraduate Writing Center. Andrea Saathoff, who led Praxis into peerreview status last year and continues to work behind the scenes, deserves a special âThank you.â This journal, like the writing-center scholarship and pedagogy it supports, exists because of the committed, collaborative work of a broad community of writers and educators. To our authors, reviewers, editors, readers and supportersâThank you.University Writing Cente
XMM-Newton observations of the Galactic Centre Region - II: The soft thermal emission
We have extended our earlier study (Heard & Warwick 2013, Paper I) of the
X-ray emission emanating from the central 100 pc x 100 pc region of our Galaxy
to an investigation of several features prominent in the soft X-ray (2-4.5 keV)
band. We focus on three specific structures: a putative bipolar outflow from
the vicinity of Sgr A*; a high surface brightness region located roughly 12
arcmin to the north-east of Sgr A*; and a lower surface-brightness extended
loop feature seen to the south of Sgr A*. We show that all three structures are
thermal in nature and have similar temperatures (kT ~ 1 keV). The inferred
X-ray luminosities lie in the range (2 - 10) x 10^34 erg s^-1. In the case of
the bipolar feature we suggest that the hot plasma is produced by the
shock-heating of the winds from massive stars within the Central Cluster,
possibly collimated by the Circumnuclear Disc. Alternatively the outflow may be
driven by outbursts on Sgr A*, which follow tidal disruption events occurring
at a rate of roughly 1 every 4000 yr. The north-east enhancement is centred on
a candidate PWN which has a relatively hard non-thermal X-ray spectrum. We
suggest that the coincident soft-thermal emission traces the core of a new
thermal-composite supernova remnant, designated as SNR G0.13-0.12. There is no
clear evidence for an associated radio shell but such a feature may be masked
by the bright emission of the nearby Radio Arc and other filamentary
structures. SNR G0.13-0.12 is very likely interacting with the nearby molecular
cloud, G0.11-0.11, and linked to the Fermi source, 2FGL J1746.4-2851c. Finally
we explore a previous suggestion that the elliptically-shaped X-ray loop to the
south of Sgr A*, of maximum extent ~45 pc, represents the shell of a
superbubble located in the GC region. Although plausible, the interpretation of
this feature in terms a coherent physical structure awaits confirmation.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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