312 research outputs found
Dark matter density profiles: A comparison of nonextensive theory with N-body simulations
Density profiles of simulated galaxy cluster-sized dark matter haloes are
analysed in the context of a recently introduced nonextensive theory of dark
matter and gas density distributions. Nonextensive statistics accounts for
long-range interactions in gravitationally coupled systems and is derived from
the fundamental concept of entropy generalisation. The simulated profiles are
determined down to radii of ~1% of R_200. The general trend of the relaxed,
spherically averaged profiles is accurately reproduced by the theory. For the
main free parameter kappa, measuring the degree of coupling within the system,
and linked to physical quantities as the heat capacity and the polytropic index
of the self-gravitating ensembles, we find a value of -15. The significant
advantage over empirical fitting functions is provided by the physical content
of the nonextensive approach.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Finite Element Thermal Study of the Linac4 Plasma Generatora
The temperature distribution and heat flow at equilibrium of the plasma generator of the RF-powered non-cesiated Linac4 H- ion source have been studied with a finite element model. It is shown that the equilibrium temperatures obtained in the Linac4 nominal operation mode (100 kW RF power, 2 Hz, 0.4 ms pulse duration) are within material specifications except for the magnet cage, where a redesign may be necessary. To assess the upgrade of the Linac4 source for operation in the high-power operation mode of SPL, an extrapolation of the heat load towards 100 kW RF power, 50 Hz repetition rate and 0.4 ms pulse duration has been performed. The results indicate that a significant improvement of the source cooling is required to allow for operation in HP-SPL
Galaxies undergoing ram-pressure stripping: the influence of the bulge on morphology and star formation rate
We investigate the influence of stellar bulges on the star formation and
morphology of disc galaxies that suffer from ram pressure. Several tree-SPH
(smoothed particle hydrodynamics) simulations have been carried out to study
the dependence of the star formation rate on the mass and size of a stellar
bulge. In addition, different strengths of ram pressure and different
alignments of the disc with respect to the intra-cluster medium (ICM) are
applied. As claimed in previous works, when ram pressure is acting on a galaxy,
the star formation rate (SFR) is enhanced and rises up to four times with
increasing ICM density compared to galaxies that evolve in isolation. However,
a bulge suppresses the SFR when the same ram pressure is applied. Consequently,
fewer new stars are formed because the SFR can be lowered by up to 2 M_sun/yr.
Furthermore, the denser the surrounding gas, the more inter-stellar medium
(ISM) is stripped. While at an ICM density of 10^-28 g/cm^3 about 30% of the
ISM is stripped, the galaxy is almost completely (more than 90%) stripped when
an ICM density of 10^-27 g/cm^3 is applied. But again, a bulge prevents the
stripping of the ISM and reduces the amount being stripped by up to 10%.
Thereby, fewer stars are formed in the wake if the galaxy contains a bulge. The
dependence of the SFR on the disc tilt angle is not very pronounced. Hereby a
slight trend of decreasing star formation with increasing inclination angle can
be determined. Furthermore, with increasing disc tilt angles, less gas is
stripped and therefore fewer stars are formed in the wake. Reducing the disc
gas mass fraction results in a lower SFR when the galaxies evolve in vacuum. On
the other hand, the enhancement of the SFR in case of acting ram pressure is
less pronounced with increasing gas mass fraction. Moreover, the fractional
amount of stripped gas does not depend on the gas mass fraction.Comment: 11 pages, 18 figure
Internal kinematics of spiral galaxies in distant clusters III. Velocity fields from FORS2/MXU spectroscopy
(Abridged) We study the impact of cluster environment on the evolution of
spiral galaxies by examining their structure and kinematics. Rather than
two-dimensional rotation curves, we observe complete velocity fields by placing
three adjacent and parallel FORS2 MXU slits on each object, yielding several
emission and absorption lines. The gas velocity fields are reconstructed and
decomposed into circular rotation and irregular motions using kinemetry. To
quantify irregularities in the gas kinematics, we define three parameters:
sigma_{PA} (standard deviation of the kinematic position angle), Delta phi (the
average misalignment between kinematic and photometric position angles) and
k_{3,5} (squared sum of the higher order Fourier terms). Using local,
undistorted galaxies from SINGS, these can be used to establish the regularity
of the gas velocity fields. Here we present the analysis of 22 distant galaxies
in the MS0451.6-0305 field with 11 members at z=0.54. In this sample we find
both field (4 out of 8) and cluster (3 out of 4) galaxies with velocity fields
that are both irregular and asymmetric. We show that these fractions are
underestimates of the actual number of galaxies with irregular velocity fields.
The values of the (ir)regularity parameters for cluster galaxies are not very
different from those of the field galaxies, implying that there are isolated
field galaxies that are as distorted as the cluster members. None of the
deviations in our small sample correlate with photometric/structural properties
like luminosity or disk scale length in a significant way.
