349 research outputs found
Accelerating Dust Temperature Calculations with Graphics Processing Units
When calculating the infrared spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of
galaxies in radiation-transfer models, the calculation of dust grain
temperatures is generally the most time-consuming part of the calculation.
Because of its highly parallel nature, this calculation is perfectly suited for
massively parallel general-purpose Graphics Processing Units (GPUs). This paper
presents an implementation of the calculation of dust grain equilibrium
temperatures on GPUs in the Monte-Carlo radiation transfer code Sunrise, using
the CUDA API. The GPU can perform this calculation 69 times faster than the 8
CPU cores, showing great potential for accelerating calculations of galaxy
SEDs.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, accepted to New Astronomy. Minor updates to text
and performance based on feedback from refere
Simulations of Dust in Interacting Galaxies
A new Monte-Carlo radiative-transfer code, Sunrise, is used to study the
effects of dust in N-body/hydrodynamic simulations of interacting galaxies.
Dust has a profound effect on the appearance of the simulated galaxies. At peak
luminosities, about 90% of the bolometric luminosity is absorbed, and the dust
obscuration scales with luminosity in such a way that the brightness at
UV/visual wavelengths remains roughly constant. A general relationship between
the fraction of energy absorbed and the ratio of bolometric luminosity to
baryonic mass is found. Comparing to observations, the simulations are found to
follow a relation similar to the observed IRX-Beta relation found by Meurer et
al (1999) when similar luminosity objects are considered. The
highest-luminosity simulated galaxies depart from this relation and occupy the
region where local (U)LIRGs are found. This agreement is contingent on the
presence of Milky-Way-like dust, while SMC-like dust results in far too red a
UV continuum slope to match observations. The simulations are used to study the
performance of star-formation indicators in the presence of dust. The
far-infrared luminosity is found to be reliable. In contrast, the H-alpha and
far-UV luminosity suffer severely from dust attenuation, and dust corrections
can only partially remedy the situation.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the conference
"The Spectral Energy Distribution of Gas-Rich Galaxies", eds. C.C. Popescu &
R.J. Tuffs (Heidelberg, October 2004
The future of farm succession : how alternative financial solutions could facilitate Swedish farm successions
This thesis develops an understanding of how Swedish beginning farmers choose between different
sources of financing and examine how these preferences could be used in assessing a new alternative
financial solution to facilitate farm successions. This has been done through a qualitative case study
were six young farmers in the region of Mälardalen, facing a generational renewal, have been
interviewed. The new alternative financial solution assessed is a hybrid loan developed by a Swedish
start-up company, GĂĄrdskapital. Agency theory and the Pecking order theory are theories used to
give guidance in understanding the empirical findings. A net present value calculation is also made
to further strengthen the analysis of the novel funding solution.
Farmers in the EU are getting older and fewer young people are interested in becoming a farmer due
to several financial and socioeconomic aspects. Research shows that the different aspects constitute
a so-called young farmer problem in the EU that leads to fewer farm successions. The land
distribution moving the ownership from farmers to corporates or governments are also affecting the
generational renewal process and makes it harder for farmers to compete on the land prices. The
poor access to finance, due to low to zero track record of farming and low equity serve as other
barriers to entry for young prospective farmers. These entry barriers are prominent in Sweden too,
where the bank regulations are stricter than EU average. The issues of having difficulties in
accessing finance and the fact that a successful farm succession is based on an unfair monetarily
compensation opens for investigating alternative financial solutions that cater the social values of
ownership and which does not add on to the financial stress for the inheritor.
The respondents of the study emphasised the need for external financing and the impossibility of
acquiring the farm to market value and monetarily compensate their parents and siblings. Although,
ownership was seen as crucial to the willingness of taking over the farm due to less agency problems
and the access to future finance.
