983 research outputs found
Koszul properties of the moment map of some classical representations
This work concerns the moment map associated with the standard
representation of a classical Lie algebra. For applications to deformation
quantization it is desirable that , the coordinate algebra of the zero
fibre of , be Koszul. The main result is that this algebra is not Koszul
for the standard representation of , and of
. This is deduced from a computation of the Betti numbers of
as an -module, which are of interest also from the point of view
of commutative algebra.Comment: Revised version. Differences to version 1: title slightly changed,
comments added at the end, minor revision
Star Formation in the Gulf of Mexico
We present an optical/infrared study of the dense molecular cloud, L935,
dubbed "The Gulf of Mexico", which separates the North America and the Pelican
nebulae, and we demonstrate that this area is a very active star forming
region. A wide-field imaging study with interference filters has revealed 35
new Herbig-Haro objects in the Gulf of Mexico. A grism survey has identified 41
Halpha emission-line stars, 30 of them new. A small cluster of partly embedded
pre-main sequence stars is located around the known LkHalpha 185-189 group of
stars, which includes the recently erupting FUor HBC 722.Comment: Submitted to A&A, 14 pages, 18 figure
Biases in Expansion Distances of Novae Arising from the Prolate Geometry of Nova Shells
(abridged) Expansion distances (or expansion parallaxes) for classical novae
are based on comparing a measurement of the shell expansion velocity,
multiplied by the time since outburst, with some measure of the angular size of
the shell. We review and formalize this method in the case of prolate
spheroidal shells. We present expressions for the maximum line-of-sight
velocity from a complete, expanding shell and for its projected major and minor
axes, in terms of the intrinsic axis ratio and the inclination of the polar
axis to the line of sight. For six distinct definitions of ``angular size'', we
tabulate the error in distance that is introduced under the assumption of
spherical symmetry (i.e., without correcting for inclination and axis ratio).
The errors can be significant and systematic, affecting studies of novae
whether considered individually or statistically. Each of the six estimators
overpredicts the distance when the polar axis is close to the line of sight,
and most underpredict the distance when the polar axis is close to the plane of
the sky. The straight mean of the projected semimajor and semiminor axes gives
the least distance bias for an ensemble of randomly oriented prolate shells.
The best individual expansion distances, however, result from a full
spatio-kinematic modeling of the nova shell. We discuss several practical
complications that affect expansion distance measurements of real nova shells.
Nova shell expansion distances be based on velocity and angular size
measurements made contemporaneously if possible, and the same ions and
transitions should be used for the imaging and velocity measurements. We
emphasize the need for complete and explicit reporting of measurement
procedures and results, regardless of the specific method used.Comment: 21 pages, LaTeX, uses aasms4.sty, to be published in Publ. Astron.
Soc. of the Pacific, May 200
Ab initio explanation of disorder and off-stoichiometry in Fe-Mn-Al-C kappa carbides
Carbides play a central role for the strength and ductility in many
materials. Simulating the impact of these precipitates on the mechanical
performance requires the knowledge about their atomic configuration. In
particular, the C content is often observed to substantially deviate from the
ideal stoichiometric composition. In the present work, we focus on Fe-Mn-Al-C
steels, for which we determined the composition of the nano-sized kappa
carbides (Fe,Mn)3AlC by atom probe tomography (APT) in comparison to larger
precipitates located in grain boundaries. Combining density functional theory
with thermodynamic concepts, we first determine the critical temperatures for
the presence of chemical and magentic disorder in these carbides. Secondly, the
experimentally observed reduction of the C content is explained as a compromise
between the gain in chemical energy during partitioning and the elastic strains
emerging in coherent microstructures
Pre-Main Sequence variables in the VMR-D : identification of T Tauri-like accreting protostars through Spitzer-IRAC variability
We present a study of the infrared variability of young stellar objects by
means of two Spitzer-IRAC images of the Vela Molecular Cloud D (VMR-D) obtained
in observations separated in time by about six months. By using the same
space-born IR instrumentation, this study eliminates all the unwanted effects
usually unavoidable when comparing catalogs obtained from different
instruments. The VMR-D map covers about 1.5 square deg. of a site where star
formation is actively ongoing. We are interested in accreting pre-main sequence
variables whose luminosity variations are due to intermittent events of disk
accretion (i.e. active T Tauri stars and EXor type objects). The variable
objects have been selected from a catalog of more than 170,000 sources detected
at a S/N ratio > 5. We searched the sample of variables for ones whose
photometric properties are close to those of known EXor's. These latter are
monitored in a more systematic way than T Tauri stars and the mechanisms that
regulate the observed phenomenology are exactly the same. Hence the modalities
of the EXor behavior is adopted as driving criterium for selecting variables in
general. We selected 19 bona fide candidates that constitute a well-defined
sample of new variable targets for further investigation. Out of these, 10
sources present a Spitzer MIPS 24 micron counterpart, and have been classified
as 3 Class I, 5 flat spectrum and 2 Class II objects, while the other 9 sources
have spectral energy distribution compatible with phases older than Class I.
