7,150 research outputs found
Faint dwarf galaxies in nearby clusters
Besides giant elliptical galaxies, a number of low-mass stellar systems
inhabit the cores of galaxy clusters, such as dwarf elliptical galaxies
(dEs/dSphs), ultra-compact dwarf galaxies (UCDs), and globular clusters. The
detailed morphological examination of faint dwarf galaxies has, until recently,
been limited to the Local Group (LG) and the two very nearby galaxy clusters
Virgo and Fornax. Here, we compare the structural parameters of a large number
of dEs/dSphs in the more distant clusters Hydra I and Centaurus to other
dynamically hot stellar systems.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure; to appear in "A Universe of Dwarf Galaxies:
Observations, Theories, Simulations", held in Lyon, France (June 14-18,
2010), eds. M. Koleva, P. Prugniel & I. Vauglin, EAS Series (Paris: EDP
The Tobacco Epidemic in South-East Europe: Consequences and Policy Responses. Health, Nutrition and Population Discussion Paper
Smoking is the single largest cause of
premature mortality in the developed world. Obtaining
accurate estimates of smoking's impacts in south east
Europe (SEE) is hindered by the lack of accurate data.. None
of the countries of the region yet conduct regular national
surveys of adult smoking prevalence and some have no recent
nationally representative data available. The very high
rates among medical personnel are cause for concern. Youth
smoking surveys are now conducted in most countries as part
of international projects and show rates broadly similar to
the EU. The collapse of communism and the end of the
conflicts in the 1990s has led to major changes in the
region's tobacco industry. The previously state-owned
tobacco monopolies have either undergone or are undergoing
privatization and the transnational tobacco companies have
been increasingly active both in importing their cigarettes
to, and investing in, the region. These changes can be
expected to increase competition in the tobacco industry
which will in turn drive down prices and increase
advertising, thereby stimulating consumption. The available
statistics, combined with the changes to the region's
tobacco industry, suggest that the health impacts of tobacco
in SEE will continue to worsen over coming years
A new low mass for the Hercules dSph: the end of a common mass scale for the dwarfs?
We present a new mass estimate for the Hercules dwarf spheroidal galaxy
(dSph), based on the revised velocity dispersion obtained by Aden et al. (2009,
arXiv:0908.3489).
The removal of a significant foreground contamination using newly acquired
Stromgren photometry has resulted in a reduced velocity dispersion. Using this
new velocity dispersion of 3.72 +/- 0.91 km/s, we find a mass of
M_300=1.9^{+1.1}_{-0.8} 10^6 M_sun within the central 300 pc, which is also the
half-light radius, and a mass of M_433=3.7_{-1.6}^{+2.2} 10^6 M_sun within the
reach of our data to 433 pc, significantly lower than previous estimates. We
derive an overall mass-to-light ratio of M_433/L=103^{+83}_{-48} M_sun/L_sun.
Our mass estimate calls into question recent claims of a common mass scale for
dSph galaxies.
Additionally, we find tentative evidence for a velocity gradient in our
kinematic data of 16 +/- 3 km/s/kpc, and evidence of an asymmetric extension in
the light distribution at about 0.5 kpc. We explore the possibility that these
features are due to tidal interactions with the Milky Way. We show that there
is a self-consistent model in which Hercules has an assumed tidal radius of r_t
= 485 pc, an orbital pericentre of r_p = 18.5 +/- 5 kpc, and a mass within r_t
of M_{tid,r_t}=5.2 +/- 2.7 10^6 M_sun. Proper motions are required to test this
model. Although we cannot exclude models in which Hercules contains no dark
matter, we argue that Hercules is more likely to be a dark matter dominated
system which is currently experiencing some tidal disturbance of its outer
parts.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, Accepted for publication by ApJ
A Dynamical Fossil in the Ursa Minor Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy
The nearby Ursa Minor dwarf spheroidal (UMi dSph) is one of the most dark
matter dominated galaxies known, with a central mass to light ratio roughly
equal to 70. Somewhat anomalously, it appears to contain morphological
substructure in the form of a second peak in the stellar number density. It is
often argued that this substructure must be transient because it could not
survive for the > 10 Gyr age of the system, given the crossing time implied by
UMi's 8.8 km/s internal velocity dispersion. In this paper, however, we present
evidence that the substructure has a cold kinematical signature, and argue that
UMi's clumpiness could indeed be a primordial artefact. Using numerical
simulations, we demonstrate that substructure is incompatible with the cusped
dark matter haloes predicted by the prevailing Cold Dark Matter (CDM) paradigm,
but is consistent with an unbound stellar cluster sloshing back and forth
within the nearly harmonic potential of a cored dark matter halo. Thus CDM
appears to disagree with observation at the least massive, most dark matter
dominated end of the galaxy mass spectrum.Comment: Astrophysical Journal (Letters), in pres
