2,338 research outputs found

    Bulges and disks in the local Universe. Linking the galaxy structure to star formation activity

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    We use a sample built on the SDSS DR7 catalogue and the bulge-disc decomposition of Simard et al. (2011) to study how the bulge and disc components contribute to the parent galaxy's star formation activity, by determining its position in the star formation rate (SFR) - stellar mass (M⋆_{\star}) plane at 0.02<z<<z<0.1. We use the bulge and disc colours as proxy for their SFRs. We study the mean galaxy bulge-total mass ratio (B/T) as a function of the residual from the MS (ΔMS\Delta_{MS}) and find that the B/T-ΔMS\Delta_{MS} relation exhibits a parabola-like shape with the peak of the MS corresponding to the lowest B/Ts at any stellar mass. The lower and upper envelop of the MS are populated by galaxies with similar B/T, velocity dispersion and concentration (R90/R50R_{90}/R_{50}) values. Bulges above the MS are characterised by blue colours or, when red, by a high level of dust obscuration, thus indicating that in both cases they are actively star forming. When on the MS or below it, bulges are mostly red and dead. At stellar masses above 1010.510^{10.5} M⊙_{\odot}, bulges on the MS or in the green valley tend to be significantly redder than their counterparts in the quiescence region, despite similar levels of dust obscuration. The disc color anti-correlates at any mass with the distance from the MS, getting redder when approaching the MS lower envelope and the quiescence region. We conclude that the position of a galaxy in the LogSFR-LogM⋆_{\star} plane depends on the star formation activity of its components: above the MS both bulge and disk are actively star forming. The nuclear activity is the first to be suppressed, moving the galaxies on the MS. Once the disk stops forming stars as well, the galaxy moves below the MS and eventually to the quiescence region. This is confirmed by a large fraction (∌45%\sim45\%) of passive galaxies with a secure two component morphology.Comment: Version modified after referee comment

    Antimatter research in Space

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    Two of the most compelling issues facing astrophysics and cosmology today are to understand the nature of the dark matter that pervades the universe and to understand the apparent absence of cosmological antimatter. For both issues, sensitive measurements of cosmic-ray antiprotons and positrons, in a wide energy range, are crucial. Many different mechanisms can contribute to antiprotons and positrons production, ranging from conventional reactions up to exotic processes like neutralino annihilation. The open problems are so fundamental (i.e.: is the universe symmetric in matter and antimatter ?) that experiments in this field will probably be of the greatest interest in the next years. Here we will summarize the present situation, showing the different hypothesis and models and the experimental measurements needed to lead to a more established scenario.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, Invited talk at the 18th European Cosmic Ray Symposium, Moscow, July 2002, submitted to Journal of Physics

    The primordial environment of super massive black holes: large scale galaxy overdensities around z∌6z\sim6 QSOs with LBT

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    We investigated the presence of galaxy overdensities around four z∌6z\sim6 QSOs, namely SDSS J1030+0524 (z = 6.28), SDSS J1148+5251 (z = 6.41), SDSS J1048+4637 (z = 6.20) and SDSS J1411+1217 (z = 5.95), through deep rr-, ii- and zz- band imaging obtained with the wide-field (∌23â€Č×25â€Č\sim23'\times25') Large Binocular Camera (LBC) at the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT). We adopted color-color selections within the i−zi-z vs r−zr-z plane to identify samples of ii-band dropouts at the QSO redshift and measure their relative abundance and spatial distribution in the four LBC fields, each covering ∌8×8\sim8\times8 physical Mpc at z∌6z\sim6. The same selection criteria were then applied to zz-band selected sources in the ∌\sim1 deg2^2 Subaru-XMM Newton Deep Survey to derive the expected number of dropouts over a blank LBC-sized field (∌\sim0.14 deg2^2). The four observed QSO fields host a number of candidates larger than what is expected in a blank field. By defining as ii-band dropouts objects with zAB1.4z_{AB}1.4 and undetected in the rr-band, we found 16, 10, 9, 12 dropouts in SDSS J1030+0524, SDSS J1148+5251, SDSS J1048+4637, and SDSS J1411+1217, respectively, whereas only 4.3 such objects are expected over a 0.14 deg2^2 blank field. This corresponds to overdensity significances of 3.3, 1.9, 1.7, 2.5σ\sigma, respectively. By considering the total number of dropouts in the four LBC fields and comparing it with what is expected in four blank fields of 0.14 deg2^2 each, we find that high-z QSOs reside in overdense environments at the 3.7σ3.7\sigma level. This is the first direct and unambiguous measurement of the large scale structures around z∌6z\sim6 QSOs. [shortened]Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in A&

