983 research outputs found
Transformation of Morphology and Luminosity Classes of the SDSS Galaxies
We present a unified picture on the evolution of galaxy luminosity and
morphology. Galaxy morphology is found to depend critically on the local
environment set up by the nearest neighbor galaxy in addition to luminosity and
the large scale density. When a galaxy is located farther than the virial
radius from its closest neighbor, the probability for the galaxy to have an
early morphological type is an increasing function only of luminosity and the
local density due to the nearest neighbor (). The tide produced by the
nearest neighbor is thought to be responsible for the morphology transformation
toward the early type at these separations. When the separation is less than
the virial radius, i.e. when , its morphology
depends also on the neighbor's morphology and the large-scale background
density over a few Mpc scales () in addition to luminosity and
. The early type probability keeps increasing as increases if
its neighbor is an early type. But the probability decreases as
increases when the neighbor is a late type. The cold gas streaming from the
late type neighbor can be the reason for the morphology transformation toward
late type. The overall early-type fraction increases as increases
when . This can be attributed to the hot halo gas
of the neighbor which is confined by the pressure of the ambient medium held by
the background mass. We have also found that galaxy luminosity depends on
, and that the isolated bright galaxies are more likely to be recent
merger products. We propose a scenario that a series of morphology and
luminosity transformation occur through distant interactions and mergers, which
results in the morphology--luminosity--local density relation.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, for higher resolution figures download PDF file
at http://astro.kias.re.kr/docs/trans.pdf ; references added and typos in
section 3.2 corrected; Final version accepted for publication in Ap
Varying c cosmology and Planck value constraints
It has been suggested that by increasing the speed of light during the early
universe various cosmological problems of standard big bang cosmology can be
overcome, without requiring an inflationary phase. However, we find that as the
Planck length and Planck time are then made correspondingly smaller, and
together with the need that the universe should not re-enter a Planck epoch,
the higher models have very limited ability to resolve such problems. For a
constantly decreasing the universe will quickly becomes quantum
gravitationally dominated as time increases: the opposite to standard cosmology
where quantum behaviour is only ascribed to early times.Comment: extended versio
Experiment K-6-03. Gravity and skeletal growth, part 1. Part 2: Morphology and histochemistry of bone cells and vasculature of the tibia; Part 3: Nuclear volume analysis of osteoblast histogenesis in periodontal ligament cells; Part 4: Intervertebral disc swelling pressure associated with microgravity
Bone area, bone electrophysiology, bone vascularity, osteoblast morphology, and osteoblast histogenesis were studied in rats associated with Cosmos 1887. The results suggest that the synchronous animals were the only group with a significantly larger bone area than the basal group, that the bone electrical potential was more negative in flight than in the synchronous rats, that the endosteal osteoblasts from flight rats had greater numbers of transitional Golgi vesicles but no difference in the large Golgi saccules or the alkaline phosphatase activity, that the perioteal vasculature in the shaft of flight rats often showed very dense intraluminal deposits with adjacent degenerating osteocytes as well as lipid accumulations within the lumen of the vessels and sometimes degeneration of the vascular wall (this change was not present in the metaphyseal region of flight animals), and that the progenitor cells decreased in flight rats while the preosteoblasts increased compared to controls. Many of the results suggest that the animals were beginning to recover from the effects of spaceflight during the two day interval between landing and euthanasia; flight effects, such as the vascular changes, did not appear to recover
The Evolution of the Cosmic Microwave Background
We discuss the time dependence and future of the Cosmic Microwave Background
(CMB) in the context of the standard cosmological model, in which we are now
entering a state of endless accelerated expansion. The mean temperature will
simply decrease until it reaches the effective temperature of the de Sitter
vacuum, while the dipole will oscillate as the Sun orbits the Galaxy. However,
the higher CMB multipoles have a richer phenomenology. The CMB anisotropy power
spectrum will for the most part simply project to smaller scales, as the
comoving distance to last scattering increases, and we derive a scaling
relation that describes this behaviour. However, there will also be a dramatic
increase in the integrated Sachs-Wolfe contribution at low multipoles. We also
discuss the effects of tensor modes and optical depth due to Thomson
scattering. We introduce a correlation function relating the sky maps at two
times and the closely related power spectrum of the difference map. We compute
the evolution both analytically and numerically, and present simulated future
sky maps.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures; references added; one figure dropped and minor
changes to match published version. For high-resolution versions of figures
and animations, see http://www.astro.ubc.ca/people/scott/future.htm
Primordial Gravitational Waves From Open Inflation
We calculate the spectrum of gravitational waves generated during inflation
in open inflationary models. In such models an initial epoch of
old inflation solves the horizon and flatness problems, and during this first
epoch of inflation the quantum state of the graviton field rapidly approaches
the Bunch-Davies vacuum. Then old inflation ends by the nucleation of a single
bubble, inside of which there is a shortened epoch of slow-roll inflation
giving today. In this paper we re-express the Bunch-Davies vacuum
for the graviton field in terms of the hyperbolic modes inside the bubble and
propagate these modes forward in time into the present era. We derive the
expression for the contribution from these gravity waves to the cosmic
microwave background anisotropy including the effect of a finite energy
difference across the bubble wall.Comment: 40 pages, TEX with phyzzx macro, 5 figure
Natural Wormholes as Gravitational Lenses
Visser has suggested traversable 3-dimensional wormholes that could plausibly
form naturally during Big Bang inflation. A wormhole mouth embedded in high
mass density might accrete mass, giving the other mouth a net *negative* mass
of unusual gravitational properties. The lensing of such a gravitationally
negative anomalous compact halo object (GNACHO) will enhance background stars
with a time profile that is observable and qualitatively different from that
recently observed for massive compact halo objects (MACHOs) of positive mass.
