4,626 research outputs found
A Wide-Field Survey of the Fornax Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy
The results of a photometric survey of the Fornax dwarf spheroidal galaxy are
presented herein. Accurate photometry in two colours (V and I) was collected
over a 10 square degree area centred on the Fornax system with the aim of
searching for extra-tidal structure. The data were complete to a magnitude of
V=20, or approximately one magnitude brighter than the Fornax red clump stars.
Stars were selected with a colour and magnitude lying near the Fornax red giant
branch, thereby reducing contamination from the field star population. We were
thus able to probe the outer structure of this dwarf galaxy. Immediately
visible was a shell-like structure located 1.3 degrees NW from the centre of
Fornax, approximately 30 arcmin beyond the nominal tidal radius at this
position angle. We have measured the absolute visual magnitude of this feature
to be M_V ~ -7. The feature is aligned with a previously reported shell (age
approximately 2 Gyr) located near the core radius of Fornax. A statistical
analysis of the extra-tidal stellar distribution further revealed two lobes
situated on the Fornax minor axis which are aligned with the two shell-like
features. The two-lobed structure combined with the two shells provide strong
evidence that Fornax has experienced a merger event in the relatively recent
past.Comment: 79 pages including 24 figures. Accepted for publication in AJ,
scheduled for the March 2005 issue. Some figures are low resolution, and a
full version of the paper is available at the ftp address:
ftp://ftp.mso.anu.edu.au/pub/coleman
The elusive old population of the dwarf spheroidal galaxy Leo I
We report the discovery of a significant old population in the dwarf
spheroidal (dSph) galaxy Leo I as a result of a wide-area search with the ESO
New Technology Telescope. Studies of the stellar content of Local Group dwarf
galaxies have shown the presence of an old stellar population in almost all of
the dwarf spheroidals. The only exception was Leo I, which alone appeared to
have delayed its initial star formation episode until just a few Gyr ago. The
color-magnitude diagram of Leo I now reveals an extended horizontal branch,
unambiguously indicating the presence of an old, metal-poor population in the
outer regions of this galaxy. Yet we find little evidence for a stellar
population gradient, at least outside R > 2' (0.16 kpc), since the old
horizontal branch stars of Leo I are radially distributed as their more
numerous intermediate-age helium-burning counterparts. The discovery of a
definitely old population in the predominantly young dwarf spheroidal galaxy
Leo I points to a sharply defined first epoch of star formation common to all
of the Local Group dSph's as well as to the halo of the Milky Way.Comment: 4 pages, 3 postscript figures, uses apjfonts.sty, emulateapj.sty.
Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Peeping at chaos: Nondestructive monitoring of chaotic systems by measuring long-time escape rates
One or more small holes provide non-destructive windows to observe
corresponding closed systems, for example by measuring long time escape rates
of particles as a function of hole sizes and positions. To leading order the
escape rate of chaotic systems is proportional to the hole size and independent
of position. Here we give exact formulas for the subsequent terms, as sums of
correlation functions; these depend on hole size and position, hence yield
information on the closed system dynamics. Conversely, the theory can be
readily applied to experimental design, for example to control escape rates.Comment: Originally 4 pages and 2 eps figures incorporated into the text; v2
has more numerical results and discussion: now 6 pages, 4 figure
The Nature of the Density Clump in the Fornax Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy
We have imaged the recently discovered stellar overdensity located
approximately one core radius from the center of the Fornax dwarf spheroidal
galaxy using the Magellan Clay 6.5m telescope with the Magellan Instant Camera
(MagIC). Superb seeing conditions allowed us to probe the stellar populations
of this overdensity and of a control field within Fornax to a limiting
magnitude of R=26. The color-magnitude diagram of the overdensity field is
virtually identical to that of the control field with the exception of the
presence of a population arising from a very short (less than 300 Myr in
duration) burst of star formation 1.4 Gyr ago. Coleman et al. have argued that
this overdensity might be related to a shell structure in Fornax that was
created when Fornax captured a smaller galaxy. Our results are consistent with
this model, but we argue that the metallicity of this young component favors a
scenario in which the gas was part of Fornax itself.Comment: 24 pages including 8 figures and 3 tables. Accepted by Astronomical
Journa
Influence of the substrate-induced strain and irradiation disorder on the Peierls transition in TTF-TCNQ microdomains
The influence of the combined effects of substrate-induced strain, finite
size and electron irradiation-induced defects have been studied on individual
micron-sized domains of the organic charge transfer compound
tetrathiafulvalene-tetracyanoquinodimethane (TTF-TCNQ) by temperature-dependent
conductivity and current-voltage measurements. The individual domains have been
isolated by focused ion beam etching and electrically contacted by focused ion
and electron beam induced deposition of metallic contacts. The
temperature-dependent conductivity follows a variable range hopping behavior
which shows a crossover of the exponent as the Peierls transition is
approached. The low temperature behavior is analyzed within the segmented rod
model of Fogler, Teber and Shklowskii, as originally developed for a
charge-ordered quasi one-dimensional electron crystal. The results are compared
with data obtained on as-grown and electron irradiated epitaxial TTF-TCNQ thin
films of the two-domain type
Majorana spinors and extended Lorentz symmetry in four-dimensional theory
An extended local Lorentz symmetry in four-dimensional (4D) theory is
considered. A source of this symmetry is a group of general linear
transformations of four-component Majorana spinors GL(4,M) which is isomorphic
to GL(4,R) and is the covering of an extended Lorentz group in a 6D Minkowski
space M(3,3) including superluminal and scaling transformations. Physical
space-time is assumed to be a 4D pseudo-Riemannian manifold. To connect the
extended Lorentz symmetry in the M(3,3) space with the physical space-time, a
fiber bundle over the 4D manifold is introduced with M(3,3) as a typical fiber.
