405 research outputs found
Measuring Hubble's Constant in our Inhomogeneous Universe
Recent observations of Cepheids in the Virgo cluster have bolstered the
evidence that supports a Hubble constant in 70-90 km/s/Mpc range. This
evidence, by and large, probes the expansion of the Universe within 100 Mpc. We
investigate the possibility that the expansion rate within this region is
systematically higher than the true expansion rate due to the presence of a
local, large underdense region or void. We begin by calculating the expected
deviations between the locally measured Hubble constant and the true Hubble
constant for a variety of models. We also discuss the expected correlations
between these deviations and mass fluctuation for the sample volume. We find
that the fluctuations are small for the standard cold dark matter as well as
mixed dark matter models but can be substantial in a number of interesting and
viable nonstandard scenarios. However, deviations in the Hubble flow for a
region of radius 200 Mpc are small for virtually all reasonable models.
Therefore, methods based on supernovae or the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect, which
can probe 200 Mpc scales, will be essential in determining the true Hubble
constant. We discuss, in detail, the fluctuations induced in the cosmic
background radiation by voids at the last scattering surface. In addition, we
discuss the dipole and quadrupole fluctuations one would expect if the void
enclosing us is aspherical or if we lie off-center.Comment: 20 pages (58K), 8 Postscript figures (111K compressed); Submitted to
MNRAS. Postscript source available at
http://astro.queensu.ca/~dursi/preprints
Simulating non-axisymmetric flows in disc galaxies
We present a two-step method to simulate and study non-circular motions in
strongly barred galaxies. The first step is to constrain the initial parameters
using a Bayesian analysis of each galaxy's azimuthally averaged rotation curve,
the 3.6 surface brightness, and the gas surface density. The second
step is to generate equilibrium models using the GalactICS code and evolve them
via GADGET-2. The bar strengths and mock velocity maps of the resulting
snapshots are compared to observations in order to determine the best
representation of the galaxy. We test our method on the unbarred galaxy NGC
3621 and the barred galaxies NGC 1300 and NGC 1530. NGC 3621 provides a
validation of our method of generating initial conditions. NGC 1530 has an
intermediate bar orientation that allows for a comparison to DiskFit. Finally
NGC 1300 has a bar oriented parallel to the galaxy's major axis, where other
algorithms tend to fail. Our models for NGC 3621 and NGC 1530 are comparable to
those obtained using commonly available algorithms. Moreover, we have produced
one of the first mass distribution models for NGC 1300.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in A&
Casimir Effect in Background of Static Domain Wall
In this paper we investigate the vacuum expectation values of energy-
momentum tensor for conformally coupled scalar field in the standard parallel
plate geometry with Dirichlet boundary conditions and on background of planar
domain wall case. First we calculate the vacuum expectation values of
energy-momentum tensor by using the mode sums, then we show that corresponding
properties can be obtained by using the conformal properties of the problem.
The vacuum expectation values of energy-momentum tensor contains two terms
which come from the boundary conditions and the the gravitational background.
