660 research outputs found
Retaining Black Holes with Very Large Recoil Velocities
Recent numerical simulations of binary black hole mergers show the
possibility of producing very large recoil velocities (> 3000 km/s). Kicks of
this magnitude should be sufficient to eject the final black hole from
virtually any galactic potential. This result has been seen as a potential
contradiction with observations of supermassive black holes residing in the
centers of most galaxies in the local universe. Using an extremely simplified
merger tree model, we show that, even in the limit of very large ejection
probability, after a small number of merger generations there should still be
an appreciable fraction (>50%) of galaxies with supermassive black holes today.
We go on to argue that the inclusion of more realistic physics ingredients in
the merger model should systematically increase this retention fraction,
helping to resolve a potential conflict between theory and observation. Lastly,
we develop a more realistic Monte Carlo model to confirm the qualitative
arguments and estimate occupation fractions as a function of the central
galactic velocity dispersion.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures; Comments welcom
Gravitational recoil from spinning binary black hole mergers
The inspiral and merger of binary black holes will likely involve black holes
with both unequal masses and arbitrary spins. The gravitational radiation
emitted by these binaries will carry angular as well as linear momentum. A net
flux of emitted linear momentum implies that the black hole produced by the
merger will experience a recoil or kick. Previous studies have focused on the
recoil velocity from unequal mass, non-spinning binaries. We present results
from simulations of equal mass but spinning black hole binaries and show how a
significant gravitational recoil can also be obtained in these situations. We
consider the case of black holes with opposite spins of magnitude
aligned/anti-aligned with the orbital angular momentum, with the
dimensionless spin parameters of the individual holes. For the initial setups
under consideration, we find a recoil velocity of V = 475 \KMS a.
Supermassive black hole mergers producing kicks of this magnitude could result
in the ejection from the cores of dwarf galaxies of the final hole produced by
the collision.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, replaced with version accepted for publication in
Ap
The Assembly and Merging History of Supermassive Black Holes in Hierarchical Models of Galaxy Formation
We assess models for the assembly of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) at the
center of galaxies that trace their hierarchical build-up far up in the dark
halo `merger tree'. We assume that the first `seed' black holes (BHs) formed in
(mini)halos collapsing at z=20 from high-sigma density fluctuations. As these
pregalactic holes become incorporated through a series of mergers into larger
and larger halos, they sink to the center owing to dynamical friction, accrete
a fraction of the gas in the merger remnant to become supermassive, form a
binary system, and eventually coalesce. The merger history of dark matter halos
and associated BHs is followed by cosmological Monte Carlo realizations of the
merger hierarchy. A simple model, where quasar activity is driven by major
mergers and SMBHs accrete at the Eddington rate a mass that scales with the
fifth power of the velocity dispersion, is shown to reproduce the optical LF of
quasars in the redshift range 1<z<4. Binary and triple BH interactions are
followed in our merger tree. The assumptions underlying our scenario lead to
the prediction of a population of massive BHs wandering in galaxy halos and the
intergalactic medium at the present epoch, and contributing <10% to the total
BH mass density. At all epochs the fraction of binary SMBHs in galaxy nuclei is
of order 10%, while the fraction of binary quasars is less than 0.3%Comment: revised version, accepted for publication in the ApJ, emulateapj, 15
pages, 16 figure
Climate change threats to two low-lying South African coastal towns: Risks and perceptions.
Climate change poses a considerable threat to low-lying coastal towns. Possible risks include flooding
induced by sea-level rise, increased discomfort from changes in temperature and precipitation, more frequent
extreme events, biodiversity shifts, and water shortages. For coastal towns that attract many tourists, these
threats can have far-reaching economic effects and may compromise the continued viability of the tourism
sector. A growing number of studies are being published on the inter-relationship between climate change and
tourism in the global North. As yet, little equivalent research has been conducted in developing countries with
economically significant tourism sectors. This paper presents a mixed-method pilot study on two adjacent
coastal towns, St Francis Bay and Cape St Francis, in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. We explored
the climate change threats in this region, and perceptions of these threats within the tourism sector. The
tourism climate index results showed that the towns are climatically well suited to tourism, but a decrease in
these index scores between 1978 and 2014 suggests that climate change experienced in recent decades has
detrimentally affected tourist comfort. A digital elevation model sea-level projection for the towns indicated
a high risk of sea-level induced flooding by 2050, particularly for properties along the coastline. Interviews
with tourism establishment respondents showed that people are aware of climate change threats, yet little
adaptation is forthcoming. Rather the government is deemed responsible for adaptation, despite its limited
capacity. A disjuncture therefore exists between the perceived severity of risk and the risk that is evident from
scientific analyses. This gap results in poor planning for the costs associated with adaptation.NCS201
The Infrared Afterglow of Supermassive Black Hole Mergers
We model the spectra and light curves of circumbinary accretion disks during
the time after the central black holes merge. The most immediate effect of this
merger is the dissipation of energy in the outer regions of the disk due to the
gravitational wave energy and linear momentum flux released at merger. This has
the effect of perturbing the gas in the disk, which then radiates the
dissipated energy over a cooling timescale, giving a characteristic infrared
signal for tens of thousands of years when the total black hole mass is M~10^8
M_sun. On the basis of a simple cosmological merger model in which a typical
supermassive black hole undergoes a few major mergers during its lifetime, we
predict that ~10^4-10^5 of these IR sources should be observable today and
discuss the possibility of identifying them with multi-wavelength surveys such
as SWIRE/XMM-LSS/XBootes and COSMOS.Comment: v2: expanded discussion of optical depth calculations; ApJ in pres
Recoiling Black Holes in Quasars
Recent simulations of merging black holes with spin give recoil velocities
from gravitational radiation up to several thousand km/s. A recoiling
supermassive black hole can retain the inner part of its accretion disk,
providing fuel for a continuing QSO phase lasting millions of years as the hole
moves away from the galactic nucleus. One possible observational manifestation
of a recoiling accretion disk is in QSO emission lines shifted in velocity from
the host galaxy. We have examined QSOs from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey with
broad emission lines substantially shifted relative to the narrow lines. We
find no convincing evidence for recoiling black holes carrying accretion disks.
