295 research outputs found
Cheating and the evolutionary stability of mutualisms
Interspecific mutualisms have been playing a central role in the functioning of all ecosystems since the early history of life. Yet the theory of coevolution of mutualists is virtually nonexistent, by contrast with well-developed coevolutionary theories of competition, predatorâprey and hostâparasite interactions. This has prevented resolution of a basic puzzle posed by mutualisms: their persistence in spite of apparent evolutionary instability. The selective advantage of 'cheating', that is, reaping mutualistic benefits while providing fewer commodities to the partner species, is commonly believed to erode a mutualistic interaction, leading to its dissolution or reciprocal extinction. However, recent empirical findings indicate that stable associations of mutualists and cheaters have existed over long evolutionary periods. Here, we show that asymmetrical competition within species for the commodities offered by mutualistic partners provides a simple and testable ecological mechanism that can account for the long-term persistence of mutualisms. Cheating, in effect, establishes a background against which better mutualists can display any competitive superiority. This can lead to the coexistence and divergence of mutualist and cheater phenotypes, as well as to the coexistence of ecologically similar, but unrelated mutualists and cheaters
Magnetic Flux Expulsion in the Powerful Superbubble Explosions and the Alpha-Omega Dynamo
The possibility of the magnetic flux expulsion from the Galaxy in the
superbubble (SB) explosions, important for the Alpha-Omega dynamo, is
considered. Special emphasis is put on the investigation of the downsliding of
the matter from the top of the shell formed by the SB explosion which is able
to influence the kinematics of the shell. It is shown that either Galactic
gravity or the development of the Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities in the shell
limit the SB expansion, thus, making impossible magnetic flux expulsion. The
effect of the cosmic rays in the shell on the sliding is considered and it is
shown that it is negligible compared to Galactic gravity. Thus, the question of
possible mechanism of flux expulsion in the Alpha-Omega dynamo remains open.Comment: MNRAS, in press, 11 pages, 9 figure
Shocked Quartz in Polymict Impact Breccia from the Upper Cretaceous Yallalie Impact Structure in Western Australia
Yallalie is a ~12 km diameter circular structure located ~200 km north of Perth, Australia. Previous studies have proposed that the buried structure is a complex impact crater based on geophysical data. Allochthonous breccia exposed near the structure has previously been interpreted as proximal impact ejecta; however, no diagnostic indicators of shock metamorphism have been found. Here we report multiple (27) shocked quartz grains containing planar fractures (PFs) and planar deformation features (PDFs) in the breccia. The PFs occur in up to five sets per grain, while the PDFs occur in up to four sets per grain. Universal stage measurements of all 27 shocked quartz grains confirms that the planar microstructures occur in known crystallographic orientations in quartz corresponding to shock compression from 5 to 20 GPa. Proximity to the buried structure (~4 km) and occurrence of shocked quartz indicates that the breccia represents either primary or reworked ejecta. Ejecta distribution simulated using iSALE hydrocode predicts the same distribution of shock levels at the site as those found in the breccia, which supports a primary ejecta interpretation, although local reworking cannot be excluded. The Yallalie impact event is stratigraphically constrained to have occurred in the interval from 89.8 to 83.6 Ma based on the occurrence of Coniacian clasts in the breccia and undisturbed overlying Santonian to Campanian sedimentary rocks. Yallalie is thus the first confirmed Upper Cretaceous impact structure in Australia
The 511 keV emission from positron annihilation in the Galaxy
The first gamma-ray line originating from outside the solar system that was
ever detected is the 511 keV emission from positron annihilation in the Galaxy.
Despite 30 years of intense theoretical and observational investigation, the
main sources of positrons have not been identified up to now. Observations in
the 1990's with OSSE/CGRO showed that the emission is strongly concentrated
towards the Galactic bulge. In the 2000's, the SPI instrument aboard ESA's
INTEGRAL gamma-ray observatory allowed scientists to measure that emission
across the entire Galaxy, revealing that the bulge/disk luminosity ratio is
larger than observed in any other wavelength. This mapping prompted a number of
novel explanations, including rather "exotic ones (e.g. dark matter
annihilation). However, conventional astrophysical sources, like type Ia
supernovae, microquasars or X-ray binaries, are still plausible candidates for
a large fraction of the observed total 511 keV emission of the bulge. A closer
study of the subject reveals new layers of complexity, since positrons may
propagate far away from their production sites, making it difficult to infer
the underlying source distribution from the observed map of 511 keV emission.
