4,325 research outputs found
Two modes of peri-interaction between an aldehyde group and a carboxylate anion in naphthalaldehydate salts
Crystal structures of the salts of 1,8-naphthalaldehydic acid (8-formyl-1-naphthoic acid) show one of two types of interaction between the functional groups. In the more commonly observed case, a carboxylate oxygen lies close to the aldehyde carbonyl carbon atom (OâŻC: 2.445â2.630 Ă
) and makes an nâpi* interaction. However, in two other cases the carboxylate group has rotated so that the aldehyde now directs its hydrogen atom at the face of the carboxylate group and forms a surprisingly short contact with the carbon atom (HâŻC: 2.29 and 2.42 Ă
). This interaction is likely to be electrostatic in nature
The Evolution of Optical Depth in the Ly-alpha Forest: Evidence Against Reionization at z~6
We examine the evolution of the IGM Ly-alpha optical depth distribution using
the transmitted flux probability distribution function (PDF) in a sample of 63
QSOs spanning absorption redshifts 1.7 < z < 5.8. The data are compared to two
theoretical optical depth distributions: a model distribution based on the
density distribution of Miralda-Escude et al. (2000) (MHR00), and a lognormal
distribution. We assume a uniform UV background and an isothermal IGM for the
MHR00 model, as has been done in previous works. Under these assumptions, the
MHR00 model produces poor fits to the observed flux PDFs at redshifts where the
optical depth distribution is well sampled, unless large continuum corrections
are applied. However, the lognormal optical depth distribution fits the data at
all redshifts with only minor continuum adjustments. We use a simple
parametrization for the evolution of the lognormal parameters to calculate the
expected mean transmitted flux at z > 5.4. The lognormal optical depth
distribution predicts the observed Ly-alpha and Ly-beta effective optical
depths at z > 5.7 while simultaneously fitting the mean transmitted flux down
to z = 1.6. If the evolution of the lognormal distribution at z < 5 reflects a
slowly-evolving density field, temperature, and UV background, then no sudden
change in the IGM at z ~ 6 due to late reionization appears necessary. We have
used the lognormal optical depth distribution without any assumption about the
underlying density field. If the MHR00 density distribution is correct, then a
non-uniform UV background and/or IGM temperature may be required to produce the
correct flux PDF. We find that an inverse temperature-density relation greatly
improves the PDF fits, but with a large scatter in the equation of state index.
[Abridged]Comment: 45 pages, 16 figures, submitted to Ap
A critical role for Cadherin6B in regulating avian neural crest emigration
Neural crest cells originate in the dorsal neural tube but subsequently undergo an epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), delaminate, and migrate to diverse locations in the embryo where they contribute to a variety of derivatives. Cadherins are a family of cellâcell adhesion molecules expressed in a broad range of embryonic tissues, including the neural tube. In particular, cadherin6B (Cad6B) is expressed in the dorsal neural tube prior to neural crest emigration but is then repressed by the transcription factor Snail2, expressed by premigratory and early migrating cranial neural crest cells. To examine the role of Cad6B during neural crest EMT, we have perturbed Cad6B protein levels in the cranial neural crest-forming region and have examined subsequent effects on emigration and migration. The results show that knock-down of Cad6B leads to premature neural crest cell emigration, whereas Cad6B overexpression disrupts migration. Our data reveal a novel role for Cad6B in controlling the proper timing of neural crest emigration and delamination from the neural tube of the avian embryo
An improved solar wind electron-density model for pulsar timing
Variations in the solar wind density introduce variable delays into pulsar
timing observations. Current pulsar timing analysis programs only implement
simple models of the solar wind, which not only limit the timing accuracy, but
can also affect measurements of pulsar rotational, astrometric and orbital
parameters. We describe a new model of the solar wind electron density content
which uses observations from the Wilcox Solar Observatory of the solar magnetic
field. We have implemented this model into the tempo2 pulsar timing package. We
show that this model is more accurate than previous models and that these
corrections are necessary for high precision pulsar timing applications.Comment: Accepted by ApJ, 13 pages, 4 figure
General Statistical properties of the CMB Polarization field
The distribution of the polarization of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)
in the sky is determined by the hypothesis of random Gaussian distribution of
the primordial density perturbations. This hypotheses is well motivated by the
inflationary cosmology. Therefore, the test of consistency of the statistical
properties of the CMB polarization field with the Gaussianity of primordial
density fluctuations is a realistic way to study the nature of primordial
inhomogeneities in the Universe. This paper contains the theoretical
predictions of the general statistical properties of the CMB polarization
field. All results obtained under assumption of the Gaussian nature of the
signal. We pay the special attention to the following two problems. First, the
classification and statistics of the singular points of the polarization field
where polarization is equal to zero. Second, the topology of contours of the
value of the degree of polarization. We have investigated the percolation
properties for the zones of ``strong'' and ``weak'' polarization. We also have
calculated Minkowski functionals for the CMB polarization field. All results
are analytical.Comment: Latex, 22 pages, including 5 figure
Fundamental Discreteness Limitations of Cosmological N-Body Clustering Simulations
We explore some of the effects that discreteness and two-body scattering may
have on N-body simulations with ``realistic'' cosmological initial conditions.
We use an identical subset of particles from the initial conditions for a
Particle-Mesh (PM) calculation as the initial conditions for a variety
PM and Tree code runs. We investigate the effect of mass resolution (the
mean interparticle separation) since most ``high resolution'' codes only have
high resolution in gravitational force. The phase-insensitive two--point
statistics, such as the power spectrum (autocorrelation) are somewhat affected
by these variations, but phase-sensitive statistics show greater differences.