    Linux Based Ethernet Communication for Xilinx FPGAs

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    This article presents the implementation of an Ethernet communication platform for use on Xilinx FPGAs. The proposed solution relies on a synthesized embedded system to provide network data transfer and control capabilities, for use with synthesizable electronic devices. Most TCP/IP stack services and protocols were implemented and the design is flexible to allow adaptation and/or expansion for different application scenarios. Currently this platform is being used on the development of a FPGA based JTAG controller, with remote access. The embedded system hardware requires a MicroBlaze softcore microprocessor running a Petalinux operating system.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    The dust and cold gas content of local star forming galaxies

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    We use dust masses (MdustM_{dust}) derived from far-infrared data and molecular gas masses (MmolM_{mol}) based on CO luminosity, to calibrate proxies based on a combination of the galaxy Balmer decrement, disk inclination and gas metallicity. We use such proxies to estimate MdustM_{dust} and MmolM_{mol} in the local SDSS sample of star-forming galaxies (SFGs). We study the distribution of MdustM_{dust} and MmolM_{mol} along and across the Main Sequence (MS) of SFGs. We find that MdustM_{dust} and MmolM_{mol} increase rapidly along the MS with increasing stellar mass (M∗M_*), and more marginally across the MS with increasing SFR (or distance from the relation). The dependence on M∗M_* is sub-linear for both MdustM_{dust} and MmolM_{mol}. Thus, the fraction of dust (fdustf_{dust}) and molecular gas mass (fmolf_{mol}) decreases monotonically towards large M∗M_*. The star formation efficiency (SFE, the inverse of the molecular gas depletion time) depends strongly on the distance from the MS and it is constant along the MS. As nearly all galaxies in the sample are central galaxies, we estimate the dependence of fdustf_{dust} and fgasf_{gas} on the host halo mass and find a tight anti-correlation. As the region where the MS is bending is numerically dominated by massive halos, we conclude that the bending of the MS is due to lower availability of molecular gas mass in massive halos rather than a lower efficiency in forming stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 12 pages, 9 figure

    Astrophysical Implications of a Visible Dark Matter Sector from a Custodially Warped-GUT

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    We explore, within the warped extra dimensional framework, the possibility of finding anti-matter signals in cosmic rays (CRs) from dark matter (DM) annihilation. Exchange of order 100 GeV radion, an integral part of our setup, generically results in Sommerfeld enhancement of the annihilation rate for TeV DM mass. No dark sector is required to obtain boosted annihilation cross sections. A mild hierarchy between the radion and DM masses can be natural due to the pseudo-Goldstone boson nature of the radion. Implications of Sommerfeld enhancement in warped grand unified theory (GUT) models, where proton stability implies a DM candidate, are studied. We show, via partially unified Pati-Salam group, how to incorporate a custodial symmetry for Z->b\bar b into the GUT framework such that a few TeV Kaluza-Klein (KK) mass scale is allowed by precision tests. The model with smallest fully unified SO(10) representation allows us to decouple the DM from the electroweak sector. Thus, a correct DM relic density is obtained and direct detection bounds are satisfied. Looking at robust CR observables, a possible future signal in the \bar p / p flux ratio is found. We show how to embed a similar custodial symmetry for the right handed tau, allowing it to be strongly coupled to KK particles. Such a scenario might lead to observed signal in CR positrons; however, the DM candidate in this case can not constitute all of the DM in the universe. Independently of the above, the strong coupling between KK particles and tau's can lead to striking LHC signals.Comment: 53 pages, 9 figure

    International support for the Arab uprisings: Understanding sympathetic collective action using theories of social dominance and social identity

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    Inspired by the popular Arab protests against oppressive regimes that began in 2010, people around the world protested in sympathy with the Arab peoples. The present research draws on two major theories of intergroup relations to develop an initial integrative model of sympathetic collective action. We incorporate social dominance theory’s (SDT) concept of (rejectionist) legitimizing myths with the solidarity and emotional mediation concept of the social identity model of collective action (SIMCA) to understand motivations for sympathetic collective action among bystanders. Using data from 12 nations (N = 1,480), we tested three models: (a) SIMCA (i.e., solidarity, anger, and efficacy), (b) a social dominance theory model of collective action (i.e., social dominance orientation and ideologies concerning Arab competence), and (c) an integrated model of sympathetic collective action combining both theories. Results find the greatest support for an integrated model of collective action. Discussion focuses on theoretical pluralism and suggestions for future research
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