4,468 research outputs found
A Robust Determination of Milky Way Satellite Properties using Hierarchical Mass Modeling
We introduce a new methodology to robustly determine the mass profile, as
well as the overall distribution, of Local Group satellite galaxies.
Specifically we employ a statistical multilevel modelling technique, Bayesian
hierarchical modelling, to simultaneously constrain the properties of
individual Local Group Milky Way satellite galaxies and the characteristics of
the Milky Way satellite population. We show that this methodology reduces the
uncertainty in individual dwarf galaxy mass measurements up to a factor of a
few for the faintest galaxies. We find that the distribution of Milky Way
satellites inferred by this analysis, with the exception of the apparent lack
of high-mass haloes, is consistent with the Lambda cold dark matter
(Lambda-CDM) paradigm. In particular we find that both the measured
relationship between the maximum circular velocity and the radius at this
velocity, as well as the inferred relationship between the mass within 300 pc
and luminosity, match the values predicted by Lambda-CDM simulations for halos
with maximum circular velocities below 20 km/sec. Perhaps more striking is that
this analysis seems to suggest a more cusped "average" halo shape that is
shared by these galaxies. While this study reconciles many of the observed
properties of the Milky Way satellite distribution with that of Lambda-CDM
simulations, we find that there is still a deficit of satellites with maximum
circular velocities of 20-40 km/sec.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, 3 table
Accurate masses for dispersion-supported galaxies
We derive an accurate mass estimator for dispersion-supported stellar systems
and demonstrate its validity by analyzing resolved line-of-sight velocity data
for globular clusters, dwarf galaxies, and elliptical galaxies. Specifically,
by manipulating the spherical Jeans equation we show that the dynamical mass
enclosed within the 3D deprojected half-light radius r_1/2 can be determined
with only mild assumptions about the spatial variation of the stellar velocity
dispersion anisotropy. We find M_1/2 = 3 \sigma_los^2 r_1/2 / G ~ 4
\sigma_los^2 R_eff / G, where \sigma_los^2 is the luminosity-weighted square of
the line-of-sight velocity dispersion and R_eff is the 2D projected half-light
radius. While deceptively familiar in form, this formula is not the virial
theorem, which cannot be used to determine accurate masses unless the radial
profile of the total mass is known a priori. We utilize this finding to show
that all of the Milky Way dwarf spheroidal galaxies (MW dSphs) are consistent
with having formed within a halo of mass approximately 3 x 10^9 M_sun in Lambda
CDM cosmology. The faintest MW dSphs seem to have formed in dark matter halos
that are at least as massive as those of the brightest MW dSphs, despite the
almost five orders of magnitude spread in luminosity. We expand our analysis to
the full range of observed dispersion-supported stellar systems and examine
their I-band mass-to-light ratios (M/L). The M/L vs. M_1/2 relation for
dispersion-supported galaxies follows a U-shape, with a broad minimum near M/L
~ 3 that spans dwarf elliptical galaxies to normal ellipticals, a steep rise to
M/L ~ 3,200 for ultra-faint dSphs, and a more shallow rise to M/L ~ 800 for
galaxy cluster spheroids.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figures. Accepted to MNRAS on March 27th, 201
A Complete Spectroscopic Survey of the Milky Way satellite Segue 1: Dark matter content, stellar membership and binary properties from a Bayesian analysis
We introduce a comprehensive analysis of multi-epoch stellar line-of-sight
velocities to determine the intrinsic velocity dispersion of the ultrafaint
satellites of the Milky Way. Our method includes a simultaneous Bayesian
analysis of both membership probabilities and the contribution of binary
orbital motion to the observed velocity dispersion within a 14-parameter
likelihood. We apply our method to the Segue 1 dwarf galaxy and conclude that
Segue 1 is a dark-matter-dominated galaxy at high probability with an intrinsic
velocity dispersion of 3.7^{+1.4}_{-1.1} km/sec. The dark matter halo required
to produce this dispersion must have an average density of 2.5^{+4.1}_{-1.9}
solar mass/pc^3 within a sphere that encloses half the galaxy's stellar
luminosity. This is the highest measured density of dark matter in the Local
Group. Our results show that a significant fraction of the stars in Segue 1 may
be binaries with the most probable mean period close to 10 years, but also
consistent with the 180 year mean period seen in the solar vicinity at about 1
sigma. Despite this binary population, the possibility that Segue 1 is a bound
star cluster with the observed velocity dispersion arising from the orbital
motion of binary stars is disfavored by the multi-epoch stellar velocity data
at greater than 99% C.L. Finally, our treatment yields a projected
(two-dimensional) half-light radius for the stellar profile of Segue 1 of
28^{+5}_{-4} pc, in excellent agreement with photometric measurements.Comment: 15 pages, 19 figure
An Adaptive Optics Survey of Stellar Variability at the Galactic Center
We present a year adaptive optics (AO) study of stellar
variability and search for eclipsing binaries in the central pc
() of the Milky Way nuclear star cluster. We measure the photometry
of 563 stars using the Keck II NIRC2 imager (-band, ). We achieve a photometric uncertainty floor of (), comparable to the highest precision achieved
in other AO studies. Approximately half of our sample () shows
variability. of known early-type young stars and of
known late-type giants are variable. These variability fractions are higher
than those of other young, massive star populations or late-type giants in
globular clusters, and can be largely explained by two factors. First, our
experiment time baseline is sensitive to long-term intrinsic stellar
variability. Second, the proper motion of stars behind spatial inhomogeneities
in the foreground extinction screen can lead to variability. We recover the two
known Galactic center eclipsing binary systems: IRS 16SW and S4-258 (E60). We
constrain the Galactic center eclipsing binary fraction of known early-type
stars to be at least . We find no evidence of an eclipsing
