3,512 research outputs found
The Quest for the Dominant Stellar Population in the Giant Elliptical NGC 5018
Newly obtained HST/WFPC2 images of the disturbed elliptical galaxy NGC 5018
show that the average amount of internal reddening due to the its complex
``dust web'' is as low as E(B-V)~0.02 within the IUE aperture, thus implying
that its observed and intrinsic energy distributions do not differ
significantly down to UV wavelengths. This, in turn, is quite relevant to the
current debate on the age of its dominant stellar population.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure. Proceedings of the conference "Galaxy Disks and
Disk Galaxies", ASP Conference Series, eds. J.G. Funes, S.J. and E.M. Corsin
Chitosan: Strategies to Increase and Modulate Drug Release Rate
Chitin is the second most abundant polysaccharide present in nature; however, chitin has more applications when transformed into chitosan (CS). It is biocompatible, biodegradable, mucoadhesive, soluble in acidic-solutions, nontoxic and nonallergenic. The main drawback of chitosan in pharmaceutical procedures is its low solubility in physiological medium. Chitosan shows physicochemical characteristics that allow it to interact with a wide variety of molecules. This is of particular interest when increasing the solubility of poor water-soluble drugs. For this purpose, chitosan can be used in oral, nasal and ocular routes. In order to modulate drug release rate and achieve a proper drug delivery in physiological medium, some parameters can be modified when solid dispersions or nanoparticles (NPs) based on chitosan are being designed. In case of nanoparticles, chitosan can be used as the main component or as a modifying agent. In order to optimize drug loading and drug delivery, response surface methodology (RSM) is an interesting tool usually underestimated in the pharmaceutical field, which allows us to optimize the parameters involved in the process simultaneously and not by different steps, which usually lead to mistakes
The inner structure and kinematics of the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy as a product of tidal stirring
The tidal stirring model envisions the formation of dwarf spheroidal (dSph)
galaxies in the Local Group via the tidal interaction of disky dwarf systems
with a larger host galaxy like the Milky Way. These progenitor disks are
embedded in extended dark halos and during the evolution both components suffer
strong mass loss. In addition, the disks undergo the morphological
transformation into spheroids and the transition from ordered to random motion
of their stars. Using collisionless N-body simulations we construct a model for
the nearby and highly elongated Sagittarius (Sgr) dSph galaxy within the
framework of the tidal stirring scenario. Constrained by the present known
orbit of the dwarf, the model suggests that in order to produce the majority of
tidal debris observed as the Sgr stream, but not yet transform the core of the
dwarf into a spherical shape, Sgr must have just passed the second pericenter
of its current orbit around the Milky Way. In the model, the stellar component
of Sgr is still very elongated after the second pericenter and morphologically
intermediate between the strong bar formed at the first pericenter and the
almost spherical shape existing after the third pericenter. This is thus the
first model of the evolution of the Sgr dwarf that accounts for its observed
very elliptical shape. At the present time there is very little intrinsic
rotation left and the velocity gradient detected along the major axis is almost
entirely of tidal origin. We model the recently measured velocity dispersion
profile for Sgr assuming that mass traces light and estimate its current total
mass within 5 kpc to be 5.2 x 10^8 M_sun. To have this mass at present, the
model requires that the initial virial mass of Sgr must have been as high as
1.6 x 10^10 M_sun, comparable to that of the Large Magellanic Cloud, which may
serve as a suitable analog for the pre-interaction, Sgr progenitor.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, minor changes to match the version published in
Ap
Transfer Learning for Structured Pruning under Limited Task Data
Large, pre-trained models are problematic to use in resource constrained
applications. Fortunately, task-aware structured pruning methods offer a
solution. These approaches reduce model size by dropping structural units like
layers and attention heads in a manner that takes into account the end-task.
