748 research outputs found
A comparison of estimators for the two-point correlation function
Nine of the most important estimators known for the two-point correlation
function are compared using a predetermined, rigorous criterion. The indicators
were extracted from over 500 subsamples of the Virgo Hubble Volume simulation
cluster catalog. The ``real'' correlation function was determined from the full
survey in a 3000Mpc/h periodic cube. The estimators were ranked by the
cumulative probability of returning a value within a certain tolerance of the
real correlation function. This criterion takes into account bias and variance,
and it is independent of the possibly non-Gaussian nature of the error
statistics. As a result for astrophysical applications a clear recommendation
has emerged: the Landy & Szalay (1993) estimator, in its original or grid
version Szapudi & Szalay (1998), are preferred in comparison to the other
indicators examined, with a performance almost indistinguishable from the
Hamilton (1993) estimator.Comment: aastex, 10 pages, 1 table, 1 figure, revised version, accepted in
ApJ
Morphological fluctuations of large-scale structure: the PSCz survey
In a follow-up study to a previous analysis of the IRAS 1.2Jy catalogue, we quantify the morphological fluctuations in the PSCz survey. We use a variety of measures, among them the family of scalar Minkowski functionals. We confirm the existence of significant fluctuations that are discernible in volume-limited samples out to 200Mpc/h. In contrast to earlier findings, comparisons with cosmological N-body simulations reveal that the observed fluctuations roughly agree with the cosmic variance found in corresponding mock samples. While two-point measures, e.g. the variance of count-in-cells, fluctuate only mildly, the fluctuations in the morphology on large scales indicate the presence of coherent structures that are at least as large as the sample
Can we detect Hot or Cold spots in the CMB with Minkowski Functionals?
In this paper, we investigate the utility of Minkowski Functionals as a probe
of cold/hot disk-like structures in the CMB. In order to construct an accurate
estimator, we resolve a long-standing issue with the use of Minkowski
Functionals as probes of the CMB sky -- namely that of systematic differences
("residuals") when numerical and analytical MF are compared. We show that such
residuals are in fact by-products of binning, and not caused by pixelation or
masking as originally thought. We then derive a map-independent estimator that
encodes the effects of binning, applicable to beyond our present work. Using
this residual-free estimator, we show that small disk-like effects (as claimed
by Vielva et al.) can be detected only when a large sample of such maps are
averaged over. In other words, our estimator is noise-dominated for small disk
sizes at WMAP resolution. To confirm our suspicion, we apply our estimator to
the WMAP7 data to obtain a null result.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figure
Dark Energy from structure: a status report
The effective evolution of an inhomogeneous universe model in any theory of
gravitation may be described in terms of spatially averaged variables. In
Einstein's theory, restricting attention to scalar variables, this evolution
can be modeled by solutions of a set of Friedmann equations for an effective
volume scale factor, with matter and backreaction source terms. The latter can
be represented by an effective scalar field (`morphon field') modeling Dark
Energy.
The present work provides an overview over the Dark Energy debate in
connection with the impact of inhomogeneities, and formulates strategies for a
comprehensive quantitative evaluation of backreaction effects both in
theoretical and observational cosmology. We recall the basic steps of a
description of backreaction effects in relativistic cosmology that lead to
refurnishing the standard cosmological equations, but also lay down a number of
challenges and unresolved issues in connection with their observational
interpretation.
The present status of this subject is intermediate: we have a good
qualitative understanding of backreaction effects pointing to a global
instability of the standard model of cosmology; exact solutions and
perturbative results modeling this instability lie in the right sector to
explain Dark Energy from inhomogeneities. It is fair to say that, even if
backreaction effects turn out to be less important than anticipated by some
researchers, the concordance high-precision cosmology, the architecture of
current N-body simulations, as well as standard perturbative approaches may all
fall short in correctly describing the Late Universe.Comment: Invited Review for a special Gen. Rel. Grav. issue on Dark Energy, 59
pages, 2 figures; matches published versio
Present and Future Experiments with Stored Exotic Nuclei at Relativistic Energies
Recent progress is presented from experiments on masses and lifetimes of bare
and few-electron exotic nuclei at GSI.Comment: Proceedings of International Conference on "Frontiers in Nuclear
Structure, Astrophysics and Reactions", Kos, Greece, September 12-17, 200
Isospin Dependence in the Odd-Even Staggering of Nuclear Binding Energies
The FRS-ESR facility at GSI provides unique conditions for precision
measurements of large areas on the nuclear mass surface in a single experiment.