binary among the young S-stars nor among the young stellar disk members. These
results are consistent with the local OB eclipsing binary fraction. We identify
a new periodic variable, S2-36, with a 39.43 day period. Further observations
are necessary to determine the nature of this source.Comment: 69 pages, 28 figures, 12 tables. Accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journa
Combined collider constraints on neutralinos and charginos
Searches for supersymmetric electroweakinos have entered a crucial phase, as
the integrated luminosity of the Large Hadron Collider is now high enough to
compensate for their weak production cross-sections. Working in a framework
where the neutralinos and charginos are the only light sparticles in the
Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model, we use gambit to perform a detailed
likelihood analysis of the electroweakino sector. We focus on the impacts of
recent ATLAS and CMS searches with 36 fb of 13 TeV proton-proton
collision data. We also include constraints from LEP and invisible decays of
the and Higgs bosons. Under the background-only hypothesis, we show that
current LHC searches do not robustly exclude any range of neutralino or
chargino masses. However, a pattern of excesses in several LHC analyses points
towards a possible signal, with neutralino masses of = (8-155,
103-260, 130-473, 219-502) GeV and chargino masses of
= (104-259, 224-507) GeV
at the 95% confidence level. The lightest neutralino is mostly bino, with a
possible modest Higgsino or wino component. We find that this excess has a
combined local significance of , subject to a number of cautions. If
one includes LHC searches for charginos and neutralinos conducted with 8 TeV
proton-proton collision data, the local significance is lowered to 2.9.
We briefly consider the implications for dark matter, finding that the correct
relic density can be obtained through the Higgs-funnel and -funnel
mechanisms, even assuming that all other sparticles are decoupled. All samples,
gambit input files and best-fit models from this study are available on Zenodo.Comment: 38 pages, 16 figures, v3 is the version accepted by EPJ
Sources of Nonnative Centrarchids in the Upper Colorado River Revealed by Stable Isotope and Microchemical Analyses of Otoliths
Nonnative fishes represent a significant impediment to the recovery of imperiled fishes, including those endemic to the Colorado River in the southwestern United States. Efforts to control nonindigenous fish abundance in the upper Colorado River basin have been unsuccessful owing in part to lack of knowledge regarding nonnative fish recruitment sources. We determined the source habitat (floodplain pond versus riverine habitats) for nonnative centrarchid fishes (largemouth bass Micropterus salmoides, green sunfish Lepomis cyanellus, bluegill L. macrochirus, and black crappie Pomoxis nigromaculatus) in the upper Colorado River using stable hydrogen isotopic composition (δD) and strontium:calcium (Sr:Ca) ratios in fish otoliths as natural markers of environmental history. Stable hydrogen isotope analysis revealed that 59% of centrarchids exhibited the otolith core signatures expected for riverine-origin fish, while 22% had emigrated from floodplain ponds and 19% were of uncertain origin. Strontium:calcium ratio data were consistent with the δD assays and indicated that relatively few fish immigrated to the river from high-salinity habitats. Black crappie was the only species that originated primarily from floodplain ponds. Efforts to control the abundance of most of the fishes included in this study should be concentrated in riverine habitats given the hydrologic conditions (below-average river discharge) present during our study. However, the proportion of pond-origin fish increased with fish age, which, coupled with historical river discharge data, suggested that floodplain pond contributions to riverine nonnative fish populations fluctuate with the interannual variations in flow regime and river–pond connectivity. Our results are the first to demonstrate the utility of δD as a natural marker of fish environmental history that will probably provide valuable insights into the management of fish in other environments
Modifications of the BTZ black hole by a dilaton/scalar
We investigate some modifications of the static BTZ black hole solution due
to a chosen asymptotically constant dilaton/scalar. New classes of static black
hole solutions are obtained. One of the solutions contains the Martinez-Zanelli
conformal black hole solution as a special case. Using quasilocal formalism, we
calculate their mass for a finite spatial region that contains the black hole.
Their temperatures are also computed. Finally, using some of the curvature
singularities as examples, we investigate whether a quantum particle behaves
singularly or not.Comment: 18 pages, Latex, in press in Phys. Rev.
Shaping black holes with free fields
Starting from a metric Ansatz permitting a weak version of Birkhoff's theorem
we find static black hole solutions including matter in the form of free scalar
and p-form fields, with and without a cosmological constant \Lambda. Single
p-form matter fields permit multiple possibilities, including dyonic solutions,
self-dual instantons and metrics with Einstein-Kaelher horizons. The inclusion
of multiple p-forms on the other hand, arranged in a homogeneous fashion with
respect to the horizon geometry, permits the construction of higher dimensional
dyonic p-form black holes and four dimensional axionic black holes with flat
horizons, when \Lambda<0. It is found that axionic fields regularize black hole
solutions in the sense, for example, of permitting regular -- rather than
singular -- small mass Reissner-Nordstrom type black holes. Their cosmic string
and Vaidya versions are also obtained.Comment: 38 pages. v2: minor changes, published versio
Perturbations of Gauss-Bonnet Black Strings in Codimension-2 Braneworlds
We derive the Lichnerowicz equation in the presence of the Gauss-Bonnet term.
Using the modified Lichnerowicz equation we study the metric perturbations of
Gauss-Bonnet black strings in Codimension-2 Braneworlds.Comment: 26 pages, no figures, clarifying comments and one reference added, to
be published in JHE
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