8,291 research outputs found
Space telescope observatory management system preliminary test and verification plan
The preliminary plan for the Space Telescope Observatory Management System Test and Verification (TAV) is provided. Methodology, test scenarios, test plans and procedure formats, schedules, and the TAV organization are included. Supporting information is provided
The discovery of trapped energetic electrons in the outer cusp
We report on the POLAR/CEPPAD discovery of a trapped, 60°\u3cθ\u3c120° pitch angle electron population in the outer cusp (7−9+ Re), whose energetic electron component extends from below 30 keV to ∼2 MeV. Because the time variability in the outer cusp precludes mapping with POLAR, we have carried out test particle simulations using the Tsyganenko 1996 model (T96) to demonstrate the trapping of these energy electrons in the outer cusp region and the resonant frequencies of its trapped motion. We discuss the boundaries and regions of the cusp trap and show that it is analogous to the dipole trap. We show that the phase space densities observed there are equal or greater than the phase space densities observed in the radiation belts at constant magnetic moment, thus allowing the possibility of diffusive filling of the radiation belts from the cus
The evolution of the number density of compact galaxies
We compare the number density of compact (small size) massive galaxies at low
and high redshift using our Padova Millennium Galaxy and Group Catalogue
(PM2GC) at z=0.03-0.11 and the CANDELS results from Barro et al. (2013) at
z=1-2. The number density of local compact galaxies with luminosity weighted
(LW) ages compatible with being already passive at high redshift is compared
with the density of compact passive galaxies observed at high-z. Our results
place an upper limit of a factor ~2 to the evolution of the number density and
are inconsistent with a significant size evolution for most of the compact
galaxies observed at high-z. The evolution may be instead significant (up to a
factor 5) for the most extreme, ultracompact galaxies. Considering all compact
galaxies, regardless of LW age and star formation activity, a minority of local
compact galaxies (<=1/3) might have formed at z<1. Finally, we show that the
secular decrease of the galaxy stellar mass due to simple stellar evolution may
in some cases be a non-negligible factor in the context of the evolution of the
mass-size relation, and we caution that passive evolution in mass should be
taken into account when comparing samples at different redshifts.Comment: ApJ in pres
Exploring the Local Orthogonality Principle
Nonlocality is arguably one of the most fundamental and counterintuitive
aspects of quantum theory. Nonlocal correlations could, however, be even more
nonlocal than quantum theory allows, while still complying with basic physical
principles such as no-signaling. So why is quantum mechanics not as nonlocal as
it could be? Are there other physical or information-theoretic principles which
prohibit this? So far, the proposed answers to this question have been only
partially successful, partly because they are lacking genuinely multipartite
formulations. In Nat. Comm. 4, 2263 (2013) we introduced the principle of Local
Orthogonality (LO), an intrinsically multipartite principle which is satisfied
by quantum mechanics but is violated by non-physical correlations.
Here we further explore the LO principle, presenting new results and
explaining some of its subtleties. In particular, we show that the set of
no-signaling boxes satisfying LO is closed under wirings, present a
classification of all LO inequalities in certain scenarios, show that all
extremal tripartite boxes with two binary measurements per party violate LO,
and explain the connection between LO inequalities and unextendible product
bases.Comment: Typos corrected; data files uploade
Astrometric Discovery of GJ 164B
We discovered a low-mass companion to the M-dwarf GJ 164 with the CCD-based
imaging system of the Stellar Planet Survey (STEPS) astrometric program. The
existence of GJ 164B was confirmed with Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS imaging
observations. A high-dispersion spectral observation in V sets a lower limit of
delta m> 2.2 mag between the two components of the system. Based upon our
parallax value of 0.082 +/- 0.008, we derive the following orbital parameters:
P = 2.04 +/- 0.03 y, a = 1.03 +/- 0.03 AU, and Mtotal = 0.265 +/- 0.020 MSun.
The component masses are MA = 0.170 +/- 0.015 MSun and MB = 0.095 +/- 0.015
MSun. Based on its mass, colors, and spectral properties, GJ 164B has spectral
type M6-8 V.Comment: pdf file 14 pages with 6 fig
Emission Line Galaxies and Active Galactic Nuclei in WINGS clusters
We present the analysis of the emission line galaxies members of 46 low
redshift (0.04 < z < 0.07) clusters observed by WINGS (WIde-field Nearby Galaxy
cluster Survey, Fasano et al. 2006). Emission line galaxies were identified
following criteria that are meant to minimize biases against non-star forming
galaxies and classified employing diagnostic diagrams. We have examined the
emission line properties and frequencies of star forming galaxies, transition
objects and active galactic nuclei (AGNs: LINERs and Seyferts), unclassified
galaxies with emission lines, and quiescent galaxies with no detectable line
emission. A deficit of emission line galaxies in the cluster environment is
indicated by both a lower frequency with respect to control samples, and by a
systematically lower Balmer emission line equivalent width and luminosity (up
to one order of magnitude in equivalent width with respect to control samples
for transition objects) that implies a lower amount of ionised gas per unit
mass and a lower star formation rate if the source is classified as Hii region.
A sizable population of transition objects and of low-luminosity LINERs
(approx. 10 - 20% of all emission line galaxies) is detected among WINGS
cluster galaxies. With respect to Hii sources they are a factor of approx. 1.5
more frequent than (or at least as frequent as) in control samples. Transition
objects and LINERs in cluster are most affected in terms of line equivalent
width by the environment and appear predominantly consistent with "retired"
galaxies. Shock heating can be a possible gas excitation mechanism able to
account for observed line ratios. Specific to the cluster environment, we
suggest interaction between atomic and molecular gas and the intracluster
medium as a possible physical cause of line-emitting shocks.Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics, accepte
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