1,764 research outputs found
Observational Test of Environmental Effects on The Local Group Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies
In this paper, we examine whether tidal forces exerted by the Galaxy or M31
have an influence on the Local Group dwarf spheroidal galaxies (dSphs) which
are their companions. We focus on the surface brightness profiles of the dSphs,
especially their core radii because it is suggested based on the numerical
simulations that tidal disturbance can make core radii extended. We examine the
correlation for the dSphs between the distances from their parent galaxy (the
Galaxy or M31) and the compactnesses of their surface brightness profiles by
using a parameter ``C'' defined newly in this paper. Consequently, we find no
significant correlation. We make some remarks on the origin of this result by
considering three possible scenarios; tidal picture, dark matter picture, and
heterogeneity of the group of dSphs, each of which has been often discussed to
understand fundamental properties and formation processes of dSphs.Comment: 14 pages LaTeX, 2 PostScript figures, to appear in ApJ Letter
The Wendelstein Calar Alto Pixellensing Project (WeCAPP): the M31 Nova catalogue
We present light curves from the novae detected in the long-term, M31
monitoring WeCAPP project. The goal of WeCAPP is to constrain the compact dark
matter fraction of the M31 halo with microlensing observations. As a by product
we have detected 91 novae benefiting from the high cadence and highly sensitive
difference imaging technique required for pixellensing. We thus can now present
the largest CCD and optical filters based nova light curve sample up-to-date
towards M31. We also obtained thorough coverage of the light curve before and
after the eruption thanks to the long-term monitoring. We apply the nova
taxonomy proposed by Strope et al. (2010) to our nova candidates and found 29
S-class novae, 10 C-class novae, 2 O-class novae and 1 J-class nova. We have
investigated the universal decline law advocated by Hachichu and Kato (2006) on
the S-class novae. In addition, we correlated our catalogue with the literature
and found 4 potential recurrent novae. Part of our catalogue has been used to
search for optical counter-parts of the super soft X-ray sources detected in
M31 (Pietsch et al. 2005). Optical surveys like WeCAPP, and coordinated with
multi-wavelength observation, will continue to shed light on the underlying
physical mechanism of novae in the future.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures, 7 tables, A&A accepted for publication. The
appendix is stored in the Data Conservanc
Central rotations of Milky Way Globular Clusters
Most Milky Way globular clusters (GCs) exhibit measurable flattening, even if
on a very low level. Both cluster rotation and tidal fields are thought to
cause this flattening. Nevertheless, rotation has only been confirmed in a
handful of GCs, based mostly on individual radial velocities at large radii. We
are conducting a survey of the central kinematics of Galactic GCs using the new
Integral Field Unit instrument VIRUS-W. We detect rotation in all 11 GCs that
we have observed so far, rendering it likely that a large majority of the Milky
Way GCs rotate. We use published catalogs of the ACS survey of GCs to derive
central ellipticities and position angles. We show that in all cases where the
central ellipticity permits an accurate measurement of the position angle,
those angles are in excellent agreement with the kinematic position angles that
we derive from the VIRUS-W velocity fields. We find an unexpected tight
correlation between central rotation and outer ellipticity, indicating that
rotation drives flattening for the objects in our sample. We also find a tight
correlation between central rotation and published values for the central
velocity dispersion, most likely due to rotation impacting the old dispersion
measurements.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures; accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
The old and heavy bulge of M31 I. Kinematics and stellar populations
We present new optical long-slit data along 6 position angles of the bulge
region of M31. We derive accurate stellar and gas kinematics reaching 5 arcmin
from the center, where the disk light contribution is always less than 30%, and
out to 8 arcmin along the major axis, where the disk makes 55% of the total
light. We show that the velocity dispersions of McElroy (1983) are severely
underestimated (by up to 50 km/s) and previous dynamical models have
underestimated the stellar mass of M31's bulge by a factor 2. Moreover, the
light-weighted velocity dispersion of the galaxy grows to 166 km/s, thus
reducing the discrepancy between the predicted and measured mass of the black
hole at the center of M31. The kinematic position angle varies with distance,
pointing to triaxiality. We detect gas counterrotation near the bulge minor
axis. We measure eight emission-corrected Lick indices. They are approximately
constant on circles. We derive the age, metallicity and alpha-element
overabundance profiles. Except for the region in the inner arcsecs of the
galaxy, the bulge of M31 is uniformly old (>12 Gyr, with many best-fit ages at
the model grid limit of 15 Gyr), slightly alpha-elements overabundant
