1,955 research outputs found
The mass content of the Sculptor dwarf spheroidal galaxy
We present a new determination of the mass content of the Sculptor dwarf
spheroidal galaxy, based on a novel approach which takes into account the two
distinct stellar populations present in this galaxy. This method helps to
partially break the well-known mass-anisotropy degeneracy present in the
modelling of pressure-supported stellar systems.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. To appear in the proceedings of IAU Symposium 254
"The Galaxy disk in a cosmological context", Copenhagen, June 200
Spin-dynamic field coupling in strongly THz driven semiconductors : local inversion symmetry breaking
We study theoretically the optics in undoped direct gap semiconductors which
are strongly driven in the THz regime. We calculate the optical sideband
generation due to nonlinear mixing of the THz field and the near infrared
probe. Starting with an inversion symmetric microscopic Hamiltonian we include
the THz field nonperturbatively using non-equilibrium Green function
techniques. We find that a self induced relativistic spin-THz field coupling
locally breaks the inversion symmetry, resulting in the formation of odd
sidebands which otherwise are absent.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
A Keck/HIRES Doppler Search for Planets Orbiting Metal-Poor Dwarfs. I. Testing Giant Planet Formation and Migration Scenarios
We describe a high-precision Doppler search for giant planets orbiting a
well-defined sample of metal-poor dwarfs in the field. This experiment
constitutes a fundamental test of theoretical predictions which will help
discriminate between proposed giant planet formation and migration models. We
present here details on the survey as well as an overall assessment of the
quality of our measurements, making use of the results for the stars that show
no significant velocity variation.Comment: 25 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Neural mechanisms underlying target detection in a dragonfly centrifugal neuron
© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2007Visual identification of targets is an important task for many animals searching for prey or conspecifics. Dragonflies utilize specialized optics in the dorsal acute zone, accompanied by higher-order visual neurons in the lobula complex, and descending neural pathways tuned to the motion of small targets. While recent studies describe the physiology of insect small target motion detector (STMD) neurons, little is known about the mechanisms that underlie their exquisite sensitivity to target motion. Lobula plate tangential cells (LPTCs), a group of neurons in dipteran flies selective for wide-field motion, have been shown to take input from local motion detectors consistent with the classic correlation model developed by Hassenstein and Reichardt in the 1950s. We have tested the hypothesis that similar mechanisms underlie the response of dragonfly STMDs. We show that an anatomically characterized centrifugal STMD neuron (CSTMD1) gives responses that depend strongly on target contrast, a clear prediction of the correlation model. Target stimuli are more complex in spatiotemporal terms than the sinusoidal grating patterns used to study LPTCs, so we used a correlation-based computer model to predict response tuning to velocity and width of moving targets. We show that increasing target width in the direction of travel causes a shift in response tuning to higher velocities, consistent with our model. Finally, we show how the morphology of CSTMD1 allows for impressive spatial interactions when more than one target is present in the visual field.Bart R. H. Geurten, Karin Nordström, Jordanna D. H. Sprayberry, Douglas M. Bolzon and David C. O'Carrol
Effect of Al mole fraction on carrier diffusion lengths and lifetimes in AlxGa1−xAs
The ambipolar diffusion length and carrier lifetime are measured in AlxGa1−xAs for several mole fractions in the interval 0<x<0.38. These parameters are found to have significantly higher values in the higher mole fraction samples. These increases are attributed to occupation of states in the indirect valleys, and supporting calculations are presented
The ESO Large Programme First Stars
In ESO period 65 (April-September 2000) the large programme 165.N-0276, led
by Roger Cayrel, began making use of UVES at the Kueyen VLT telescope. Known
within the Team and outside as ``First Stars'', it was aimed at obtaining high
resolution, high signal-to-noise ratio spectra in the range 320 nm -- 1000 nm
for a large sample of extremely metal-poor (EMP) stars identified from the HK
objective prism survey.In this contribution we highlight the main results of
the large programme.Comment: to be published in the proceedings of the Workshop "Science with VLT
in the ELT era" 8-12 October 2007, Garching, ed. A. Moorwoo