The action is constructed which is invariant with respect to both general 4D
coordinate and local GL(4,M) spinor transformations. The components of the
metric on the 6D fiber are expressed in terms of the 4D pseudo-Riemannian
metric and two extra complex fields: 4D vector and scalar ones. These extra
fields describe in the general case massive particles interacting with an extra
U(1) gauge field and weakly interacting with ordinary particles, i.e.
possessing properties of invisible (dark) matter.Comment: 24 page
Star complexes and stellar populations in NGC 6822 - Comparison with the Magellanic Clouds
The star complexes (large scale star forming regions) of NGC 6822 were traced
and mapped and their size distribution was compared with the size distribution
of star complexes in the Magellanic Clouds (MCs). Furthermore, the spatial
distributions of different age stellar populations were compared with each
other. The star complexes of NGC 6822 were determined by using the isopleths,
based on star counts, of the young stars of the galaxy, using a statistical
cutoff limit in density. In order to map them and determine their geometrical
properties, an ellipse was fitted to every distinct region satisfying this
minimum limit. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov statistical test was used to study
possible patterns in their size distribution. Isopleths were also used to study
the stellar populations of NGC 6822. The star complexes of NGC 6822 were
detected and a list of their positions and sizes was produced. Indications of
hierarchical star formation, in terms of spatial distribution, time evolution
and preferable sizes were found in NGC 6822 and the MCs. The spatial
distribution of the various age stellar populations has indicated traces of an
interaction in NGC 6822, dated before 350 +/- 50 Myr.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted by A&A; minor typeface correction
On the resonance eigenstates of an open quantum baker map
We study the resonance eigenstates of a particular quantization of the open
baker map. For any admissible value of Planck's constant, the corresponding
quantum map is a subunitary matrix, and the nonzero component of its spectrum
is contained inside an annulus in the complex plane, . We consider semiclassical sequences of eigenstates, such that the
moduli of their eigenvalues converge to a fixed radius . We prove that, if
the moduli converge to , then the sequence of eigenstates
converges to a fixed phase space measure . The same holds for
sequences with eigenvalue moduli converging to , with a different
limit measure . Both these limiting measures are supported on
fractal sets, which are trapped sets of the classical dynamics. For a general
radius , we identify families of eigenstates with
precise self-similar properties.Comment: 32 pages, 2 figure
On the distance of GRO J1655-40
We challenge the accepted distance of 3.2 kpc of GRO J1655-40. We present
VLT-UVES spectroscopic observations to estimate the absorption toward the
source, and determine a maximum distance of GRO J1655-40. We show that the
accepted value of 3.2 kpc is taken for granted by many authors. We retrieved in
the ESO archive UVES spectra taken in April 2004 when GRO J1655-40 was in
quiescence to determine the spectral type of the secondary star. For the first
time we build a flux-calibrated mean (UVES) spectrum of GRO J1655-40 and
compare its observed flux to that of five nearby stars of similar spectral
types. We strengthen our results with the traditional pair method, using
published photometric data of the comparison stars. We show that the distance
of 3.2 kpc is questionable. We determine a spectral type F6IV for the secondary
star. We demonstrate in details that the distance of GRO J1655-40 must be
smaller than 1.7 kpc. The runaway black hole GRO J1655-40 could be associated
with the open cluster NGC 6242 which is located at 1.00.1 kpc from the
Sun. At 1.7 kpc the jets are not a superluminal, and GRO J1655-40
becomes one of the closest known black holes to the Sun.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysics. Small correction of distance range values using the photometric
method. (re-accepted by A&A
The distance to the Fornax Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy
A large multicolour, wide-field photometric database of the Fornax dwarf
spheroidal galaxy has been analysed using three different methods to provide
revised distance estimates based on stellar populations in different age
intervals. The distance to Fornax was obtained from the Tip of the Red Giant
Branch measured by a new method, and using the luminosity of Horizontal Branch
stars and Red Clump stars correc ted for stellar population effects. Assuming a
reddening , the following distance moduli were derived:
based on the Tip of the Red Giant Branch,
from the level of the Horizontal Branch, and
using the Red Clump method. The weighted mean distance
modulus to Fornax is . All these measurements agree
within the errors, and are fully consistent with previous determinations and
with the distance measurements obtained in a companion paper from near-infrared
colour-magnitude diagrams.Comment: Accepted for publication on Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical
Societ
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