7,636 research outputs found
Survival analysis of the optical brightness of GRB host galaxies
We studied the unbiased optical brightness distribution which was calculated
from the survival analysis of host galaxies and its relationship with the Swift
GRB data of the host galaxies observed by the Keck telescopes. Based on the
sample obtained from merging the Swift GRB table and the Keck optical data we
also studied the dependence of this distribution on the data of the GRBs.
Finally, we compared the HGs distribution with standard galaxies distribution
which is in the DEEP2 galaxies catalog.Comment: Swift: 10 Years of Discovery. Conference paper. 2-5 December 2014. La
Sapienza University, Rome, Ital
Advanced operator-splitting-based semi-implicit spectral method to solve the binary phase-field crystal equations with variable coefficients
We present an efficient method to solve numerically the equations of dissipative dynamics of the binary phase-field crystal model proposed by Elder et al. [Phys. Rev. B 75, 064107 (2007)] characterized by variable coefficients. Using the operator splitting method, the problem has been decomposed into sub-problems that can be solved more efficiently. A combination of non-trivial splitting with spectral semi-implicit solution leads to sets of algebraic equations of diagonal matrix form. Extensive testing of the method has been carried out to find the optimum balance among errors associated with time integration, spatial discretization, and splitting. We show that our method speeds up the computations by orders of magnitude relative to the conventional explicit finite difference scheme, while the costs of the pointwise implicit solution per timestep remains low. Also we show that due to its numerical dissipation, finite differencing can not compete with spectral differencing in terms of accuracy. In addition, we demonstrate that our method can efficiently be parallelized for distributed memory systems, where an excellent scalability with the number of CPUs is observed
A giant ring-like structure at 0.78<z<0.86 displayed by GRBs
According to the cosmological principle, Universal large-scale structure is
homogeneous and isotropic. The observable Universe, however, shows complex
structures even on very large scales. The recent discoveries of structures
significantly exceeding the transition scale of 370 Mpc pose a challenge to the
cosmological principle.
We report here the discovery of the largest regular formation in the
observable Universe; a ring with a diameter of 1720 Mpc, displayed by 9 gamma
ray bursts (GRBs), exceeding by a factor of five the transition scale to the
homogeneous and isotropic distribution. The ring has a major diameter of
and a minor diameter of at a distance of 2770 Mpc in the 0.78<z<0.86
redshift range, with a probability of of being the result of
a random fluctuation in the GRB count rate.
Evidence suggests that this feature is the projection of a shell onto the
plane of the sky. Voids and string-like formations are common outcomes of
large-scale structure. However, these structures have maximum sizes of 150 Mpc,
which are an order of magnitude smaller than the observed GRB ring diameter.
Evidence in support of the shell interpretation requires that temporal
information of the transient GRBs be included in the analysis.
This ring-shaped feature is large enough to contradict the cosmological
principle. The physical mechanism responsible for causing it is unknown.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 13 pages, 8 figures and 4 table
Diffusion-controlled anisotropic growth of stable and metastable crystal polymorphs in the phase-field crystal model
The official published version of the article can be accessed from the link below - Copyright @ 2009 APSWe use a simple density functional approach on a diffusional time scale, to address freezing to the body-centered cubic (bcc), hexagonal close-packed (hcp), and face-centered cubic (fcc) structures. We observe faceted equilibrium shapes and diffusion-controlled layerwise crystal growth consistent with two-dimensional nucleation. The predicted growth anisotropies are discussed in relation with results from experiment and atomistic simulations. We also demonstrate that varying the lattice constant of a simple cubic substrate, one can tune the epitaxially growing body-centered tetragonal structure between bcc and fcc, and observe a Mullins-Sekerka-Asaro-Tiller-Grinfeld-type instability.This work has been supported by the EU FP7
Collaborative Project ENSEMBLE under Grant
Agreement NMP4-SL-2008-213669, the Hungarian
Academy of Sciences under contract OTKA-K-62588, the Academy of Finland via its COMP CoE grant, and by Tekes via its MASIT33 project. A. J. acknowledges financial
support from the Finnish Academy of Science and Letters. T. P. acknowledges support from the Bolyai Ja´nos Grant
Crystallization in suspensions of hard spheres: A Monte Carlo and Molecular Dynamics simulation study
The crystallization of a metastable melt is one of the most important non
equilibrium phenomena in condensed matter physics, and hard sphere colloidal
model systems have been used for several decades to investigate this process by
experimental observation and computer simulation. Nevertheless, there is still
an unexplained discrepancy between simulation data and experimental nucleation
rate densities. In this paper we examine the nucleation process in hard spheres
using molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo simulation. We show that the
crystallization process is mediated by precursors of low orientational
bond-order and that our simulation data fairly match the experimental data
sets
Magnetic Effects Change Our View of the Heliosheath
There is currently a controversy as to whether Voyager 1 has already crossed
the Termination Shock, the first boundary of the Heliosphere. The region
between the Termination Shock and the Heliopause, the Helisheath, is one of the
most unknown regions theoretically. In the Heliosheath magnetic effects are
crucial, as the solar magnetic field is compressed at the Termination Shock by
the slowing flow. Recently, our simulations showed that the Heliosheath
presents remarkable dynamics, with turbulent flows and the presence of a jet
flow at the current sheet that is unstable due to magnetohydrodynamic
instabilities \cite{opher,opher1}. In this paper we review these recent
results, and present an additional simulation with constant neutral atom
background. In this case the jet is still present but with reduced intensity.
Further study, e.g., including neutrals and the tilt of the solar rotation from
the magnetic axis, is required before we can definitively address how the
Heliosheath behaves. Already we can say that this region presents remarkable
dynamics, with turbulent flows, indicating that the Heliosheath might be very
different from what we previously thought.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, to appear in IGPP 3rd Annual International
Astrophysics Conference, "PHYSICS OF THE OUTER HELIOSPHERE
Factor analysis as a tool for spectral line component separation 21cm emission in the direction of L1780
The spectra of the 21cm HI radiation from the direction of L1780, a small high-galactic latitude dark/molecular cloud, were analyzed by multivariate methods. Factor analysis was performed on HI (21cm) spectra in order to separate the different components responsible for the spectral features. The rotated, orthogonal factors explain the spectra as a sum of radiation from the background (an extended HI emission layer), and from the L1780 dark cloud. The coefficients of the cloud-indicator factors were used to locate the HI 'halo' of the molecular cloud. Our statistically derived 'background' and 'cloud' spectral profiles, as well as the spatial distribution of the HI halo emission distribution were compared to the results of a previous study which used conventional methods analyzing nearly the same data set
The Puzzle of the Flyby Anomaly
Close planetary flybys are frequently employed as a technique to place
spacecraft on extreme solar system trajectories that would otherwise require
much larger booster vehicles or may not even be feasible when relying solely on
chemical propulsion. The theoretical description of the flybys, referred to as
gravity assists, is well established. However, there seems to be a lack of
understanding of the physical processes occurring during these dynamical
events. Radio-metric tracking data received from a number of spacecraft that
experienced an Earth gravity assist indicate the presence of an unexpected
energy change that happened during the flyby and cannot be explained by the
standard methods of modern astrodynamics. This puzzling behavior of several
spacecraft has become known as the flyby anomaly. We present the summary of the
recent anomalous observations and discuss possible ways to resolve this puzzle.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. Accepted for publication by Space Science Review
- …