1,753 research outputs found
Purely radiative perfect fluids
We study `purely radiative' (div E = div H = 0) and geodesic perfect fluids
with non-constant pressure and show that the Bianchi class A perfect fluids can
be uniquely characterized --modulo the class of purely electric and
(pseudo-)spherically symmetric universes-- as those models for which the
magnetic and electric part of the Weyl tensor and the shear are simultaneously
diagonalizable. For the case of constant pressure the same conclusion holds
provided one also assumes that the fluid is irrotational.Comment: 12 pages, minor grammatical change
Mammary-carcinoma cells in mouse liver: infiltration of liver tissue and interaction with Kupffer cells.
Interactions between TA3 mammary-carcinoma cells and liver cells were studied with the electron microscope in mouse livers that had been perfused with a defined medium containing the tumour cells. Infiltration of liver tissue by the TA3 cells proceeded in the following steps. First, numerous small protrusions were extended through endothelial cells and into hepatocytes. Next, some cells had larger processes deeply indenting hepatocytes. Finally a few tumour cells became located outside the blood vessels. Two variant cell lines, TA3/Ha and TA3/St, differing in cell coat and surface charge, did not differ in the extent of infiltration. TA3/Ha cells were often encircled by thin processes of liver macrophages (Kupffer cells). Encircled cells were initially intact, but later some of them degenerated. These observations suggest that TA3/Ha cells were phagocytized by the Kupffer cells. Encirclement appeared to be inhibited after only 30 min, when many cells were still partly surrounded. Encirclement of TA3/St was much less frequent. After injection of tumour cells intra-portally in vivo, similar results were obtained, which demonstrated the validity of the perfused liver model. TA3/Ha cells formed much fewer tumour nodules in the liver than TA3/St cells
Local cosmic string in generalised scalar tensor theory
A recent investigation shows that a local gauge string with a
phenomenological energy momentum tensor, as prescribed by Vilenkin, is
inconsistent in Brans-Dicke theory. In this work it has been shown that such a
string is consistent in a more general scalar tensor theory where is
function of the scalar field.A set of solutions of full nonlinear Einstein's
equations for interior region of such a string are presented.Comment: 7 pages, latex format, minor changes according to referee's
suggestions, revised version submitted in Phys.Rev.
Young Globular Clusters and Dwarf Spheroidals
Most of the globular clusters in the main body of the Galactic halo were
formed almost simultaneously. However, globular cluster formation in dwarf
spheroidal galaxies appears to have extended over a significant fraction of a
Hubble time. This suggests that the factors which suppressed late-time
formation of globulars in the main body of the Galactic halo were not operative
in dwarf spheroidal galaxies. Possibly the presence of significant numbers of
``young'' globulars at R_{GC} > 15 kpc can be accounted for by the assumption
that many of these objects were formed in Sagittarius-like (but not
Fornax-like) dwarf spheroidal galaxies, that were subsequently destroyed by
Galactic tidal forces. It would be of interest to search for low-luminosity
remnants of parental dwarf spheroidals around the ``young'' globulars Eridanus,
Palomar 1, 3, 14, and Terzan 7. Furthermore multi-color photometry could be
used to search for the remnants of the super-associations, within which outer
halo globular clusters originally formed. Such envelopes are expected to have
been tidally stripped from globulars in the inner halo.Comment: 18 pages, with 2 figures, in LaTeX format; to appear in the
Astrophysical Journal in February 200
The spatial and age distribution of stellar populations in DDO 190
The spatial distribution of stellar populations, the star formation history,
and other properties of the dIrr galaxy DDO 190 have been analyzed using
color--magnitude diagrams (CMDs) of about 3900 resolved stars and the Ha fluxes
of HII regions. From the mean color index of the red giant branch, a mean
metallicity [Fe/H]=-2.0 is obtained. The I magnitude of the TRGB has been used
to estimate the distance. DDO 190 is 2.9+/-0.2 Mpc from the Milky Way, 2.1 Mpc
from the M 94 group (CnV-I), 2.4 Mpc from the M 81 group and 2.9 Mpc from the
barycenter of the Local Group, all indicating that it is an isolated, field
galaxy. The surface-brightness distribution of the galaxy is well fitted by
ellipses of ellipticity e=1-a/b=0.1 and P.A.=82deg. The radial star density
distribution follows an exponential law of scale length a=43."4, corresponding
to 611 pc. The Holmberg semi-major axis to mu_B=26.5 is estimated to be
r^B_(26.5)=3.'0. Stellar populations of different ages in DDO 190 show strong
spatial decoupling, the oldest population appearing much more extended than the
youngest. Stars younger than 0.1 Gyr occupy only the central 40'' (0.55 kpc);
stars younger than a few (~4) Gyr extend out to ~80'' (125 kpc), and for larger
galactocentric distances only older stars seem to be present. This behavior is
found in all the dIrr galaxies for which spatially extended studies have been
performed and could be related with the kinematical history of the galaxy.Comment: To be published in the AJ. 29 pages, 13 figure
Searching for Failed Supernovae With Astrometric Binaries
Stars in the mass range 8 Msun<M<30 Msun are thought to end their lives as
luminous supernovae that leave behind a neutron star. However, if a substantial
fraction of these stars instead ended as black-hole remnants, without producing
a supernova (a `failed' supernova), how would one know? We show that, under
plausible assumptions, the Hipparcos catalog should contain about 30 f_{fail}
astrometric binaries with black-hole companions, where f_{fail} is the fraction
of supernovae that fail. Since no black-hole astrometric binaries are found in
Hipparcos, one might like to conclude that such failed supernovae are very
rare. However, the most important assumption required for this argument, the
initial companion mass function (ICMF) of G stars (the majority of Hipparcos
stars) in the high-mass companion regime, is without any observational basis.
