269 research outputs found
Cosmic cookery : making a stereoscopic 3D animated movie.
This paper describes our experience making a short stereoscopic movie visualizing the development of structure in
the universe during the 13.7 billion years from the Big Bang to the present day. Aimed at a general audience for
the Royal Society's 2005 Summer Science Exhibition, the movie illustrates how the latest cosmological theories
based on dark matter and dark energy are capable of producing structures as complex as spiral galaxies and
allows the viewer to directly compare observations from the real universe with theoretical results. 3D is an
inherent feature of the cosmology data sets and stereoscopic visualization provides a natural way to present the
images to the viewer, in addition to allowing researchers to visualize these vast, complex data sets.
The presentation of the movie used passive, linearly polarized projection onto a 2m wide screen but it was
also required to playback on a Sharp RD3D display and in anaglyph projection at venues without dedicated
stereoscopic display equipment. Additionally lenticular prints were made from key images in the movie. We
discuss the following technical challenges during the stereoscopic production process; 1) Controlling the depth
presentation, 2) Editing the stereoscopic sequences, 3) Generating compressed movies in display speci¯c formats.
We conclude that the generation of high quality stereoscopic movie content using desktop tools and equipment
is feasible. This does require careful quality control and manual intervention but we believe these overheads
are worthwhile when presenting inherently 3D data as the result is signi¯cantly increased impact and better
understanding of complex 3D scenes
A Vehicular Traffic Flow Model Based on a Stochastic Acceleration Process
A new vehicular traffic flow model based on a stochastic jump process in
vehicle acceleration and braking is introduced. It is based on a master
equation for the single car probability density in space, velocity and
acceleration with an additional vehicular chaos assumption and is derived via a
Markovian ansatz for car pairs. This equation is analyzed using simple driver
interaction models in the spatial homogeneous case. Velocity distributions in
stochastic equilibrium, together with the car density dependence of their
moments, i.e. mean velocity and scattering and the fundamental diagram are
presented.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figure
Convexity in partial cubes: the hull number
We prove that the combinatorial optimization problem of determining the hull
number of a partial cube is NP-complete. This makes partial cubes the minimal
graph class for which NP-completeness of this problem is known and improves
some earlier results in the literature.
On the other hand we provide a polynomial-time algorithm to determine the
hull number of planar partial cube quadrangulations.
Instances of the hull number problem for partial cubes described include
poset dimension and hitting sets for interiors of curves in the plane.
To obtain the above results, we investigate convexity in partial cubes and
characterize these graphs in terms of their lattice of convex subgraphs,
improving a theorem of Handa. Furthermore we provide a topological
representation theorem for planar partial cubes, generalizing a result of
Fukuda and Handa about rank three oriented matroids.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figure
Stellar population gradients from cosmological simulations: dependence on mass and environment in local galaxies
The age and metallicity gradients for a sample of group and cluster galaxies
from N-body+hydrodynamical simulation are analyzed in terms of galaxy stellar
mass. Dwarf galaxies show null age gradient with a tail of high and positive
values for systems in groups and cluster outskirts. Massive systems have
generally zero age gradients which turn to positive for the most massive ones.
Metallicity gradients are distributed around zero in dwarf galaxies and become
more negative with mass; massive galaxies have steeper negative metallicity
gradients, but the trend flatten with mass. In particular, fossil groups are
characterized by a tighter distribution of both age and metallicity gradients.
We find a good agreement with both local observations and independent
simulations. The results are also discussed in terms of the central age and
metallicity, as well as the total colour, specific star formation and velocity
dispersion.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication on MNRA
All at sea? Maritime dimensions of Europe's relations with Africa
The article examines three dimensions of Europe’s maritime relations with Africa: first, the notion that Europe’s strategic maritime frontiers are linked to Africa; second, the coherence or ‘actorness’ of the European Union’s (EU) anti-piracy force operating off the Horn of Africa; and third, the relationship between the EU’s own military and naval objectives and its wider regional policies in Africa.
