9,455 research outputs found

    Geometrical and spectral study of beta-skeleton graphs

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    We perform an extensive numerical analysis of beta-skeleton graphs, a particular type of proximity graphs. In beta-skeleton graph (BSG) two vertices are connected if a proximity rule, that depends of the parameter beta is an element of (0, infinity), is satisfied. Moreover, for beta > 1 there exist two different proximity rules, leading to lune-based and circle-based BSGs. First, by computing the average degree of large ensembles of BSGs we detect differences, which increase with the increase of beta, between lune-based and circle-based BSGs. Then, within a random matrix theory (RMT) approach, we explore spectral and eigenvector properties of random BSGs by the use of the nearest-neighbor energy-level spacing distribution and the entropic eigenvector localization length, respectively. The RMT analysis allows us to conclude that a localization transition occurs at beta = 1

    Bar pattern speed evolution over the last 7 Gyr

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    The tumbling pattern of a bar is the main parameter characterising its dynamics. From numerical simulations, its evolution since bar formation is tightly linked to the dark halo in which the bar is formed through dynamical friction and angular momentum exchange. Observational measurements of the bar pattern speed with redshift can restrict models of galaxy formation and bar evolution. We aim to determine, for the first time, the bar pattern speed evolution with redshift based on morphological measurements. We have selected a sample of 44 low inclination ringed galaxies from the SDSS and COSMOS surveys covering the redshift range 0 <z< 0.8 to investigate the evolution of the bar pattern speed. We have derived morphological ratios between the deprojected outer ring radius (R_{ring}) and the bar size (R_{bar}). This quantity is related to the parameter {\cal R}=R_{CR}/R_{bar} used for classifiying bars in slow and fast rotators, and allow us to investigate possible differences with redshift. We obtain a similar distribution of RR at all redshifts. We do not find any systematic effect that could be forcing this result. The results obtained here are compatible with both, the bulk of the bar population (~70%) being fast-rotators and no evolution of the pattern speed with redshift. We argue that if bars are long-lasting structures, the results presented here imply that there has not been a substantial angular momentum exchange between the bar and halo, as predicted by numerical simulations. In consequence, this might imply that the discs of these high surface-brightness galaxies are maximal.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&

    Shear localization as a mesoscopic stress-relaxation mechanism in fused silica glass at high strain rates

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    Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of fused silica glass deforming in pressure-shear, while revealing useful insights into processes unfolding at the atomic level, fail spectacularly in that they grossly overestimate the magnitude of the stresses relative to those observed, e. g., in plate-impact experiments. We interpret this gap as evidence of relaxation mechanisms that operate at mesoscopic lengthscales and which, therefore, are not taken into account in atomic-level calculations. We specifically hypothesize that the dominant mesoscopic relaxation mechanism is shear banding. We evaluate this hypothesis by first generating MD data over the relevant range of temperature and strain rate and then carrying out continuum shear-banding calculations in a plate-impact configuration using a critical-state plasticity model fitted to the MD data. The main outcome of the analysis is a knock-down factor due to shear banding that effectively brings the predicted level of stress into alignment with experimental observation, thus resolving the predictive gap of MD calculations

    The structures underlying soliton solutions in integrable hierarchies

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    We point out that a common feature of integrable hierarchies presenting soliton solutions is the existence of some special ``vacuum solutions'' such that the Lax operators evaluated on them, lie in some abelian subalgebra of the associated Kac-Moody algebra. The soliton solutions are constructed out of those ``vacuum solitons'' by the dressing transformation procedure.Comment: Talk given at the I Latin American Symposium on High Energy Physics, I SILAFAE, Merida, Mexico, November/96, 5 pages, LaTeX, needs aipproc.tex, aipproc.sty, aipproc.cls, available from ftp://ftp.aip.org/ems/tex/macros/proceedings/6x9