Values for masses of 604 neutron-deficient nuclides (30<=Z<=92) were obtained
with a typical uncertainty of 30 microunits. The masses of 114 nuclides were
determined for the first time. The odd-even staggering (OES) of nuclear masses
was systematically investigated for isotopic chains between the proton shell
closures at Z=50 and Z=82. The results were compared with predictions of modern
nuclear models. The comparison revealed that the measured trend of OES is not
reproduced by the theories fitted to masses only. The spectral pairing gaps
extracted from models adjusted to both masses, and density related observables
of nuclei agree better with the experimental data.Comment: Physics Review Letters 95 (2005) 042501
http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRL/v95/e04250
The complex universe: recent observations and theoretical challenges
The large scale distribution of galaxies in the universe displays a complex
pattern of clusters, super-clusters, filaments and voids with sizes limited
only by the boundaries of the available samples. A quantitative statistical
characterization of these structures shows that galaxy distribution is
inhomogeneous in these samples, being characterized by large-amplitude
fluctuations of large spatial extension. Over a large range of scales, both the
average conditional density and its variance show a nontrivial scaling
behavior: at small scales, r<20 Mpc/h, the average (conditional) density scales
as 1/r. At larger scales, the density depends only weakly (logarithmically) on
the system size and density fluctuations follow the Gumbel distribution of
extreme value statistics. These complex behaviors are different from what is
expected in a homogeneous distribution with Gaussian fluctuations. The observed
density inhomogeneities pose a fundamental challenge to the standard picture of
cosmology but it also represent an important opportunity which points to new
directions with respect to many cosmological puzzles. Indeed, the fact that
matter distribution is not uniform, in the limited range of scales sampled by
observations, rises the question of understanding how inhomogeneities affect
the large-scale dynamics of the universe. We discuss several attempts which try
to model inhomogeneities in cosmology, considering their effects with respect
to the role and abundance of dark energy and dark matter.Comment: 30 pages, 10 figure
Mark correlations: relating physical properties to spatial distributions
Mark correlations provide a systematic approach to look at objects both
distributed in space and bearing intrinsic information, for instance on
physical properties. The interplay of the objects' properties (marks) with the
spatial clustering is of vivid interest for many applications; are, e.g.,
galaxies with high luminosities more strongly clustered than dim ones? Do
neighbored pores in a sandstone have similar sizes? How does the shape of
impact craters on a planet depend on the geological surface properties? In this
article, we give an introduction into the appropriate mathematical framework to
deal with such questions, i.e. the theory of marked point processes. After
having clarified the notion of segregation effects, we define universal test
quantities applicable to realizations of a marked point processes. We show
their power using concrete data sets in analyzing the luminosity-dependence of
the galaxy clustering, the alignment of dark matter halos in gravitational
-body simulations, the morphology- and diameter-dependence of the Martian
crater distribution and the size correlations of pores in sandstone. In order
to understand our data in more detail, we discuss the Boolean depletion model,
the random field model and the Cox random field model. The first model
describes depletion effects in the distribution of Martian craters and pores in
sandstone, whereas the last one accounts at least qualitatively for the
observed luminosity-dependence of the galaxy clustering.Comment: 35 pages, 12 figures. to be published in Lecture Notes of Physics,
second Wuppertal conference "Spatial statistics and statistical physics
Functional Dissection of the Proton Pumping Modules of Mitochondrial Complex I
A catalytically active subcomplex of respiratory chain complex I lacks 14 of its 42 subunits yet retains half of its proton-pumping capacity, indicating that its membrane arm has two pump modules
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