However, these pruning algorithms require more task-specific data than is
typically available. We propose a framework which combines structured pruning
with transfer learning to reduce the need for task-specific data. Our empirical
results answer questions such as: How should the two tasks be coupled? What
parameters should be transferred? And, when during training should transfer
learning be introduced? Leveraging these insights, we demonstrate that our
framework results in pruned models with improved generalization over strong
baselines.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures and 3 table
Towards a Mini-App for Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics at Exascale
The smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) technique is a purely Lagrangian
method, used in numerical simulations of fluids in astrophysics and
computational fluid dynamics, among many other fields. SPH simulations with
detailed physics represent computationally-demanding calculations. The
parallelization of SPH codes is not trivial due to the absence of a structured
grid. Additionally, the performance of the SPH codes can be, in general,
adversely impacted by several factors, such as multiple time-stepping,
long-range interactions, and/or boundary conditions. This work presents
insights into the current performance and functionalities of three SPH codes:
SPHYNX, ChaNGa, and SPH-flow. These codes are the starting point of an
interdisciplinary co-design project, SPH-EXA, for the development of an
Exascale-ready SPH mini-app. To gain such insights, a rotating square patch
test was implemented as a common test simulation for the three SPH codes and
analyzed on two modern HPC systems. Furthermore, to stress the differences with
the codes stemming from the astrophysics community (SPHYNX and ChaNGa), an
additional test case, the Evrard collapse, has also been carried out. This work
extrapolates the common basic SPH features in the three codes for the purpose
of consolidating them into a pure-SPH, Exascale-ready, optimized, mini-app.
Moreover, the outcome of this serves as direct feedback to the parent codes, to
improve their performance and overall scalability.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables, 2018 IEEE International Conference on
Cluster Computing proceedings for WRAp1
The shapes of Milky Way satellites: looking for signatures of tidal stirring
We study the shapes of Milky Way satellites in the context of the tidal
stirring scenario for the formation of dwarf spheroidal galaxies. The standard
procedures used to measure shapes involve smoothing and binning of data and
thus may not be sufficient to detect structural properties like bars, which are
usually subtle in low surface brightness systems. Taking advantage of the fact
that in nearby dwarfs photometry of individual stars is available we introduce
discrete measures of shape based on the two-dimensional inertia tensor and the
Fourier bar mode. We apply these measures of shape first to a variety of
simulated dwarf galaxies formed via tidal stirring of disks embedded in dark
matter halos and orbiting the Milky Way. In addition to strong mass loss and
randomization of stellar orbits, the disks undergo morphological transformation
that typically involves the formation of a triaxial bar after the first
pericenter passage. These tidally induced bars persist for a few Gyr before
being shortened towards a more spherical shape if the tidal force is strong
enough. We test this prediction by measuring in a similar way the shape of
nearby dwarf galaxies, satellites of the Milky Way. We detect inner bars in
Ursa Minor, Sagittarius, LMC and possibly Carina. In addition, six out of
eleven studied dwarfs show elongated stellar distributions in the outer parts
that may signify transition to tidal tails. We thus find the shapes of Milky
Way satellites to be consistent with the predictions of the tidal stirring
model.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Failure of the Hopf-Oleinik lemma for a linear elliptic problem with singular convection of non-negative divergence
In this paper we study existence, uniqueness, and integrability of solutions
to the Dirichlet problem in a bounded domain of with . We are
particularly interested in singular with . We start
by recalling known existence results when that do not rely on the
sign of . Then, under the assumption that distributionally, we extend the existence theory to . For the
uniqueness, we prove a comparison principle in this setting. Lastly, we discuss
the particular cases of singular at one point as , or towards
the boundary as . In these cases the singularity of leads to
vanishing to a certain order. In particular, this shows that the Hopf-Oleinik
lemma, i.e. , fails in the presence of such
singular drift terms
Stellar and Gaseous Nuclear Disks Observed in Nearby (U)LIRGs
We present near-infrared integral field spectroscopy of the central
kiloparsec of 17 nearby luminous and ultra-luminous infrared galaxies
undergoing major mergers. These observations were taken with OSIRIS assisted by
the Keck I and II Adaptive Optics systems, providing spatial resolutions of a
few tens of parsecs. The resulting kinematic maps reveal gas disks in at least
16 out of 19 nuclei and stellar disks in 11 out of 11 nuclei observed in these
galaxy merger systems. In our late-stages mergers, these disks are young
(stellar ages Myr) and likely formed as gas disks which became unstable
to star formation during the merger. On average, these disks have effective
radii of a few hundred parsecs, masses between and ,
and between 1 and 5. These disks are similar to those created in
high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations of gas-rich galaxy mergers, and
favor short coalescence times for binary black holes. The few galaxies in our
sample in earlier stages of mergers have disks which are larger
( pc) and likely are remnants of the galactic disks that
have not yet been completely disrupted by the merger.Comment: accepted for publication in Ap
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