([alpha/Fe]~0.2) and at solar metallicity, in agreement with studies of the
resolved stellar components. The predicted u-g, g-r and r-i Sloan color
profiles match reasonably well the dust-corrected observations. The stellar
populations have approximately radially constant mass-to-light ratios (M/L_R ~
4-4.5 for a Kroupa IMF), in agreement with stellar dynamical estimates based on
our new velocity dispersions. In the inner arcsecs the luminosity-weighted age
drops to 4-8 Gyr, while the metallicity increases to above 3 times the solar
value.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Analysis of linearized inverse problems in ultrasound transmission imaging
The purpose of this paper is to analyze the linearized inverse problem during the iterativesolution process of the ill-posed nonlinear inverse problem of image reconstruction for ultra-sound transmission imaging. We show that the conjugate gradient applied to normal equation(CGNE) method gives more reliable solutions for linearized systems than Tikhonov regular-ization methods. The linearized systems are more sensitive when treated by CGNE than byTikhonov regularization methods. The Tikhonov regularization is less effective at the be-ginning of the outer-loop iteration, where the nonlinearity is dominating while the conjugategradient for the linearized system stops earlier. Only when the linear approximation is goodenough to describe the whole system, Tikhonov regularization can fully play its role and giveslightly better reconstruction results as compared to CGNE in a very noisy case
Properties of Galaxies in and around Voids
Two surveys for intrinsically faint galaxies towards nearby voids have been
conducted at the MPI f\"ur Astronomie, Heidelberg. One selected targets from a
new diameter limited () catalog with morphological criteria while
the other used digitized objective prism Schmidt plates to select mainly HII
dwarf galaxies. For some 450 galaxies, redshifts and other optical data were
obtained. We studied the spatial distribution of the sample objects, their
luminosity function, and their intrinsic properties. Most of the galaxies
belong to already well known sheets and filaments. But we found about a dozen
highly isolated galaxies in each sample (nearest neighborhood distance ). These tend to populate additional structures and are not
distributed homogeneously throughout the voids. As our results on 'void
galaxies' still suffer from small sample statistics, I also tried to combine
similar existing surveys of nearby voids to get further hints on the larger
structure and on the luminosity function of the isolated galaxies. No
differences in the luminosity function of sheet and void galaxies could be
found. The optical and infrared properties of both samples are in the normal
range for samples dominated by late-type dwarfs. Follow-up HI studies show that
the isolated dwarfs in both samples have unusual high amount of neutral gas for
a given luminosity.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, latex, to appear in the proceedings of the
'Ringberg workshop on Large Scale Structure', hold Sep. 23-28, 199
Physics, Stability and Dynamics of Supply Networks
We show how to treat supply networks as physical transport problems governed
by balance equations and equations for the adaptation of production speeds.
Although the non-linear behaviour is different, the linearized set of coupled
differential equations is formally related to those of mechanical or electrical
oscillator networks. Supply networks possess interesting new features due to
their complex topology and directed links. We derive analytical conditions for
absolute and convective instabilities. The empirically observed "bull-whip
effect" in supply chains is explained as a form of convective instability based
on resonance effects. Moreover, it is generalized to arbitrary supply networks.
Their related eigenvalues are usually complex, depending on the network
structure (even without loops). Therefore, their generic behavior is
characterized by oscillations. We also show that regular distribution networks
possess two negative eigenvalues only, but perturbations generate a spectrum of
complex eigenvalues.Comment: For related work see http://www.helbing.or
SBS 0335-052W - an Extremely Low Metallicity Dwarf Galaxy
We present Multiple Mirror Telescope (MMT) and Keck II telescope
spectrophotometry and 3.5m Calar Alto telescope R, I photometry of the western
component of the extremely low-metallicity blue compact galaxy SBS 0335-052.
The components, separated by 22 kpc, appear to be members of a unique,
physically connected system. It is shown that SBS 0335-052W consists of at
least three stellar clusters and has the same redshift as SBS 0335-052. The
oxygen abundance in its two brightest knots is extremely low, 12+log(O/H)=
7.22+/-0.03 and 7.13+/-0.08, respectively. These values are lower than in SBS
0335-052 and are nearly the same as those in I Zw 18. The (R-I) color profiles
are very blue in both galaxies due to the combined effects of ionized gas and a
young stellar population emission. We argue that SBS 0335-052W is likely to be
a nearby, young dwarf galaxy.Comment: 18 pages, 4 EPS figures, to appear in ApJ, 1 July 199
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