We show how the ICMF of G stars can be measured using the Full-Sky Astrometric
Explorer (FAME), thereby permitting an accurate measurement of the rate of
supernovae that fail.Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 14 pages including 4 figure
Clustering of supernova Ia host galaxies
For the first time the cross-correlation between type Ia supernova host
galaxies and surrounding field galaxies is measured using the Supernova Legacy
Survey sample. Over the z=0.2 to 0.9 redshift range we find that supernova
hosts are correlated an average of 60% more strongly than similarly selected
field galaxies over the 3-100 arcsec range and about a factor of 3 more
strongly below 10 arcsec. The correlation errors are empirically established
with a jackknife analysis of the four SNLS fields. The hosts are more
correlated than the field at a significance of 99% in the fitted amplitude and
slope, with the point-by-point difference of the two correlation functions
having a reduced for 8 degrees of freedom of 4.3, which has a
probability of random occurrence of less than 3x10^{-5}. The correlation angle
is 1.5+/-0.5 arcsec, which deprojects to a fixed co-moving correlation length
of approximately 6.5+/- 2/h mpc. Weighting the field galaxies with the mass and
star formation rate supernova frequencies of the simple A+B model produces good
agreement with the observed clustering. We conclude that these supernova
clustering differences are primarily the expected outcome of the dependence of
supernova rates on galaxy masses and stellar populations with their clustering
environment.Comment: ApJ (Letts) accepte
Purely gravito-magnetic vacuum space-times
It is shown that there are no vacuum space-times (with or without
cosmological constant) for which the Weyl-tensor is purely gravito-magnetic
with respect to a normal and timelike congruence of observers.Comment: 4 page
HV 11423: The Coolest Supergiant in the SMC
We call attention to the fact that one of the brightest red supergiants in
the SMC has recently changed its spectral type from K0-1 I (December 2004) to
M4 I (December 2005) and back to K0-1 I (September 2006). An archival spectrum
from the Very Large Telescope reveals that the star was even cooler (M4.5-M5 I)
in December 2001. By contrast, the star was observed to be an M0 I in both
October 1978 and October 1979. The M4-5 I spectral types is by far the latest
type seen for an SMC supergiant, and its temperature in that state places it
well beyond the Hayashi limit into a region of the H-R diagram where the star
should not be in hydrostatic equilibrium. The star is variable by nearly 2 mag
in V, but essentially constant in K. Our modeling of its spectral energy
distribution shows that the visual extinction has varied during this time, but
that the star has remained essentially constant in bolometric luminosity. We
suggest that the star is currently undergoing a period of intense instability,
with its effective temperature changing from 4300 K to 3300 K on the time-scale
of months. It has one of the highest 12-micron fluxes of any RSG in the SMC,
and we suggest that the variability at V is due primarily to changes in
effective temperature, and secondly, due to changes in the local extinction due
to creation and dissipation of circumstellar dust. We speculate that the star
may be nearing the end of its life.Comment: Accepted by the Astrophysical Journa
O3/O7 Orientifold Truncations and Very Special Quaternionic-Kaehler Geometry
We study the orientifold truncation that arises when compactifying type II
string theory on Calabi-Yau orientifolds with O3/O7-planes, in the context of
supergravity. We look at the N=2 to N=1 reduction of the hypermultiplet sector
of N=2 supergravity under the truncation, for the case of very special
quaternionic-Kaehler target space geometry. We explicitly verify the Kaehler
structure of the truncated spaces, and we study the truncated isometry algebra.
For symmetric special quaternionic spaces, we give a complete overview of the
spaces one finds after truncation. We also find new examples of dual Kaehler
spaces, that give rise to flat potentials in N=1 supergravity.Comment: 25 pages, LaTeX, v2:curvature tensor of the dual symmetric spaces
calculated, section 7 expanded, references added, v3:few typos fixed, version
to appear in Class.Quantum Gravit
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