1,949 research outputs found
About the Algebraic Solutions of Smallest Enclosing Cylinders Problems
Given n points in Euclidean space E^d, we propose an algebraic algorithm to
compute the best fitting (d-1)-cylinder. This algorithm computes the unknown
direction of the axis of the cylinder. The location of the axis and the radius
of the cylinder are deduced analytically from this direction. Special attention
is paid to the case d=3 when n=4 and n=5. For the former, the minimal radius
enclosing cylinder is computed algebrically from constrained minimization of a
quartic form of the unknown direction of the axis. For the latter, an
analytical condition of existence of the circumscribed cylinder is given, and
the algorithm reduces to find the zeroes of an one unknown polynomial of degree
at most 6. In both cases, the other parameters of the cylinder are deduced
analytically. The minimal radius enclosing cylinder is computed analytically
for the regular tetrahedron and for a trigonal bipyramids family with a
symmetry axis of order 3.Comment: 13 pages, 0 figure; revised version submitted to publication
(previous version is a copy of the original one of 2010
Testing Cosmological Models With A \lya Forest Statistic: The High End Of The Optical Depth Distribution
We pay particular attention to the high end of the \lya optical depth
distribution of a quasar spectrum. Based on the flux distribution
(Miralda-Escud\'e et al 1996), a simple yet seemingly cosmological model
-differentiating statistic, -- the cumulative probability of
a quasar spectrum with \lya optical depth greater than a high value
-- is emphasized. It is shown that two different models -- the cold dark matter
model with a cosmological constant and the mixed hot and cold dark matter
model, both normalized to COBE and local galaxy cluster abundance -- yield
quite different values of : 0.13 of the former versus 0.058 of
the latter for at . Moreover, it is argued that
may be fairly robust to compute theoretically because it does
not seem to depend sensitively on small variations of simulations parameters
such as radiation field, cooling, feedback process, radiative transfer,
resolution and simulation volume within the plausible ranges of the concerned
quantities. Furthermore, it is illustrated that can be
obtained sufficiently accurately from currently available observed quasar
spectra for , when observational noise is properly taken
into account. We anticipate that analyses of observations of quasar \lya
absorption spectra over a range of redshift may be able to constrain the
redshift evolution of the amplitude of the density fluctuations on
small-to-intermediate scales, therefore providing an independent constraint on
, and .Comment: ApJ Letters, in press, substantial changes have been made from the
last versio
Semiclassical approach to the ac-conductance of chaotic cavities
We address frequency-dependent quantum transport through mesoscopic
conductors in the semiclassical limit. By generalizing the trajectory-based
semiclassical theory of dc quantum transport to the ac case, we derive the
average screened conductance as well as ac weak-localization corrections for
chaotic conductors. Thereby we confirm respective random matrix results and
generalize them by accounting for Ehrenfest time effects. We consider the case
of a cavity connected through many leads to a macroscopic circuit which
contains ac-sources. In addition to the reservoir the cavity itself is
capacitively coupled to a gate. By incorporating tunnel barriers between cavity
and leads we obtain results for arbitrary tunnel rates. Finally, based on our
findings we investigate the effect of dephasing on the charge relaxation
resistance of a mesoscopic capacitor in the linear low-frequency regime
Temperature and Kinematics of CIV Absorption Systems
We use Keck HIRES spectra of three intermediate redshift QSOs to study the
physical state and kinematics of the individual components of CIV selected
heavy element absorption systems. Fewer than 8 % of all CIV lines with column
densities greater than 10^{12.5} cm^{-2} have Doppler parameters b < 6 km/s. A
formal decomposition into thermal and non-thermal motion using the simultaneous
presence of SiIV gives a mean thermal Doppler parameter b_{therm}(CIV) = 7.2
km/s, corresponding to a temperature of 38,000 K although temperatures possibly
in excess of 300,000 K occur occasionally. We also find tentative evidence for
a mild increase of temperature with HI column density. Non-thermal motions
within components are typically small (< 10 km/s) for most systems, indicative
of a quiescent environment. The two-point correlation function (TPCF) of CIV
systems on scales up to 500 km/s suggests that there is more than one source of
velocity dispersion. The shape of the TPCF can be understood if the CIV systems
are caused by ensembles of objects with the kinematics of dwarf galaxies on a
small scale, while following the Hubble flow on a larger scale. Individual high
redshift CIV components may be the building blocks of future normal galaxies in
a hierarchical structure formation scenario.Comment: submitted to the ApJ Letters, March 16, 1996 (in press); (13 Latex