This is consistent with what is known about the small sample of known EXor's,
and suggests that the accretion flaring or EXor stage might come as a Class
I/II transition. We present also new prescriptions that can be useful in future
searches for accretion variables in large IR databases.Comment: 35 pages, 12 figures To appear in Ap
Testing the Relation Between the Local and Cosmic Star Formation Histories
Recently, there has been great progress toward observationally determining
the mean star formation history of the universe. When accurately known, the
cosmic star formation rate could provide much information about Galactic
evolution, if the Milky Way's star formation rate is representative of the
average cosmic star formation history. A simple hypothesis is that our local
star formation rate is proportional to the cosmic mean. In addition, to specify
a star formation history, one must also adopt an initial mass function (IMF);
typically it is assumed that the IMF is a smooth function which is constant in
time. We show how to test directly the compatibility of all these assumptions,
by making use of the local (solar neighborhood) star formation record encoded
in the present-day stellar mass function. Present data suggests that at least
one of the following is false: (1) the local IMF is constant in time; (2) the
local IMF is a smooth (unimodal) function; and/or (3) star formation in the
Galactic disk was representative of the cosmic mean. We briefly discuss how to
determine which of these assumptions fail, and improvements in observations
which will sharpen this test.Comment: 14 pages in LaTeX (uses aaspp4.sty). 5 postscript figures. To appear
in the Astrophysical Journa
V1647 Ori (IRAS 05436-0007) in Outburst: the First Three Months
We report on photometric (BVRIJHK) and low dispersion spectroscopic
observations of V1647 Ori, the star that drives McNeil's Nebula, between 10
February and 7 May 2004. The star is photometrically variable atop a general
decline in brightness of about 0.3-0.4 magnitudes during these 87 days. The
spectra are featureless, aside from H-alpha and the Ca II infrared triplet in
emission, and a Na I D absorption feature. The Ca II triplet line ratios are
typical of young stellar objects. The H-alpha equivalent width may be modulated
on a period of about 60 days. The post-outburst extinction appears to be less
than 7 mag. The data are suggestive of an FU Orionis-like event, but further
monitoring will be needed to definitively characterize the outburst.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journa
Trajectories of Experience Through the Pandemic: A Qualitative Longitudinal Dataset
Here, we present a dataset collected within a longitudinal interview study that has been conducted as part of a larger project (i.e., Viral Communication), exploring (changing) public attitudes and behaviours through the course of the pandemic in Germany. From a nationally representative survey, forty participants were purposively sampled on the basis of gender, age and socioeconomic status for the interviews. Each participant was interviewed three times within a 10 month time frame (between December 2020 and September 2021), with the exception of two dropouts from the study. The semi-structured interviews were developed to further elaborate on some of the responses in the survey instrument and to provide additional insights into topics and controversies surrounding the Covid-19 pandemic in Germany, such as information/misinformation, trust/distrust, compliance, vaccination, and conspiracy beliefs
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