1,154 research outputs found
Towards the First Galaxies
The formation of the first galaxies at redshifts z~10-15 signaled the
transition from the simple initial state of the universe to one of ever
increasing complexity. We here review recent progress in understanding their
assembly process with numerical simulations, starting with cosmological initial
conditions and modelling the detailed physics of star formation. In particular,
we study the role of HD cooling in ionized primordial gas, the impact of UV
radiation produced by the first stars, and the propagation of the supernova
blast waves triggered at the end of their brief lives. We conclude by
discussing promising observational diagnostics that will allow us to probe the
properties of the first galaxies, such as their contribution to reionization
and the chemical abundance pattern observed in extremely low-metallicity stars.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figures, appeared in "First Stars III", eds. B. O'Shea,
A. Heger and T. Abel, a high resolution version (highly recommended) can be
found at http://www.ita.uni-heidelberg.de/~tgreif/files/gjb07.pd
Is the Two Micron all Sky Survey Clustering Dipole Convergent?
There is a long-standing controversy about the convergence of the dipole moment of the galaxy angular distribution
(the so-called clustering dipole). Is the dipole convergent at all, and if so, what is the scale of the convergence?
We study the growth of the clustering dipole of galaxies as a function of the limiting flux of the sample from the
Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS). Contrary to some earlier claims, we find that the dipole does not converge
before the completeness limit of the 2MASS Extended Source Catalog, i.e., up to 13.5 mag in the near-infrared K_s
band (equivalent to an effective distance of 300 Mpc h
^(−1)). We compare the observed growth of the dipole with the theoretically expected, conditional one (i.e., given the velocity of the Local Group relative to the cosmic microwave background), for the ΛCDM power spectrum and cosmological parameters constrained by the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe. The observed growth turns out to be within 1σ confidence level of its theoretical counterpart once the proper observational window of the 2MASS flux-limited catalog is included. For a contrast, if the adopted window is a top hat, then the predicted dipole grows significantly faster and converges (within the errors) to its final value for a distance of about 300 Mpc h
^(−1). By comparing the observational windows, we show that for a given flux limit and a corresponding distance limit, the 2MASS flux-weighted window passes less large-scale signal than the top-hat one. We conclude that the growth of the 2MASS dipole for effective distances greater than 200 Mpc h^(−1) is only apparent. On the other hand, for a distance of 80 Mpc h^(−1) (mean depth of the 2MASS Redshift Survey) and the ΛCDM power spectrum, the true dipole is expected to reach only ~80% of its final value. Eventually, since for the window function of 2MASS the predicted growth is consistent with the observed one, we can compare the
two to evaluate β ≡ Ω^(0.55)_m /b. The result is β = 0.38 ± 0.04, which leads to an estimate of the density parameter
Ω_m = 0.20 ± 0.08
Petrographic and Core Analysis of the Jurassic Norphlet Formation: A Case Study in the Lithofacies Control of Diagenesis and Porosity in the Flomaton Field, AL
This study includes a sedimentologic and petrographic study of cores and thin-sections from the Jurassic Norphlet Formation in the Flomaton Field in southern Alabama to define a specific paragenetic history of each facies encountered and to identify key controls on reservoir quality. Eolian dune, nearshore, sand flat, and wadi facies were likely encountered in Norphlet core and thin-section samples that displayed a high degree of heterogeneity between them in terms of porosity, grain contacts, cement abundance/type, intergranular volume, and overall diagenetic processes. These distinct petrographic differences suggest that the paragenesis in the Flomaton Field is primarily facies controlled. The eolian dune facies, which serves as a significant oil and gas reservoir in the Norphlet Formation, exhibits a mean porosity of 16% despite being buried to depths exceeding 16,000 feet in southern Alabama. This preservation of porosity likely resulted from an introduction of a halite cement, prior to compaction, that tended to keep the grains apart during eogenesis, but was later removed due to dissolution resulting from migrating fluids associated with hydrocarbon charging of the Norphlet reservoir.
Authigenic clay coats are present in the eolian dune and sand flat facies but they are not suggested to be the primary factor in porosity preservation as they were in the Norphlet Formation of Mobile Bay. In the up-dip Flomaton Field, saline groundwater was closer to the surface than the down-dip Mobile Bay Field which inhibited vegetation growth. This resulted in more active dunes and increased sand grain remobilization that led to increased clay coat abrasion and hence, discontinuous to no clay coat formation
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The First Supernova Explosions: Energetics, Feedback, And Chemical Enrichment
We perform three-dimensional smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations in a realistic cosmological setting to investigate the expansion, feedback, and chemical enrichment properties of a 200M(circle dot) pair-instability supernova in the high-redshift universe. We find that the SN remnant propagates for a Hubble time at z similar or equal to 20 to a final mass-weighted mean shock radius of 2.5 kpc (proper), roughly half the size of the H II region, and in this process sweeps up a total gas mass of 2: 5; 10(5) M-circle dot. The morphology of the shock becomes highly anisotropic once it leaves the host halo and encounters filaments and neighboring minihalos, while the bulk of the shock propagates into the voids of the intergalactic medium. The SN entirely disrupts the host halo and terminates further star formation for at least 200 Myr, while in our specific case it exerts positive mechanical feedback on neighboring minihalos by shock-compressing their cores. In contrast, we do not observe secondary star formation in the dense shell via gravitational fragmentation, due to the previous photoheating by the progenitor star. We find that cooling by metal lines is unimportant for the entire evolution of the SN remnant, while the metal-enriched, interior bubble expands adiabatically into the cavities created by the shock, and ultimately into the voids with a maximum extent similar to the final mass-weighted mean shock radius. Finally, we conclude that dark matter halos of at least M-vir greater than or similar to 10(8) M-circle dot must be assembled to recollect all components of the swept-up gas.Astronom
Radio astronomy in Africa: the case of Ghana
South Africa has played a leading role in radio astronomy in Africa with the
Hartebeesthoek Radio Astronomy Observatory (HartRAO). It continues to make
strides with the current seven-dish MeerKAT precursor array (KAT-7), leading to
the 64-dish MeerKAT and the giant Square Kilometer Array (SKA), which will be
used for transformational radio astronomy research. Ghana, an African partner
to the SKA, has been mentored by South Africa over the past six years and will
soon emerge in the field of radio astronomy. The country will soon have a
science-quality 32m dish converted from a redundant satellite communication
antenna. Initially, it will be fitted with 5 GHz and 6.7 GHz receivers to be
followed later by a 1.4 - 1.7 GHz receiver. The telescope is being designed for
use as a single dish observatory and for participation in the developing
African Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) Network (AVN) and the European
VLBI Network. Ghana is earmarked to host a remote station during a possible SKA
Phase 2. The location of the country on 5 degree north of the Equator gives it
the distinct advantage of viewing the entire plane of the Milky Way galaxy and
nearly the whole sky. In this article, we present the case of Ghana in the
radio astronomy scene and the science/technology that will soon be carried out
by engineers and astronomers.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, Full Referred Journal Article accepted for
publication in the South African Institute of Physics (SAIP 2014) Conference
Proceeding
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