227 research outputs found
The Pattern Speed of the Galactic Bar
Most late-type stars in the solar neighborhood have velocities similar to the
local standard of rest (LSR), but there is a clearly separated secondary
component corresponding to a slower rotation and a mean outward motion.
Detailed simulations of the response of a stellar disk to a central bar show
that such a bi-modality is expected from outer-Lindblad resonant scattering.
When constraining the run of the rotation curve by the proper motion of Sgr A*
and the terminal gas velocities, the value observed for the rotation velocity
separating the two components results in a value of (53+/-3)km/s/kpc for the
pattern speed of the bar, only weakly dependent on the precise values for Ro
and bar angle phi.Comment: 5 pages LaTeX, 2 Figs, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
PLoS Genet.
The Helicobacter pylori cag pathogenicity island (cagPAI) encodes a type IV secretion system. Humans infected with cagPAI-carrying H. pylori are at increased risk for sequelae such as gastric cancer. Housekeeping genes in H. pylori show considerable genetic diversity; but the diversity of virulence factors such as the cagPAI, which transports the bacterial oncogene CagA into host cells, has not been systematically investigated. Here we compared the complete cagPAI sequences for 38 representative isolates from all known H. pylori biogeographic populations. Their gene content and gene order were highly conserved. The phylogeny of most cagPAI genes was similar to that of housekeeping genes, indicating that the cagPAI was probably acquired only once by H. pylori, and its genetic diversity reflects the isolation by distance that has shaped this bacterial species since modern humans migrated out of Africa. Most isolates induced IL-8 release in gastric epithelial cells, indicating that the function of the Cag secretion system has been conserved despite some genetic rearrangements. More than one third of cagPAI genes, in particular those encoding cell-surface exposed proteins, showed signatures of diversifying (Darwinian) selection at more than 5% of codons. Several unknown gene products predicted to be under Darwinian selection are also likely to be secreted proteins (e.g. HP0522, HP0535). One of these, HP0535, is predicted to code for either a new secreted candidate effector protein or a protein which interacts with CagA because it contains two genetic lineages, similar to cagA. Our study provides a resource that can guide future research on the biological roles and host interactions of cagPAI proteins, including several whose function is still unknown
High resolution simulations of unstable modes in a collisionless disc
We present N-body simulations of unstable spiral modes in a dynamically cool
collisionless disc. We show that spiral modes grow in a thin collisionless disk
in accordance with the analytical perturbation theory. We use the particle-mesh
code SUPERBOX with nested grids to follow the evolution of unstable spirals
that emerge from an unstable equilibrium state. We use a large number of
particles (up to 40 million particles) and high-resolution spatial grids in our
simulations (128^3 cells). These allow us to trace the dynamics of the unstable
spiral modes until their wave amplitudes are saturated due to nonlinear
effects. In general, the results of our simulations are in agreement with the
analytical predictions. The growth rate and the pattern speed of the most
unstable bar-mode measured in N-body simulations agree with the linear
analysis. However the parameters of secondary unstable modes are in lesser
agreement because of the still limited resolution of our simulations.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures in 22 files, A&A in print: Oct. 1st 200
Global Spiral Modes in NGC 1566: Observations and Theory
We present an observational and theoretical study of the spiral structure in
galaxy NGC 1566. A digitized image of NGC 1566 in I-band was used for
measurements of the radial dependence of amplitude variations in the spiral
arms. We use the known velocity dispersion in the disk of NGC 1566, together
with its rotation curve, to construct linear and 2D nonlinear simulations which
are then compared with observations. A two-armed spiral is the most unstable
linear global mode in the disk of NGC 1566. The nonlinear simulations are in
agreement with the results of the linear modal analysis, and the theoretical
surface amplitude and the velocity residual variations across the spiral arms
are in qualitative agreement with the observations. The spiral arms found in
the linear and nonlinear simulations are considerably shorter than those
observed in the disk of NGC 1566. We argue therefore, that the surface density
distribution in the disk of the galaxy NGC 1566 was different in the past, when