Results converge at the mean interparticle separation scale of the lowest
mass-resolution code. As more particles are added, but the force resolution is
held constant, the PM and the Tree runs agree more and more strongly with
each other and with the PM run which had the same initial conditions. This
shows high particle density is necessary for correct time evolution, since many
different results cannot all be correct. However, they do not so converge to a
PM run which continued the fluctuations to small scales. Our results show that
ignoring them is a major source of error on comoving scales of the missing
wavelengths. This can be resolved by putting in a high particle density. Since
the codes never agree well on scales below the mean comoving interparticle
separation, we find little justification for quantitative predictions on this
scale. Some measures vary by 50%, but others can be off by a factor of three or
more. Our results suggest possible problems with the density of galaxy halos,
formation of early generation objects such as QSO absorber clouds, etc.Comment: Revised version to be published in Astrophysical Journal. One figure
changed; expanded discussion, more information on code parameters. Latex, 44
pages, including 19 figures. Higher resolution versions of Figures 10-15
available at: ftp://kusmos.phsx.ukans.edu/preprints/nbod
Extended quantum conditional entropy and quantum uncertainty inequalities
Quantum states can be subjected to classical measurements, whose
incompatibility, or uncertainty, can be quantified by a comparison of certain
entropies. There is a long history of such entropy inequalities between
position and momentum. Recently these inequalities have been generalized to the
tensor product of several Hilbert spaces and we show here how their derivations
can be shortened to a few lines and how they can be generalized. All the
recently derived uncertainty relations utilize the strong subadditivity (SSA)
theorem; our contribution relies on directly utilizing the proof technique of
the original derivation of SSA.Comment: 4 page
On the spatial distribution of dark matter halos
We study the spatial distribution of dark matter halos in the Universe in
terms of their number density contrast, related to the underlying dark matter
fluctuation via a non-local and non-linear bias random field. The description
of the matter dynamics is simplified by adopting the `truncated' Zel'dovich
approximation to obtain both analytical results and simulated maps. The halo
number density field in our maps and its probability distribution reproduce
with excellent accuracy those of halos in a high-resolution N-body simulation
with the same initial conditions. Our non-linear and non-local bias
prescription matches the N-body halo distribution better than any Eulerian
linear and local bias.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX (uses emulateapj; included psfig.tex), 3 figures, 1
table. Shortened version, matching the size requirements of ApJ Letters.
Accepted for publicatio
The Statistics of Density Peaks and the Column Density Distribution of the Lyman-Alpha Forest
We develop a method to calculate the column density distribution of the
Lyman-alpha forest for column densities in the range . The Zel'dovich approximation, with appropriate smoothing, is used to
compute the density and peculiar velocity fields. The effect of the latter on
absorption profiles is discussed and it is shown to have little effect on the
column density distribution. An approximation is introduced in which the column
density distribution is related to a statistic of density peaks (involving its
height and first and second derivatives along the line of sight) in real space.
We show that the slope of the column density distribution is determined by the
temperature-density relation as well as the power spectrum on scales . An expression relating the three is given. We
find very good agreement between the column density distribution obtained by
applying the Voigt-profile-fitting technique to the output of a full
hydrodynamic simulation and that obtained using our approximate method for a
test model. This formalism then is applied to study a group of CDM as well as
CHDM models. We show that the amplitude of the column density distribution
depends on the combination of parameters , which is not well-constrained by independent observations. The
slope of the distribution, on the other hand, can be used to distinguish
between different models: those with a smaller amplitude and a steeper slope of
the power spectrum on small scales give rise to steeper distributions, for the
range of column densities we study. Comparison with high resolution Keck data
is made.Comment: match accepted version; discussion added: the effect of the shape of
the power spectrum on the slope of the column density distributio
The Line-of-Sight Proximity Effect and the Mass of Quasar Host Halos
We show that the Lyman-alpha optical depth statistics in the proximity
regions of quasar spectra depend on the mass of the dark matter halos hosting
the quasars. This is owing to both the overdensity around the quasars and the
associated infall of gas toward them. For a fiducial quasar host halo mass of
(3.0+/-1.6) h^-1 x 10^12 Msun, as inferred by Croom et al. from clustering in
the 2dF QSO Redshift Survey, we show that estimates of the ionizing background
(Gamma^bkg) from proximity effect measurements could be biased high by a factor
of ~2.5 at z=3 owing to neglecting these effects alone. The clustering of
galaxies and other active galactic nuclei around the proximity effect quasars
enhances the local background, but is not expected to skew measurements by more
than a few percent. Assuming the measurements of Gamma^bkg based on the mean
flux decrement in the Ly-alpha forest to be free of bias, we demonstrate how
the proximity effect analysis can be inverted to measure the mass of the dark
matter halos hosting quasars. In ideal conditions, such a measurement could be
made with a precision comparable to the best clustering constraints to date
from a modest sample of only about 100 spectra. We discuss observational
difficulties, including continuum flux estimation, quasar systematic redshift
determination, and quasar variability, which make accurate proximity effect
measurements challenging in practice. These are also likely to contribute to
the discrepancies between existing proximity effect and flux decrement
measurements of Gamma^bkg.Comment: 25 pages, including 14 figures, accepted by Ap
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