10,891 research outputs found
The mass and dynamical state of Abell 2218
Abell 2218 is one of a handful of clusters in which X-ray and lensing
analyses of the cluster mass are in strong disagreement. It is also a system
for which X-ray data and radio measurements of the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich decrement
have been combined in an attempt to constrain the Hubble constant. However, in
the absence of reliable information on the temperature structure of the
intracluster gas, most analyses have been carried out under the assumption of
isothermality. We combine X-ray data from the ROSAT PSPC and the ASCA GIS
instruments, enabling us to fit non-isothermal models, and investigate the
impact that this has on the X-ray derived mass and the predicted
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect.
We find that a strongly non-isothermal model for the intracluster gas, which
implies a central cusp in the cluster mass distribution, is consistent with the
available X-ray data and compatible with the lensing results. At r<1 arcmin,
there is strong evidence to suggest that the cluster departs from a simple
relaxed model. We analyse the dynamics of the galaxies and find that the
central galaxy velocity dispersion is too high to allow a physical solution for
the galaxy orbits. The quality of the radio and X-ray data do not at present
allow very restrictive constraints to be placed on H_0. It is apparent that
earlier analyses have under-estimated the uncertainties involved. However,
values greater than 50 km/s/Mpc are preferred when lensing constraints are
taken into account.Comment: 16 pages, 9 postscript figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Interpolation in waveform space: enhancing the accuracy of gravitational waveform families using numerical relativity
Matched-filtering for the identification of compact object mergers in
gravitational-wave antenna data involves the comparison of the data stream to a
bank of template gravitational waveforms. Typically the template bank is
constructed from phenomenological waveform models since these can be evaluated
for an arbitrary choice of physical parameters. Recently it has been proposed
that singular value decomposition (SVD) can be used to reduce the number of
templates required for detection. As we show here, another benefit of SVD is
its removal of biases from the phenomenological templates along with a
corresponding improvement in their ability to represent waveform signals
obtained from numerical relativity (NR) simulations. Using these ideas, we
present a method that calibrates a reduced SVD basis of phenomenological
waveforms against NR waveforms in order to construct a new waveform approximant
with improved accuracy and faithfulness compared to the original
phenomenological model. The new waveform family is given numerically through
the interpolation of the projection coefficients of NR waveforms expanded onto
the reduced basis and provides a generalized scheme for enhancing
phenomenological models.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Towards Rapid Parameter Estimation on Gravitational Waves from Compact Binaries using Interpolated Waveforms
Accurate parameter estimation of gravitational waves from coalescing compact
binary sources is a key requirement for gravitational-wave astronomy.
Evaluating the posterior probability density function of the binary's
parameters (component masses, sky location, distance, etc.) requires computing
millions of waveforms. The computational expense of parameter estimation is
dominated by waveform generation and scales linearly with the waveform
computational cost. Previous work showed that gravitational waveforms from
non-spinning compact binary sources are amenable to a truncated singular value
decomposition, which allows them to be reconstructed via interpolation at fixed
computational cost. However, the accuracy requirement for parameter estimation
is typically higher than for searches, so it is crucial to ascertain that
interpolation does not lead to significant errors. Here we provide a proof of
principle to show that interpolated waveforms can be used to recover posterior
probability density functions with negligible loss in accuracy with respect to
non-interpolated waveforms. This technique has the potential to significantly
increase the efficiency of parameter estimation.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Invariant Peano curves of expanding Thurston maps
We consider Thurston maps, i.e., branched covering maps
that are postcritically finite. In addition, we assume that is expanding in
a suitable sense. It is shown that each sufficiently high iterate of
is semi-conjugate to , where is equal to the
degree of . More precisely, for such an we construct a Peano curve
(onto), such that
(for all ).Comment: 63 pages, 12 figure
Hydrogen bonding in substituted nitroanilines : isolated nets in 1,3-diamino-4-nitrobenzene and continuously interwoven nets in 3,5-dinitroaniline
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
The Nature of Radio Continuum Emission in the Dwarf Starburst Galaxy NGC 625
We present new multi-frequency radio continuum imaging of the dwarf starburst
galaxy NGC 625 obtained with the Very Large Array. Data at 20, 6, and 3.6 cm
reveal global continuum emission dominated by free-free emission, with only
mild synchrotron components. Each of the major HII regions is detected; the
individual spectral indices are thermal for the youngest regions (showing
strongest H Alpha emission) and nonthermal for the oldest. We do not detect any
sources that appear to be associated with deeply embedded, dense, young
clusters, though we have discovered one low-luminosity, obscured source that
has no luminous optical counterpart and which resides in the region of highest
optical extinction. Since NGC 625 is a Wolf-Rayet galaxy with strong recent
star formation, these radio properties suggest that the youngest star formation
complexes have not yet evolved to the point where their thermal spectra are
significantly contaminated by synchrotron emission. The nonthermal components
are associated with regions of older star formation that have smaller ionized
gas components. These results imply a range of ages of the HII regions and
radio components that agrees with our previous resolved stellar population
analysis, where an extended burst of star formation has pervaded the disk of
NGC 625 over the last ~ 50 Myr. We compare the nature of radio continuum
emission in selected nearby dwarf starburst and Wolf-Rayet galaxies,
demonstrating that thermal radio continuum emission appears to be more common
in these systems than in typical HII galaxies with less recent star formation
and more evolved stellar clusters.Comment: ApJ, in press; 27 pages, 5 figures. Full-resolution version may be
obtained at http://www.astro.umn.edu/~cannon/n625.vla.p
Techniques for measuring atmospheric aerosols at the High Resolution Fly's Eye experiment
We describe several techniques developed by the High Resolution Fly's Eye
experiment for measuring aerosol vertical optical depth, aerosol horizontal
attenuation length, and aerosol phase function. The techniques are based on
measurements of side-scattered light generated by a steerable ultraviolet laser
and collected by an optical detector designed to measure fluorescence light
from cosmic-ray air showers. We also present a technique to cross-check the
aerosol optical depth measurement using air showers observed in stereo. These
methods can be used by future air fluorescence experiments.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astroparticle Physics Journal 16 pages, 9
figure
The Potential For UK Portfolio Investors To Finance Sustainable Tropical Forestry
Environmental Economics and Policy, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Radio Sources in the 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey. I. Radio Source Populations
We present the first results from a study of the radio continuum properties
of galaxies in the 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey, based on thirty 2dF fields
covering a total area of about 100 square degrees. About 1.5% of galaxies with
b(J) < 19.4 mag are detected as radio continuum sources in the NRAO VLA Sky
Survey (NVSS). Of these, roughly 40% are star-forming galaxies and 60% are
active galaxies (mostly low-power radio galaxies and a few Seyferts). The
combination of 2dFGRS and NVSS will eventually yield a homogeneous set of
around 4000 radio-galaxy spectra, which will be a powerful tool for studying
the distriibution and evolution of both AGN and starburst galaxies out to
redshift z=0.3.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
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