The study finds that the drivers for ownership of farmland is connected to social values rather than
direct financial incentives due to agency problems connected to the leasing of farmland and that it
may be less financially risky for the farmer to take a hybrid loan, but that it will have long-term
effects on the LTV. Further, the current generation and siblings may have to accept an unfair
monetary compensation if the social values of keeping the family farm exceeds the monetary value
Shapes of Stellar Systems and Dark Halos from Simulations of Galaxy Major Mergers
Using a sample of 89 snapshots from 58 hydrodynamic binary galaxy major
merger simulations, we find that stellar remnants are mostly oblate while dark
matter halos are mostly prolate or triaxial. The stellar minor axis and the
halo major axis are almost always nearly perpendicular. This can be understood
by considering the influence of angular momentum and dissipation during the
merger. If binary mergers of spiral galaxies are responsible for the formation
of elliptical galaxies or some subpopulation thereof, these galaxies can be
expected to be oblate and inhabit their halos with the predicted shapes and
orientations. These predictions are potentially relevant to observational
studies of weak gravitational lensing, where one must stack many optically
aligned galaxies in order to determine the shape of the resulting stacked mass
distribution. The simple relationship between the dark and luminous matter
presented here can be used to guide the stacking of galaxies to minimize the
information lost.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. Minor changes to match published versio
#museumgroupie Playful photography at the museum
This bachelor thesis aimed to develop an application which encourages documentation through photography at Universeum. Furthermore, the application aimed to support social interaction and enable sharing of the photographs. The project was carried out in collaboration with Museum 2020. The application was developed for Universeum, a museum and science centre in Gothenburg, Sweden. In order to motivate visitors to photograph at Universeum, gamification methods including feedback, reputation, rewards and progress have been used. Two prototypes were designed, tested and evaluated before the final application was implemented. The testing results indicated that by using the application the participants interacted together and photographed more at Universeum. However, these results must be interpreted with caution and further testing is required
Generating Hot Gas in Simulations of Disk-Galaxy Major Mergers
We report on the merger-induced generation of a shock-heated gas wind and
formation of a remnant gas halo in simulations of colliding disk galaxies. The
simulations use cosmologically motivated initial conditions and include the
effects of radiative cooling, star formation, stellar feedback and the
non-adiabatic heating of gas. The non-adiabatic heating, i.e. shocks, generated
in the final merger forces gas out of the central region of the merger remnant
and into the dark-matter halo. We demonstrate that the amount of heating
depends on the size of the progenitor disk galaxy as well as the initial orbit
the galaxies are placed on. Based upon these dependencies, we motivate a
possible recipe for including this effect in semi-analytic models of galaxy
formation.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, uses emulateapj.cls, submitted to ApJ Letter
The Effect of Mass Ratio on the Morphology and Time-scales of Disc Galaxy Mergers
The majority of galaxy mergers are expected to be minor mergers. The
observational signatures of minor mergers are not well understood, thus there
exist few constraints on the minor merger rate. This paper seeks to address
this gap in our understanding by determining if and when minor mergers exhibit
disturbed morphologies and how they differ from the morphology of major
mergers. We simulate a series of unequal-mass moderate gas-fraction disc galaxy
mergers. With the resulting g-band images, we determine how the time-scale for
identifying galaxy mergers via projected separation and quantitative morphology
(the Gini coefficient G, asymmetry A, and the second-order moment of the
brightest 20% of the light M20) depends on the merger mass ratio, relative
orientations and orbital parameters. We find that G-M20 is as sensitive to 9:1
baryonic mass ratio mergers as 1:1 mergers, with observability time-scales ~
0.2-0.4 Gyr. In contrast, asymmetry finds mergers with baryonic mass ratios
between 4:1 and 1:1 (assuming local disc galaxy gas-fractions). Asymmetry
time-scales for moderate gas-fraction major disc mergers are ~ 0.2-0.4 Gyr, and
less than 0.06 Gyr for moderate gas-fraction minor mergers. The relative
orientations and orbits have little effect on the time-scales for morphological
disturbances. Observational studies of close pairs often select major mergers
by choosing paired galaxies with similar luminosities and/or stellar masses.