    Structural properties of disk galaxies I. The intrinsic ellipticity of bulges

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    (Abridged) A variety of formation scenarios was proposed to explain the diversity of properties observed in bulges. Studying their intrinsic shape can help in constraining the dominant mechanism at the epochs of their assembly. The structural parameters of a magnitude-limited sample of 148 unbarred S0--Sb galaxies were derived in order to study the correlations between bulges and disks as well as the probability distribution function (PDF) of the intrinsic equatorial ellipticity of bulges. It is presented a new fitting algorithm (GASP2D) to perform the two-dimensional photometric decomposition of galaxy surface-brightness distribution. This was assumed to be the sum of the contribution of a bulge and disk component characterized by elliptical and concentric isophotes with constant (but possibly different) ellipticity and position angles. Bulge and disk parameters of the sample galaxies were derived from the J-band images which were available in the Two Micron All Sky Survey. The PDF of the equatorial ellipticity of the bulges was derived from the distribution of the observed ellipticities of bulges and misalignments between bulges and disks. Strong correlations between the bulge and disk parameters were found. About 80% of bulges in unbarred lenticular and early-to-intermediate spiral galaxies are not oblate but triaxial ellipsoids. Their mean axial ratio in the equatorial plane is = 0.85. There is not significant dependence of their PDF on morphology, light concentration, and luminosity. The interplay between bulge and disk parameters favors scenarios in which bulges assembled from mergers and/or grew over long times through disk secular evolution. But all these mechanisms have to be tested against the derived distribution of bulge intrinsic ellipticities.Comment: 24 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, corrected proof

    Weighted random--geometric and random--rectangular graphs: Spectral and eigenfunction properties of the adjacency matrix

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    Within a random-matrix-theory approach, we use the nearest-neighbor energy level spacing distribution P(s)P(s) and the entropic eigenfunction localization length ℓ\ell to study spectral and eigenfunction properties (of adjacency matrices) of weighted random--geometric and random--rectangular graphs. A random--geometric graph (RGG) considers a set of vertices uniformly and independently distributed on the unit square, while for a random--rectangular graph (RRG) the embedding geometry is a rectangle. The RRG model depends on three parameters: The rectangle side lengths aa and 1/a1/a, the connection radius rr, and the number of vertices NN. We then study in detail the case a=1a=1 which corresponds to weighted RGGs and explore weighted RRGs characterized by a∼1a\sim 1, i.e.~two-dimensional geometries, but also approach the limit of quasi-one-dimensional wires when a≫1a\gg1. In general we look for the scaling properties of P(s)P(s) and ℓ\ell as a function of aa, rr and NN. We find that the ratio r/Nγr/N^\gamma, with γ(a)≈−1/2\gamma(a)\approx -1/2, fixes the properties of both RGGs and RRGs. Moreover, when a≥10a\ge 10 we show that spectral and eigenfunction properties of weighted RRGs are universal for the fixed ratio r/CNγr/{\cal C}N^\gamma, with C≈a{\cal C}\approx a.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure

    The intrinsic three-dimensional shape of galactic bars

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    We present the first statistical study on the intrinsic three-dimensional (3D) shape of a sample of 83 galactic bars extracted from the CALIFA survey. We use the galaXYZ code to derive the bar intrinsic shape with a statistical approach. The method uses only the geometric information (ellipticities and position angles) of bars and discs obtained from a multi-component photometric decomposition of the galaxy surface-brightness distributions. We find that bars are predominantly prolate-triaxial ellipsoids (68%), with a small fraction of oblate-triaxial ellipsoids (32%). The typical flattening (intrinsic C/A semiaxis ratio) of the bars in our sample is 0.34, which matches well the typical intrinsic flattening of stellar discs at these galaxy masses. We demonstrate that, for prolate-triaxial bars, the intrinsic shape of bars depends on the galaxy Hubble type and stellar mass (bars in massive S0 galaxies are thicker and more circular than those in less massive spirals). The bar intrinsic shape correlates with bulge, disc, and bar parameters. In particular with the bulge-to-total (B/T) luminosity ratio, disc g-r color, and central surface brightness of the bar, confirming the tight link between bars and their host galaxies. Combining the probability distributions of the intrinsic shape of bulges and bars in our sample we show that 52% (16%) of bulges are thicker (flatter) than the surrounding bar at 1σ\sigma level. We suggest that these percentages might be representative of the fraction of classical and disc-like bulges in our sample, respectively.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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