899 research outputs found
A survey for large image-separation lensed quasars
The statistics of gravitationally lensed quasars with multiple images in the
0.1''-7'' range have been measured in various surveys. Little is known,
however, about lensed-quasar statistics at larger image separations, which
probe masses on the scale of galaxy clusters. We extend the results of the HST
Snapshot Survey for Lensed Quasars to the 7''-50'' range for a sub-sample of 76
quasars that is free of known selection effects. Using a combination of
multicolor photometry and spectroscopy, we show that none of the point sources
in the entire field of view of the HST observations of these quasars are lensed
images. Large-separation quasar lensing is therefore not common. We carry out a
detailed calculation of the expected statistics of large-separation lensing for
this quasar sample, incorporating realistic input for the mass profiles and
mass function of galaxy clusters. We find that the observational null results
are consistent with the expected effect of galaxy clusters, even if these have
existed in their present form and number since z of about 2. The rarity of
large-separation lensed quasars can rule out some extreme scenarios, e.g. that
the mass-function of clusters has been severely underestimated, or that large
mass concentrations that are not associated with galaxies (i.e. ``failed''
clusters) are common. The rareness of wide lensing also sets limits on the
cosmological constant that are independent of limits derived from galaxy
lensing. The lensing statistics of larger quasar samples can probe the
structure, number, and evolution of clusters, as well as the geometry of space.Comment: LaTex, ApJ, submitte
Optical Continuum and Emission-Line Variability of Seyfert 1 Galaxies
We present the light curves obtained during an eight-year program of optical
spectroscopic monitoring of nine Seyfert 1 galaxies: 3C 120, Akn 120, Mrk 79,
Mrk 110, Mrk 335, Mrk 509, Mrk 590, Mrk 704, and Mrk 817. All objects show
significant variability in both the continuum and emission-line fluxes. We use
cross-correlation analysis to derive the sizes of the broad Hbeta-emitting
regions based on emission-line time delays, or lags. We successfully measure
time delays for eight of the nine sources, and find values ranging from about
two weeks to a little over two months. Combining the measured lags and widths
of the variable parts of the emission lines allows us to make virial mass
estimates for the active nucleus in each galaxy. The virial masses are in the
range 10^{7-8} solar masses.Comment: 24 pages, 16 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Central Masses and Broad-Line Region Sizes of Active Galactic Nuclei. II. A Homogeneous Analysis of a Large Reverberation-Mapping Database
We present improved black hole masses for 35 active galactic nuclei (AGNs)
based on a complete and consistent reanalysis of broad emission-line
reverberation-mapping data. From objects with multiple line measurements, we
find that the highest precision measure of the virial product is obtained by
using the cross-correlation function centroid (as opposed to the
cross-correlation function peak) for the time delay and the line dispersion (as
opposed to full width half maximum) for the line width and by measuring the
line width in the variable part of the spectrum. Accurate line-width
measurement depends critically on avoiding contaminating features, in
particular the narrow components of the emission lines. We find that the
precision (or random component of the error) of reverberation-based black hole
mass measurements is typically around 30%, comparable to the precision attained
in measurement of black hole masses in quiescent galaxies by gas or stellar
dynamical methods. Based on results presented in a companion paper by Onken et
al., we provide a zero-point calibration for the reverberation-based black hole
mass scale by using the relationship between black hole mass and host-galaxy
bulge velocity dispersion. The scatter around this relationship implies that
the typical systematic uncertainties in reverberation-based black hole masses
are smaller than a factor of three. We present a preliminary version of a
mass-luminosity relationship that is much better defined than any previous
attempt. Scatter about the mass-luminosity relationship for these AGNs appears
to be real and could be correlated with either Eddington ratio or object
inclination.Comment: 61 pages, including 8 Tables and 16 Figures. Accepted for publication
in The Astrophysical Journa
A NWB-based dataset and processing pipeline of human single-neuron activity during a declarative memory task
A challenge for data sharing in systems neuroscience is the multitude of different data formats used. Neurodata Without Borders: Neurophysiology 2.0 (NWB:N) has emerged as a standardized data format for the storage of cellular-level data together with meta-data, stimulus information, and behavior. A key next step to facilitate NWB:N adoption is to provide easy to use processing pipelines to import/export data from/to NWB:N. Here, we present a NWB-formatted dataset of 1863 single neurons recorded from the medial temporal lobes of 59 human subjects undergoing intracranial monitoring while they performed a recognition memory task. We provide code to analyze and export/import stimuli, behavior, and electrophysiological recordings to/from NWB in both MATLAB and Python. The data files are NWB:N compliant, which affords interoperability between programming languages and operating systems. This combined data and code release is a case study for how to utilize NWB:N for human single-neuron recordings and enables easy re-use of this hard-to-obtain data for both teaching and research on the mechanisms of human memory
Minisuperspace Quantization of "Bubbling AdS" and Free Fermion Droplets
We quantize the space of 1/2 BPS configurations of Type IIB SUGRA found by
Lin, Lunin and Maldacena (hep-th/0409174), directly in supergravity. We use the
Crnkovic-Witten-Zuckerman covariant quantization method to write down the
expression for the symplectic structure on this entire space of solutions. We
find the symplectic form explicitly around AdS_5 x S^5 and obtain a U(1)
