56 research outputs found
Giant Cyclones in Gaseous Discs of Spiral Galaxies
We report detection of giant cyclonic vortices in the gaseous disc of the
spiral galaxy NGC 3631 in the reference frame rotating with the spiral pattern.
A presence of such structures was predicted by the authors for galaxies, where
the radial gradient of the perturbed velocity exceeds that of the rotational
velocity. This situation really takes place in NGC 3631.Comment: 13 pages, 4 EPS and 3 PS figure
Over-reflection in lab: the all-sufficient cause of instability of an annular supersonic shear in simulations on free-surface shallow water
Presented are results of the pioneering research on the over-reflection instability of an annular ‘supersonic’ shear in experiments on free-surface shallow water covering a differentially rotating and properly shaped bottom (characteristic waves on shallow water play the role of sound, all alternative shear instabilities are suppressed due to specificity of the rotation profile and experimental procedure). The consideration focuses upon distinctive features of the structures generated by the instability as perturbations of shallow-water thickness. The features of the structures observed are compared with those predicted by an original theory. The structures are also readily interpreted as a superposition of Huygens-Mach fronts that are multiply over-reflected from the shear, having been induced by a supersonic disturbance moving along it. Owing to the annular geometry, the instability in the experiments develops even in absence of external boundaries that are universally included in traditional theoretical schemes for feedback necessary for the wave generation
New Structures in Galactic Disks: Predictions and Discoveries
Original paper can be found at http://www.astrosociety.org/pubs/cs/222-252.html--Copyright Astronomical Society of the Pacific --Our main goal is to review: 1) some physical mechanisms which form the observed structures in galactic disks; 2) the discovery of new galactic structures predicted earlier. Specifically in the first part of the paper we discuss some questions associated with spiral structure. The second part is devoted to the prediction and discovery of giant vortices in gaseous disks of the grand design spiral galaxies using method of reconstruction of the full three-component velocity field from the observed line-of-sight velocity field. In the third part, we give some arguments in favour of existence of the slow bars in the grand design spiral galaxies
Gravitational stability and dynamical overheating of stellar disks of galaxies
We use the marginal stability condition for galactic disks and the stellar
velocity dispersion data published by different authors to place upper limits
on the disk local surface density at two radial scalelengths .
Extrapolating these estimates, we constrain the total mass of the disks and
compare these estimates to those based on the photometry and color of stellar
populations. The comparison reveals that the stellar disks of most of spiral
galaxies in our sample cannot be substantially overheated and are therefore
unlikely to have experienced a significant merging event in their history. The
same conclusion applies to some, but not all of the S0 galaxies we consider.
However, a substantial part of the early type galaxies do show the stellar
velocity dispersion well in excess of the gravitational stability threshold
suggesting a major merger event in the past. We find dynamically overheated
disks among both seemingly isolated galaxies and those forming pairs. The ratio
of the marginal stability disk mass estimate to the total galaxy mass within
four radial scalelengths remains within a range of 0.4---0.8. We see no
evidence for a noticeable running of this ratio with either the morphological
type or color index.Comment: 25 pages, 5 figures, accepted to Astronomy Letter
Inner Polar Rings and Disks: Observed Properties
A list of galaxies with inner regions revealing polar (or strongly inclined
to the main galactic plane) disks and rings is compiled from the literature
data. The list contains 47 galaxies of all morphological types, from E to Irr.