Therefore, the various ways of finding galaxy mergers (G-M20, A, close pairs)
are sensitive to galaxy mergers of different mass ratios. By comparing the
frequency of mergers selected by different techniques, one may place empirical
constraints on the major and minor galaxy merger rates.Comment: 16 pages; resubmitted to MNRA
The Effect of Gas Fraction on the Morphology and Time-scales of Disc Galaxy Mergers
Gas-rich galaxy mergers are more easily identified by their disturbed
morphologies than mergers with less gas. Because the typical gas fraction of
galaxy mergers is expected to increase with redshift, the under-counting of low
gas-fraction mergers may bias morphological estimates of the evolution of
galaxy merger rate. To understand the magnitude of this bias, we explore the
effect of gas fraction on the morphologies of a series of simulated disc galaxy
mergers. With the resulting g-band images, we determine how the time-scale for
identifying major and minor galaxy mergers via close projected pairs and
quantitative morphology (the Gini coefficient G, the second-order moment of the
brightest 20% of the light M20, and asymmetry A) depends on baryonic gas
fraction f(gas). Strong asymmetries last significantly longer in high
gas-fraction mergers of all mass ratios, with time-scales ranging from >= 300
Myr for f(gas) ~ 20% to >= 1 Gyr for f(gas) ~ 50%. Therefore the strong
evolution with redshift observed in the fraction of asymmetric galaxies may
reflect evolution in the gas properties of galaxies rather than the global
galaxy merger rate. On the other hand, the time-scale for identifying a galaxy
merger via G-M20 is weakly dependent on gas-fraction (~ 200-400 Myr),
consistent with the weak evolution observed for G-M20 mergers.Comment: 15 pages; resubmitted to MNRA
Washington Park Main Street Plan
There is an immense variety of privately owned businesses. They will be stakeholders because their businesses are located there, but they will also be assets in themselves in drawing people to the area. There is basically everything anyone could possible want or need in this area. There are two gas stations, a Family Dollar, a liquor store, a few sit down restaurants, numerous places where one can get a quick bite to eat, a frame shop, a clothing store, a pawn shop, a store with fresh produce (which is hard to find in urban areas), a store that sells sports uniforms, a frame shop, a lawyerĘĽs office, an animal hospital, two Laundromats, a record shop, a health food store, two cell phone stores, an automotive shop, and a karate school with an afterschool program. With such variety, it will draw people to the area and then give them other reasons to keep coming back
The effect of galaxy mass ratio on merger--driven starbursts
We employ numerical simulations of galaxy mergers to explore the effect of
galaxy mass ratio on merger--driven starbursts. Our numerical simulations
include radiative cooling of gas, star formation, and stellar feedback to
follow the interaction and merger of four disk galaxies. The galaxy models span
a factor of 23 in total mass and are designed to be representative of typical
galaxies in the local Universe. We find that the merger--driven star formation
is a strong function of merger mass ratio, with very little, if any, induced
star formation for large mass ratio mergers. We define a burst efficiency that
is useful to characterize the merger--driven star formation and test that it is
insensitive to uncertainties in the feedback parameterization. In accord with
previous work we find that the burst efficiency depends on the structure of the
primary galaxy. In particular, the presence of a massive stellar bulge
stabilizes the disk and suppresses merger--driven star formation for large mass
ratio mergers. Direct, co--planar merging orbits produce the largest tidal
disturbance and yield that most intense burst of star formation. Contrary to
naive expectations, a more compact distribution of gas or an increased gas
fraction both decrease the burst efficiency. Owing to the efficient feedback
model and the newer version of SPH employed here, the burst efficiencies of the
mergers presented here are smaller than in previous studies.Comment: 26 pages, 21 figures, submitted to MNRA
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