2,443 research outputs found
Dynamical Mass Estimates for the Halo of M31 from Keck Spectroscopy
The last few months have seen the measurements of the radial velocities of
all of the dwarf spheroidal companions to the Andromeda galaxy (M31) using the
spectrographs (HIRES and LRIS) on the Keck Telescope. This paper summarises the
data on the radial velocities and distances for all the companion galaxies and
presents new dynamical modelling to estimate the mass of extended halo of M31.
The best fit values for the total mass of M31 are between 7 and 10 x 10^{11}
solar masses, depending on the details of the modelling. The mass estimate is
accompanied by considerable uncertainty caused by the smallness of the dataset;
for example, the upper bound on the total mass is roughly 24 x 10^{11} solar
masses, while the lower bound is about 3 x 10^{11} solar masses. These values
are less than the most recent estimates of the most likely mass of the Milky
Way halo. Bearing in mind all the uncertainties, a fair conclusion is that the
M31 halo is roughly as massive as that of the Milky Way halo. There is no
dynamical evidence for the widely held belief that M31 is more massive -- it
may even be less massive.Comment: In press, The Astrophysical Journal (Letters
Kinematically Cold Populations at Large Radii in the Draco and Ursa Minor Dwarf Spheroidals
We present projected velocity dispersion profiles for the Draco and Ursa
Minor (UMi) dwarf spheroidal galaxies based on 207 and 162 discrete stellar
velocities, respectively. Both profiles show a sharp decline in the velocity
dispersion outside ~30 arcmin (Draco) and ~40 arcmin (UMi). New, deep
photometry of Draco reveals a break in the light profile at ~25 arcmin. These
data imply the existence of a kinematically cold population in the outer parts
of both galaxies. Possible explanations of both the photometric and kinematic
data in terms of both equilibrium and non-equilibrium models are discussed in
detail. We conclude that these data challenge the picture of dSphs as simple,
isolated stellar systems.Comment: 5 pages, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
A Dynamical Fossil in the Ursa Minor Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy
The nearby Ursa Minor dwarf spheroidal (UMi dSph) is one of the most dark
matter dominated galaxies known, with a central mass to light ratio roughly
equal to 70. Somewhat anomalously, it appears to contain morphological
substructure in the form of a second peak in the stellar number density. It is
often argued that this substructure must be transient because it could not
survive for the > 10 Gyr age of the system, given the crossing time implied by
UMi's 8.8 km/s internal velocity dispersion. In this paper, however, we present
evidence that the substructure has a cold kinematical signature, and argue that
UMi's clumpiness could indeed be a primordial artefact. Using numerical
simulations, we demonstrate that substructure is incompatible with the cusped
dark matter haloes predicted by the prevailing Cold Dark Matter (CDM) paradigm,
but is consistent with an unbound stellar cluster sloshing back and forth
within the nearly harmonic potential of a cored dark matter halo. Thus CDM
appears to disagree with observation at the least massive, most dark matter
dominated end of the galaxy mass spectrum.Comment: Astrophysical Journal (Letters), in pres
First Clear Signature of an Extended Dark Matter Halo in the Draco Dwarf Spheroidal
We present the first clear evidence for an extended dark matter halo in the
Draco dwarf spheroidal galaxy based on a sample of new radial velocities for
159 giant stars out to large projected radii. Using a two parameter family of
halo models spanning a range of density profiles and velocity anisotropies, we
are able to rule out (at about the 2.5 sigma confidence level) haloes in which
mass follows light. The data strongly favor models in which the dark matter is
significantly more extended than the visible dwarf. However, haloes with
harmonic cores larger than the light distribution are also excluded. When
combined with existing measurements of the proper motion of Draco, our data
strongly suggest that Draco has not been tidally truncated within ~1 kpc. We
also show that the rising velocity dispersion at large radii represents a
serious problem for modified gravity (MOND).Comment: to be published in ApJL; 5 pages, 4 figure
An Infinite Dimensional Symmetry Algebra in String Theory
Symmetry transformations of the space-time fields of string theory are
generated by certain similarity transformations of the stress-tensor of the
associated conformal field theories. This observation is complicated by the
fact that, as we explain, many of the operators we habitually use in string
theory (such as vertices and currents) have ill-defined commutators. However,
we identify an infinite-dimensional subalgebra whose commutators are not
singular, and explicitly calculate its structure constants. This constitutes a
subalgebra of the gauge symmetry of string theory, although it may act on
auxiliary as well as propagating fields. We term this object a {\it weighted
tensor algebra}, and, while it appears to be a distant cousin of the
-algebras, it has not, to our knowledge, appeared in the literature before.Comment: 14 pages, Plain TeX, report RU93-8, CTP-TAMU-2/94, CERN-TH.7022/9
Detection Rates of Northern Bobwhite Coveys Using a Small Unmanned Aerial System-Mounted Thermal Camera
The northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus; hereafter, bobwhite) requires intensive monitoring to evaluate management efforts and determine harvest rates. However, traditional monitoring techniques (e.g., covey-call surveys) are labor-intensive and imprecise. Small unmanned aerial systems (sUASs) mounted with thermal cameras have demonstrated promise for monitoring multiple avian species and could provide a less intensive and more effective approach to monitoring bobwhite coveys, assuming coveys produce a recognizable heat signature. To assess sUAS monitoring, we evaluated the influence of bobwhite covey size (3, 6, and 12) and cover type (grass, shrub, and forest) on covey detectability by a sUAS equipped with a thermal camera. We hypothesized that forest would have the lowest covey detection due to trees obstructing detection of the thermal signature and that larger covey size would improve covey detection due to the formation of larger, more visibly distinct thermal signatures. We placed groups of known-size, pen-reared bobwhites in steel mesh cages (3, 6, and 12 individuals/cage) in 3 vegetation types (grass, shrub, and forest) among predetermined locations on a private farm in Clay County, Mississippi, USA (3 replicates, 27 total cages). At civil twilight on 5 March 2020, the sUAS flew a systematic route over the cage area at 30 m above ground level, capturing thermal infrared photographs every 5 seconds. To assess detection, we distributed 57 photographs to 31 volunteers and asked them to assign a binary value for detection (1, 0) regarding covey presence in each photograph. Overall true positive rate was 0.551 but improved with increasing covey size. By vegetation type, simulated coveys in grass had the lowest true positive rate by photograph (0.403), followed by forest (0.562) and shrub (0.605). Results indicate that sUASs and thermal camera technology could be a viable method for surveying intact bobwhite coveys, especially if detection of smaller groups and those in denser vegetation improves. As this technology advances, we recommend that future research focus on evaluating the efficacy of this novel methodology through assessing the influence of weather conditions, camera specifications, flight speed, and altitude, as well as assessing machine learning for processing photos
Vibrotactile pedals : provision of haptic feedback to support economical driving
The use of haptic feedback is currently an underused modality in the driving environment, especially with respect to vehicle manufacturers. This exploratory study evaluates the effects of a vibrotactile (or haptic) accelerator pedal on car driving performance and perceived workload using a driving simulator. A stimulus was triggered when the driver exceeded a 50% throttle threshold, past which is deemed excessive for economical driving. Results showed significant decreases in mean acceleration values, and maximum and excess throttle use when the haptic pedal was active as compared to a baseline condition. As well as the positive changes to driver behaviour, subjective workload decreased when driving with the haptic pedal as compared to when drivers were simply asked to drive economically. The literature suggests that the haptic processing channel offers a largely untapped resource in the driving environment, and could provide information without overloading the other attentional resource pools used in driving
The Formation of Low-Mass Binary Star Systems Via Turbulent Fragmentation
We characterize the infall rate onto protostellar systems forming in
self-gravitating radiation-hydrodynamic simulations. Using two dimensionless
parameters to determine disks' susceptability to gravitational fragmentation,
we infer limits on protostellar system multiplicity and the mechanism of binary
formation. We show that these parameters give robust predictions even in the
case of marginally resolved protostellar disks. We find that protostellar
systems with radiation feedback predominately form binaries via turbulent
fragmentation, not disk instability, and we predict turbulent fragmentation is
the dominant channel for binary formation for low-mass stars. We clearly
demonstrate that systems forming in simulations including radiative feedback
have fundamentally different parameters than those in purely hydrodynamic
simulations.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted to Ap
The Farthest Known Supernova: Support for an Accelerating Universe and a Glimpse of the Epoch of Deceleration
We present photometric observations of an apparent Type Ia supernova (SN Ia)
at a redshift of ~1.7, the farthest SN observed to date. SN 1997ff, was
discovered in a repeat observation by the HST of the HDF-), and serendipitously
monitored with NICMOS on HST throughout the GTO campaign. The SN type can be
determined from the host galaxy type:an evolved, red elliptical lacking enough
recent star formation to provide a significant population of core-collapse SNe.
The class- ification is further supported by diagnostics available from the
observed colors and temporal behavior of the SN, both of which match a typical
SN Ia. The photo- metric record of the SN includes a dozen flux measurements in
the I, J, and H bands spanning 35 days in the observed frame. The redshift
derived from the SN photometry, z=1.7+/-0.1, is in excellent agreement with the
redshift estimate of z=1.65+/-0.15 derived from the
U_300,B_450,V_606,I_814,J_110,J_125,H_160, H_165,K_s photometry of the galaxy.
Optical and near-infrared spectra of the host provide a very tentative
spectroscopic redshift of 1.755. Fits to observations of the SN provide
constraints for the redshift-distance relation of SNe~Ia and a powerful test of
the current accelerating Universe hypothesis. The apparent SN brightness is
consistent with that expected in the decelerating phase of the preferred
cosmological model, Omega_M~1/3, Omega_Lambda~2/3. It is inconsistent with grey
dust or simple luminosity evolution, candidate astro- physical effects which
could mimic past evidence for an accelerating Universe from SNe Ia at z~0.5.We
consider several sources of possible systematic error including lensing, SN
misclassification, selection bias, and calibration errors. Currently, none of
these effects appears likely to challenge our conclusions.Comment: Accepted to the Astrophysical Journal 38 pages, 15 figures, Pretty
version available at http://icarus.stsci.edu/~stefano/ariess.tar.g
Targeting ligand-activated ErbB2 signaling inhibits breast and prostate tumor growth
AbstractErbB2 is a ligand-less member of the ErbB receptor family that functions as a coreceptor with EGFR, ErbB3, and ErbB4. Here, we describe an approach to target ErbB2's role as a coreceptor using a monoclonal antibody, 2C4, which sterically hinders ErbB2's recruitment into ErbB ligand complexes. Inhibition of ligand-dependent ErbB2 signaling by 2C4 occurs in both low- and high-ErbB2-expressing systems. Since the ErbB3 receptor contains an inactive tyrosine kinase domain, 2C4 is very effective in blocking heregulin-mediated ErbB3-ErbB2 signaling. We demonstrate that the in vitro and in vivo growth of several breast and prostate tumor models is inhibited by 2C4 treatment
- âŠ