4,386 research outputs found
Physics of SNeIa and Cosmology
We give an overview of the current understanding of Type Ia supernovae
relevant for their use as cosmological distance indicators. We present the
physical basis to understand their homogeneity of the observed light curves and
spectra and the observed correlations. This provides a robust method to
determine the Hubble constant, 67 +- 8 (2 sigma) km/Mpc/sec, independently from
primary distance indicators.
We discuss the uncertainties and tests which include SNe Ia based distance
determinations prior to delta-Ceph. measurements for the host galaxies. Based
on detailed models, we study the small variations from homogeneities and their
observable consequences. In combination with future data, this underlines the
suitability and promises the refinements needed to determine accurate relative
distances within 2 to 3 % and to use SNe Ia for high precision cosmology.Comment: to be published in "Stellar Candles", eds. Gieren et al. Lecture
Notes in Physics (http://link.springer.de/series/lnpp
Vegetative morphology and interfire survival strategies in the Cape Fynbos grasses
It is shown that there is a wide range of structural variation in the habit of the Arundineae and Ehrharteae of the fynbos of the Cape Floristic Region (Cape Province, South Africa). Structural differences in the bases of the fynbos grasses have been classified into four groups: swollen, knotty tillering, weak and annual. Variation in the position of the innovation buds occurs with one group having basal perennating buds, implying that all the culm material is annual, while the second group has cauline innovation buds, leading to the development of a divaricate perennial herb. The recognition of caducous, mesic (orthophyllous) and sclerophyllous leaf blades is also possible, based on leaf morphology and anatomy. These variations in growth forms allow the classification of the Cape grasses into five guilds adapted for survival in the dense fynbos vegetation that develops between the well-spaced fires in these heathlands. The following guilds have been recognized: competition avoiders that grow on rock ledges and outcrops where competition from shrubby vegetation is reduced; reseeders, that survive the protracted interfire period as seed; geophytes, that survive this period as underground organs; coppicers, that survive as small plants; and competitors, that grow tall by means of cauline innovation buds, and so are able to compete with the shrubby heath vegetation
Dark energy records in lensed cosmic microwave background
We consider the weak lensing effect induced by linear cosmological
perturbations on the cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarization
anisotropies. We find that the amplitude of the lensing peak in the BB mode
power spectrum is a faithful tracer of the dark energy dynamics at the onset of
cosmic acceleration. This is due to two reasons. First, the lensing power is
non-zero only at intermediate redshifts between the observer and the source,
keeping record of the linear perturbation growth rate at the corresponding
epoch. Second, the BB lensing signal is expected to dominate over the other
sources. The lensing distortion on the TT and EE spectra do exhibit a similar
dependence on the dark energy dynamics, although those are dominated by primary
anisotropies. We investigate and quantify the effect by means of exact tracking
quintessence models, as well as parameterizing the dark energy equation of
state in terms of the present value () and its asymptotic value in the
past (); in the interval allowed by the present constraints on dark
energy, the variation of induces a significant change in the BB
mode lensing amplitude. A Fisher matrix analysis, under conservative
assumptions concerning the increase of the sample variance due to the lensing
non-Gaussian statistics, shows that a precision of order 10% on both
and is achievable by the future experiments probing a large sky
area with angular resolution and sensitivity appropriate to detect the lensing
effect on the CMB angular power spectrum. These results show that the CMB can
probe the differential redshift behavior of the dark energy equation of state,
beyond its average.Comment: New version including substantial text change, three more figures and
two more table
Quantum transport in noncentrosymmetric superconductors and thermodynamics of ferromagnetic superconductors
We consider a general Hamiltonian describing coexistence of itinerant
ferromagnetism, spin-orbit coupling and mixed spin-singlet/triplet
superconducting pairing in the context of mean-field theory. The Hamiltonian is
diagonalized and exact eigenvalues are obtained, thus allowing us to write down
the coupled gap equations for the different order parameters. Our results may
then be applied to any model describing coexistence of any combination of these
three phenomena. As a specific application of our results, we consider
tunneling between a normal metal and a noncentrosymmetric superconductor with
mixed singlet and triplet gaps. The conductance spectrum reveals information
about these gaps in addition to how the influence of spin-orbit coupling is
manifested. We also consider the coexistence of itinerant ferromagnetism and
triplet superconductivity as a model for recently discovered ferromagnetic
superconductors. The coupled gap equations are solved self-consistently, and we
study the conditions necessary to obtain the coexistent regime of
ferromagnetism and superconductivity. Analytical expressions are presented for
the order parameters, and we provide an analysis of the free energy to identify
the preferred system state. Moreover, we make specific predictions concerning
the heat capacity for a ferromagnetic superconductor. In particular, we report
a nonuniversal relative jump in the specific heat, depending on the
magnetization of the system, at the uppermost superconducting phase transition.