Antibiotic-resistant Escherichia Coli from Retail Poultry Meat with Different Antibiotic Use Claims
Background We sought to determine if the prevalence of antibiotic-resistant Escherichia coli differed across retail poultry products and among major production categories, including organic, “raised without antibiotics”, and conventional. Results We collected all available brands of retail chicken and turkey—including conventional, “raised without antibiotic”, and organic products—every two weeks from January to December 2012. In total, E. coli was recovered from 91% of 546 turkey products tested and 88% of 1367 chicken products tested. The proportion of samples contaminated with E. coli was similar across all three production categories. Resistance prevalence varied by meat type and was highest among E. coli isolates from turkey for the majority of antibiotics tested. In general, production category had little effect on resistance prevalence among E. coli isolates from chicken, although resistance to gentamicin and multidrug resistance did vary. In contrast, resistance prevalence was significantly higher for 6 of the antibiotics tested—and multidrug resistance—among isolates from conventional turkey products when compared to those labelled organic or “raised without antibiotics”. E. coli isolates from chicken varied strongly in resistance prevalence among different brands within each production category. Conclusion The high prevalence of resistance among E. coli isolates from conventionally-raised turkey meat suggests greater antimicrobial use in conventional turkey production as compared to “raised without antibiotics” and organic systems. However, among E. coli from chicken meat, resistance prevalence was more strongly linked to brand than to production category, which could be caused by brand-level differences during production and/or processing, including variations in antimicrobial use
Evolution of the Velocity Ellipsoids in the Thin Disk of the Galaxy and the Radial Migration of Stars
Data from the revised Geneva--Copenhagen catalog are used to study the
influence of radial migration of stars on the age dependences of parameters of
the velocity ellipsoids for nearby stars in the thin disk of the Galaxy,
assuming that the mean radii of the stellar orbits remain constant. It is
demonstrated that precisely the radial migration of stars, together with the
negative metallicity gradient in the thin disk,are responsible for the observed
negative correlation between the metallicities and angular momenta of nearby
stars, while the angular momenta of stars that were born at the same
Galactocentric distances do not depend on either age or metallicity. (abridged)Comment: Astronomy Reports, Vol. 86 No. 9, P.1117-1126 (2009
Casimir force in brane worlds: coinciding results from Green's and Zeta function approaches
Casimir force encodes the structure of the field modes as vacuum fluctuations
and so it is sensitive to the extra dimensions of brane worlds. Now, in flat
spacetimes of arbitrary dimension the two standard approaches to the Casimir
force, Green's function and zeta function, yield the same result, but for brane
world models this was only assumed. In this work we show both approaches yield
the same Casimir force in the case of Universal Extra Dimensions and
Randall-Sundrum scenarios with one and two branes added by p compact
dimensions. Essentially, the details of the mode eigenfunctions that enter the
Casimir force in the Green's function approach get removed due to their
orthogonality relations with a measure involving the right hyper-volume of the
plates and this leaves just the contribution coming from the Zeta function
approach. The present analysis corrects previous results showing a difference
between the two approaches for the single brane Randall-Sundrum; this was due
to an erroneous hyper-volume of the plates introduced by the authors when using
the Green's function. For all the models we discuss here, the resulting Casimir
force can be neatly expressed in terms of two four dimensional Casimir force
contributions: one for the massless mode and the other for a tower of massive
modes associated with the extra dimensions.Comment: 30 pages, title, abstract and discussion have change
Quasienergy Spectroscopy of Excitons
We theoretically study nonlinear optics of excitons under intense THz
irradiation. In particular, the linear near infrared absorption and resonantly
enhanced nonlinear sideband generation are described. We predict a rich
structure in the spectra which can be interpreted in terms of the quasienergy
spectrum of the exciton, via a remarkably transparent expression for the
susceptibility, and show that the effects of strongly avoided quasienergy
crossings manifest themselves directly, both in the absorption and transmitted
sidebands.Comment: 4 pages RevTex, 3 eps figs included, as publishe
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