7,008 research outputs found
The Possible z=0.83 Precursors of z=0 M* Early-type Cluster Galaxies
We examine the distribution of stellar masses of galaxies in MS 1054-03 and
RX J0152.7-1357, two X-ray selected clusters of galaxies at z=0.83. Our stellar
mass estimates, from spectral energy distribution fitting, reproduce the
dynamical masses as measured from velocity dispersions and half-light radii
with a scatter of 0.2 dex in the mass for early-type galaxies. When we restrict
our sample of members to high stellar masses, > 1e11.1 Msun (M* in the
Schechter mass function for cluster galaxies), we find that the fraction of
early-type galaxies is 79 +/- 6% at z=0.83 and 87 +/- 6% at z=0.023 for the
Coma cluster, consistent with no evolution. Previous work with
luminosity-selected samples finds that the early-type fraction in rich clusters
declines from =~80% at z=0 to =~60% at z=0.8. The observed evolution in the
early-type fraction from luminosity-selected samples must predominately occur
among sub-M* galaxies. As M* for field and group galaxies, especially
late-types, is below M* for clusters galaxies, infall could explain most of the
recent early-type fraction growth. Future surveys could determine the
morphological distributions of lower mass systems which will confirm or refute
this explanation.Comment: 5 pages in emulate ApJ format with three color figures. Accepted for
publication in ApJ Letters, v642n2. Updated to correct grammatical and
typographic errors found by the journa
Mass-Selection and the Evolution of the Morphology-Density Relation from z=0.8 to z=0
We examined the morphology-density relations for galaxy samples selected by
luminosity and by mass in each of five massive X-ray clusters from z=0.023 to
0.83 for 674 spectroscopically-confirmed members. Rest-frame optical colors and
visual morphologies were obtained primarily from Hubble Space Telescope images.
Morphology-density relations (MDR) are derived in each cluster from a complete,
luminosity-selected sample of 452 galaxies with a magnitude limit M_V <
M^{*}_{V} + 1. The change in the early-type fraction with redshift matches
previous work for massive clusters of galaxies. We performed a similar
analysis, deriving MDRs for complete, mass-selected samples of 441 galaxies
with a mass-limit of 10^{10.6} M_{\sun}. Our mass limit includes faint objects,
the equivalent of =~1 mag below L^{*} for the red cluster galaxies, and
encompasses =~70% of the stellar mass in cluster galaxies. The MDRs in the
mass-selected sample at densities of Sigma > 50 galaxies Mpc^{-2} are similar
to those in the luminosity-selected sample but show larger early-type
fractions. However, the trend with redshift in the fraction of elliptical and
S0 galaxies with masses > 10^{10.6} M_{\sun} differs significantly between the
mass- and luminosity-selected samples. The clear trend seen in the early-type
fraction from z=0 to z=~ 0.8 is not found in mass-selected samples. The
early-type galaxy fraction changes much less, and is consistent with being
constant at 92% +/- 4% at \Sigma> 500 galaxies Mpc^{-2} and 83 +/- 3% at 50 <
\Sigma < 500 galaxies Mpc^{-2}. This suggests that galaxies of mass lower than
> 10^{10.6} M_{\sun} play a significant role in the evolution of the early-type
fraction in luminosity-selected samples. (Abstract abridged)Comment: 18 pages in emulate ApJ format, with 10 color figures, Accepted to
ApJ. Version updated to reflect published version, includes new references
and a correction to table
WIYN Open Cluster Study XI: WIYN 3.5m Deep Photometry of M35 (NGC 2168)
We present deep BVI observations of the core of M35 and a nearby comparison
field obtained at the WIYN 3.5m telescope under excellent seeing. These
observations display the lower main sequence in BV and VI CMDs down to V = 23.3
and 24.6, respectively. At these faint magnitudes background field stars are
far more numerous than the cluster stars, yet by using a smoothing technique
and CMD density distribution subtraction we recover the cluster fiducial main
sequence and luminosity function to V = 24.6. We find the location of the main
sequence in these CMDs to be consistent with earlier work on other open
clusters, specifically NGC 188, NGC 2420, and NGC 2477. We compare these open
cluster fiducial sequences to stellar models by Baraffe et al. (1998), Siess et
al. (2000), Girardi et al. (2000), and Yi et al. (2001) and find that the
models are too blue in both B-V and V-I for stars below ~0.4 Mo. M35 contains
stars to the limit of the extracted main sequence, at M ~ 0.10-0.15 Mo,
suggesting that M35 may harbor a large number of brown dwarfs, which should be
easy targets for near-IR instrumentation on 8-10m telescopes. We also identify
a new candidate white dwarf in M35 at V = 21.36 +- 0.01. Depending on which WD
models are used to interpret this cluster candidate, it is either a very high
mass WD (1.05 +- 0.05 Mo) somewhat older (0.19-0.26 Gyr, 3-4 sigma) than our
best isochrone age (150 Myr), or it is a modestly massive WD (0.67-0.78 Mo)
much too old (0.42-0.83 Gyr) to belong to the cluster.Comment: 28 pages + 24 figures; to be published in the Sept, 2002 A
Saddle-point van Hove singularity and the phase diagram of high-Tc cuprates
We examine the generic phase behavior of high-Tc cuprate superconductors in
terms a universal van Hove singularity in the strongly overdoped region. Using
a rigid ARPES-derived dispersion we solve the BCS gap equation and show that
the pairing interaction or pairing energy cutoff must be a rapidly declining
function of doping. This result is prejudicial to a phonon-based pairing
interaction and more consistent with a magnetic or magnetically enhanced
