21,625 research outputs found
VLT and GTC observations of SDSS J0123+00: a type 2 quasar triggered in a galaxy encounter?
We present long-slit spectroscopy, continuum and [OIII]5007 imaging data
obtained with the Very Large Telescope and the Gran Telescopio Canarias of the
type 2 quasar SDSS J0123+00 at z=0.399. The quasar lies in a complex, gas-rich
environment. It appears to be physically connected by a tidal bridge to another
galaxy at a projected distance of ~100 kpc, which suggests this is an
interacting system. Ionized gas is detected to a distance of at least ~133 kpc
from the nucleus. The nebula has a total extension of ~180 kpc. This is one of
the largest ionized nebulae ever detected associated with an active galaxy.
Based on the environmental properties, we propose that the origin of the nebula
is tidal debris from a galactic encounter, which could as well be the
triggering mechanism of the nuclear activity. SDSS J0123+00 demonstrates that
giant, luminous ionized nebulae can exist associated with type 2 quasars of low
radio luminosities, contrary to expectations based on type 1 quasar studies.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
Economic Fluctuations, Child Mortality and Policy Considerations in the Least Developed Countries
Between 1990 and 2010 child mortality decreased in general terms in the Least Developed Countries (LDCs), although the differences between countries over time are significant. This paper examines the relationship between short-term economic fluctuations and changes in child mortality in the LDCs during the period 1990-2010. Unlike other studies, we consider a large group of LDCs and provide empirical evidence of the asymmetrical effects of variations in Gross Domestic Product per capita on the evolution of child mortality rate in periods of economic recession and expansion. The significance of said effects diminishes when other relevant socio-economic control variables are considered, and some development policy considerations are addressed in order to achieve the Millennium Development Goal 4 target
Preparing projected entangled pair states on a quantum computer
We present a quantum algorithm to prepare injective PEPS on a quantum
computer, a class of open tensor networks representing quantum states. The
run-time of our algorithm scales polynomially with the inverse of the minimum
condition number of the PEPS projectors and, essentially, with the inverse of
the spectral gap of the PEPS' parent Hamiltonian.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure. To be published in Physical Review Letters.
Removed heuristics, refined run-time boun
Discovery of a wide companion near the deuterium burning mass limit in the Upper Scorpius association
We present the discovery of a companion near the deuterium burning mass limit
located at a very wide distance, at an angular separation of 4.6+/-0.1 arcsec
(projected distance of ~ 670 AU) from UScoCTIO108, a brown dwarf of the very
young Upper Scorpius association. Optical and near-infrared photometry and
spectroscopy confirm the cool nature of both objects, with spectral types of M7
and M9.5, respectively, and that they are bona fide members of the association,
showing low gravity and features of youth. Their masses, estimated from the
comparison of their bolometric luminosities and theoretical models for the age
range of the association, are 60+/-20 and 14^{+2}_{-8} MJup, respectively. The
existence of this object around a brown dwarf at this wide orbit suggests that
the companion is unlikely to have formed in a disk based on current planet
formation models. Because this system is rather weakly bound, they did not
probably form through dynamical ejection of stellar embryos.Comment: 10 pages, including 4 figures and 2 table
The spin glass transition of the three dimensional Heisenberg spin glass
It is shown, by means of Monte Carlo simulation and Finite Size Scaling
analysis, that the Heisenberg spin glass undergoes a finite-temperature phase
transition in three dimensions. There is a single critical temperature, at
which both a spin glass and a chiral glass orderings develop. The Monte Carlo
algorithm, adapted from lattice gauge theory simulations, makes possible to
thermalize lattices of size L=32, larger than in any previous spin glass
simulation in three dimensions. High accuracy is reached thanks to the use of
the Marenostrum supercomputer. The large range of system sizes studied allow us
to consider scaling corrections.Comment: 4 pages, 4 Postscript figures, version to be published in Physical
Review Letter
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