811 research outputs found
Binary Neutron Stars with Generic Spin, Eccentricity, Mass ratio, and Compactness - Quasi-equilibrium Sequences and First Evolutions
Information about the last stages of a binary neutron star inspiral and the
final merger can be extracted from quasi-equilibrium configurations and
dynamical evolutions. In this article, we construct quasi-equilibrium
configurations for different spins, eccentricities, mass ratios, compactnesses,
and equations of state. For this purpose we employ the SGRID code, which allows
us to construct such data in previously inaccessible regions of the parameter
space. In particular, we consider spinning neutron stars in isolation and in
binary systems; we incorporate new methods to produce highly eccentric and
eccentricity reduced data; we present the possibility of computing data for
significantly unequal-mass binaries; and we create equal-mass binaries with
individual compactness up to 0.23. As a proof of principle, we explore the
dynamical evolution of three new configurations. First, we simulate a
mass ratio which is the highest mass ratio for a binary neutron star evolved in
numerical relativity to date. We find that mass transfer from the companion
star sets in a few revolutions before merger and a rest mass of
is transferred between the two stars. This configuration
also ejects a large amount of material during merger, imparting a substantial
kick to the remnant. Second, we simulate the first merger of a precessing
binary neutron star. We present the dominant modes of the gravitational waves
for the precessing simulation, where a clear imprint of the precession is
visible in the (2,1) mode. Finally, we quantify the effect of an eccentricity
reduction procedure on the gravitational waveform. The procedure improves the
waveform quality and should be employed in future precision studies, but also
other errors, notably truncation errors, need to be reduced in order for the
improvement due to eccentricity reduction to be effective. [abridged]Comment: (37pages, 26 figures
High resolution observations of Cen A: Yellow and red supergiants in a region of jet-induced star formation?
We present the analysis of near infrared (NIR), adaptive optics (AO) Subaru
and archived HST imaging data of a region near the northern middle lobe (NML)
of the Centaurus A (Cen A) jet, at a distance of kpc north-east (NE)
from the center of NGC5128. Low-pass filtering of the NIR images reveals strong
-- above the background mean -- signal at the expected position of
the brightest star in the equivalent HST field. Statistical analysis of the NIR
background noise suggests that the probability to observe signal at
the same position, in three independent measurements due to stochastic
background fluctuations alone is negligible () and, therefore,
that this signal should reflect the detection of the NIR counterparts of the
brightest HST star. An extensive photometric analysis of this star yields
, visual-NIR, and NIR colors expected from a yellow supergiant (YSG) with
an estimated age Myr. Furthermore, the second and third
brighter HST stars are, likely, also supergiants in Cen A, with estimated ages
Myr and Myr, respectively. The ages of
these three supergiants are in good agreement with the ages of the young
massive stars that were previously found in the vicinity and are thought to
have formed during the later phases of the jet-HI cloud interaction that
appears to drive the star formation (SF) in the region for the past
Myr.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in Ap
SUBARU and e-Merlin observations of NGC3718. Diaries of an SMBH recoil?
NGC3718 is a LINER galaxy, lying at a distance of about
Mpc away from earth and its similarities with NGC5128 often award it the name
"northern Centaurus A". We use high angular resolution ( mas) e-Merlin
radio and SUBARU NIR ( mas) data, to take a detailed view of the
processes taking place in its central region. In order to preserve some
objectivity in our interpretation, we combine our results with literature
values and findings from previous studies. Our NIR maps suggest, on one hand,
that towards the stellar bulge there are no large scale absorption phenomena
caused by the apparent dust lane and, on the other, that there is a significant
(local) contribution from hot ( K) dust to the nuclear NIR emission.
The position where this takes place appears to be closer to the offset compact
radio emission from our e-Merlin cm map, lying offset by pc from
the center of the underlying stellar bulge. The shape of the radio map suggests
the presence of one (or possibly two, forming an X-shape) bipolar structure(s)
() arcsec across, which combined with the balance between the
gas and the stellar velocity dispersions and the presence of hard X-ray
emission, point towards effects expected by AGN feedback. We also argue that
NGC3718 has a "core" in its surface brightness profile, despite the fact that
it is a gas-rich galaxy and we discuss its mixed photometric and spectroscopic
characteristics. The latter combined with the observed spatial and radio
offsets, the relative redshift between the broad and the narrow
line, the limited star formation activity and AGN
feedback, strongly imply the existence of an SMBH recoil. Finally, we discuss a
possible interpretation, that could naturally incorporate all these findings
into one physically consistent picture.Comment: 18 pages, 18 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publications in A&
Managing lane-changing of algorithm-assisted drivers
Theoretical models of vehicular traffic ascribe the fundamental cause of velocity oscillations and stop-and-go waves to suboptimal or unpredictable human driving behavior. In this paper we ask: if vehicles were controlled or assisted by algorithms, and hence driven “optimally,” would these phenomena simply go away? If they do not, how should a regulator manage algorithm-assisted vehicular traffic for a smooth flow? We study these questions in the context of a mandatory lane-changing scenario from the perspective of an algorithm-assisted driver on a curtailed lane that has to merge to an adjacent free lane with a relatively dense platoon. In a stylized model of algorithm-assisted driving, we liken the blocked-lane driver to a rational self-interested agent, whose objective is to minimize her expected travel time through the blockage, deciding (a) at what velocity to move, and (b) whether to merge to the free lane if an adequate gap arises. Moving at higher velocities reduces travel time, but also reduces the probability of finding a large enough gap to merge. We analyze the problem