While the EU adopted a ‘Maritime Security Strategy’ in 2014, the article notes that, in practice, the EU’s strategy at sea has focused on two groups of ‘non-state actors’: the Africans who are ‘pirates’; and the migrants crossing the Mediterranean, who are the object of the EU’s Frontex patrols. As such, the initial question examined charts the somewhat fluid notion of the sea as a maritime frontier: where do Europe’s strategic interests in terms of its maritime frontiers lie? Is the EU’s anti-piracy mission defending them? Is this first-ever maritime mission a more tangible manifestation of EU’s common foreign and defence policy than some of the other shorter and smaller military and policing missions in Africa
High Redshift Galaxy Populations and their Descendants
We study model predictions for three high-redshift galaxy populations: Lyman
break galaxies at z~3 (LBGs), optically selected star-forming galaxies at z~2
(BXs), and distant red galaxies at z~2 (DRGs).Our galaxy formation model
simultaneously reproduces the abundances, redshift distributions and clustering
of all three observed populations. The star formation rates (SFRs) of model
LBGs and BXs are lower than those quoted for real samples, reflecting different
initial mass functions and scatter in model dust properties. About 85% of model
galaxies selected as DRGs are star-forming, with SFRs ranging up to 100
M_sun/yr. Model LBGs, BXs and DRGs together account for less than half of all
star formation over the range 1.5<z<3.2. Model BXs have metallicities which
agree roughly with observation, but model LBGs are only slightly more
metal-poor, in disagreement with recent observational results. Model galaxies
are predominantly disk-dominated. About 30% of model galaxies with
M>10^{11}M_sun are classified as LBGs or BXs at the relevant redshifts, while
65% are classified as DRGs. Almost all model LBGs and BXs are central galaxies,
but about a quarter of DRGs are satellites. Half of all LBG descendants at z=2
would be identified as BX's, but very few as DRGs. Clustering increases with
decreasing redshift for descendants of all three populations, becoming stronger
than that of L^* galaxies by z=0, when many have become satellite galaxies.
Their stellar mass growth is dominated by star formation until z~1 and
thereafter by mergers. Most LBGs and DRGs end up as red ellipticals, while BXs
have a more varied fate. 99% of local galaxies with M>10^{11.5}M_sun are
predicted to have at least one LBG/BX/DRG progenitor, and over 70% above
10^{11}M_sun. (abbreviated)Comment: 16 pages, 17 figures, submitted to MNRA
Simulations of the galaxy population constrained by observations from z=3 to the present day: implications for galactic winds and the fate of their ejecta
We apply Monte Carlo Markov Chain (MCMC) methods to large-scale simulations of galaxy formation in a LambdaCDM cosmology in order to explore how star formation and feedback are constrained by the observed luminosity and stellar mass functions of galaxies. We build models jointly on the Millennium and Millennium-II simulations, applying fast sampling techniques which allow observed galaxy abundances over the ranges 7<log(M*/Msun)<12 and z=0 to z=3 to be used simultaneously as constraints in the MCMC analysis. When z=0 constraints alone are imposed, we reproduce the results of previous modelling by Guo et al. (2012), but no single set of parameters can reproduce observed galaxy abundances at all redshifts simultaneously, reflecting the fact that low-mass galaxies form too early and thus are overabundant at high redshift in this model. The data require the efficiency with which galactic wind ejecta are reaccreted to vary with redshift and halo mass quite differently than previously assumed, but in a similar way as in some recent hydrodynamic simulations of galaxy formation. We propose a specific model in which reincorporation timescales vary inversely with halo mass and are independent of redshift. This produces an evolving galaxy population which fits observed abundances as a function of stellar mass, B- and K-band luminosity at all redshifts simultaneously. It also produces a significant improvement in two other areas where previous models were deficient. It leads to present day dwarf galaxy populations which are younger, bluer, more strongly star-forming and more weakly clustered on small scales than before, although the passive fraction of faint dwarfs remains too high
Subtidal macrozoobenthos communities from northern Chile during and post El Niño 1997–1998
Despite a large amount of climatic and oceanographic information dealing with the recurring climate phenomenon El Niño (EN) and its well known impact on diversity of marine benthic communities, most published data are rather descriptive and consequently our understanding of the underlying mechanisms and processes that drive community structure during EN are still very scarce. In this study, we address two questions on the effects of EN on macrozoobenthic communities: (1) how does EN affect species diversity of the communities in northern Chile? and (2) is EN a phenomenon that restarts community assembling processes by affecting species interactions in northern Chile? To answer these questions, we compared species diversity and co-occurrence patterns of soft-bottoms macrozoobenthos communities from the continental shelf off northern Chile during (March 1998) and after (September 1998) the strong EN event 1997–1998. The methods used varied from species diversity and species co-occurrence analyses to multivariate ordination methods.
Our results indicate that EN positively affects diversity of macrozoobenthos communities in the study area, increasing the species richness and diversity and decreasing the species dominance. EN represents a strong disturbance that affects species interactions that rule the species assembling processes in shallow-water, sea-bottom environments
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