spiral structure in NGC 1566 was linearly growing.Comment: 41 pages, 20 figures, to be published in the Astrophysical Journa
Properties of odd nuclei and the impact of time-odd mean fields: A systematic Skyrme-Hartree-Fock analysis
We present a systematic analysis of the description of odd nuclei by the
Skyrme-Hartree-Fock approach augmented with pairing in BCS approximation and
blocking of the odd nucleon. Current and spin densities in the Skyrme
functional produce time-odd mean fields (TOMF) for odd nuclei. Their effect on
basic properties (binding energies, odd-even staggering, separation energies
and spectra) is investigated for the three Skyrme parameterizations SkI3, SLy6,
and SV-bas. About 1300 spherical and axially-deformed odd nuclei with 16 < Z <
92 are considered. The calculations demonstrate that the TOMF effect is
generally small, although not fully negligible. The influence of the Skyrme
parameterization and the consistency of the calculations are much more
important. With a proper choice of the parameterization, a good description of
binding energies and their differences is obtained, comparable to that for even
nuclei. The description of low-energy excitation spectra of odd nuclei is of
varying quality depending on the nucleus
Nonlinear Effects in Models of the Galaxy: 1. Midplane Stellar Orbits in the Presence of 3D Spiral Arms
With the aim of studying the nonlinear stellar and gaseous response to the
gravitational potential of a galaxy such as the Milky Way, we have modeled 3D
galactic spiral arms as a superposition of inhomogeneous oblate spheroids and
added their contribution to an axisymmetric model of the Galactic mass
distribution. Three spiral loci are proposed here, based in different sets of
observations. A comparison of our model with a tight-winding approximation
shows that the self-gravitation of the whole spiral pattern is important in the
middle and outer galactic regions. As a first step to full 3D calculations the
model is suitable for, we have explored the stellar orbital structure in the
midplane of the Galaxy. We present the standard analysis in the pattern
rotating frame, and complement this analysis with orbital information from the
Galactic inertial frame. Prograde and retrograde orbits are defined
unambiguously in the inertial frame, then labeled as such in the Poincar\'e
diagrams of the non-inertial frame. In this manner we found a sharp separatrix
between the two classes of orbits. Chaos is restricted to the prograde orbits,
and its onset occurs for the higher spiral perturbation considered plausible in
our Galaxy.Comment: 23 pages, 22 Figures. Latex. Submitted to Ap
The Leo I Cloud: Secular nuclear evolution of NGC 3379, NGC 3384, and NGC 3368?
The central regions of the three brightest members of the Leo I galaxy group
-- NGC 3368, NGC 3379, and NGC 3384 -- are investigated by means of 2D
spectroscopy. In all three galaxies we have found separate circumnuclear
stellar and gaseous subsystems -- more probably, disks -- whose spatial
orientations and spins are connected to the spatial orientation of the
supergiant intergalactic HI ring reported previously by Schneider et al. (1983)
and Schneider (1985, 1989). In NGC 3368 the global gaseous disk seems also to
be inclined to the symmetry plane of the stellar body, being probably of
external origin. Although the rather young mean stellar age and spatial
orientations of the circumnuclear disks in NGC 3379, NGC 3384, and NGC 3368
could imply their recent formation from material of the intergalactic HI cloud,
the time scale of these secondary formation events, of order 3 Gyr, does not
support the collision scenario of Rood & Williams (1985), but is rather in line
with the ideas of Schneider (1985, 1989) regarding tidal interactions of the
galaxies with the HI cloud on timescales of the intergroup orbital motions.Comment: Accepted to ApJ, 46 pages (figs 18 and 22 are low resolution
86 GHz SiO maser survey of late-type stars in the Inner Galaxy. I. Observational data
We present 86 GHz (v = 1, J = 2 -1) SiO maser line observations with the IRAM
30-m telescope of a sample of 441 late-type stars in the Inner Galaxy (-4 degr
< l < +30 degr). These stars were selected on basis of their infrared
magnitudes and colours from the ISOGAL and MSX catalogues. SiO maser emission
was detected in 271 sources, and their line-of-sight velocities indicate that
the stars are located in the Inner Galaxy. These new detections double the
number of line-of-sight velocities available from previous SiO and OH maser
observations in the area covered by our survey and are, together with other
samples of e.g. OH/IR stars, useful for kinematic studies of the central parts
of the Galaxy.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, accepted by A&A Journa
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