via dynamic programming, and we show that the optimal policy has a surprising structure: in the presence of uncertainty on adequate-sized gaps in the target lane, it may be optimal for the blocked-lane driver, in certain parameter regimes, to oscillate between high and low velocities while attempting to merge. Hence, traffic oscillations can arise not just due to suboptimal or unpredictable human driving behavior, but also endogenously, as the outcome of a driver’s rational, optimizing behavior. We provide theoretical support for this finding by drawing similarities to bang–bang control. As velocity oscillations are known to be detrimental to a smooth traffic flow, we provide sufficient conditions such that traffic oscillations, due to such optimizing behavior, do not arise. Finally, we investigate the fundamental flow-density and travel time-density diagrams through traffic micro-simulations performed in SUMO. We establish that the proposed approach exhibits consistently near-optimal performance, in a broad variety of traffic conditions
Pricing Multi-Unit Markets
We study the power and limitations of posted prices in multi-unit markets,
where agents arrive sequentially in an arbitrary order. We prove upper and
lower bounds on the largest fraction of the optimal social welfare that can be
guaranteed with posted prices, under a range of assumptions about the
designer's information and agents' valuations. Our results provide insights
about the relative power of uniform and non-uniform prices, the relative
difficulty of different valuation classes, and the implications of different
informational assumptions. Among other results, we prove constant-factor
guarantees for agents with (symmetric) subadditive valuations, even in an
incomplete-information setting and with uniform prices
The impact of temperature changes on summer time ozone and its precursors in the Eastern Mediterranean
Changes in temperature due to variability in meteorology and climate change are expected to significantly impact atmospheric composition. The Mediterranean is a climate sensitive region and includes megacities like Istanbul and large urban agglomerations such as Athens. The effect of temperature changes on gaseous air pollutant levels and the atmospheric processes that are controlling them in the Eastern Mediterranean are here investigated. The WRF/CMAQ mesoscale modeling system is used, coupled with the MEGAN model for the processing of biogenic volatile organic compound emissions. A set of temperature perturbations (spanning from 1 to 5 K) is applied on a base case simulation corresponding to July 2004. The results indicate that the Eastern Mediterranean basin acts as a reservoir of pollutants and their precursor emissions from large urban agglomerations. During summer, chemistry is a major sink at these urban areas near the surface, and a minor contributor at downwind areas. On average, the atmospheric processes are more effective within the first 1000 m above ground. Temperature increases lead to increases in biogenic emissions by 9&plusmn;3% K<sup>−1</sup>. Ozone mixing ratios increase almost linearly with the increases in ambient temperatures by 1&plusmn;0.1 ppb O<sub>3</sub> K<sup>−1</sup> for all studied urban and receptor stations except for Istanbul, where a 0.4&plusmn;0.1 ppb O<sub>3</sub> K<sup>−1</sup> increase is calculated, which is about half of the domain-averaged increase of 0.9&plusmn;0.1 ppb O<sub>3</sub> K<sup>−1</sup>. The computed changes in atmospheric processes are also linearly related with temperature changes
Air quality in the mid-21st century for the city of Paris under two climate scenarios; from the regional to local scale
Ozone and PM<sub>2.5</sub> concentrations over the city of Paris are modeled with
the CHIMERE air-quality model at 4 km × 4 km horizontal resolution for two
future emission scenarios. A high-resolution (1 km × 1 km) emission projection
until 2020 for the greater Paris region is developed by local experts
(AIRPARIF) and is further extended to year 2050 based on regional-scale
emission projections developed by the Global Energy Assessment. Model
evaluation is performed based on a 10-year control simulation. Ozone is in
very good agreement with measurements while PM<sub>2.5</sub> is underestimated by
20% over the urban area mainly due to a large wet bias in wintertime
precipitation. A significant increase of maximum ozone relative to present-day levels over Paris is modeled under the "business-as-usual" scenario
(+7 ppb) while a more optimistic "mitigation" scenario leads to a moderate
ozone decrease (−3.5 ppb) in year 2050. These results are substantially
different to previous regional-scale projections where 2050 ozone is found
to decrease under both future scenarios. A sensitivity analysis showed that
this difference is due to the fact that ozone formation over Paris at the
current urban-scale study is driven by volatile organic compound (VOC)-limited chemistry, whereas at
the regional-scale ozone formation occurs under NO<sub>x</sub>-sensitive
conditions. This explains why the sharp NO<sub>x</sub> reductions implemented in
the future scenarios have a different effect on ozone projections at
different scales. In rural areas, projections at both scales yield similar
results showing that the longer timescale processes of emission transport
and ozone formation are less sensitive to model resolution. PM<sub>2.5</sub> concentrations decrease by 78% and 89% under business-as-usual
and mitigation scenarios, respectively, compared to the present-day period.
The reduction is much more prominent over the urban part of the domain due
to the effective reductions of road transport and residential emissions
resulting in the smoothing of the large urban increment modeled in the
control simulation
Equilibrium solutions of relativistic rotating stars with mixed poloidal and toroidal magnetic fields
Stationary and axisymmetric solutions of relativistic rotating stars with
strong mixed poloidal and toroidal magnetic fields are obtained numerically.
Because of the mixed components of the magnetic field, the underlying
stationary and axisymmetric spacetimes are no longer circular. These
configurations are computed from the full set of the Einstein-Maxwell
equations, Maxwell's equations and from first integrals and integrability
conditions of the magnetohydrodynamic equilibrium equations. After a brief
introduction of the formulation of the problem, we present the first results
for highly deformed magnetized rotating compact stars.Comment: 7 pages, to appear in PRD rapid communicatio
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