Our 3D-spectroscopic method successfully maps the velocity field of distant
galaxies, enabling the importance and efficiency of cluster specific
interactions to be assessed quantitatively.Comment: accepted for publication in A&A, high resolution version available at
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~kutdemir/papers
Metal enrichment of the intra-cluster medium over a Hubble time for merging and relaxed galaxy clusters
We investigate the efficiency of galactic mass loss, triggered by
ram-pressure stripping and galactic winds of cluster galaxies, on the chemical
enrichment of the intra-cluster medium (ICM). We combine N-body and
hydrodynamic simulations with a semi-numerical galaxy formation model. By
including simultaneously different enrichment processes, namely ram-pressure
stripping and galactic winds, in galaxy-cluster simulations, we are able to
reproduce the observed metal distribution in the ICM. We find that the mass
loss by galactic winds in the redshift regime z>2 is ~10% to 20% of the total
galactic wind mass loss, whereas the mass loss by ram-pressure stripping in the
same epoch is up to 5% of the total ram-pressure stripping mass loss over the
whole simulation time. In the cluster formation epochs z<2 ram-pressure
stripping becomes more dominant than galactic winds. We discuss the
non-correlation between the evolution of the mean metallicity of galaxy
clusters and the galactic mass losses. For comparison with observations we
present two dimensional maps of the ICM quantities and radial metallicity
profiles. The shape of the observed profiles is well reproduced by the
simulations in the case of merging systems. In the case of cool-core clusters
the slope of the observed profiles are reproduced by the simulation at radii
below ~300 kpc, whereas at larger radii the observed profiles are shallower. We
confirm the inhomogeneous metal distribution in the ICM found in observations.
To study the robustness of our results, we investigate two different
descriptions for the enrichment process interaction.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, high
resolution version can be found at
<http://astro.uibk.ac.at/~wolfgang/kapferer.pdf
Automated search for star clusters in large multiband surveys: II. Discovery and investigation of open clusters in the Galactic plane
Automated search for star clusters in J,H,K_s data from 2MASS catalog has
been performed using the method developed by Koposov et. al (2008). We have
found and verified 153 new clusters in the interval of the galactic latitude
-24 < b < 24 degrees. Color excesses E(B-V), distance moduli and ages were
determined for 130 new and 14 yet-unstudied known clusters. In this paper, we
publish a catalog of coordinates, diameters, and main parameters of all the
clusters under study. A special web-site available at http://ocl.sai.msu.ru has
been developed to facilitate dissemination and scientific usage of the results.Comment: 9 pages, 3 tables, 5 figures, accepted to Astronomy Letter
Enrichment of the ICM of galaxy clusters due to ram-pressure stripping
We investigate the impact of galactic mass loss triggered by ram-pressure
stripping of cluster galaxies on the evolution of the intra-cluster medium
(ICM). We use combined N-body and hydrodynamic simulations together with a
phenomenological galaxy formation model and a prescription of the effect of
ram-pressure stripping on the galaxies. We analyze the effect of galaxy -- ICM
interaction for different model clusters with different masses and different
merger histories. Our simulations show that ram-pressure stripping can account
for ~ 10% of the overall observed level of enrichment in the ICM within a
radius of 1.3 Mpc. The efficiency of metal ejection of cluster galaxies depends
at the first few Gyr of the simulation mainly on the cluster mass and is
significantly increased during major merger events. Additionally we show that
ram-pressure stripping is most efficient in the center of the galaxy cluster
and the level of enrichment drops quite fast at larger radii. We present
emission weighted metallicity maps of the ICM which can be compared with X-ray
observations. The resulting distribution of metals in the ICM shows a complex
pattern with stripes and plumes of metal rich material. The metallicity maps
can be used to trace the present and past interactions between the ICM and
cluster galaxies.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Metal enrichment of the intra-cluster medium by thermally and cosmic-ray driven galactic winds
We investigate the efficiency and time-dependence of thermally and cosmic ray
driven galactic winds for the metal enrichment of the intra-cluster medium
(ICM) using a new analytical approximation for the mass outflow. The spatial
distribution of the metals are studied using radial metallicity profiles and 2D
metallicity maps of the model clusters as they would be observed by X-ray
telescopes like XMM-Newton. Analytical approximations for the mass loss by
galactic winds driven by thermal and cosmic ray pressure are derived from the
Bernoulli equation and implemented in combined N-body/hydrodynamic cosmological
simulations with a semi-analytical galaxy formation model. Observable
quantities like the mean metallicity, metallicity profiles, and 2D metal maps
of the model clusters are derived from the simulations. We find that galactic
winds alone cannot account for the observed metallicity of the ICM. At redshift
the model clusters have metallicities originating from galactic winds
which are almost a factor of 10 lower than the observed values. For massive,
relaxed clusters we find, as in previous studies, a central drop in the
metallicity due to a suppression of the galactic winds by the pressure of the
ambient ICM. Combining ram-pressure stripping and galactic winds we find radial
metallicity profiles of the model clusters which agree qualitatively with
observed profiles. Only in the inner parts of massive clusters the observed
profiles are steeper than in the simulations. Also the combination of galactic
winds and ram-pressure stripping yields too low values for the ICM
metallicities. The slope of the redshift evolution of the mean metallicity in
the simulations agrees reasonably well with recent observations.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, accepted by A&
A New Approach to Non-Commutative U(N) Gauge Fields
Based on the recently introduced model of arXiv:0912.2634 for non-commutative
U(1) gauge fields, a generalized version of that action for U(N) gauge fields
is put forward. In this approach to non-commutative gauge field theories, UV/IR
mixing effects are circumvented by introducing additional 'soft breaking' terms
in the action which implement an IR damping mechanism. The techniques used are
similar to those of the well-known Gribov-Zwanziger approach to QCD.Comment: 11 pages; v2 minor correction
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