712 research outputs found
Quantifying the Origins of Life on a Planetary Scale
A simple, heuristic formula with parallels to the Drake Equation is
introduced to help focus discussion on open questions for the origins of life
in a planetary context. This approach indicates a number of areas where
quantitative progress can be made on parameter estimation for determining
origins of life probabilities. We also suggest that the probability of origin
of life events can be dramatically increased on planets with parallel
chemistries that can undergo the development of complexity, and in solar
systems where more than one planet is available for chemical evolution, and
where efficient impact ejecta exchange occurs, increasing the effective
chemical search space and available time.Comment: 13 pages, submitted to Scienc
Exoplanet Transit Parallax
The timing and duration of exoplanet transits has a dependency on observer
position due to parallax. In the case of an Earth-bound observer with a 2 AU
baseline the dependency is typically small and slightly beyond the limits of
current timing precision capabilities. However, it can become an important
systematic effect in high-precision repeated transit measurements for long
period systems due to its relationship to secular perspective acceleration
phenomena. In this short paper we evaluate the magnitude and characteristics of
transit parallax in the case of exoplanets using simplified geometric examples.
We also discuss further implications of the effect, including its possible
exploitation to provide immediate confirmation of planetary transits and/or
unique constraints on orbital parameters and orientations.Comment: 12 Pages, 3 Figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
Optimal Chandra/XMM-Newton Band-Passes for Detecting Low Temperature Groups and Clusters of Galaxies
In this short paper I present the results of a calculation which seeks the
maximum, or optimal, signal-to-noise energy band for galaxy group or cluster
X-ray emission detected by the Chandra and XMM-Newton observatories. Using a
background spectrum derived from observations and a grid of models I show that
the "classical" 0.5-2 keV band is indeed close to optimal for clusters with gas
temperatures >2 keV, and redshifts z<1. For cooler systems however, this band
is generally far from optimal. Sub-keV plasmas can suffer 20-60%
signal-to-noise loss compared to an optimal band, and worse for z>0. The
implication is that current and forthcoming surveys should be carefully
constructed in order to minimize bias against the low mass, low temperature end
of the cluster/group population.Comment: 9 pages, 4 postscript figures, uses AASTEX, accepted Ap
Rebuilding the Habitable Zone from the Bottom Up with Computational Zones
Computation, if treated as a set of physical processes that act on
information represented by states of matter, encompasses biological systems,
digital systems, and other constructs, and may be a fundamental measure of
living systems. The opportunity for biological computation, represented in the
propagation and selection-driven evolution of information-carrying organic
molecular structures, has been partially characterized in terms of planetary
habitable zones based on primary conditions such as temperature and the
presence of liquid water. A generalization of this concept to computational
zones is proposed, with constraints set by three principal characteristics:
capacity, energy, and instantiation (or substrate). Computational zones
naturally combine traditional habitability factors, including those associated
with biological function that incorporate the chemical milieu, constraints on
nutrients and free energy, as well as element availability. Two example
applications are presented by examining the fundamental thermodynamic work
efficiency and Landauer limit of photon-driven biological computation on
planetary surfaces and of generalized computation in stellar energy capture
structures (a.k.a. Dyson structures). It is shown that computational zones
involving nested structures or substellar objects could manifest unique
observational signatures as cool far-infrared emitters. While this is an
entirely hypothetical example, its simplicity offers a useful, complementary
introduction to computational zones.Comment: 31 pages, 3 figures, submitted to The Astrobiology Journa
X-Ray Detection of an Obscured Active Galactic Nucleus in a z=3.09 Radio-quiet Ly-alpha Nebula
We present evidence for a highly obscured X-ray source in one of two giant
Ly-alpha emission nebulae in the z=3.09 proto-cluster region SSA22. Neither
Ly-alpha nebula is associated with significant radio emission. While one has a
significant submillimeter detection and is undetected in the X-ray, the other
is a factor of 2-10 times less submillimeter bright and appears to contain a
hard-band X-ray source. We discuss our analysis and techniques for assessing
the X-ray properties of this source and suggest that we have detected an
embedded AGN source in one of these nebulae which may be at least partially
responsible for exciting the Ly-alpha emission through a mechanism that is
essentially decoupled from the radio, submillimeter, or optical luminosities.
We also present an upper limit on the mean X-ray emission from 10 other
extended Ly-alpha objects in the SSA22 region.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, accepted to appear in ApJL, Vol. 615, 2004
November 1
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