56,777 research outputs found
Two new Lejeuneaceae records for the Colombian liverwort flora
Two epiphyllous Lejeuneaceae, Cololejeunea surinamensis and Drepanolejeunea polyrhiza, previously known from Amazonian Brazil, are recorded for the first time in Colombia. They were found as epiphylls on understory shrubs in the middle Caquetá area in Colombian Amazonia. Cololejeunea surinamensis was found in the Tierra Firme forests and D. polyrhiza was found in the floodplains of the Caquetá River.Dos especies de Lejeuneaceae epífilas, Cololejeunea surinamensis y Drepanolejeunea polyrhiza, previamente conocidas de los bosques amazónicos de Brasil son reportadas por primera vez para Colombia. Las especies fueron encontradas como epífilas sobre hojas de arbustos del sotobosque en el área del medio Caquetá en la amazonía Colombiana. Cololejeunea surinamensis fue encontrada en los bosques de tierra firme, mientras que D. polyrhiza fue encontrada en los planos inundables del Río Caquetá
Regular and chaotic motion in elliptical galaxies
Here I review recent work, by other authors and by myself, on some particular
topics related to the regular and chaotic motion in elliptical galaxies. I show
that it is quite possible to build highly stable triaxial stellar systems that
include large fractions of chaotic orbits and that partially and fully chaotic
orbits fill different regions of space, so that it is important not to group
them together under the single denomination of chaotic orbits. Partially
chaotic orbits should not be confused with weakly fully chaotic orbits either,
and their spatial distributions are also different. Slow figure rotation (i.e.,
rotation in systems with zero angular momentum) seems to be always present in
highly flattened models that result from cold collapses, with the rotational
velocity diminishing or becoming negligibly small for less flattened models.
Finally, I comment on the usefulness and limitation of the classification of
regular orbits via frequency analysis.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures (both are mosaics of 6 and 4 individual figures,
respectively, in eps format). It is an invited talk delivered at the workshop
"Chaos in Astronomy 2007", in memory of N. Voglis, held in Athens (Greece),
17 - 20 September 2008, and accepted for publication in the Proccedings of
that worksho
The inflationary origin of the Cold Spot anomaly
Single-field inflation, arguably the simplest and most compelling paradigm
for the origin of our Universe, is strongly supported by the recent results of
the Planck satellite and the BICEP2 experiment. The results from Planck,
however, also confirm the presence of a number of anomalies in the Cosmic
Microwave Background (CMB), whose origin becomes problematic in single-field
inflation. Among the most prominent and well-tested of these anomalies is the
Cold Spot, which constitutes the only significant deviation from gaussianity in
the CMB. Planck's non-detection of primordial non-gaussianity on smaller scales
thus suggests the existence of a physical mechanism whereby significant
non-gaussianity is generated on large angular scales only. In this letter, we
address this question by developing a localized version of the inhomogeneous
reheating scenario, which postulates the existence of a scalar field able to
modify the decay of the inflaton on localized spatial regions only. We
demonstrate that if the Cold Spot is due to an overdensity in the last
scattering surface, the localization mechanism offers a feasible explanation
for it, thus providing a physical mechanism for the generation of localized
non-gaussianity in the CMB. If, on the contrary, the Cold Spot is caused by a
newly discovered supervoid (as recently claimed), we argue that the
localization mechanism, while managing to enhance underdensities, may well shed
light on the rarity of the discovered supervoid.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures. v3 Comments and references added. It matches
published versio
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