4,219 research outputs found
On the importance of local sources of radiation for quasar absorption line systems
A generic assumption of ionization models of quasar absorption systems is
that radiation from local sources is negligible compared with the cosmological
background. We test this assumption and find that it is unlikely to hold for
absorbers as rare as H I Lyman limit systems. Assuming that the absorption
systems are gas clouds centered on sources of radiation, we derive analytic
estimates for the cross-section weighted moments of the flux seen by the
absorbers, of the impact parameter, and of the luminosity of the central
source. In addition, we compute the corresponding medians numerically. For the
one class of absorbers for which the flux has been measured: damped Ly-alpha
systems at z~3, our prediction is in excellent agreement with the observations
if we assume that the absorption arises in clouds centered on Lyman-break
galaxies. Finally, we show that if Lyman-break galaxies dominate the UV
background at redshift 3, then consistency between observations of the UV
background, the UV luminosity density from galaxies, and the number density of
Lyman limit systems requires escape fractions of order 10 percent.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal, 11 pages, 1
figure. Version 2: Added alternative method. Decreased fiducial escape
fraction to guarantee consistency between observed luminosity density, mean
free path, and UV background. This increased the column density above which
local radiation is importan
Optical properties and spatial distribution of MgII absorbers from SDSS image stacking
We present a statistical analysis of the photometric properties and spatial
distribution of more than 2,800 MgII absorbers with 0.37<z<1 and rest
equivalent width W_0(\lambda2796)>0.8\AA detected in SDSS quasar spectra. Using
an improved image stacking technique, we measure the cross-correlation between
MgII gas and light (in the g, r, i and z-bands) from 10 to 200 kpc and infer
the light-weighted impact parameter distribution of MgII absorbers. Such a
quantity is well described by a power-law with an index that strongly depends
on W_0, ranging from ~-1 for W_0~ 1.5\AA. At redshift
0.37<z<0.55, we find the average luminosity enclosed within 100 kpc around MgII
absorbers to be M_g=-20.65+-0.11 mag, which is ~0.5 L_g*. The global
luminosity-weighted colors are typical of present-day intermediate type
galaxies. However, while the light of weaker absorbers originates mostly from
red passive galaxies, stronger systems display the colors of blue star-forming
galaxies. Based on these observations, we argue that the origin of strong MgII
absorber systems might be better explained by models of metal-enriched gas
outflows from star-forming/bursting galaxies. Our analysis does not show any
redshift dependence for both impact parameter and rest-frame colors up to z=1.
However, we do observe a brightening of the absorbers related light at high
redshift (~50% from z~0.4 to 1). We argue that MgII absorbers are a phenomenon
typical of a given evolutionary phase that more massive galaxies experience
earlier than less massive ones, in a downsizing fashion. (abridged)Comment: ApJ in press, 28 pages, 16 figures, using emulateapj. Only typo
corrections wrt the original submission (v1
Balanced Vertices in Trees and a Simpler Algorithm to Compute the Genomic Distance
This paper provides a short and transparent solution for the covering cost of
white-grey trees which play a crucial role in the algorithm of Bergeron {\it et
al.}\ to compute the rearrangement distance between two multichromosomal
genomes in linear time ({\it Theor. Comput. Sci.}, 410:5300-5316, 2009). In the
process it introduces a new {\em center} notion for trees, which seems to be
interesting on its own.Comment: 6 pages, submitte
Coloured peak algebras and Hopf algebras
For a finite abelian group, we study the properties of general
equivalence relations on G_n=G^n\rtimes \SG_n, the wreath product of with
the symmetric group \SG_n, also known as the -coloured symmetric group. We
show that under certain conditions, some equivalence relations give rise to
subalgebras of \k G_n as well as graded connected Hopf subalgebras of
\bigoplus_{n\ge o} \k G_n. In particular we construct a -coloured peak
subalgebra of the Mantaci-Reutenauer algebra (or -coloured descent algebra).
