2,121 research outputs found
A comprehensive analysis of multi-scale field aligned currents: Characteristics, controlling parameters, and relationships
We explore the characteristics, controlling parameters, and relationships of multi-scale field aligned currents (FACs) using a rigorous, comprehensive, and cross-platform analysis. Our unique approach combines FAC data from the Swarm satellites and the Advanced Magnetosphere and Planetary Electrodynamics Response Experiment (AMPERE) to create a database of small-scale (∼10-150 km, 250 km) FACs. We examine these data for the repeatable behavior of FACs across scales (i.e., the characteristics), the dependence on the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) orientation, and the degree to which each scale ‘departs’ from nominal large-scale specification. We retrieve new information by utilizing magnetic latitude and local time dependence, correlation analyses, and quantification of the departure of smaller from larger scales. We find that: 1) FACs characteristics and dependence on controlling parameters do not map between scales in a straight forward manner; 2) relationships between FAC scales exhibit local time dependence; and 3) the dayside high-latitude region is characterized by remarkably distinct FAC behavior when analyzed at different scales, and the locations of distinction correspond to ‘anomalous’ ionosphere-thermosphere (IT) behavior. Comparing with nominal large-scale FACs, we find that differences are characterized by a horseshoe shape, maximizing across dayside local times, and that difference magnitudes increase when smaller scale observed FACs are considered. We suggest that both new physics and increased resolution of models are required to address the multi-scale complexities. We include a summary table of our findings to provide a quick reference for differences between multi-scale FACs
The metallicity properties of simulated long-GRB galaxy hosts and the Fundamental Metallicity Relation
We study the implication of the collapsar model for Long Gamma-Ray Bursts
(LGRBs) on the metallicity properties of the host galaxies, by combining
high-resolution N-body simulations with semi-analytic models of galaxy
formation. The cosmological model that we use reproduces the Fundamental
Metallicity Relation recently discovered for the SDSS galaxies, whereby the
metallicity decreases with increasing Star Formation Rate for galaxies of a
given stellar mass. We select host galaxies housing pockets of gas-particles,
young and with different thresholds in metallicities, that can be sites of LRGB
events, according to the collapsar model. The simulated samples are compared
with 18 observed LGRB hosts in the aim at discriminating whether the
metallicity is a primary parameter. We find that a threshold in metallicity for
the LGRB progenitors, within the model galaxies, is not necessary in order to
reproduce the observed distribution of host metallicities. The low
metallicities of observed LGRB hosts is a consequence of the high star
formation environment. The star formation rate appears to be the primary
parameter to generate a burst event. Finally, we show that only a few LGRBs are
observed in massive, highly extincted galaxies, while these galaxies are
expected to produce many such events. We identify these missing events with the
fraction of dark LGRBs.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, submitted MNRA
Simplicial models of social aggregation I
This paper presents the foundational ideas for a new way of modeling social
aggregation. Traditional approaches have been using network theory, and the
theory of random networks. Under that paradigm, every social agent is
represented by a node, and every social interaction is represented by a segment
connecting two nodes. Early work in family interactions, as well as more recent
work in the study of terrorist organizations, shows that network modeling may
be insufficient to describe the complexity of human social structures.
Specifically, network theory does not seem to have enough flexibility to
represent higher order aggregations, where several agents interact as a group,
rather than as a collection of pairs. The model we present here uses a well
established mathematical theory, the theory of simplicial complexes, to address
this complex issue prevalent in interpersonal and intergroup communication. The
theory enables us to provide a richer graphical representation of social
interactions, and to determine quantitative mechanisms to describe the
robustness of a social structure. We also propose a methodology to create
random simplicial complexes, with the purpose of providing a new method to
simulate computationally the creation and disgregation of social structures.
Finally, we propose several measures which could be taken and observed in order
to describe and study an actual social aggregation occurring in interpersonal
and intergroup contexts.Comment: 31 page
Ionospheric response to the corotating interaction region-driven geomagnetic storm of October 2002
Unlike the geomagnetic storms produced by coronal mass ejections (CMEs), the storms generated by corotating interaction regions (CIRs) are not manifested by dramatic enhancements of the ring current. The CIR-driven storms are however capable of producing other phenomena typical for the magnetic storms such as relativistic particle acceleration, enhanced magnetospheric convection and ionospheric heating. This paper examines ionospheric plasma anomalies produced by a CIR-driven storm in the middle- and high-latitude ionosphere with a specific focus on the polar cap region. The moderate magnetic storm which took place on 14–17 October 2002 has been used as an example of the CIR-driven event. Four-dimensional tomographic reconstructions of the ionospheric plasma density using measurements of the total electron content along ray paths of GPS signals allow us to reveal the large-scale structure of storm-induced ionospheric anomalies. The tomographic reconstructions are compared with the data obtained by digital ionosonde located at Eureka station near the geomagnetic north pole. The morphology and dynamics of the observed ionospheric anomalies is compared qualitatively to the ionospheric anomalies produced by major CME-driven storms. It is demonstrated that the CIR-driven storm of October 2002 was able to produce ionospheric anomalies comparable to those produced by CME-driven storms of much greater Dst magnitude. This study represents an important step in linking the tomographic GPS reconstructions with the data from ground-based network of digital ionosondes
Discovery of strong CIV absorption in the highest redshift quasar
We report the near-IR detection of a prominent CIV absorption in the
rest-frame UV spectrum of the most distant known QSO, SDSS J104433.04-012502.2,
at z=5.80. This QSO was recently observed with XMM-Newton and it was found to
be notably X-ray weak. The equivalent width of the CIV absorption feature (~10
A) strongly supports the idea that the X-ray faintness of this QSO is due to
heavy absorption by gas with a column density N_H > 10^{24} cm^-2. The shape of
the CIV feature suggests that this is a Broad Absorption Line QSO. Although
absorbed by a huge column of gas, the observed continuum in the 0.9-2.4um range
(~1300-3500 A rest frame) exactly matches the template of unabsorbed QSOs
without invoking any reddening (E(B-V)<0.08 mag), indicating that dust in the
absorbing gas is either absent or composed of large grains.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in A&A Letter
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