Calculation of the unitary part of the Bures measure for N-level quantum systems
We use the canonical coset parameterization and provide a formula with the
unitary part of the Bures measure for non-degenerate systems in terms of the
product of even Euclidean balls. This formula is shown to be consistent with
the sampling of random states through the generation of random unitary
matrices
Iwasawa N=8 Attractors
Starting from the symplectic construction of the Lie algebra e_7(7) due to
Adams, we consider an Iwasawa parametrization of the coset E_7(7)/SU(8), which
is the scalar manifold of N=8, d=4 supergravity. Our approach, and the manifest
off-shell symmetry of the resulting symplectic frame, is determined by a
non-compact Cartan subalgebra of the maximal subgroup SL(8,R) of E_7(7). In
absence of gauging, we utilize the explicit expression of the Lie algebra to
study the origin of E_7(7)/SU(8) as scalar configuration of a 1/8-BPS extremal
black hole attractor. In such a framework, we highlight the action of a U(1)
symmetry spanning the dyonic 1/8-BPS attractors. Within a suitable
supersymmetry truncation allowing for the embedding of the Reissner-Nordstrom
black hole, this U(1) is interpreted as nothing but the global R-symmetry of
pure N=2 supergravity. Moreover, we find that the above mentioned U(1) symmetry
is broken down to a discrete subgroup Z_4, implying that all 1/8-BPS Iwasawa
attractors are non-dyonic near the origin of the scalar manifold. We can trace
this phenomenon back to the fact that the Cartan subalgebra of SL(8,R) used in
our construction endows the symplectic frame with a manifest off-shell
covariance which is smaller than SL(8,R) itself. Thus, the consistence of the
Adams-Iwasawa symplectic basis with the action of the U(1) symmetry gives rise
to the observed Z_4 residual non-dyonic symmetry.Comment: 1+26 page
Signatures of SN Ia in the galactic thick disk
We present the first results of a larger study into the stellar abundances
and chemical trends in long-lived dwarf stars in the solar neighbourhood that
belong to (based on their kinematics) the thin and thick galactic disk,
respectively. We confirm that the trends of alpha-elements in the thin and
thick disk are distinct (this has previously been shown for Mg by Fuhrmann
1998, but e.g. Chen et al. 2000 claimed the trends to follow smoothly upon each
other). We find that the thick disk show the typical signature of contribution
from SN Ia (i.e. the ``knee'') to the enrichment of the interstellar gas out of
which the later generations of thick disk stars formed. The trend starts out as
[Mg/Fe] ~0.35 at [Fe/H] ~ -0.7 and continue on this level with increasing
[Fe/H] until -0.4 dex where a decline in [Mg/Fe] starts and steadily continues
down to 0 dex at solar metallicity. The same is true for the other
alpha-elements (e.g. Si). Using ages from the literature we find that the thick
disk in the mean is older than the thin disk. Combining our results with other
observational facts we suggest that the most likely formation scenario for the
thick disk is, still, a violent merger event. We also suggest that there might
be tentativeevidence for diffusion of orbits in todays thin disk (based on
kinematics in combination with elemental abundances).Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, A&A Letter in pres
Calibration of a single atom detector for atomic micro chips
We experimentally investigate a scheme for detecting single atoms
magnetically trapped on an atom chip. The detector is based on the
photoionization of atoms and the subsequent detection of the generated ions. We
describe the characterization of the ion detector with emphasis on its
calibration via the correlation of ions with simultaneously generated
electrons. A detection efficiency of 47.8% (+-2.6%) is measured, which is
useful for single atom detection, and close to the limit allowing atom counting
with sub-Poissonian uncertainty
Bounded Representations of Interval and Proper Interval Graphs
Klavik et al. [arXiv:1207.6960] recently introduced a generalization of
recognition called the bounded representation problem which we study for the
classes of interval and proper interval graphs. The input gives a graph G and
in addition for each vertex v two intervals L_v and R_v called bounds. We ask
whether there exists a bounded representation in which each interval I_v has
its left endpoint in L_v and its right endpoint in R_v. We show that the
problem can be solved in linear time for interval graphs and in quadratic time
for proper interval graphs.
Robert's Theorem states that the classes of proper interval graphs and unit
interval graphs are equal. Surprisingly the bounded representation problem is
polynomially solvable for proper interval graphs and NP-complete for unit
interval graphs [Klav\'{\i}k et al., arxiv:1207.6960]. So unless P = NP, the
proper and unit interval representations behave very differently.
The bounded representation problem belongs to a wider class of restricted
representation problems. These problems are generalizations of the
well-understood recognition problem, and they ask whether there exists a
representation of G satisfying some additional constraints. The bounded
representation problems generalize many of these problems
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