1,883 research outputs found
Probing the Galaxy I. The galactic structure towards the galactic pole
Observations of (B-V) colour distributions towards the galactic poles are
compared with those obtained from synthetic colour-magnitude diagrams to
determine the major constituents in the disc and spheroid. The disc is
described with four stellar sub-populations: the young, intermediate, old, and
thick disc populations, which have respectively scale heights of 100 pc, 250
pc, 0.5 kpc, and 1.0 kpc. The spheroid is described with stellar contributions
from the bulge and halo. The bulge is not well constrained with the data
analyzed in this study. A non-flattened power-law describes the observed
distributions at fainter magnitudes better than a deprojected R^{1/4}-law.
Details about the age, metallicity, and normalizations are listed in Table 1.
The star counts and the colour distributions from the stars in the intermediate
fields towards the galactic anti-centre are well described with the stellar
populations mentioned above. Arguments are given that the actual solar offset
is about 15 pc north from the galactic plane.Comment: 11 pages TeX, 4 separate pages with additional figures, accepted for
publication in A&
Cepheid Mass-loss and the Pulsation -- Evolutionary Mass Discrepancy
I investigate the discrepancy between the evolution and pulsation masses for
Cepheid variables. A number of recent works have proposed that non-canonical
mass-loss can account for the mass discrepancy. This mass-loss would be such
that a 5Mo star loses approximately 20% of its mass by arriving at the Cepheid
instability strip; a 14Mo star, none. Such findings would pose a serious
challenge to our understanding of mass-loss. I revisit these results in light
of the Padova stellar evolutionary models and find evolutionary masses are
()% greater than pulsation masses for Cepheids between 5<M/Mo<14. I
find that mild internal mixing in the main-sequence progenitor of the Cepheid
are able to account for this mass discrepancy.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, ApJ accepte
Relative entropy and the stability of shocks and contact discontinuities for systems of conservation laws with non BV perturbations
We develop a theory based on relative entropy to show the uniqueness and L^2
stability (up to a translation) of extremal entropic Rankine-Hugoniot
discontinuities for systems of conservation laws (typically 1-shocks, n-shocks,
1-contact discontinuities and n-contact discontinuities of large amplitude)
among bounded entropic weak solutions having an additional trace property. The
existence of a convex entropy is needed. No BV estimate is needed on the weak
solutions considered. The theory holds without smallness condition. The
assumptions are quite general. For instance, strict hyperbolicity is not needed
globally. For fluid mechanics, the theory handles solutions with vacuum.Comment: 29 page
Graphene-based nanomaterials for tissue engineering in the dental field
The world of dentistry is approaching graphene-based nanomaterials as substitutes for tissue engineering. Apart from its exceptional mechanical strength, electrical conductivity and thermal stability, graphene and its derivatives can be functionalized with several bioactive molecules. They can also be incorporated into different scaffolds used in regenerative dentistry, generating nanocomposites with improved characteristics. This review presents the state of the art of graphene-based nanomaterial applications in the dental field. We first discuss the interactions between cells and graphene, summarizing the available in vitro and in vivo studies concerning graphene biocompatibility and cytotoxicity. We then highlight the role of graphene-based nanomaterials in stem cell control, in terms of adhesion, proliferation and differentiation. Particular attention will be given to stem cells of dental origin, such as those isolated from dental pulp, periodontal ligament or dental follicle. The review then discusses the interactions between graphene-based nanomaterials with cells of the immune system; we also focus on the antibacterial activity of graphene nanomaterials. In the last section, we offer our perspectives on the various opportunities facing the use of graphene and its derivatives in associations with titanium dental implants, membranes for bone regeneration, resins, cements and adhesives as well as for tooth-whitening procedure
Near-infrared adaptive optics imaging of high redshift quasars
The properties of high redshift quasar host galaxies are studied, in order to
investigate the connection between galaxy evolution, nuclear activity, and the
formation of supermassive black holes. We combine new near-infrared
observations of three high redshift quasars (2 < z < 3), obtained at the ESO
Very Large Telescope equipped with adaptive optics, with selected data from the
literature. For the three new objects we were able to detect and characterize
the properties of the host galaxy, found to be consistent with those of massive
elliptical galaxies of M(R) ~ -24.7 for the one radio loud quasar, and M(R) ~
-23.8 for the two radio quiet quasars. When combined with existing data at
lower redshift, these new observations depict a scenario where the host
galaxies of radio loud quasars are seen to follow the expected trend of
luminous (~5L*) elliptical galaxies undergoing passive evolution. This trend is
remarkably similar to that followed by radio galaxies at z > 1.5. Radio quiet
quasars hosts also follow a similar trend but at a lower average luminosity
(~0.5 mag dimmer). The data indicate that quasar host galaxies are already
fully formed at epochs as early as ~2 Gyr after the Big Bang and then passively
fade in luminosity to the present epoch.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 24 pages, 10 figure
Assessing the positional accuracy of perceptual landscape data: A study from Friuli Venezia Giulia, Italy
Online GIS-based applications that combine mapping and public participation to collect citizens' voices on their surrounding environment are a way to collect original spatial data that do not already figure in authoritative data sets. However, these applications, relying on non-expert users, might produce spatial data of insufficient quality for the purpose for which they are collected. This article presents an approach for assessing the positional accuracy of vague landscape features, using the results from a map-based survey completed by a group of volunteers in the Friuli Venezia Giulia region of Italy. The spatial section of the survey, gathering both georeferenced data and textual information on the mapping activity, allows the assessment of whether there is a correspondence between the mapped features and the intended map locations. The findings reveal a greater accuracy among participants in completing the mapping activity relating to degraded sites than to those of beauty
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