interaction.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Physical Review
High pressure effects in fluorinated HgBa2Ca2Cu3O(8+d)
We have measured the pressure sensitivity of Tc in fluorinated
HgBa2Ca2Cu3O(8+d) (Hg-1223) ceramic samples with different F contents, applying
pressures up to 30 GPa. We obtained that Tc increases with increasing pressure,
reaching different maximum values, depending on the F doping level, and
decreases for a further increase of pressure. A new high Tc record (166 K +/- 1
K) was achieved by applying pressure (23 GPa) in a fluorinated Hg-1223 sample
near the optimum doping level. Our results show that all our samples are at the
optimal doping, and that fluorine incorporation decreases the crystallographic
-parameter concomitantly increasing the maximum attainable Tc. This effect
reveals that the compression of the axes is one of the keys that controls
the Tc of high temperature superconductors.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
The existence problem for dynamics of dissipative systems in quantum probability
Motivated by existence problems for dissipative systems arising naturally in
lattice models from quantum statistical mechanics, we consider the following
-algebraic setting: A given hermitian dissipative mapping is
densely defined in a unital -algebra . The identity
element in is also in the domain of . Completely
dissipative maps are defined by the requirement that the induced maps,
, are dissipative on the by complex
matrices over for all . We establish the existence of different
types of maximal extensions of completely dissipative maps. If the enveloping
von Neumann algebra of is injective, we show the existence of an
extension of which is the infinitesimal generator of a quantum
dynamical semigroup of completely positive maps in the von Neumann algebra. If
is a given well-behaved *-derivation, then we show that each of the
maps and is completely dissipative.Comment: 24 pages, LaTeX/REVTeX v. 4.0, submitted to J. Math. Phys.; PACS 02.,
02.10.Hh, 02.30.Tb, 03.65.-w, 05.30.-
Entropy Encoding, Hilbert Space and Karhunen-Loeve Transforms
By introducing Hilbert space and operators, we show how probabilities,
approximations and entropy encoding from signal and image processing allow
precise formulas and quantitative estimates. Our main results yield orthogonal
bases which optimize distinct measures of data encoding.Comment: 25 pages, 1 figur
A theory of intense-field dynamic alignment and high harmonic generation from coherently rotating molecules and interpretation of intense-field ultrafast pump-probe experiments
A theory of ultra-fast pump-probe experiments proposed by us earlier [F.H.M.
Faisal et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 98, 143001 (2007) and F.H.M. Faisal and A.
Abdurrouf, Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 123005 (2008)] is developed here fully and
applied to investigate the phenomena of dynamic alignment and high harmonic
generation (HHG) from coherently rotating linear molecules. The theory provides
essentially analytical results for the signals that allow us to investigate the
simultaneous dependence of the HHG signals on the two externally available
control parameters, namely, the relative angle between the polarizations, and
the delay-time between the two pulses. It is applied to investigate the
characteristics of high harmonic emission from nitrogen and oxygen molecules
that have been observed experimentally in a number of laboratories. The results
obtained both in the time-domain and in the frequency-domain are compared with
the observed characteristics as well as directly with the data and are found to
agree remarkably well. In addition we have predicted the existence of a "magic"
polarization angle at which all modulations of the harmonic emission from
nitrogen molecule changes to a steady emission at the harmonic frequency. Among
other things we have also shown a correlation between the existence of the
"magic" or critical polarization angles and the symmetry of the active
molecular orbitals, that is deemed to be useful in connection with the "inverse
problem" of molecular imaging from the HHG data.Comment: 31 pages, 22 figures, and 140 equation
Applications of Automata and Graphs: Labeling-Operators in Hilbert Space I
We show that certain representations of graphs by operators on Hilbert space
have uses in signal processing and in symbolic dynamics. Our main result is
that graphs built on automata have fractal characteristics. We make this
precise with the use of Representation Theory and of Spectral Theory of a
certain family of Hecke operators. Let G be a directed graph. We begin by
building the graph groupoid G induced by G, and representations of G. Our main
application is to the groupoids defined from automata. By assigning weights to
the edges of a fixed graph G, we give conditions for G to acquire fractal-like
properties, and hence we can have fractaloids or G-fractals. Our standing
assumption on G is that it is locally finite and connected, and our labeling of
G is determined by the "out-degrees of vertices". From our labeling, we arrive
at a family of Hecke-type operators whose spectrum is computed. As
applications, we are able to build representations by operators on Hilbert
spaces (including the Hecke operators); and we further show that automata built
on a finite alphabet generate fractaloids. Our Hecke-type operators, or
labeling operators, come from an amalgamated free probability construction, and
we compute the corresponding amalgamated free moments. We show that the free
moments are completely determined by certain scalar-valued functions.Comment: 69 page
- âŠ