9,944 research outputs found
The Dwarf Spheroidal Companions to M31: WFPC2 Observations of Andromeda I
Images have been obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope WFPC2 camera of
Andromeda I, a dwarf spheroidal (dSph) galaxy that lies in the outer halo of
M31. The resulting color-magnitude diagrams reveal for the first time the
morphology of the horizontal branch in this system. We find that, in a similar
fashion to many of the galactic dSph companions, the horizontal branch (HB) of
And~I is predominantly red. Combined with the metal abundance of this dSph,
this red HB morphology indicates that And I can be classified as a ``second
parameter'' system in the outer halo of M31. This result then supports the
hypothesis that the outer halo of M31 formed in the same extended chaotic
manner as is postulated for the outer halo of the Galaxy.Comment: 26 pages using aas2pp4.sty, including 2 tables and 7 figures, to be
published in AJ. Figure 1 is in gif form. To include in main ps file, use xv
to create a ps file called Da_Costa.fig1.ps and uncomment appropriate lines
in .tex fil
Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation Anisotropy Induced by Cosmic Strings
We report on a current investigation of the anisotropy pattern induced by
cosmic strings on the cosmic microwave background radiation (MBR). We have
numerically evolved a network of cosmic strings from a redshift of to
the present and calculated the anisotropies which they induce. Based on a
limited number of realizations, we have compared the results of our simulations
with the observations of the COBE-DMR experiment. We have obtained a
preliminary estimate of the string mass-per-unit-length in the cosmic
string scenario.Comment: 8 pages of TeX - [Color] Postscript available by anonymous ftp at
ftp://fnas08.fnal.gov:/pub/Publications/Conf-94-197-A, FERMILAB-Conf-94/197-
Simulation Of Human Jumping - Task Alteration
Similar human motions are often grouped together into a single movement class. In jumping, the question of similarity in control and coordination of different tasks within a movement class has been addressed by altering the direction of maximal effort jumps between vertical and horizontal (Jensen & Phillips, 1991). Other researchers have studied vertical jumping using computer simulations (Pandy & Zajac, 1991; van Soest et al., 1993), but have not addressed the issue of modifying the jumping task. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the effect of task alteration on forward .dynamic simulations of jumping. The simulation model was comprised of 4 linked rigid segments (Fig. 1). Segmental motion was controlled by 3 torque generators defined with pre-set magnitudes and activation time constants.
All jumps began from a static posture with all torques set to zero. Each jumping performance was dictated by the onset times of each torque generator. The choice of task was specified by one of two objective functions:
1) vertical height, or 2) horizontal distance. The optimization algorithm searched for the pattern of activation onset times for the 3 torque generators which maximized each objective function. A variety of tests were performed to compare the model's optimal vertical and horizontal jumping performance, and the underlying coordination of torque generation.
With the set of initial conditions shown in Fig. la (00 = (1.0,-0.7,1.1,-0.8}), the model's maximum height was 1.814 m, with a forward displacement of 0.39 m. For the optimal forward jump the displacement increased to only 0.73 m.
However, by changing the initial posture (00 = (0.8,-1.0,0.8,-1.0}) the optimal forward jump was improved to 1.87 m (Fig. lb), but the optimal vertical jump was reduced to 1.465 m. The relative magnitude of onset times varied substantially between the two optimal jumps. For the conditions studied, the order of onset times does not follow the proximo-distal sequence often .proported for humans, and the relative timing of joint torques changes with task. The results illustrate the dependence of the optimal solution on initial conditions. Further work will examine the relations between initial conditions, coordination and perfommance
Anisotropy of the Cosmic Neutrino Background
The cosmic neutrino background (CNB) consists of low-energy relic neutrinos
which decoupled from the cosmological fluid at a redshift z ~ 10^{10}. Despite
being the second-most abundant particles in the universe, direct observation
remains a distant challenge. Based on the measured neutrino mass differences,
one species of neutrinos may still be relativistic with a thermal distribution
characterized by the temperature T ~ 1.9K. We show that the temperature
distribution on the sky is anisotropic, much like the photon background,
experiencing Sachs-Wolfe and integrated Sachs-Wolfe effects.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures / updated references, discussion of earlier wor
Cosmology with velocity dispersion counts: an alternative to measuring cluster halo masses
The evolution of galaxy cluster counts is a powerful probe of several
fundamental cosmological parameters. A number of recent studies using this
probe have claimed tension with the cosmology preferred by the analysis of the
Planck primary CMB data, in the sense that there are fewer clusters observed
than predicted based on the primary CMB cosmology. One possible resolution to
this problem is systematic errors in the absolute halo mass calibration in
cluster studies, which is required to convert the standard theoretical
prediction (the halo mass function) into counts as a function of the observable
(e.g., X-ray luminosity, Sunyaev-Zel'dovich flux, optical richness). Here we
propose an alternative strategy, which is to directly compare predicted and
observed cluster counts as a function of the one-dimensional velocity
dispersion of the cluster galaxies. We argue that the velocity dispersion of
groups/clusters can be theoretically predicted as robustly as mass but, unlike
mass, it can also be directly observed, thus circumventing the main systematic
bias in traditional cluster counts studies. With the aid of the BAHAMAS suite
of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, we demonstrate the potential of the
velocity dispersion counts for discriminating even similar CDM models.
These predictions can be compared with the results from existing redshift
surveys such as the highly-complete Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey, and
upcoming wide-field spectroscopic surveys such as the Wide Area Vista
Extragalactic Survey (WAVES) and the Dark Energy Survey Instrument (DESI).Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS. New section
on cosmological forecasts adde
On the width of the last scattering surface
We discuss the physical effects of some accelerated world models on the width
of the last scattering surface (LSS) of the cosmic microwave background
radiation (CMBR). The models considered in our analysis are X-matter (XCDM) and
a Chaplygin type gas. The redshift of the LSS does not depend on the kind of
dark energy (if XCDM of Chaplygin). Further, for a Chaplygin gas, the width of
the LSS is also only weakly dependent on the kind of scenario (if we have dark
energy plus cold dark matter or the unified picture).Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables, accepted to IJMP
Exact Perturbations for inflation with smooth exit
Toy models for the Hubble rate or the scalar field potential have been used
to analyze the amplification of scalar perturbations through a smooth
transition from inflation to the radiation era. We use a Hubble rate that
arises consistently from a decaying vacuum cosmology, which evolves smoothly
from nearly de Sitter inflation to radiation domination. We find exact
solutions for super-horizon perturbations (scalar and tensor), and for
sub-horizon perturbations in the vacuum- and radiation-dominated eras. The
standard conserved quantity for super-horizon scalar perturbations is exactly
constant for growing modes, and zero for the decaying modes.Comment: Minor errors correcte
Some FRW Models of Accelerating Universe with Dark Energy
The paper deals with a spatially homogeneous and isotropic FRW space-time
filled with perfect fluid and dark energy components. The two sources are
assumed to interact minimally, and therefore their energy momentum tensors are
conserved separately. A special law of variation for the Hubble parameter
proposed by Berman (1983) has been utilized to solve the field equations. The
Berman's law yields two explicit forms of the scale factor governing the FRW
space-time and constant values of deceleration parameter. The role of dark
energy with variable equation of state parameter has been studied in detail in
the evolution of FRW universe. It has been found that dark energy dominates the
universe at the present epoch, which is consistent with the observations. The
physical behavior of the universe is discussed in detail.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
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