168 research outputs found
Cosmological Models and Latest Observational Data
In this note, we consider the observational constraints on some cosmological
models by using the 307 Union type Ia supernovae (SNIa), the 32 calibrated
Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) at , the updated shift parameter from WMAP
5-year data (WMAP5), and the distance parameter of the measurement of the
baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) peak in the distribution of SDSS luminous red
galaxies with the updated scalar spectral index from WMAP5. The tighter
constraints obtained here update the ones obtained previously in the
literature.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, revtex4; v2: discussions added,
accepted by Eur. Phys. J. C; v3: published versio
Biological and geophysical feedbacks with fire in the Earth system
Roughly 3% of the Earth's land surface burns annually, representing a critical exchange of energy and matter between the land and atmosphere via combustion. Fires range from slow smouldering peat fires, to low-intensity surface fires, to intense crown fires, depending on vegetation structure, fuel moisture, prevailing climate, and weather conditions. While the links between biogeochemistry, climate and fire are widely studied within Earth system science, these relationships are also mediated by fuels—namely plants and their litter—that are the product of evolutionary and ecological processes. Fire is a powerful selective force and, over their evolutionary history, plants have evolved traits that both tolerate and promote fire numerous times and across diverse clades. Here we outline a conceptual framework of how plant traits determine the flammability of ecosystems and interact with climate and weather to influence fire regimes. We explore how these evolutionary and ecological processes scale to impact biogeochemical and Earth system processes. Finally, we outline several research challenges that, when resolved, will improve our understanding of the role of plant evolution in mediating the fire feedbacks driving Earth system processes. Understanding current patterns of fire and vegetation, as well as patterns of fire over geological time, requires research that incorporates evolutionary biology, ecology, biogeography, and the biogeosciences
Emissions of primary aerosol and precursor gases in the year 2000 and 1750 prescribed data-sets for AeroCom.
Inventories for global aerosol and aerosol precursor emissions have been collected (based on published inventories and published simulations), assessed and prepared for the year 2000 (present-day conditions) and for the year 1750 (pre-industrial conditions). These global datasets establish a comprehensive source for emission input to global modeling, when simulating the aerosol impact on climate with state-of-the-art aerosol component modules. As these modules stratify aerosol into dust, sea-salt, sulfate, organic matter and soot, for all these aerosol types global fields on emission strength and recommendations for injection altitude and particulate size are provided. Temporal resolution varies between daily (dust and sea-salt), monthly (wild-land fires) and annual (all other emissions). These datasets benchmark aerosol emissions according to the knowledge in the year 2004. They are intended to serve as systematic constraints in sensitivity studies of the AeroCom initiative, which seeks to quantify (actual) uncertainties in aerosol global modeling
Study of variable stars in the MOA data base: long-period red variables in the Large Magellanic Cloud
One hundred and forty six long-period red variable stars in the Large
Magellanic Cloud (LMC) from the three year MOA project database were analysed.
A careful periodic analysis was performed on these stars and a catalogue of
their magnitudes, colours, periods and amplitudes is presented. We convert our
blue and red magnitudes to band values using 19 oxygen-rich stars. A group
of red short-period stars separated from the Mira sequence has been found on a
(log P, K) diagram. They are located at the short period side of the Mira
sequence consistent with the work of Wood and Sebo (1996). There are two
interpretations for such stars; a difference in pulsation mode or a difference
in chemical composition. We investigated the properties of these stars together
with their colour, amplitude and periodicity. We conclude that they have small
amplitudes and less regular variability. They are likely to be higher mode
pulsators. A large scatter has been also found on the long period side of the
(log P, K) diagram. This is possibly a systematic spread given that the blue
band of our photometric system covers both standard B and V bands and affects
carbon-rich stars.Comment: 19 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Effect of halo modelling on WIMP exclusion limits
WIMP direct detection experiments are just reaching the sensitivity required
to detect galactic dark matter in the form of neutralinos. Data from these
experiments are usually analysed under the simplifying assumption that the
Milky Way halo is an isothermal sphere with maxwellian velocity distribution.
Observations and numerical simulations indicate that galaxy halos are in fact
triaxial and anisotropic. Furthermore, in the cold dark matter paradigm
galactic halos form via the merger of smaller subhalos, and at least some
residual substructure survives. We examine the effect of halo modelling on WIMP
exclusion limits, taking into account the detector response. Triaxial and
anisotropic halo models, with parameters motivated by observations and
numerical simulations, lead to significant changes which are different for
different experiments, while if the local WIMP distribution is dominated by
small scale clumps then the exclusion limits are changed dramatically.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, version to appear in Phys. Rev. D, minor change
Reionization by active sources and its effects on the cosmic microwave background
We investigate the possible effects of reionization by active sources on the
cosmic microwave background. We concentrate on the sources themselves as the
origin of reionization, rather than early object formation, introducing an
extra period of heating motivated by the active character of the perturbations.
