468 research outputs found

    Lopsided spiral galaxies: evidence for gas accretion

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    We quantify the degree of lopsidedness for a sample of 149 galaxies observed in the near-infrared from the OSUBGS sample, and try to explain the physical origin for the observed disk lopsidedness. We confirm previous studies, but now for a larger sample, that a large fraction of galaxies show significant lopsidedness in their stellar disks, measured as the Fourier amplitude of the m=1 component, normalised to the average or m=0 component, in the surface density. Late-type galaxies are found to be more lopsided, while the presence of m=2 spiral arms and bars is correlated. The m=1 amplitude is found to be uncorrelated with the tidal forces acting on a galaxy via nearby companions. Numerical simulations are carried out to study the generation of m=1 via different processes: galaxy tidal encounters, galaxy mergers, and external gas accretion and subsequent star formation. The simulations show that galaxy interactions and mergers can trigger strong lopsidedness, but do not explain several independent statistical properties of observed galaxies. To explain all the observational results, it is required that a large fraction of lopsidedness results from cosmological accretion of gas on galactic disks, which can create strongly lopsided disks when this accretion is asymmetrical enough.Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics - Final version after language editio

    Tidally Compressed Gas in Centers of Early Type and Ultraluminous Galaxies

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    In this paper we propose that the compressive tidal field in the centers of flat-core early type galaxies and ultraluminous galaxies compresses molecular clouds producing dense gas obseved in the centers of these galaxies. The effect of galactic tidal fields is usually considered disruptive in the literature. However, for some galaxies, the mass profile flattens towards the center and the resulting galactic tidal field is not disruptive but instead it is compressive within the flat-core region. We have used the virial theorem to determine the minimum density of a molecular cloud to be stable and gravitationally bound within the tidally compressive region of a galaxy. We have applied the mechanism to determine the mean molecular cloud densities in the centers of a sample of flat-core, early-type galaxies and ultraluminous galaxies.Comment: 18 latex pages and uses aaspp4.sty, accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journa

    Origin of Radially Increasing Stellar Scaleheight in a Galactic Disk

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    For the past twenty years, it has been accepted that the vertical scaleheight of the stellar disk in spiral galaxies is constant with radius. However, there is no clear physical explanation for this in the literature. Here we calculate the vertical stellar scaleheight for a self-gravitating stellar disk including the additional gravitational force of the HI and H_2 gas and the dark matter halo. We apply our model to two edge-on galaxies, NGC 891 and NGC 4565, and find that the resulting scaleheight shows a linear increase of nearly a factor of two within the optical disk for both these galaxies. Interestingly, we show that the observed data when looked at closely, do not imply a constant scaleheight but actually support this moderate flaring in scaleheight.Comment: 8 pages, 4 .EPS figures, Astron. & Astrophys Letters, In press (Vol 390, L35 - L38

    Origin of Disc Lopsidedness in the Eridanus Group of Galaxies

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    The HI surface density maps for a sample of 18 galaxies in the Eridanus group are Fourier analysed. This analysis gives the radial variation of the lopsidedness in the HI spatial distribution. The lopsidedness is quantified by the Fourier amplitude A1A_1 of the m=1m=1 component normalized to the average value. It is also shown that in the radial region where the stellar disc and HI overlap, their A1A_1 coefficients are comparable. All the galaxies studied show significant lopsidedness in HI. The mean value of A1A_1 in the inner regions of the galaxies (1.5 - 2.5 scale lengths) is 0.2\geq 0.2. This value of A1A_1 is twice the average value seen in the field galaxies. Also, the lopsidedness is found to be smaller for late-type galaxies, this is opposite to the trend seen in the field galaxies. These two results indicate a different physical origin for disc lopsidedness in galaxies in a group environment compared to the field galaxies. Further, a large fraction (\sim 30%) shows a higher degree of lopsidedness (A10.3A_1 \geq 0.3). It is also seen that the disk lopsidedness increases with the radius as demonstrated in earlier studies, but over a radial range that is two timeslarger than done in the previous studies. The average lopsidedness of the halo potential is estimated to be 10\sim 10%, assuming that the lopsidedness in HI disc is due to its response to the halo asymmetry.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA

    A Magellanic Origin for the Warp of the Galaxy

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    We show that a Magellanic Cloud origin for the warp of the Milky Way can explain most quantitative features of the outer HI layer recently identified by Levine, Blitz & Heiles (2005). We construct a model similar to that of Weinberg (1998) that produces distortions in the dark matter halo, and we calculate the combined effect of these dark-halo distortions and the direct tidal forcing by the Magellanic Clouds on the disk warp in the linear regime. The interaction of the dark matter halo with the disk and resonances between the orbit of the Clouds and the disk account for the large amplitudes observed for the vertical m=0,1,2 harmonics. The observations lead to six constraints on warp forcing mechanisms and our model reasonably approximates all six. The disk is shown to be very dynamic, constantly changing its shape as the Clouds proceed along their orbit. We discuss the challenges to MOND placed by the observations.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to ApJ Letters. Additional graphics, 3d visualizations and movies available at http://www.astro.umass.edu/~weinberg/lm

    Unequal-mass galaxy merger remnants: spiral-like morphology but elliptical-like kinematics

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    It is generally believed that major galaxy mergers with mass ratios in the range 1:1-3:1 result in remnants that have properties similar to elliptical galaxies, and minor mergers below 10:1 result in disturbed spiral galaxies. The intermediate range of mass ratios 4:1-10:1 has not been studied so far. Using N-body simulations, we show that such mergers can result in very peculiar systems, that have the morphology of a disk galaxy with an exponential profile, but whose kinematics is closer to that of elliptical systems. These objects are similar to those recently observed by Jog & Chitre (2002). We present two cases with mass ratios 4.5:1 and 7:1, and show that the merging causes major heating and results in the appearance of elliptical-type kinematics, while surprisingly the initial spiral-like mass profile is conserved.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Accepted for publication in A&A Letter

    Isotropic reconstruction of 3D fluorescence microscopy images using convolutional neural networks

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    Fluorescence microscopy images usually show severe anisotropy in axial versus lateral resolution. This hampers downstream processing, i.e. the automatic extraction of quantitative biological data. While deconvolution methods and other techniques to address this problem exist, they are either time consuming to apply or limited in their ability to remove anisotropy. We propose a method to recover isotropic resolution from readily acquired anisotropic data. We achieve this using a convolutional neural network that is trained end-to-end from the same anisotropic body of data we later apply the network to. The network effectively learns to restore the full isotropic resolution by restoring the image under a trained, sample specific image prior. We apply our method to 33 synthetic and 33 real datasets and show that our results improve on results from deconvolution and state-of-the-art super-resolution techniques. Finally, we demonstrate that a standard 3D segmentation pipeline performs on the output of our network with comparable accuracy as on the full isotropic data

    Mixed lattice phases in cold dense matter

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    Over a wide density range, the ground state of cold neutral matter in the absence of external magnetic fields is a degenerate sea of electrons containing a lattice of nuclei. In certain density regions, a phase composed of interpenetrating cubic lattices of different nuclides is preferable to a body-centered cubic lattice of any single nuclide. The arguments supporting this result are first made assuming the electrons to be a uniform background; the qualitative features remain when screening and exchange effects are included
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