18,551 research outputs found
The formation of spiral arms and rings in barred galaxies
In this and in a previous paper (Romero-Gomez et al. 2006) we propose a
theory to explain the formation of both spirals and rings in barred galaxies
using a common dynamical framework. It is based on the orbital motion driven by
the unstable equilibrium points of the rotating bar potential. Thus, spirals,
rings and pseudo-rings are related to the invariant manifolds associated to the
periodic orbits around these equilibrium points. We examine the parameter space
of three barred galaxy models and discuss the formation of the different
morphological structures according to the properties of the bar model. We also
study the influence of the shape of the rotation curve in the outer parts, by
making families of models with rising, flat, or falling rotation curves in the
outer parts. The differences between spiral and ringed structures arise from
differences in the dynamical parameters of the host galaxies. The results
presented here will be discussed and compared with observations in a
forthcoming paper.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, accepted in A&A. High resolution version
available at http://www.oamp.fr/dynamique/pap/merce.htm
Biodiversity study of Southern Biscayne Bay and Card Sound 1968-1973
A multi-disciplinary investigation was conducted in southern Biscayne Bay and Card Sound from 1968 to 1973. The purpose of the investigation was to conduct an integrated study of the ecology of southern Biscayne Bay with special emphasis on the effects of the heated effluent from the Turkey Point fossil fuel power plant, and to predict the impact of additional effluent from the planned conversion of the plant to nuclear fuel. The results of this investigation have been discussed in numerous publications. This report contains the unpublished biology data that resulted from the investigation. (PDF contains 44 pages
IMPORT PRICES AND HARD CURRENCY CONSTRAINTS IN EASTERN EUROPE: IMPLICATIONS FOR COARSE GRAIN IMPORTS AND PRODUCTION OF MEAT
The objectives of this study were (a) to determine the degree to which hard currency earnings constrained overall imports and coarse grain imports in command economies; (b) to measure the importance of import prices on grain imports and to trace the link of grain availability to meat production; and (c) to determine how economic and political reforms in the selected countries may have affected the hard currency constraint, the importance of import prices, and grain imports and meat production. The results indicate that import demand was constrained by earnings of hard currency, but was not responsive to world prices, and meat production was affected by total grain availability, including imports.Coarse grain imports, Hard currency, Eastern Europe, Import prices, Meat production, Political reforms, International Relations/Trade,
Neutrinoless double-beta decay. A brief review
In this brief review we discuss the generation of Majorana neutrino masses
through the see-saw mechanism, the theory of neutrinoless double-beta decay,
the implications of neutrino oscillation data for the effective Majorana mass,
taking into account the recent Daya Bay measurement of theta_13, and the
interpretation of the results of neutrinoless double-beta decay experiments.Comment: 22 page
Self-sustained spatiotemporal oscillations induced by membrane-bulk coupling
We propose a novel mechanism leading to spatiotemporal oscillations in
extended systems that does not rely on local bulk instabilities. Instead,
oscillations arise from the interaction of two subsystems of different spatial
dimensionality. Specifically, we show that coupling a passive diffusive bulk of
dimension d with an excitable membrane of dimension d-1 produces a
self-sustained oscillatory behavior. An analytical explanation of the
phenomenon is provided for d=1. Moreover, in-phase and anti-phase
synchronization of oscillations are found numerically in one and two
dimensions. This novel dynamic instability could be used by biological systems
such as cells, where the dynamics on the cellular membrane is necessarily
different from that of the cytoplasmic bulk.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
3D Segmentation Method for Natural Environments based on a Geometric-Featured Voxel Map
This work proposes a new segmentation algorithm for three-dimensional dense point clouds and has been
specially designed for natural environments where the ground is unstructured and may include big slopes, non-flat areas and
isolated areas. This technique is based on a Geometric-Featured Voxel map (GFV) where the scene is discretized in
constant size cubes or voxels which are classified in flat surface, linear or tubular structures and scattered or undefined
shapes, usually corresponding to vegetation. Since this is not a point-based technique the computational cost is significantly
reduced, hence it may be compatible with Real-Time applications. The ground is extracted in order to obtain more accurate