We show that the direct sum of the -coloured peak algebras is a Hopf
algebra. We also have similar results for a -colouring of the Loday-Ronco
Hopf algebras of planar binary trees. For many of the equivalence relations
under study, we obtain a functor from the category of finite abelian groups to
the category of graded connected Hopf algebras. We end our investigation by
describing a Hopf endomorphism of the -coloured descent Hopf algebra whose
image is the -coloured peak Hopf algebra. We outline a theory of
combinatorial -coloured Hopf algebra for which the -coloured
quasi-symmetric Hopf algebra and the graded dual to the -coloured peak Hopf
algebra are central objects.Comment: 26 pages latex2
Discovery of Damped Lyman-Alpha Systems at Redshifts Less Than 1.65 and Results on their Incidence and Cosmological Mass Density
We report results on the incidence and cosmological mass density of damped
Lyman-alpha (DLA) systems at redshifts less that 1.65. We used HST and an
efficient non-traditional (but unbiased) survey technique to discover DLA
systems at redshifts z<1.65, where we observe the Lyman-alpha line in known
MgII absorption-line systems. We uncovered 14 DLA lines including 2
serendipitously. We find that (1) The DLA absorbers are drawn almost
exclusively from the population of MgII absorbers which have rest equivalent
widths W(2796)>0.6A. (2) The incidence of DLA systems per unit redshift,
n(DLA), is observed to decrease with decreasing redshift. (3) On the other
hand, the cosmological mass density of neutral gas in low-redshift DLA
absorbers, Omega(DLA), is observed to be comparable to that observed at high
redshift. (4) The low-redshift DLA absorbers exhibit a significantly larger
fraction of very high column density systems in comparison to determinations at
both high redshift and locally.Comment: 47 pages in LaTeX - emulateapj style with included tables and
encapsulated postscript figures. Accepted for Publication in Astrophysical
Journal Supplements. Results unchanged, text revise
Fighting for Survival: USS Yorktown (CV5) Damage Control Experiences in 1942
This study reveals how the Pacific war changed at Coral Sea and Midway due to a little known but important cadre of sailors on USS Yorktown (CV5). Those US victories resulted from not only clever code breakers and courageous airmen but equally from the determined Damage Control (DC) crews aboard Yorktown. DC crews were the ship’s first responders. They fought fires, kept power and propulsion operable, controlled the ship’s stability, and patched her flight deck to keep aircraft flying. DC teams saved Yorktown multiple times, and their story is memorable for their contributions at Coral Sea and Midway. Without DC efforts, CV5 would not have participated in the battle of Midway. Without Yorktown, the commitment of only two American carriers (with one being virtually inexperienced) against four Japanese carriers with their skilled airmen would have yielded disaster for the United States at Midway instead of victory
Fighting for Survival: USS Yorktown (CV5) Damage Control Experiences in 1942
This study reveals how the Pacific war changed at Coral Sea and Midway due to a little known but important cadre of sailors on USS Yorktown (CV5). Those US victories resulted from not only clever code breakers and courageous airmen but equally from the determined Damage Control (DC) crews aboard Yorktown. DC crews were the ship’s first responders. They fought fires, kept power and propulsion operable, controlled the ship’s stability, and patched her flight deck to keep aircraft flying. DC teams saved Yorktown multiple times, and their story is memorable for their contributions at Coral Sea and Midway. Without DC efforts, CV5 would not have participated in the battle of Midway. Without Yorktown, the commitment of only two American carriers (with one being virtually inexperienced) against four Japanese carriers with their skilled airmen would have yielded disaster for the United States at Midway instead of victory
Second Place Isn’t Good Enough: Achieving True Reform ThroughExpanded Parole Eligibility
The article proposes the expansion of existing geriatric parole statute in Louisiana so as to eradicate the state\u27s practices of unjustified sentencing and mass incarceration
Spectre automorphe des vari\'et\'es hyperboliques et applications topologiques
This book is made of two parts. The first is concerned with the differential
form spectrum of congruence hyperbolic manifolds. We prove Selberg type
theorems on the first eigenvalue of the laplacian on differential forms. The
method of proof is representation theoritic, we hope the different chapters may
as well serve as an introduction to the modern theory of automorphic forms and
its application to spectral questions. The second part of the book is of a more
differential geometric flavor, a new kind of lifting of cohomology classes is
proved.Comment: 237 pages, book (in french
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