In the Minkovskian limit our results agree with those obtained in [3].Comment: 8 Page
Modeling Collisionless Matter in General Relativity: A New Numerical Technique
We propose a new numerical technique for following the evolution of a
self-gravitating collisionless system in general relativity. Matter is modeled
as a scalar field obeying the coupled Klein-Gordon and Einstein equations. A
phase space distribution function, constructed using covariant coherent states,
obeys the relativistic Vlasov equation provided the de Broglie wavelength for
the field is very much smaller than the scales of interest. We illustrate the
method by solving for the evolution of a system of particles in a static,
plane-symmetric, background spacetime.Comment: 6 pages, 3 postscript figures, submitted to Physical Review
Galaxy Masses
Galaxy masses play a fundamental role in our understanding of structure
formation models. This review addresses the variety and reliability of mass
estimators that pertain to stars, gas, and dark matter. The different sections
on masses from stellar populations, dynamical masses of gas-rich and gas-poor
galaxies, with some attention paid to our Milky Way, and masses from weak and
strong lensing methods, all provide review material on galaxy masses in a
self-consistent manner.Comment: 145 pages, 28 figures, to appear in Reviews of Modern Physics. Figure
22 is missing here, and Figs. 15, 26-28 are at low resolution. This version
has a slightly different title and some typos fixed in Chapter 5. For the
full review with figures, please consult:
http://www.astro.queensu.ca/~courteau/GalaxyMasses_28apr2014.pd
Pseudo-Stable Bubbles
The evolution of spherically symmetric unstable scalar field configurations
(``bubbles'') is examined for both symmetric (SDWP) and asymmetric (ADWP)
double-well potentials. Bubbles with initial static energies E_0\la E_{{\rm
crit}}, where is some critical value, shrink in a time scale
determined by their linear dimension, or ``radius''. Bubbles with E_0\ga
E_{{\rm crit}} evolve into time-dependent, localized configurations which are
{\it very} long-lived compared to characteristic time-scales in the models
examined. The stability of these configurations is investigated and possible
applications are briefly discussed.tic time-scales in the models examined. The
stability of these configurations is investigated and possible applications are
briefly discussed.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX (uses revtex 3.0), 4 figures (postscript files of
figs.1 and 2 appended starting on line 497), report DART-HEP-93/0
Implicitly Constrained Semi-Supervised Least Squares Classification
We introduce a novel semi-supervised version of the least squares classifier.
This implicitly constrained least squares (ICLS) classifier minimizes the
squared loss on the labeled data among the set of parameters implied by all
possible labelings of the unlabeled data. Unlike other discriminative
semi-supervised methods, our approach does not introduce explicit additional
assumptions into the objective function, but leverages implicit assumptions
already present in the choice of the supervised least squares classifier. We
show this approach can be formulated as a quadratic programming problem and its
solution can be found using a simple gradient descent procedure. We prove that,
in a certain way, our method never leads to performance worse than the
supervised classifier. Experimental results corroborate this theoretical result
in the multidimensional case on benchmark datasets, also in terms of the error
rate.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, 1 table. The Fourteenth International Symposium
on Intelligent Data Analysis (2015), Saint-Etienne, Franc
Dynamics in the satellite system of Triangulum: Is AndXXII a dwarf satellite of M33?
We present results from a spectroscopic survey of the dwarf spheroidal And
XXII and the two extended clusters EC1 and EC2. These three objects are
candidate satellites of the Triangulum galaxy, M33, which itself is likely a
satellite of M31. We use the DEep Imaging Multi-Object Spectrograph mounted on
the Keck-II telescope to derive radial velocities for candidate member stars of
these objects and thereby identify the stars that are most likely actual
members. Eleven most probable stellar members (of 13 candidates) are found for
AndXXII. We obtain an upper limit of sigma_v < 6.0 km s-1 for the velocity
dispersion of AndXXII, [Fe/H] ~ -1.6 for its metallicity, and 255pc for the
Plummer radius of its projected density profile. We construct a colour
magnitude diagram for AndXXII and identify both the red giant branch and the
horizontal branch. The position of the latter is used to derive a heliocentric
distance to And XXII of 853 pm 26 kpc. The combination of the radial velocity,
distance, and angular position of AndXXII indicates that it is a strong
candidate for being the first known satellite of M33 and one of the very few
examples of a galactic satellite of a satellite. N-body simulations imply that
this conclusion is unchanged even if M31 and M33 had a strong encounter in the
past few Gyr. We test the hypothesis that the extended clusters highlight
tidally stripped galaxies by searching for an excess cloud of halo-like stars
in their vicinity. We find such a cloud for the case of EC1 but not EC2. The
three objects imply a dynamical mass for M33 that is consistent with previous
estimates.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, revised for MNRAS publicatio
The dynamics of curved gravitating walls
We examine the dynamics of a self-gravitating domain wall using the model as a specific example. We find that the Nambu motion of the wall
is quite generic and dominates the wall motion even in the presence of gravity.
We calculate the corrections to this leading order motion, and estimate the
effect of the inclusion of gravity on the dynamics of the wall. We then treat
the case of a spherical gravitating thick wall as a particular example, solving
the field equations and calculating the corrections to the Nambu motion
analytically for this specific case. We find that the presence of gravity
retards collapse in this case.Comment: 19 pages revtex, 3 figures, references added, equations correcte
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