We consider the statistics of the parameters of polar structures known from
observations. The radii of the majority of them do not exceed 1.5 kpc. The
polar structures are equally common in barred and unbarred galaxies. At the
same time, if a galaxy has a bar (or a triaxial bulge), this leads to the polar
disk stabilization - its axis of rotation usually coincides with the major axis
of the bar. More than two thirds of all considered galaxies reveal one or
another sign of recent interaction or merging. This fact indicates a direct
relation between the external environment and the presence of an inner polar
structure.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, accepted to Astrophysical Bulletin. Minor
changes and corrections are still possibl
Past decade above-ground biomass change comparisons from four multi-temporal global maps
Above-ground biomass (AGB) is considered an essential climate variable that underpins our knowledge and information about the role of forests in mitigating climate change. The availability of satellite-based AGB and AGB change (Delta AGB) products has increased in recent years. Here we assessed the past decade net Delta AGB derived from four recent global multi-date AGB maps: ESA-CCI maps, WRI-Flux model, JPL time series, and SMOS-LVOD time series. Our assessments explore and use different reference data sources with biomass re-measurements within the past decade. The reference data comprise National Forest Inventory (NFI) plot data, local Delta AGB maps from airborne LiDAR, and selected Forest Resource Assessment country data from countries with well-developed monitoring capacities. Map to reference data comparisons were performed at levels ranging from 100 m to 25 km spatial scale. The comparisons revealed that LiDAR data compared most reasonably with the maps, while the comparisons using NFI only showed some agreements at aggregation levels <10 km. Regardless of the aggregation level, AGB losses and gains according to the map comparisons were consistently smaller than the reference data. Map-map comparisons at 25 km highlighted that the maps consistently captured AGB losses in known deforestation hotspots. The comparisons also identified several carbon sink regions consistently detected by all maps. However, disagreement between maps is still large in key forest regions such as the Amazon basin. The overall AAGB map cross-correlation between maps varied in the range 0.11-0.29 (r). Reported AAGB magnitudes were largest in the high-resolution datasets including the CCI map differencing (stock change) and Flux model (gain-loss) methods, while they were smallest according to the coarser-resolution LVOD and JPL time series products, especially for AGB gains. Our results suggest that AAGB assessed from current maps can be biased and any use of the estimates should take that into account. Currently, AAGB reference data are sparse especially in the tropics but that deficit can be alleviated by upcoming LiDAR data networks in the context of Supersites and GEO-Trees
Negative Energy and Angular Momentum Modes of Thin Accretion Disks
This work derives the linearized equations of motion, the Lagrangian density,
the Hamiltonian density, and the canonical angular momentum density for general
perturbations [ with ] of a geometrically
thin self-gravitating, homentropic fluid disk including the pressure. The
theory is applied to ``eccentric,'' perturbations of a geometrically
thin Keplerian disk. We find modes at low frequencies relative to the
Keplerian frequency. Further, it shown that these modes can have negative
energy and negative angular momentum. The radial propagation of these low
frequency modes can transport angular momentum away from the inner region
of a disk and thus increase the rate of mass accretion. Depending on the radial
boundary conditions there can be discrete low-frequency, negative-energy,
modes.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figure
An optimal transient growth of small perturbations in thin gaseous discs
A thin gaseous disc with an almost keplerian angular velocity profile,
bounded by a free surface and rotating around point-mass gravitating object is
nearly spectrally stable. Despite that the substantial transient growth of
linear perturbations measured by the evolution of their acoustic energy is
possible. This fact is demonstrated for the simple model of a non-viscous
polytropic thin disc of a finite radial size where the small adiabatic
perturbations are considered as a linear combination of neutral modes with a
corotational radius located beyond the outer boundary of the flow.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Ast
Classification of current anticancer immunotherapies
During the past decades, anticancer immunotherapy has evolved from a promising
therapeutic option to a robust clinical reality. Many immunotherapeutic regimens are
now approved by the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines
Agency for use in cancer patients, and many others are being investigated as standalone
therapeutic interventions or combined with conventional treatments in clinical
studies. Immunotherapies may be subdivided into “passive” and “active” based on
their ability to engage the host immune system against cancer. Since the anticancer
activity of most passive immunotherapeutics (including tumor-targeting monoclonal
antibodies) also relies on the host immune system, this classification does not properly
reflect the complexity of the drug-host-tumor interaction. Alternatively, anticancer
immunotherapeutics can be classified according to their antigen specificity. While some
immunotherapies specifically target one (or a few) defined tumor-associated antigen(s),
others operate in a relatively non-specific manner and boost natural or therapy-elicited
anticancer immune responses of unknown and often broad specificity. Here, we propose
a critical, integrated classification of anticancer immunotherapies and discuss the clinical
relevance of these approaches
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