1,670 research outputs found
Mass Density Profiles of LSB Galaxies
We derive the mass density profiles of dark matter halos that are implied by
high spatial resolution rotation curves of low surface brightness galaxies. We
find that at small radii, the mass density distribution is dominated by a
nearly constant density core with a core radius of a few kpc. For rho(r) ~ r^a,
the distribution of inner slopes a is strongly peaked around a = -0.2. This is
significantly shallower than the cuspy a < -1 halos found in CDM simulations.
While the observed distribution of alpha does have a tail towards such extreme
values, the derived value of alpha is found to depend on the spatial resolution
of the rotation curves: a ~ -1 is found only for the least well resolved
galaxies. Even for these galaxies, our data are also consistent with constant
density cores (a = 0) of modest (~ 1 kpc) core radius, which can give the
illusion of steep cusps when insufficiently resolved. Consequently, there is no
clear evidence for a cuspy halo in any of the low surface brightness galaxies
observed.Comment: To be published in ApJ Letters. 6 pages. Uses aastex and
emulateapj5.sty Typo in Eq 1 fixe
Coordinating criminal justice: a Qualitative Comparative Analysis of inter-organisational information sharing of four EU Member States
Qualitative-comparative analysis of four cases of inter-organisational information sharing in
criminal justice chains demonstrates the causal asymmetry between successful and
unsuccessful inter-organisational information sharing. While unsuccessful information sharing
requires poor project management, successful information sharing also requires compatible
technologies which are implemented either by means of a small-scale, bottom-up approach to
standardization or a top-down, centralised architecture. By triggering the radical restructuring
of information-sharing workflows, good project management and compatible technologies set
in motion underlying mechanisms that generate successful inter-organisational information
sharing. Implications are discussed by highlighting the role of coordination by technological
feedback in a context of increasing digitization
Digitizing criminal justice: A Qualitative Comparative Analysis of supply-chain integration across four EU Member States
Drawing on Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) techniques, we formally analyse four cases of supply-chain integration within the European Union (EU). Our findings demonstrate the causal asymmetry between successful and unsuccessful digitization of inter-organizational information flows. While unsuccessful digitization requires poor project management skills, successful digitization is much more demanding because it also requires compatible technologies which are implemented either by means of a small-scale, bottom-up approach to standardization or a single, centralised architecture developed in a top-down fashion. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed by highlighting the key role of coordination by feedback in a context of increasing digitization of criminal justice systems
A search for Low Surface Brightness galaxies in the near-infrared I. Selection of the sample
A sample of about 3,800 Low Surface Brightness (LSB) galaxies was selected
using the all-sky near-infrared (J, H and K_s-band) 2MASS survey. The selected
objects have a mean central surface brightness within a 5 arcsec radius around
their centre fainter than 18 mag/sq.arcsec in the K_s band, making them the
lowest surface brightness galaxies detected by 2MASS. A description is given of
the relevant properties of the 2MASS survey and the LSB galaxy selection
procedure, as well as of basic photometric properties of the selected objects.
The latter properties are compared to those of other samples of galaxies, of
both LSBs and `classical' high surface brightness (HSB) objects, which were
selected in the optical. The 2MASS LSBs have a (B_T_c)-(K_T) colour which is on
average 0.9 mag bluer than that of HSBs from the NGC. The 2MASS sample does not
appear to contain a significant population of red objects.Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics on 24/2/2003;
62 page
A Morphological-type dependence in the mu_0-log(h) plane of Spiral galaxy disks
We present observational evidence for a galaxy `Type' dependence to the
location of a spiral galaxy's disk parameters in the mu_0-log(h) (central disk
surface-brightness - disk scale-length) plane. With a sample of ~40 Low Surface
Brightness galaxies (both bulge- and disk-dominated) and ~80 High Surface
Brightness galaxies, the early-type disk galaxies (<=Sc) tend to define a
bright envelope in the mu_0-log(h) plane, while the late-type (>=Scd) spiral
galaxies have, in general, smaller and fainter disks. Below the defining
surface brightness threshold for a Low Surface Brightness galaxy (i.e. more
than 1 mag fainter than the 21.65 B-mag arcsec^(-2) Freeman value), the
early-type spiral galaxies have scale-lengths greater than 8-9 kpc, while the
late-type spiral galaxies have smaller scale-lengths. All galaxies have been
modelled with a seeing-convolved Sersic r^(1/n) bulge and exponential disk
model. We show that the trend of decreasing bulge shape parameter (n) with
increasing Hubble type and decreasing bulge-to-disk luminosity ratio, which has
been observed amongst the High Surface Brightness galaxies, extends to the Low
Surface Brightness galaxies, revealing a continuous range of structural
parameters.Comment: To be published in ApJ. Inc. three two-part figure
A Structural and Dynamical Study of Late-Type, Edge-On Galaxies: I. Sample Selection and Imaging Data
We present optical (B & R) and infrared (K_s) images and photometry for a
sample of 49 extremely late-type, edge-on disk galaxies selected from the Flat
Galaxy Catalog of Karenchentsev et al. (1993). Our sample was selected to
include galaxies with particularly large axial ratios, increading the
likelihood that the galaxies in the sample are truly edge-on. We have also
concentrated the sample on galaxies with low apparent surface brightness, in
order to increase the representation of intrinisically low surface brightness
galaxies. Finally, the sample was chosen to have no apprarent bulges or optical
warps so that the galaxies represent undisturbed, ``pure disk'' systems. The
resulting sample forms the basis for a much larger spectroscopic study designed
to place constraints on the physical quantities and processes which shape disk
galaxies. The imaging data presented in this paper has been painstakingly
reduced and calibrated to allow accurate surface photometry of features as
faint as 30 mag/sqr-arcsec in B and 29 mag/sqr-arcsec in R on scales larger
than 10 arcsec. Due to limitations in sky subtraction and flat fielding, the
infrared data can reach only to 22.5 mag/sqr-arcsec in K_s on comparable
scales. As part of this work, we have developed a new method for quantifying
the reliability of surface photometry, which provides useful diagnostics for
the presence of scattered light, optical emission from infrared cirrus, and
other sources of non-uniform sky backgrounds.Comment: scheduled to appear in the Astronomical Journal, LaTeX, 36 pages
including 7 pages of figures (fig 1-2,4). A low resolution version of Figure
3 is included in JPEG format; contours are seriously degraded. A full
resolution Postscript version of Figure 3 (10.6Mb,gzipped) is available
through anonymous ftp at
ftp://ftp.astro.washington.edu/pub/users/jd/FGC/dalcanton.f3.ps.g
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