We place an upper limit on the incidence of recoiling black holes in QSOs of 4%
for kicks greater than 500 km/s and 0.35% for kicks greater than 1000 km/s
line-of-sight velocity.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, uses emulateapj, Submitted to ApJ Letter
Recoiling from a kick in the head-on collision of spinning black holes
Recoil ``kicks'' induced by gravitational radiation are expected in the
inspiral and merger of black holes. Recently the numerical relativity community
has begun to measure the significant kicks found when both unequal masses and
spins are considered. Because understanding the cause and magnitude of each
component of this kick may be complicated in inspiral simulations, we consider
these effects in the context of a simple test problem. We study recoils from
collisions of binaries with initially head-on trajectories, starting with the
simplest case of equal masses with no spin and then adding spin and varying the
mass ratio, both separately and jointly. We find spin-induced recoils to be
significant relative to unequal-mass recoils even in head-on configurations.
Additionally, it appears that the scaling of transverse kicks with spins is
consistent with post-Newtonian theory, even though the kick is generated in the
nonlinear merger interaction, where post-Newtonian theory should not apply.
This suggests that a simple heuristic description might be effective in the
estimation of spin-kicks.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures. Replaced with published version, including more
discussion of convergence and properties of final hol
Uma análise dos preditores do conhecimento do conteúdo da história: Implicações para polÃtica e prática
How and to what extent students learn history content is a complicated process, drawing from the instructional opportunities they experience; the policy prioritization of history/social studies instruction in schools; and their own cultural perspectives toward the past. In an attempt to better understand the complex inter-play among these dimensions, we examined relationships among student sociocultural characteristics, instructional exposure, and school-level variables and US History content knowledge. Using data from the 2010 National Assessment of Educational Progress Test on US History (NAEP-USH), multilevel analyses indicated that while sociocultural indicators (such as race, gender, and socioeconomic status) correlate with achievement, students’ instructional exposure variables remain significant predictors of history content knowledge. Moreover, school context such as building-level demographics and state testing-policy predict between school variance in content knowledge and moderate the achievement gap. Results also suggest that, while a substantial achievement gap remains, exposure to text-based instructional practices is associated with increased knowledge. Findings from this study have policy implications for the development of a more inclusive social studies curriculum, the advocating of text-dependent instruction as a high-leverage practice among history teachers, and cautious consideration of tests as proxies for accountability in history education. Entender cómo y cuántos alumnos aprenden sobre contenido histórico es un proceso complicado, basado en oportunidades de aprendizaje que los alumnos encuentran, en una polÃtica de priorización de la enseñanza de contenido histórico o de ciencias sociales, y en las perspectivas culturales de los alumnos sobre el estudio del pasado. Con el objetivo de entender la relación compleja entre los diversos aspectos en este proceso de aprendizaje, investigamos la relación entre caracterÃsticas socioculturales de los alumnos, acceso a este tipo de enseñanza, y variables explicativas de escuelas y del conocimiento de la historia de los Estados Unidos. El resultado de nuestra modelación jerárquica indica que mientras variables socioculturales (raza, sexo y situación socioeconómica) se correlacionan con éxito, con datos de la Evaluación Nacional de la Prueba de Progreso Educativo en Historia Americana (NAEP-USH, por sus siglas en inglés) Académico, las variables de acceso a este tipo de enseñanza son parámetros importantes para el conocimiento del contenido histórico. Además, variables sobre la escuela, por ejemplo demografÃa de la escuela y polÃticas estaduales en cuanto a pruebas académicas, son parámetros relevantes en el análisis de varianza en conocimiento sobre el contenido académico y la disparidad en éxito académico entre alumnos. Los resultados también indican que a pesar de la existencia de la disparidad en el éxito académico, el acceso a textos y materiales educativos está relacionado con el avance del conocimiento. Nuestras conclusiones son relevantes para el desarrollo de polÃticas educativas de un currÃculo en ciencias sociales que sea más inclusivo, el apoyo al uso de instrucciones usando textos / libros académicos, y la cautela en cuanto