Using reasonable parameters, this leads to four possibilities depending on the
time and duration of the energy input: delayed last scattering, double last
scattering, shifted last scattering and total reionization. We show that these
possibilities are only very weakly constrained by the limits on spectral
distortions from the COBE FIRAS measurements. We illustrate the effects of
these reionization possibilities on the angular power spectrum of temperature
anisotropies and polarization for simple passive isocurvature models and simple
coherent sources, observing the difference between passive and active models.
Finally, we comment on the implications of this work for more realistic active
sources, such as causal white noise and topological defect models. We show for
these models that non-standard ionization histories can shift the peak in the
CMB power to larger angular scales.Comment: 21 pages LaTeX with 11 eps figures; replaced with final version
accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
QCD ghost f(T)-gravity model
Within the framework of modified teleparallel gravity, we reconstruct a f(T)
model corresponding to the QCD ghost dark energy scenario. For a spatially flat
FRW universe containing only the pressureless matter, we obtain the time
evolution of the torsion scalar T (or the Hubble parameter). Then, we calculate
the effective torsion equation of state parameter of the QCD ghost f(T)-gravity
model as well as the deceleration parameter of the universe. Furthermore, we
fit the model parameters by using the latest observational data including
SNeIa, CMB and BAO data. We also check the viability of our model using a
cosmographic analysis approach. Moreover, we investigate the validity of the
generalized second law (GSL) of gravitational thermodynamics for our model.
Finally, we point out the growth rate of matter density perturbation. We
conclude that in QCD ghost f(T)-gravity model, the universe begins a matter
dominated phase and approaches a de Sitter regime at late times, as expected.
Also this model is consistent with current data, passes the cosmographic test,
satisfies the GSL and fits the data of the growth factor well as the LCDM
model.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables. arXiv admin note: substantial text
overlap with arXiv:1111.726
DT/T beyond linear theory
The major contribution to the anisotropy of the temperature of the Cosmic
Microwave Background (CMB) radiation is believed to come from the interaction
of linear density perturbations with the radiation previous to the decoupling
time. Assuming a standard thermal history for the gas after recombination, only
the gravitational field produced by the linear density perturbations present on
a universe can generate anisotropies at low z (these
anisotropies would manifest on large angular scales). However, secondary
anisotropies are inevitably produced during the nonlinear evolution of matter
at late times even in a universe with a standard thermal history. Two effects
associated to this nonlinear phase can give rise to new anisotropies: the
time-varying gravitational potential of nonlinear structures (Rees-Sciama RS
effect) and the inverse Compton scattering of the microwave photons with hot
electrons in clusters of galaxies (Sunyaev-Zeldovich SZ effect). These two
effects can produce distinct imprints on the CMB temperature anisotropy. We
discuss the amplitude of the anisotropies expected and the relevant angular
scales in different cosmological scenarios. Future sensitive experiments will
be able to probe the CMB anisotropies beyong the first order primary
contribution.Comment: plain tex, 16 pages, 3 figures. Proceedings of the Laredo Advance
School on Astrophysics "The universe at high-z, large-scale structure and the
cosmic microwave background". To be publised by Springer-Verla
The Formation of Cosmic Structures in a Light Gravitino Dominated Universe
We analyse the formation of cosmic structures in models where the dark matter
is dominated by light gravitinos with mass of eV -- 1 keV, as predicted
by gauge-mediated supersymmetry (SUSY) breaking models. After evaluating the
number of degrees of freedom at the gravitinos decoupling (), we compute
the transfer function for matter fluctuations and show that gravitinos behave
like warm dark matter (WDM) with free-streaming scale comparable to the galaxy
mass scale. We consider different low-density variants of the WDM model, both
with and without cosmological constant, and compare the predictions on the
abundances of neutral hydrogen within high-redshift damped Ly-- systems
and on the number density of local galaxy clusters with the corresponding
observational constraints. We find that none of the models satisfies both
constraints at the same time, unless a rather small value (\mincir
0.4) and a rather large Hubble parameter (\magcir 0.9) is assumed.
Furthermore, in a model with warm + hot dark matter, with hot component
provided by massive neutrinos, the strong suppression of fluctuation on scales
of \sim 1\hm precludes the formation of high-redshift objects, when the
low-- cluster abundance is required. We conclude that all different variants
of a light gravitino DM dominated model show strong difficulties for what
concerns cosmic structure formation.
This gives a severe cosmological constraint on the gauge-mediated SUSY
breaking scheme.Comment: 28 pages,Latex, submitted for publication to Phys.Rev.
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