However, contrary to the rather well understood propagation of high energy
(>GeV) particles of Galactic cosmic rays, understanding the propagation of low
energy (~MeV) positrons in the turbulent, magnetized interstellar medium, still
remains a formidable challenge. We review the spectral and imaging properties
of the observed 511 keV emission and we critically discuss candidate positron
sources and models of positron propagation in the Galaxy.Comment: 62 pages, 35 figures. Review paper to appear in Reviews of Modern
Physic
The Evolution of Adiabatic Supernova Remnants in a Turbulent, Magnetized Medium
(Abridged) We present the results of three dimensional calculations for the
MHD evolution of an adiabatic supernova remnant in both a uniform and turbulent
interstellar medium using the RIEMANN framework of Balsara. In the uniform
case, which contains an initially uniform magnetic field, the density structure
of the shell remains largely spherical, while the magnetic pressure and
synchrotron emissivity are enhanced along the plane perpendicular to the field
direction. This produces a bilateral or barrel-type morphology in synchrotron
emission for certain viewing angles. We then consider a case with a turbulent
external medium as in Balsara & Pouquet, characterized by .
Several important changes are found. First, despite the presence of a uniform
field, the overall synchrotron emissivity becomes approximately spherically
symmetric, on the whole, but is extremely patchy and time-variable, with
flickering on the order of a few computational time steps. We suggest that the
time and spatial variability of emission in early phase SNR evolution provides
information on the turbulent medium surrounding the remnant. The
shock-turbulence interaction is also shown to be a strong source of
helicity-generation and, therefore, has important consequences for magnetic
field generation. We compare our calculations to the Sedov-phase evolution, and
discuss how the emission characteristics of SNR may provide a diagnostic on the
nature of turbulence in the pre-supernova environment.Comment: ApJ, in press, 5 color figure
Evidence for dark matter in the inner Milky Way
The ubiquitous presence of dark matter in the universe is today a central
tenet in modern cosmology and astrophysics. Ranging from the smallest galaxies
to the observable universe, the evidence for dark matter is compelling in
dwarfs, spiral galaxies, galaxy clusters as well as at cosmological scales.
However, it has been historically difficult to pin down the dark matter
contribution to the total mass density in the Milky Way, particularly in the
innermost regions of the Galaxy and in the solar neighbourhood. Here we present
an up-to-date compilation of Milky Way rotation curve measurements, and compare
it with state-of-the-art baryonic mass distribution models. We show that
current data strongly disfavour baryons as the sole contribution to the
galactic mass budget, even inside the solar circle. Our findings demonstrate
the existence of dark matter in the inner Galaxy while making no assumptions on
its distribution. We anticipate that this result will compel new
model-independent constraints on the dark matter local density and profile,
thus reducing uncertainties on direct and indirect dark matter searches, and
will shed new light on the structure and evolution of the Galaxy.Comment: First submitted version of letter published in Nature Physics on
Febuary 9, 2015:
http://www.nature.com/nphys/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nphys3237.htm
Magnetogenesis from Cosmic String Loops
Large-scale coherent magnetic fields are observed in galaxies and clusters,
but their ultimate origin remains a mystery. We reconsider the prospects for
primordial magnetogenesis by a cosmic string network. We show that the magnetic
flux produced by long strings has been overestimated in the past, and give
improved estimates. We also compute the fields created by the loop population,
and find that it gives the dominant contribution to the total magnetic field
strength on present-day galactic scales. We present numerical results obtained
by evolving semi-analytic models of string networks (including both one-scale
and velocity-dependent one-scale models) in a Lambda-CDM cosmology, including
the forces and torques on loops from Hubble redshifting, dynamical friction,
and gravitational wave emission. Our predictions include the magnetic field
strength as a function of correlation length, as well as the volume covered by
magnetic fields. We conclude that string networks could account for magnetic
fields on galactic scales, but only if coupled with an efficient dynamo
amplification mechanism.Comment: 10 figures; v3: small typos corrected to match published version.
