987 research outputs found
Fitting the radial acceleration relation to individual SPARC galaxies
Galaxies follow a tight radial acceleration relation (RAR): the acceleration
observed at every radius correlates with that expected from the distribution of
baryons. We use the Markov Chain Monte Carlo method to fit the mean RAR to 175
individual galaxies in the SPARC database, marginalizing over stellar
mass-to-light ratio (), galaxy distance, and disk
inclination. Acceptable fits with astrophysically reasonable parameters are
found for the vast majority of galaxies. The residuals around these fits have
an rms scatter of only 0.057 dex (13). This is in agreement with the
predictions of modified Newtonian dynamics (MOND). We further consider a
generalized version of the RAR that, unlike MOND, permits galaxy-to-galaxy
variation in the critical acceleration scale. The fits are not improved with
this additional freedom: there is no credible indication of variation in the
critical acceleration scale. The data are consistent with the action of a
single effective force law. The apparent universality of the acceleration scale
and the small residual scatter are key to understanding galaxies.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A. The
same as the first version with typos corrected. A set of 175 figures is
available at http://astroweb.cwru.edu/SPARC
The baryonic Tully-Fisher relation for different velocity definitions and implications for galaxy angular momentum
We study the baryonic Tully-Fisher relation (BTFR) at z=0 using 153 galaxies
from the SPARC sample. We consider different definitions of the characteristic
velocity from HI and H-alpha rotation curves, as well as HI line-widths from
single-dish observations. We reach the following results: (1) The tightest BTFR
is given by the mean velocity along the flat part of the rotation curve. The
orthogonal intrinsic scatter is extremely small (6%) and the best-fit slope is
3.85+/-0.09, but systematic uncertainties may drive the slope from 3.5 to 4.0.
Other velocity definitions lead to BTFRs with systematically higher scatters
and shallower slopes. (2) We provide statistical relations to infer the flat
rotation velocity from HI line-widths or less extended rotation curves (like
H-alpha and CO data). These can be useful to study the BTFR from large HI
surveys or the BTFR at high redshifts. (3) The BTFR is more fundamental than
the relation between angular momentum and galaxy mass (the Fall relation). The
Fall relation has about 7 times more scatter than the BTFR, which is merely
driven by the scatter in the mass-size relation of galaxies. The BTFR is
already the "fundamental plane" of galaxy discs: no value is added with a
radial variable as a third parameter.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Towards the development of a problem solver for the monitoring and control of instrumentation in a grid environment
This paper considers the issues involved in developing a generic problem solver to be used within a grid environment for the monitoring and control of instrumentation. The specific feature of such an environment is that the type of data to be processed, as well as the problem, is not always known in advance. Therefore, it is necessary to develop a problem solver architecture that addresses this issue. We propose to analyze the performance of the problem solving algorithms available within the WEKA toolkit and determine a decision tree of the best performing algorithm for a given type of data. For this purpose the algorithms have been tested using 51 datasets either drawn from publicly available repositories or generated in a grid-enabled environmen
Predictive models applied to groundwater level forecasting: a preliminary experience on the alluvial aquifer of the Magra River (Italy)
Computer-based decision support systems are getting a growing interest for water managing authorities and water distribution companies. This work discusses a preliminary experience in the application of computational intelligence in a hydrological modeling framework, regarding the study area of the alluvial aquifer of the Magra River (Italy)
Testing Feedback-Modified Dark Matter Haloes with Galaxy Rotation Curves: Estimation of Halo Parameters and Consistency with CDM
Cosmological -body simulations predict dark matter (DM) haloes with steep
central cusps (e.g. NFW, Navarro et al. 1996). This contradicts observations of
gas kinematics in low-mass galaxies that imply the existence of shallow DM
cores. Baryonic processes such as adiabatic contraction and gas outflows can,
in principle, alter the initial DM density profile, yet their relative
contributions to the halo transformation remain uncertain. Recent high
resolution, cosmological hydrodynamic simulations (Di Cintio et al. 2014, DC14)
predict that inner density profiles depend systematically on the ratio of
stellar to DM mass (M/M). Using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo
approach, we test the NFW and the M/M-dependent DC14 halo
models against a sample of 147 galaxy rotation curves from the new {\it
Spitzer} Photometry and Accurate Rotation Curves (SPARC) data set. These
galaxies all have extended H{\small I} rotation curves from radio
interferometry as well as accurate stellar mass density profiles from
near-infrared photometry. The DC14 halo profile provides markedly better fits
to the data compared to the NFW profile. Unlike NFW, the DC14 halo parameters
found in our rotation curve fits naturally fall within two standard deviations
of the mass-concentration relation predicted by CDM and the stellar
mass-halo mass relation inferred from abundance matching with few outliers.
Halo profiles modified by baryonic processes are therefore more consistent with
expectations from cold dark matter (CDM) cosmology and
provide better fits to galaxy rotation curves across a wide range of galaxy
properties than do halo models that neglect baryonic physics. Our results offer
a solution to the decade long cusp-core discrepancy.Comment: 23 Pages, 18 Figures, MNRAS Accepte
Geochemistry of the Albano and Nemi crater lakes in the volcanic district of Alban Hills
Lake Albano, located 20 km to the SE of Rome, is hosted within the most recent crater of the quiescent Alban
Hills volcanic complex that produced hydromagmatic eruptions in Holocene times. Stratigraphic,
archaeological and historical evidence indicates that the lake level underwent important variations in the
Bronze Age. Before the IV century B.C. several lahars were generated by water overflows from the lake and in
the IV century B.C. Romans excavated a drainage tunnel. The lake is located above a buried carbonate horst
that contains a pressurized medium-enthalpy geothermal reservoir from which fluids escape to the surface
to produce many important gas manifestations of mostly CO2. Previous studies recognized the presence of
gas emissions also from the crater bottom. In 1997 the possibility of a Nyos-type event triggered by a lake
rollover was considered very low, because the CO2 water concentration at depth was found to be far from
saturation. However, considering the high population density nearby, the Italian Civil Protection Department
recommended that periodical monitoring be carried out. To this scope we initiated in 2001 a systematic
geochemical study of the lake. Thirteen vertical profiles have been repeatedly carried out in 2001–2006,
especially in the deepest part of the lake (167 m in 2006), measuring T, pH, dissolved O2 and electrical
conductivity. Water samples were collected from various depths and chemically and isotopically analysed.
Two similar profiles have been measured also in the nearby Nemi crater lake. Results indicate that in the
4.5 years of monitoring the pressure of gas dissolved in the Lake Albano deep waters remained much lower
than the hydrostatic pressure. A CO2 soil survey carried out on the borders of the two lakes, indicates the
presence of some zones of anomalous degassing of likely magmatic origin. A water overturn or a heavy
mixing of deep and shallow waters likely occurred in winter 2003–2004, when cold rainfall cooled the
surface water below 8.5 °C. Such overturns cause only a limited gas exsolution from the lake when the deep
water is brought to a few meters depth but can explain the observed decrease with time of dissolved CO2 at
depth and related water pH increase. A gas hazard could occur in the case of a sudden injection through the
lake bottom of a huge quantity of CO2-rich fluids, which might be caused by earthquake induced fracturing of
the rock pile beneath the lake. A limnic gas eruption might also occur should CO2 concentration build up
within the lake for a long time
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