45 research outputs found
Relativistic electronic dressing in laser-assisted ionization of atomic hydrogen by electron impact
Within the framework of the coplanar binary geometry where it is justified to
use plane wave solutions for the study of the reaction and in the
presence of a circularly polarized laser field, we introduce as a first step
the DVRPWBA1 (Dirac-Volkov Plane Wave Born Approximation1) where we take into
account only the relativistic dressing of the incident and scattered electrons.
Then, we introduce the DVRPWBA2 (Dirac-Volkov Plane Wave Born Approximation2)
where we take totally into account the relativistic dressing of the incident,
scattered and ejected electrons. We then compare the corresponding triple
differential cross sections for laser-assisted ionization of atomic hydrogen by
electron impact both for the non relativistic and the relativistic regime.Comment: 18 pages, Latex, 7 figure
Low-mass pre--main-sequence stars in the Magellanic Clouds
[Abridged] The stellar Initial Mass Function (IMF) suggests that sub-solar
stars form in very large numbers. Most attractive places for catching low-mass
star formation in the act are young stellar clusters and associations, still
(half-)embedded in star-forming regions. The low-mass stars in such regions are
still in their pre--main-sequence (PMS) evolutionary phase. The peculiar nature
of these objects and the contamination of their samples by the evolved
populations of the Galactic disk impose demanding observational techniques for
the detection of complete numbers of PMS stars in the Milky Way. The Magellanic
Clouds, the companion galaxies to our own, demonstrate an exceptional star
formation activity. The low extinction and stellar field contamination in
star-forming regions of these galaxies imply a more efficient detection of
low-mass PMS stars than in the Milky Way, but their distance from us make the
application of special detection techniques unfeasible. Nonetheless, imaging
with the Hubble Space Telescope yield the discovery of solar and sub-solar PMS
stars in the Magellanic Clouds from photometry alone. Unprecedented numbers of
such objects are identified as the low-mass stellar content of their
star-forming regions, changing completely our picture of young stellar systems
outside the Milky Way, and extending the extragalactic stellar IMF below the
persisting threshold of a few solar masses. This review presents the recent
developments in the investigation of PMS stars in the Magellanic Clouds, with
special focus on the limitations by single-epoch photometry that can only be
circumvented by the detailed study of the observable behavior of these stars in
the color-magnitude diagram. The achieved characterization of the low-mass PMS
stars in the Magellanic Clouds allowed thus a more comprehensive understanding
of the star formation process in our neighboring galaxies.Comment: Review paper, 26 pages (in LaTeX style for Springer journals), 4
figures. Accepted for publication in Space Science Review
The IMF in Starbursts
The history of the IMF in starburst regions is reviewed. The IMFs are no
longer believed to be top-heavy, although some superstar clusters, whether in
starburst regions or not, could be. General observations of the IMF are
discussed to put the starburst results in perspective. Observed IMF variations
seem to suggest that the IMF varies a little with environment in the sense that
denser and more massive clusters produce more massive stars, and perhaps more
brown dwarfs too, compared to intermediate mass stars.Comment: 8 pages, to be published in ``Starbursts: from 30 Doradus to Lyman
Break Galaxies,'' held at Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge University, UK,
September 6-10, 2004. Kluwer Academic Publishers, edited by Richard de Grijs
and Rosa M. Gonzalez Delgad
Cluster Density and the IMF
Observed variations in the IMF are reviewed with an emphasis on environmental
density. The remote field IMF studied in the LMC by several authors is clearly
steeper than most cluster IMFs, which have slopes close to the Salpeter value.
Local field regions of star formation, like Taurus, may have relatively steep
IMFs too. Very dense and massive clusters, like super star clusters, could have
flatter IMFs, or inner-truncated IMFs. We propose that these variations are the
result of three distinct processes during star formation that affect the mass
function in different ways depending on mass range. At solar to intermediate
stellar masses, gas processes involving thermal pressure and supersonic
turbulence determine the basic scale for stellar mass, starting with the
observed pre-stellar condensations, and they define the mass function from
several tenths to several solar masses. Brown dwarfs require extraordinarily
high pressures for fragmentation from the gas, and presumably form inside the
pre-stellar condensations during mutual collisions, secondary fragmentations,
or in disks. High mass stars form in excess of the numbers expected from pure
turbulent fragmentation as pre-stellar condensations coalesce and accrete with
an enhanced gravitational cross section. Variations in the interaction rate,
interaction strength, and accretion rate among the primary fragments formed by
turbulence lead to variations in the relative proportions of brown dwarfs,
solar to intermediate mass stars, and high mass stars.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, to be published in ``IMF@50: A Fest-Colloquium
in honor of Edwin E. Salpeter,'' held at Abbazia di Spineto, Siena, Italy,
May 16-20, 2004. Kluwer Academic Publishers; edited by E. Corbelli, F. Palla,
and H. Zinnecke
Revealing the properties of dark matter in the merging cluster MACS J0025.4-1222
We constrain the physical nature of dark matter using the newly identified massive merging galaxy cluster MACS J0025.4–1222. As was previously shown by the example of the Bullet Cluster (1E 0657–56), such systems are ideal laboratories for detecting isolated dark matter and distinguishing between cold dark matter (CDM) and other scenarios (e.g., self-interacting dark matter, alternative gravity theories). MACS J0025.4–1222 consists of two merging subclusters of similar richness at z = 0.586. We measure the distribution of X-ray-emitting gas from Chandra X-ray data and find it to be clearly displaced from the distribution of galaxies. A strong (information from highly distorted arcs) and weak (using weakly distorted background galaxies) gravitational lensing analysis based on Hubble Space Telescope observations and Keck arc spectroscopy confirms that the subclusters have near-equal mass. The total mass distribution in each of the subclusters is clearly offset (at >4 σ significance) from the peak of the hot X-ray-emitting gas (the main baryonic component) but aligned with the distribution of galaxies. We measure the fractions of mass in hot gas (0.09+ 0.07−0.03) and stars (0.010+ 0.007−0.004), consistent with those of typical clusters, finding that dark matter is the dominant contributor to the gravitational field. Under the assumption that the subclusters experienced a head-on collision in the plane of the sky, we obtain an order-of-magnitude estimate of the dark matter self-interaction cross section of σ/m < 4 cm 2 g−1, reaffirming the results from the Bullet Cluster on the collisionless nature of dark matter
Improved Cryptanalysis of the Self-Shrinking Generator
. We propose a new attack on the self-shrinking generator [8]
New Guess-and-Determine Attack on the Self-Shrinking Generator
We propose a new type of guess-and-determine attack on the self-shrinking generator (SSG). The inherent flexibility of the new attack enables us to deal with different attack conditions and requirements smoothly. For the SSG with a length L LFSR of arbitrary form, our attack can reliably restore the initial state with time complexit