MagnetiCS, the code described in paper, is available at
http://markcwyman.com/ and
http://www.damtp.cam.ac.uk/user/dhw22/code/index.htm
The supernova rate-velocity dispersion relation in the interstellar medium
We investigate the relationship between the velocity dispersion of the gas
and the SN rate and feedback efficiency in the ISM. We explore the constancy of
the velocity dispersion profiles in the outer parts of galactic disks at~6-8 km
s^-1, and the transition to the starburst regime. Our results show that a) SN
driving leads to constant velocity dispersions of sig~6 km s^-1 for the total
gas and sigHI~3 km s^-1 for the HI gas, independent of the SN rate, for values
of the rate between 0.01-0.5 the Galactic rate R_{G},b) the position of the
transition to the starburst regime at SFR/Area~5*10^-3-10^-2 M_sol yr^-1 kpc^-2
observed in the simulations, is in good agreement with the transition to the
starburst regime in the observations, c) for the high SN rates, no HI gas is
present in the simulations box, however, for the total gas velocity dispersion,
there is good agreement between the models and the observations,d) at the
intermediate SN rates R/R_{G}~0.5-1, taking into account the thermal broadening
of the HI line helps reach a good agreement in that regime between the models
and the observations,e) for R/R_{G}<0.5, sig and sigHI fall below the observed
values by a factor of~2. However, a set of simulation with different values of
epsilon indicates that for larger values of the supernova feedback
efficiencies, velocity dispersions of the HI gas of the order of 5-6 km s^{-1}
can be obtained, in closer agreement with the observations. The fact that for
R/R_{G}<0.5, the HI gas velocity dispersions are a factor ~2 smaller than the
observed values could result from the fact that we might have underestimated
the SN feedback efficiency. It might also be an indication that other physical
processes couple to the stellar feedback in order to produce the observed level
of turbulence in galactic disks.Comment: 44 pages, 22 figures. Accepted to Ap
A Broadband Study of Galactic Dust Emission
We have combined infrared data with HI, H2 and HII surveys in order to
spatially decompose the observed dust emission into components associated with
different phases of the gas. An inversion technique is applied. For the
decomposition, we use the IRAS 60 and 100 micron bands, the DIRBE 140 and 240
micron bands, as well as Archeops 850 and 2096 micron wavelengths. In addition,
we apply the decomposition to all five WMAP bands. We obtain longitude and
latitude profiles for each wavelength and for each gas component in carefully
selected Galactic radius bins.We also derive emissivity coefficients for dust
in atomic, molecular and ionized gas in each of the bins.The HI emissivity
appears to decrease with increasing Galactic radius indicating that dust
associated with atomic gas is heated by the ambient interstellar radiation
field (ISRF). By contrast, we find evidence that dust mixed with molecular
clouds is significantly heated by O/B stars still embedded in their progenitor
clouds. By assuming a modified black-body with emissivity law lambda^(-1.5), we
also derive the radial distribution of temperature for each phase of the gas.
All of the WMAP bands except W appear to be dominated by emission from
something other than normal dust, most likely a mixture of thermal
bremstrahlung from diffuse ionized gas, synchrotron emission and spinning dust.
Furthermore, we find indications of an emissivity excess at long wavelengths
(lambda > 850 micron) in the outer Galaxy (R > 8.9 kpc). This suggests either
the existence of a very cold dust component in the outer Galaxy or a
temperature dependence of the spectral emissivity index. Finally, it is shown
that ~ 80% of the total FIR luminosity is produced by dust associated with
atomic hydrogen, in agreement with earlier findings by Sodroski et al. (1997).Comment: accepted for publication by A&
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