2,635 research outputs found
2D kinematics of the edge-on spiral galaxy ESO 379-G006
We present a kinematical study of the nearly edge-on galaxy ESO 379-G006 that
shows the existence of extraplanar ionized gas. With Fabry-Perot spectroscopy
at H-alpha, we study the kinematics of ESO 379-G006 using velocity maps and
position-velocity diagrams parallel to the major and to the minor axis of the
galaxy. We build the rotation curve of the disk and discuss the role of
projection effects due to the fact of viewing this galaxy nearly edge-on. The
twisting of the isovelocities in the radial velocity field of the disk of ESO
379-G006 as well as the kinematic asymmetries found in some position-velocity
diagrams parallel to the minor axis of the galaxy suggest the existence of
deviations to circular motions in the disk that can be modeled and explained
with the inclusion of a radial inflow probably generated by a bar or by spiral
arms. We succeeded in detecting extraplanar Diffuse Ionized Gas in this galaxy.
At the same time, from the analysis of position-velocity diagrams, we found
some evidence that the extraplanar gas could lag in rotation velocity with
respect to the midplane rotation.Comment: 61 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication in A
Computer science approach to the stellar fabric of violent starforming regions in AGN
In order to analyse the large numbers of Seyfert galaxy spectra available at
present, we are testing new techniques to derive their physical parameters
fastly and accurately.
We present an experiment on such a new technique to segregate old and young
stellar populations in galactic spectra using machine learning methods. We used
an ensemble of classifiers, each classifier in the ensemble specializes in
young or old populations and was trained with locally weighted regression and
tested using ten-fold cross-validation. Since the relevant information
concentrates in certain regions of the spectra we used the method of sequential
floating backward selection offline for feature selection.
Very interestingly, the application to Seyfert galaxies proved that this
technique is very insensitive to the dilution by the Active Galactic Nucleus
(AGN) continuum. Comparing with exhaustive search we concluded that both
methods are similar in terms of accuracy but the machine learning method is
faster by about two orders of magnitude.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, Contribution to IAU Symp. 222, The interplay among
Black Holes, Stars and ISM in Galactic Nuclei, Gramado, Brazil, 200
EVIDENCES ABOUT HUMAN TICK-BORNE INFECTIONS IN CUBA
Serosurveys for IgG antibodies to Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto in a population exposed to tick bites (n = 247) and blood donors (n = 114) were done to assess the prevalence of tick-borne infections in. Seroprevalence of antiborrelial IgG antibodies was estimated in 0.6–7.2 % and 0 % of risk population and blood donors, respectively. While previous expositions to A. phagocytophilum (7.2 %), E. chaffensis (3.6 %) and B. microti (11.5 %) were serologically detected. These reports suggest the presence of tick-borne pathogens in Cuba, nonetheless lacking of further accurate information strongly calls to the need of more deeply studies. Cub
A single sub-km Kuiper Belt object from a stellar Occultation in archival data
The Kuiper belt is a remnant of the primordial Solar System. Measurements of
its size distribution constrain its accretion and collisional history, and the
importance of material strength of Kuiper belt objects (KBOs). Small, sub-km
sized, KBOs elude direct detection, but the signature of their occultations of
background stars should be detectable. Observations at both optical and X-ray
wavelengths claim to have detected such occultations, but their implied KBO
abundances are inconsistent with each other and far exceed theoretical
expectations. Here, we report an analysis of archival data that reveals an
occultation by a body with a 500 m radius at a distance of 45 AU. The
probability of this event to occur due to random statistical fluctuations
within our data set is about 2%. Our survey yields a surface density of KBOs
with radii larger than 250 m of 2.1^{+4.8}_{-1.7} x 10^7 deg^{-2}, ruling out
inferred surface densities from previous claimed detections by more than 5
sigma. The fact that we detected only one event, firmly shows a deficit of
sub-km sized KBOs compared to a population extrapolated from objects with r>50
km. This implies that sub-km sized KBOs are undergoing collisional erosion,
just like debris disks observed around other stars.Comment: To appear in Nature on December 17, 2009. Under press embargo until
1800 hours London time on 16 December. 19 pages; 7 figure
GeantV: Results from the prototype of concurrent vector particle transport simulation in HEP
Full detector simulation was among the largest CPU consumer in all CERN
experiment software stacks for the first two runs of the Large Hadron Collider
(LHC). In the early 2010's, the projections were that simulation demands would
scale linearly with luminosity increase, compensated only partially by an
increase of computing resources. The extension of fast simulation approaches to
more use cases, covering a larger fraction of the simulation budget, is only
part of the solution due to intrinsic precision limitations. The remainder
corresponds to speeding-up the simulation software by several factors, which is
out of reach using simple optimizations on the current code base. In this
context, the GeantV R&D project was launched, aiming to redesign the legacy
particle transport codes in order to make them benefit from fine-grained
parallelism features such as vectorization, but also from increased code and
data locality. This paper presents extensively the results and achievements of
this R&D, as well as the conclusions and lessons learnt from the beta
prototype.Comment: 34 pages, 26 figures, 24 table
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