387 research outputs found

    The orbital structure of a tidally induced bar

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    Orbits are the key building blocks of any density distribution and their study helps us understand the kinematical structure and the evolution of galaxies. Here we investigate orbits in a tidally induced bar of a dwarf galaxy, using an NN-body simulation of an initially disky dwarf galaxy orbiting a Milky Way-like host. After the first pericenter passage, a tidally induced bar forms in the stellar component of the dwarf. The bar evolution is different than in isolated galaxies and our analysis focuses on the period before it buckles. We study the orbits in terms of their dominant frequencies, which we calculate in a Cartesian coordinate frame rotating with the bar. Apart from the well-known x1_1 orbits we find many other types, mostly with boxy shapes of various degree of elongation. Some of them are also near-periodic, admitting frequency ratios of 4/3, 3/2 and 5/3. The box orbits have various degrees of vertical thickness but only a relatively small fraction of those have banana (i.e. smile/frown) or infinity-symbol shapes in the edge-on view. In the very center we also find orbits known from the potential of triaxial ellipsoids. The elongation of the orbits grows with distance from the center of the bar in agreement with the variation of the shape of the density distribution. Our classification of orbits leads to the conclusion that more than 80%80 \% of them have boxy shapes, while only 8%8 \% have shapes of classical x1_1 orbits.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in Ap

    Tidally induced bars in dwarf galaxies on different orbits around a Milky Way-like host

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    Bars in galaxies may develop through a global instability or due to an interaction with another system. We study bar formation in disky dwarf galaxies orbiting a Milky Way-like galaxy. We employ NN-body simulations to study the impact of initial orbital parameters: the size of the dwarf galaxy orbit and the inclination of its disc with respect to the orbital plane. In all cases a bar develops in the center of the dwarf during the first pericenter on its orbit around the host. Between subsequent pericenter passages the bars are stable, but at the pericenters they are usually weakened and shortened. The initial properties and details of the further evolution of the bars depend heavily on the orbital configuration. We find that for the exactly prograde orientation, the strongest bar is formed for the intermediate-size orbit. On the tighter orbit, the disc is too disturbed and stripped to form a strong bar. On the wider orbit, the tidal interaction is too weak. The dependence on the disc inclination is such that weaker bars form in more inclined discs. The bars experience either a very weak buckling or none at all. We do not observe any secular evolution, possibly because the dwarfs are perturbed at each pericenter passage. The rotation speed of the bars can be classified as slow (RCR/lbar23R_\mathrm{CR}/l_\mathrm{bar}\sim2-3). We attribute this to the loss of a significant fraction of the disc's rotation during the encounter with the host galaxy.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures, accepted to Ap

    TEMPERED RELAXATION EQUATION AND RELATED GENERALIZED STABLE PROCESSES

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    Fractional relaxation equations, as well as relaxation functions time-changed by independent stochastic processes have been widely studied (see, for example, MAI, STAW and GAR). We start here by proving that the upper-incomplete Gamma function satisfies the tempered-relaxation equation (of index ρ∈(0,1)); thanks to this explicit form of the solution, we can then derive its spectral distribution, which extends the stable law. Accordingly, we define a new class of selfsimilar processes (by means of the n-times Laplace transform of its density) which is indexed by the parameter ρ: in the special case where ρ=1, it reduces to the stable subordinator. Therefore the parameter ρ can be seen as a measure of the local deviation from the temporal dependence structure displayed in the standard stable case

    Application of lightning location systems for fault detection on transmission and distribution lines

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    The lightning location systems were installed in many countries during last twenty years. The paper presents the SAFIR system called PERUN, which was built in Poland in 2002. The lightning location systems are used for different purposes including among other things meteorology, weather forecasting and aviation. A brief review of fault detection on transmission and distribution lines made abroad and the first experience of the Polish National Grid PSE was shown

    Adventures of a tidally induced bar

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    Using N-body simulations, we study the properties of a bar induced in a discy dwarf galaxy as a result of tidal interaction with the Milky Way. The bar forms at the first pericentre passage and survives until the end of the evolution at 10 Gyr. Fourier decomposition of the bar reveals that only even modes are significant and preserve a hierarchy so that the bar mode is always the strongest. They show a characteristic profile with a maximum, similar to simulated bars forming in isolated galaxies and observed bars in real galaxies. We adopt the maximum of the bar mode as a measure of the bar strength and we estimate the bar length by comparing the density profiles along the bar and perpendicular to it. The bar strength and the bar length decrease with time, mainly at pericentres, as a result of tidal torques acting at those times and not to secular evolution. The pattern speed of the bar varies significantly on a time-scale of 1 Gyr and is controlled by the orientation of the tidal torque from the Milky Way. The bar is never tidally locked, but we discover a hint of a 5/2 orbital resonance between the third and fourth pericentre passage. The speed of the bar decreases in the long run so that the bar changes from initially rather fast to slow in the later stages. The boxy/peanut shape is present for some time and its occurrence is preceded by a short period of buckling instability

    Superfluidity of the BEC at finite temperature

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    We use the classical fields approximation to study a translational flow of the condensate with respect to the thermal cloud in a weakly interacting Bose gas. We study both, subcritical and supercritical relative velocity cases and analyze in detail a state of stationary flow which is reached in the dynamics. This state corresponds to the thermal equilibrium, which is characterized by the relative velocity of the condensate and the thermal cloud. The superfluidity manifests itself in the existence of many thermal equilibria varying in (the value of this velocity) the relative velocity between the condensate and the thermal cloud. We pay a particular attention to excitation spectra in a phonon as well as in a particle regime. Finally, we introduce a measure of the amount of the superfluid fraction in a weakly interacting Bose gas, allowing for the precise distinction between the superfluid and the condensed fractions in a single and consistent framework.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
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