Kac-Moody algebra, in precise agreement with the quantization of a system of N
free fermions in a harmonic oscillator potential, as expected from AdS/CFT. As
a cross check, we also perform the quantization around AdS_5 x S^5 by another
method, using the known spectrum of physical perturbations around this
background and find precise agreement with our previous calculation.Comment: 22 Pages + 2 Appendices, JHEP3; v3: explanation of factor 2 mismatch
added, references reordered, published versio
The Correlation Between Galaxy HI Linewidths and K' Luminosities
The relationship between galaxy luminosities and rotation rates is studied
with total luminosities in the K' band. Extinction problems are essentially
eliminated at this band centered at 2.1 micron. A template luminosity-linewidth
relation is derived based on 65 galaxies drawn from two magnitude-limited
cluster samples. The zero-point is determined using 4 galaxies with accurately
known distances. The calibration is applied to give the distance to the Pisces
Cluster (60 Mpc) at a redshift in the CMB frame of 4771 km/s. The resultant
value of the Hubble Constant is 81 km/s/Mpc. The largest sources of uncertainty
arises from the small number of zero-point calibrators at this time at K' and
present application to only one cluster.Comment: 13 pages including 5 figures and 2 tables. Accepted for publication
in Astrophysical Journa
Supernovae in Low-Redshift Galaxy Clusters: Observations by the Wise Observatory Optical Transient Search (WOOTS)
We describe the Wise Observatory Optical Transient Search (WOOTS), a survey
for supernovae (SNe) and other variable and transient objects in the fields of
redshift 0.06-0.2 Abell galaxy clusters. We present the survey design and
data-analysis procedures, and our object detection and follow-up strategies. We
have obtained follow-up spectroscopy for all viable SN candidates, and present
the resulting SN sample here. Out of the 12 SNe we have discovered, seven are
associated with our target clusters while five are foreground or background
field events. All but one of the SNe (a foreground field event) are Type Ia
SNe. Our non-cluster SN sample is uniquely complete, since all SN candidates
have been either spectroscopically confirmed or ruled out. This allows us to
estimate that flux-limited surveys similar to WOOTS would be dominated (~80%)
by SNe Ia. Our spectroscopic follow-up observations also elucidate the
difficulty in distinguishing active galactic nuclei from SNe. In separate
papers we use the WOOTS sample to derive the SN rate in clusters for this
redshift range, and to measure the fraction of intergalactic cluster SNe. We
also briefly report here on some quasars and asteroids discovered by WOOTS.Comment: Submitted to ApJ. Comments welcom
Supertube domain-walls and elimination of closed time-like curves in string theory
We show that some novel physics of supertubes removes closed time-like curves
from many supersymmetric spaces which naively suffer from this problem. The
main claim is that supertubes naturally form domain-walls, so while analytical
continuation of the metric would lead to closed time-like curves, across the
domain-wall the metric is non-differentiable, and the closed time-like curves
are eliminated. In the examples we study the metric inside the domain-wall is
always of the G\"odel type, while outside the shell it looks like a localized
rotating object, often a rotating black hole. Thus this mechanism prevents the
appearance of closed time-like curves behind the horizons of certain rotating
black holes.Comment: 22 pages, JHEP3 class. V2: Some corrections and clariffications,
references added. V3: more corrections to formulas, results unchanged. V4:
minor typos, as published in PR
Epigenetic Suppression of Transgenic T-cell Receptor Expression via Gamma-Retroviral Vector Methylation in Adoptive Cell Transfer Therapy
Transgenic T-cell receptor (TCR) adoptive cell therapies recognizing tumor antigens are associated with robust initial response rates, but frequent disease relapse. This usually occurs in the setting of poor long-term persistence of cells expressing the transgenic TCR, generated using murine stem cell virus (MSCV) y-retroviral vectors. Analysis of clinical transgenic adoptive cell therapy products in vivo revealed that despite strong persistence of the transgenic TCR DNA sequence over time, its expression was profoundly decreased over time at the RNA and protein levels. Patients with the greatest degrees of expression suppression displayed significant increases in DNA methylation over time within the MSCV promoter region, as well as progressive increases in DNA methylation within the entire MSCV vector over time. These increases in vector methylation occurred independently of its integration site within the host genomes. These results have significant implications for the design of future viral-vector gene engineered adoptive cell transfer therapies
OGLE-2003-BLG-262: Finite-Source Effects from a Point-Mass Lens
We analyze OGLE-2003-BLG-262, a relatively short, t_E=12.5+-0.1day,
microlensing event generated by a point-mass lens transiting the face of a K
giant source in the Galactic bulge. We use the resulting finite-source effects
to measure the angular Einstein radius, theta_E=195+-17muas, and so constrain
the lens mass to the full-width half-maximum interval 0.08 < M/M_sun < 0.54.
The lens-source relative proper motion is mu_rel = 27+-2 km/s/kpc. Both values
are typical of what is expected for lenses detected toward the bulge. Despite
the short duration of the event, we detect marginal evidence for a "parallax
asymmetry", but argue that this is more likely to be induced by acceleration of
the source, a binary lens, or possibly by statistical fluctuations. Although
OGLE-2003-BLG-262 is only the second published event to date in which the lens
transits the source, such events will become more common with the new OGLE-III
survey in place. We therefore give a detailed account of the analysis of this
event to facilitate the study of future events of this type.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
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