We recommend that MACHO search data be analyzed for GNACHOs.Comment: 4 pages; plus 4 figures; ReV_TeX 3.0; DOE/ER/40537-001/NPL94-07-01
Open Inflationary Universes in the Induced Gravity Theory
The induced gravity theory is a variant of Jordan--Brans--Dicke theory where
the `dilaton' field possesses a potential. It has the unusual feature that in
the presence of a false vacuum there is a {\em stable} static solution with the
dilaton field displaced from the minimum of its potential, giving perfect de
Sitter expansion. We demonstrate how this solution can be used to implement the
open inflationary universe scenario. The necessary second phase of inflation
after false vacuum decay by bubble nucleation is driven by the dilaton rolling
from the static point to the minimum of its potential. Because the static
solution is stable whilst the false vacuum persists, the required evolution
occurs for a wide range of initial conditions. As the exterior of the bubble is
perfect de Sitter space, there is no problem with fields rolling outside the
bubble, as in one of the related models considered by Linde and Mezhlumian, and
the expansion rates before and after tunnelling may be similar which prevents
problematic high-amplitude super-curvature modes from being generated. Once
normalized to the microwave background anisotropies seen by the COBE satellite,
the viable models form a one-parameter family for each possible .Comment: 7 pages RevTeX file with three figures incorporated (uses RevTeX and
epsf). Also available by e-mailing ARL, or by WWW at
http://star-www.maps.susx.ac.uk/papers/early_papers.htm
Quantum Evolution of the Bianchi Type I Model
The behaviour of the flat anisotropic model of the Universe with a scalar
field is explored within the framework of quantum cosmology. The principal
moment of the account of an anisotropy is the presence either negative
potential barrier or positive repelling wall. In the first case occur the above
barrier reflection of the wave function of the Universe, in the second one
there is bounce off a potential wall. The further evolution of the Universe
represents an exponential inflating with fast losses of an anisotropy and
approach to the standard cosmological scenario.Comment: Latex, 18 pages, 5 figure
New remarks on the Cosmological Argument
We present a formal analysis of the Cosmological Argument in its two main
forms: that due to Aquinas, and the revised version of the Kalam Cosmological
Argument more recently advocated by William Lane Craig. We formulate these two
arguments in such a way that each conclusion follows in first-order logic from
the corresponding assumptions. Our analysis shows that the conclusion which
follows for Aquinas is considerably weaker than what his aims demand. With
formalizations that are logically valid in hand, we reinterpret the natural
language versions of the premises and conclusions in terms of concepts of
causality consistent with (and used in) recent work in cosmology done by
physicists. In brief: the Kalam argument commits the fallacy of equivocation in
a way that seems beyond repair; two of the premises adopted by Aquinas seem
dubious when the terms `cause' and `causality' are interpreted in the context
of contemporary empirical science. Thus, while there are no problems with
whether the conclusions follow logically from their assumptions, the Kalam
argument is not viable, and the Aquinas argument does not imply a caused
origination of the universe. The assumptions of the latter are at best less
than obvious relative to recent work in the sciences. We conclude with mention
of a new argument that makes some positive modifications to an alternative
variation on Aquinas by Le Poidevin, which nonetheless seems rather weak.Comment: 12 pages, accepted for publication in International Journal for
Philosophy of Religio
Reconciling inflation with openness
It is already understood that the increasing observational evidence for an
open Universe can be reconciled with inflation if our horizon is contained
inside one single huge bubble nucleated during the inflationary phase
transition. In this frame of ideas, we show here that the probability of living
in a bubble with the right (now the observations require ) can be comparable with unity, rather than infinitesimally small.
For this purpose we modify both quantitatively and qualitatively an intuitive
toy model based upon fourth order gravity. As this scheme can be implemented in
canonical General Relativity as well (although then the inflation driving
potential must be designed entirely ad hoc), inferring from the observations
that not only does not conflict with the inflationary paradigm,
but rather supports therein the occurrence of a primordial phase transition.Comment: 4 pages, one postscript figure, to be published on Physical Review D
PACS: 98.80. C
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