pages, 4 Postscript figures, and psfig.sty included
High resolution study of associated C IV absorption systems in NGC 5548
We present the results of a careful analysis of associated absorption systems
toward NGC 5548. Most of the well resolved narrow components in the associated
system, defined by the Lyman alpha, C IV and N V profiles, show velocity
separation similar (to within 10~\kms) to the C IV doublet splitting. We
estimate the chance probability of occurrence of such pairs with velocity
separation equal to C IV doublet splitting to be . Thus it is
more likely that most of the narrow components are line-locked with C IV
doublet splitting. This will mean that the radiative acceleration plays an
important role in the kinematics of the absorbing clouds. We build grids of
photoionization models and estimate the radiative acceleration due to all
possible bound-bound transitions. We show that the clouds producing absorption
have densities less than , and are in the outer regions of the
broad emission line region (BLR). We note that the clouds which are line-locked
cannot produce appreciable optical depths of O VII and O VIII, and hence cannot
be responsible for the observed ionized edges, in the soft X-ray. We discuss
the implications of the presence of optically thin clouds in the outer regions
of the BLR to the models of broad emission lines.Comment: 21 pages, latex (aasms4 style), incluedes 4 ps figures. To appear in
Astrophysical Journa
A Multi-Species Model for Hydrogen and Helium Absorbers in Lyman-Alpha Forest Clouds
We have performed a multi-species hydrodynamical simulation of the formation
and evolution of Lyman alpha clouds in a flat CDM dominated universe with an
external flux of ionizing radiation. We solve the fully coupled non-equilibrium
rate equations for the following species: H, H^+, H^-, H_2, H_2^+, He, He^+,
He^{++}, and e^-. The statistical properties of the distribution and evolution
of both hydrogen and helium absorption lines are extracted and compared to
observed data. We find excellent agreement for the following neutral hydrogen
data: the distribution of column densities is fit well by a power law with
exponent beta=1.55 with a possible deficiency of lines above column density
10^{15} cm^{-2}; the integrated distribution matches observed data over a broad
range of column densities 10^{13} to 10^{17} cm^{-2}; a Gaussian statistical
fit to the Doppler parameter distribution yields a median of 35.6 km s^{-1};
the evolution of the number of clouds with column densities larger than 10^{14}
cm^{-2} follows a power law with exponent gamma=2.22. Analogous calculations
are presented for HeII absorption lines and we find the ratio of Doppler
parameters b_{HeII}/b_{HI} = 0.87. Our data also suggests that Ly
clouds may belong to two morphologically different groups: small column density
clouds which tend to reside in sheets or filamental structures and are very
elongated and/or flattened, and the large column density clouds which are
typically found at the intersections of these caustic structures and are
quasi-spherical.Comment: 14 pages, 4 postscript figure
The Origin of C IV Absorption Systems at Redshifts z<1---Discovery of Extended C IV Envelopes Around Galaxies
(Abridged) We report the discovery of extended CIV gaseous envelopes around
galaxies of a wide range of luminosity and morphological type. First, we show
that CIV absorption systems are strongly clustered around galaxies on velocity
scales of v < 250 km/s and impact parameter scales of rho < 100 h^{-1} kpc but
not on larger velocity or impact parameter scales. Next, adopting measurements
of galaxy properties presented in previous papers, we examine how properties of
the CIV absorption systems depend on properties of the galaxies. On the basis
of 14 galaxy and absorber pairs and 36 galaxies that do not produce
corresponding CIV absorption lines to within sensitive upper limits, we find
that: (1) Galaxies of a range of morphological type and luminosity appear to
possess extended CIV gaseous envelopes of radius R ~ 100 h^{-1} kpc, with
abrupt boundaries between the CIV absorbing and non-absorbing regions. (2) The
extent of CIV-absorbing gas around galaxies scales with galaxy B-band
luminosity as R \propto L_B^{0.5 +/- 0.1} but does not depend strongly on
galaxy surface brightness, redshift, or morphological type. And (3) the
covering factor of CIV clouds within ~ 100 h^{-1} kpc of galaxies is nearly
unity, but there is a large scatter in the mean number of clouds encountered
along the line of sight. The most significant implication of the study is that
galaxies of a wide range of luminosity and morphological type are surrounded by
chemically enriched gas that extends for at least ~ 100 h^{-1} kpc. We consider
various scenarios that may have produced metals at large galactic distance and
conclude that accreting satellites are most likely to be responsible for
chemically enriched gas at large galactic distances to regular looking
galaxies.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures, to appear in ApJ, July 20 200
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