results in the posterior segmentation process. The scene is split into objects and a second segmentation in regions inside
each object is performed based on the voxel’s geometric class. The work here evaluates the proposed algorithm in various
versions and several voxel sizes and compares the results with other methods from the literature. For the segmentation
evaluation the algorithms are tested on several differently challenging hand-labeled data sets using two metrics, one of which
is novel.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tech
Thermalization and Cooling of Plasmon-Exciton Polaritons: Towards Quantum Condensation
We present indications of thermalization and cooling of quasi-particles, a
precursor for quantum condensation, in a plasmonic nanoparticle array. We
investigate a periodic array of metallic nanorods covered by a polymer layer
doped with an organic dye at room temperature. Surface lattice resonances of
the array---hybridized plasmonic/photonic modes---couple strongly to excitons
in the dye, and bosonic quasi-particles which we call
plasmon-exciton-polaritons (PEPs) are formed. By increasing the PEP density
through optical pumping, we observe thermalization and cooling of the strongly
coupled PEP band in the light emission dispersion diagram. For increased
pumping, we observe saturation of the strong coupling and emission in a new
weakly coupled band, which again shows signatures of thermalization and
cooling.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures including supplemental material. The newest
version includes new measurements and corrections to the interpretation of
the result
Optimizing Scan Homogeneity for Building Full-3D Lidars based on Rotating a Multi-Beam Velodyne Rangefinder
Multi-beam lidar (MBL) scanners are compact, light, and accessible 3D sensors with high data rates, but they offer limited vertical resolution and field of view (FOV).
Some recent robotics research has profited from the addition of a degree-of-freedom (DOF) to an MBL to build rotating multi-beam lidars (RMBL) that can achieve high-resolution scans with full spherical FOV. In a previous work, we offered a methodology to analyze the complex 3D scan measurement distributions produced by RMBLs with a rolling DOF and no pitching. In this paper, we investigate the effect of introducing constant pitch angles in the construction of the RMBLs with the purpose of finding a kinematic configuration that optimizes scan homogeneity with a spherical FOV. To this end, we propose a scalar index of 3D sensor homogeneity that is based on the spherical formulation of Ripley's K function. The optimization is performed for the widely used Puck (VLP-16) and HDL-32 sensors by Velodyne.This work was partially funded by the Spanish project {DPI2015-65186-R}. The publication has received support from Universidad de Málaga, Campus de Excelencia Andalucía Tech
On the origin of rR_1 ring structures in barred galaxies
We propose a new theory for the formation of rR_1 ring structures, i.e. for
ring structures with both an inner and an outer ring, the latter having the
form of ``8''. We propose that these rings are formed by material from the
stable and unstable invariant manifolds associated with the Lyapunov orbits
around the equilibrium points of a barred galaxy. We discuss the shape and
velocity structure of the rings thus formed and argue that they are in
agreement with the observed properties of rR_1 structures.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, accepted in Astronomy and Astrophysics. High
quality figures are available upon reques
Invariant manifolds as building blocks for the formation of spiral arms and rings in barred galaxies
We propose a theory to explain the formation of spiral arms and of all types
of outer rings in barred galaxies, extending and applying the technique used in
celestial mechanics to compute transfer orbits. Thus, our theory is based on
the chaotic orbital motion driven by the invariant manifolds associated to the
periodic orbits around the hyperbolic equilibrium points. In particular, spiral
arms and outer rings are related to the presence of heteroclinic or homoclinic
orbits. Thus, R1 rings are associated to the presence of heteroclinic orbits,
while R1R2 rings are associated to the presence of homoclinic orbits. Spiral
arms and R2 rings, however, appear when there exist neither heteroclinic nor
homoclinic orbits. We examine the parameter space of three realistic, yet
simple, barred galaxy models and discuss the formation of the different
morphologies according to the properties of the galaxy model. The different
morphologies arise from differences in the dynamical parameters of the galaxy.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, in the proceedings of the conference: "Chaos in
Astronomy", Athens, September 2007, G. Contopoulos and P.A. Patsis (eds), to
be published by Springe
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