al uso de pruebas para medir la enseñanza de la historia. Entender como e o quanto alunos aprendem sobre conteúdo histórico é um processo complicado, baseado em oportunidades de aprendizagem que alunos encontram, numa polÃtica de priorização do ensino de conteúdo histórico ou de ciências sociais, e nas perspectivas culturais dos alunos sobre o estudo do passado. Com o objetivo de entender a relação complexa entre os vários aspectos neste processo de aprendizagem, nós investigamos a relação entre caracterÃsticas socioculturais dos alunos, acesso a este tipo de ensino, e variáveis explanatórias de escolas e do conhecimento da história dos EUA. Usando dados da Avaliação Nacional do Teste de Progresso Educacional em História Americana (NAEP-USH, por sua sigla em inglês) de 2010, os resultados da nossa modelação hierárquica indicam que enquanto variáveis socioculturais (raça, sexo e situação socioeconômica) são correlacionadas com sucesso acadêmico, variáveis de acesso a este tipo de ensino são parâmetros importantes para o conhecimento de conteúdo histórico. Além disso, variáveis sobre a escola, por exemplo demografia da escola e polÃticas estaduais quanto a testes acadêmicos, são parâmetros relevantes na análise de variância em conhecimento sobre o conteúdo acadêmico e a disparidade em sucesso acadêmico entre alunos. Os resultados também indicam que apesar da existência da disparidade em sucesso acadêmico, acesso a textos e materiais educativos é relacionado com o avanço de conhecimento. Nossas conclusões são relevantes para o desenvolvimento de polÃticas educacionais de um currÃculo em ciências sociais que seja mais inclusivo, o apoio ao uso de instruções usando textos/ livros acadêmicos, e a cautela quanto ao uso de provas para medir o ensino de história.
Systematic analysis of funding awarded for norovirus research to institutions in the United Kingdom, 1997-2010
Objectives:Norovirus infections pose great economic and disease burden to health systems around the world. This study quantifies the investments in norovirus research awarded to UK institutions over a 14-year time period.Design:A systematic analysis of public and philanthropic infectious disease research investments awarded to UK institutions between 1997 and 2010.Participants:NoneSetting:UK institutions carrying out infectious disease research.Main outcome measures:Total funding for infectious disease research, total funding for norovirus research, position of norovirus research along the R&D value chain.Results:The total dataset consisted of 6165 studies with sum funding of £2.6 billion. Twelve norovirus studies were identified with a total funding of £5.1 million, 0.2% of the total dataset. Of these, eight were categorized as pre-clinical, three as intervention studies and one as implementation research. Median funding was £200,620.Conclusions:Research funding for norovirus infections in the UK appears to be unacceptably low, given the burden of disease and disability produced by these infections. There is a clear need for new research initiatives along the R&D value chain: from pre-clinical through to implementation research, including trials to assess cost-effectiveness of infection control policies as well as clinical, public health and environmental interventions in hospitals, congregate settings and in the community.</p
Gravitational Recoil during Binary Black Hole Coalescence using the Effective One Body Approach
Using the Effective One Body approach, that includes nonperturbative resummed
estimates for the damping and conservative parts of the compact binary
dynamics, we compute the recoil during the late inspiral and the subsequent
plunge of non-spinning black holes of comparable masses moving in
quasi-circular orbits. Further, using a prescription that smoothly connects the
plunge phase to a perturbed single black hole, we obtain an estimate for the
total recoil associated with the binary black hole coalescence. We show that
the crucial physical feature which determines the magnitude of the terminal
recoil is the presence of a ``burst'' of linear momentum flux emitted slightly
before coalescence. When using the most natural expression for the linear
momentum flux during the plunge, together with a Taylor-expanded
correction factor, we find that the maximum value of the terminal recoil is
km/s and occurs for a mass ratio . We comment,
however, on the fact that the above `best bet estimate' is subject to strong
uncertainties because the location and amplitude of the crucial peak of linear
momentum flux happens at a moment during the plunge where most of the
simplifying analytical assumptions underlying the Effective One Body approach
are no longer justified. Changing the analytical way of estimating the linear
momentum flux, we find maximum recoils that range between 49 and 172 km/s.
(Abridged)Comment: 46 pages, new figures and discussions, to appear in PR
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