[Shortened abstract due to arXiv submission.]Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures (high quality figures available in published
version). Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Estimating the age of fire in the Cape flora of South Africa from an orchid phylogeny
Fire may have been a crucial component in the evolution of the Cape flora of South Africa, a region characterized by outstanding levels of species richness and endemism. However, there is, to date, no critical assessment of the age of the modern fire regime in this biome. Here, we exploit the presence of two obligate post-fire flowering clades in the orchid genus Disa, in conjunction with a robust, well-sampled and dated molecular phylogeny, to estimate the age by which fire must have been present. Our results indicate that summer drought (winter rainfall), the fire regime and the fynbos vegetation are several million years older than currently suggested. Summer drought and the fynbos vegetation are estimated to date back to at least the Early Miocene (ca 19.5 Ma). The current fire regime may have been established during a period of global cooling that followed the mid-Miocene Climatic Optimum (ca 15 Ma), which led to the expansion of open habitats and increased aridification. The first appearance of Disa species in the grassland biome, as well as in the subalpine habitat, is in striking agreement with reliable geological and palaeontological evidence of the age of these ecosystems, thus corroborating the efficacy of our methods. These results change our understanding of the historical mechanisms underlying botanical evolution in southern Africa, and confirm the potential of using molecular phylogenies to date events for which other information is lacking or inconclusive
Galaxy Peculiar Velocities From Large-Scale Supernova Surveys as a Dark Energy Probe
Upcoming imaging surveys such as the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope will
repeatedly scan large areas of sky and have the potential to yield
million-supernova catalogs. Type Ia supernovae are excellent standard candles
and will provide distance measures that suffice to detect mean pairwise
velocities of their host galaxies. We show that when combining these distance
measures with photometric redshifts for either the supernovae or their host
galaxies, the mean pairwise velocities of the host galaxies will provide a dark
energy probe which is competitive with other widely discussed methods. Adding
information from this test to type Ia supernova photometric luminosity
distances from the same experiment, plus the cosmic microwave background power
spectrum from the Planck satellite, improves the Dark Energy Task Force Figure
of Merit by a factor of 1.8. Pairwise velocity measurements require no
additional observational effort beyond that required to perform the traditional
supernova luminosity distance test, but may provide complementary constraints
on dark energy parameters and the nature of gravity. Incorporating additional
spectroscopic redshift follow-up observations could provide important dark
energy constraints from pairwise velocities alone. Mean pairwise velocities are
much less sensitive to systematic redshift errors than the luminosity distance
test or weak lensing techniques, and also are only mildly affected by
systematic evolution of supernova luminosity.Comment: 18 pages; 4 figures; 4 tables; replaced to match the accepted versio
Reticulation, Data Combination, and Inferring Evolutionary History: An Example from Danthonioideae (Poaceae)
We explore the potential impact of conflicting gene trees on inferences of evolutionary history above the species level. When conflict between gene trees is discovered, it is common practice either to analyze the data separately or to combine the data having excluded the conflicting taxa or data partitions for those taxa (which are then recoded as missing). We demonstrate an alternative approach, which involves duplicating conflicting taxa in the matrix, such that each duplicate is represented by one partition only. This allows the combination of all available data in standard phylogenetic analyses, despite reticulations. We show how interpretation of contradictory gene trees can lead to conflicting inferences of both morphological evolution and biogeographic history, using the example of the pampas grasses, Cortaderia. The characteristic morphological syndrome of Cortaderia can be inferred as having arisen multiple times (chloroplast DNA [cpDNA]) or just once (nuclear ribosomal DNA [nrDNA]). The distributions of species of Cortaderia and related genera in Australia/New Guinea, New Zealand, and South America can be explained by few (nrDNA) or several (cpDNA) dispersals between the southern continents. These contradictions can be explained by past hybridization events, which have linked gains of complex morphologies with unrelated chloroplast lineages and have erased evidence of dispersals from the nuclear genome. Given the discrepancies between inferences based on the gene trees individually, we urge the use of approaches such as ours that take multiple gene trees into accoun
Crystal structure of the human ATP-dependent splicing and export factor UAP56
Pre-mRNA splicing requires the function of a number of RNA-dependent ATPases/helicases, yet no three-dimensional structure of any spliceosomal ATPases/helicases is known. The highly conserved DECD-box protein UAP56/Sub2 is an essential splicing factor that is also important for mRNA export. The expected ATPase/helicase activity appears to be essential for the UAP56/Sub2 functions. Here, we show that purified human UAP56 is an active RNA-dependent ATPase, and we also report the crystal structures of UAP56 alone and in complex with ADP, as well as a DECD to DEAD mutant. The structures reveal a unique spatial arrangement of the two conserved helicase domains, and ADP-binding induces significant conformational changes of key residues in the ATP-binding pocket. Our structural analyses suggest a specific protein-RNA displacement model of UAP56/Sub2. The detailed structural information provides important mechanistic insights into the splicing function of UAP56/Sub2. The structures also will be useful for the analysis of other spliceosomal DExD-box ATPases/helicases
Tunneling currents in ferromagnetic systems with multiple broken symmetries
SHORTENED ABSTRACT: A system exhibiting multiple simultaneously broken
symmetries offers the opportunity to influence physical phenomena such as
tunneling currents by means of external control parameters. In this paper, we
consider the broken SU(2) (internal spin) symmetry of ferromagnetic systems
coexisting with \textit{i)} the broken U(1) symmetry of superconductors and
\textit{ii)} the broken spatial inversion symmetry induced by a Rashba term in
a spin-orbit coupling Hamiltonian. In order to study the effect of these broken
symmetries, we consider tunneling currents that arise in two different systems;
tunneling junctions consisting of non-unitary spin-triplet ferromagnetic
superconductors and junctions consisting of ferromagnets with spin-orbit
coupling.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Cosmological Models and Latest Observational Data
In this note, we consider the observational constraints on some cosmological
models by using the 307 Union type Ia supernovae (SNIa), the 32 calibrated
Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) at , the updated shift parameter from WMAP
5-year data (WMAP5), and the distance parameter of the measurement of the
baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) peak in the distribution of SDSS luminous red
galaxies with the updated scalar spectral index from WMAP5. The tighter
constraints obtained here update the ones obtained previously in the
literature.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, revtex4; v2: discussions added,
accepted by Eur. Phys. J. C; v3: published versio
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