35 research outputs found
Fractal analysis of the galaxy distribution in the redshift range 0.45 < z < 5.0
Evidence is presented that the galaxy distribution can be described as a
fractal system in the redshift range of the FDF galaxy survey. The fractal
dimension was derived using the FDF galaxy volume number densities in the
spatially homogeneous standard cosmological model with ,
and H_0=70 \; \mbox{km} \; {\mbox{s}}^{-1} \;
{\mbox{Mpc}}^{-1}. The ratio between the differential and integral number
densities and obtained from the red and blue FDF
galaxies provides a direct method to estimate , implying that and
vary as power-laws with the cosmological distances. The
luminosity distance , galaxy area distance
and redshift distance were plotted against
their respective number densities to calculate by linear fitting. It was
found that the FDF galaxy distribution is characterized by two single fractal
dimensions at successive distance ranges. Two straight lines were fitted to the
data, whose slopes change at or depending on
the chosen cosmological distance. The average fractal dimension calculated
using changes from to for all galaxies, and decreases as
increases. Small values of at high mean that in the past galaxies were
distributed much more sparsely and the large-scale galaxy structure was then
possibly dominated by voids. Results of Iribarrem et al. (2014,
arXiv:1401.6572) indicating similar fractal features with in the far-infrared sources of the Herschel/PACS evolutionary
probe (PEP) at are also mentioned.Comment: LaTex, 15 pages, 28 figures, 4 tables. To appear in "Physica A
Relativistic cosmology number densities in void-Lemaître-Tolman-Bondi models
Aims. The goal of this work is to compute the number density of far-IR selected galaxies in the comoving frame and along the past lightcone of observationally constrained Lemaître-Tolman-Bondi “giant void” models and to compare those results with their standard model counterparts
The role of natural regeneration to ecosystem services provision and habitat availability: a case study in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest
Natural regeneration provides multiple benefits to nature and human societies, and can play a major role in global and national restoration targets. However, these benefits are context specific and impacted by both biophysical and socioeconomic heterogeneity across landscapes. Here we investigate the benefits of natural regeneration for climate change mitigation, sediment retention and biodiversity conservation in a spatially explicit way at very high resolution for a region within the global biodiversity hotspot of the Atlantic Forest. We classified current land-use cover in the region and simulated a natural regeneration scenario in abandoned pasturelands, areas where potential conflicts with agricultural production would be minimized and where some early stage regeneration is already occurring. We then modelled changes in biophysical functions for climate change mitigation and sediment retention, and performed an economic valuation of both ecosystem services. We also modelled how land-use changes affect habitat availability for species. We found that natural regeneration can provide significant ecological and social benefits. Economic values of climate change mitigation and sediment retention alone could completely compensate for the opportunity costs of agricultural production over 20 years. Habitat availability is improved for three species with different dispersal abilities, although by different magnitudes. Improving the understanding of how costs and benefits of natural regeneration are distributed can be useful to design incentive structures that bring farmers’ decision making more in line with societal benefits. This alignment is crucial for natural regeneration to fulfil its potential as a large-scale solution for pressing local and global environmental challenges
Differential Density Statistics of Galaxy Distribution and the Luminosity Function
This paper uses data obtained from the galaxy luminosity function (LF) to
calculate two types of radial number densities statistics of the galaxy
distribution as discussed in Ribeiro (2005), namely the differential density
and the integral differential density . By applying the
theory advanced by Ribeiro and Stoeger (2003), which connects the relativistic
cosmology number counts with the astronomically derived LF, the differential
number counts are extracted from the LF and used to calculate both
and with various cosmological distance definitions,
namely the area distance, luminosity distance, galaxy area distance and
redshift distance. LF data are taken from the CNOC2 galaxy redshift survey and
and are calculated for two cosmological models:
Einstein-de Sitter and an , standard
cosmology. The results confirm the strong dependency of both statistics on the
distance definition, as predicted in Ribeiro (2005), as well as showing that
plots of and against the luminosity and redshift
distances indicate that the CNOC2 galaxy distribution follows a power law
pattern for redshifts higher than 0.1. These findings bring support to
Ribeiro's (2005) theoretical proposition that using different cosmological
distance measures in statistical analyses of galaxy surveys can lead to
significant ambiguity in drawing conclusions about the behavior of the observed
large scale distribution of galaxies.Comment: LaTeX, 37 pages, 6 tables, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in
"The Astrophysical Journal
Cosmological model dependence of the galaxy luminosity function: far-infrared results in the Lemaître-Tolman-Bondi model
Aims. This is the first paper of a series aiming at investigating galaxy formation and evolution in the giant-void class of the Lemaître-Tolman-Bondi (LTB) models that best fits current cosmological observations. Here we investigate the luminosity function (LF) methodology, and how its estimates would be affected by a change on the cosmological model assumed in its computation. Are the current observational constraints on the allowed cosmology enough to yield robust LF results
Discriminação e Delimitação das Terras Baixas no Estado do Rio Grande do Sul: Primeira Aproximação.
bitstream/item/127161/1/Comunicado313-12-de-maio.pd
Biophysical suitability, economic pressure and land-cover change: a global probabilistic approach and insights for REDD+
There has been a concerted effort by the international scientific community to understand the multiple causes and patterns of land-cover change to support sustainable land management. Here, we examined biophysical suitability, and a novel integrated index of “Economic Pressure on Land” (EPL) to explain land cover in the year 2000, and estimated the likelihood of future land-cover change through 2050, including protected area effectiveness. Biophysical suitability and EPL explained almost half of the global pattern of land cover (R 2 = 0.45), increasing to almost two-thirds in areas where a long-term equilibrium is likely to have been reached (e.g. R 2 = 0.64 in Europe). We identify a high likelihood of future land-cover change in vast areas with relatively lower current and past deforestation (e.g. the Congo Basin). Further, we simulated emissions arising from a “business as usual” and two reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD) scenarios by incorporating data on biomass carbon. As our model incorporates all biome types, it highlights a crucial aspect of the ongoing REDD + debate: if restricted to forests, “cross-biome leakage” would severely reduce REDD + effectiveness for climate change mitigation. If forests were protected from deforestation yet without measures to tackle the drivers of land-cover change, REDD + would only reduce 30 % of total emissions from land-cover change. Fifty-five percent of emissions reductions from forests would be compensated by increased emissions in other biomes. These results suggest that, although REDD + remains a very promising mitigation tool, implementation of complementary measures to reduce land demand is necessary to prevent this leakage