3,447 research outputs found
The Two Phases of Galaxy Formation
Cosmological simulations of galaxy formation appear to show a two-phase
character with a rapid early phase at z>2 during which in-situ stars are formed
within the galaxy from infalling cold gas followed by an extended phase since
z<3 during which ex-situ stars are primarily accreted. In the latter phase
massive systems grow considerably in mass and radius by accretion of smaller
satellite stellar systems formed at quite early times (z>3) outside of the
virial radius of the forming central galaxy. These tentative conclusions are
obtained from high resolution re-simulations of 39 individual galaxies in a
full cosmological context with present-day virial halo masses ranging from 7e11
M_sun h^-1 < M_vir < 2.7e13 M_sun h^-1 and central galaxy masses between 4.5e10
M_sun h^-1 < M_* < 3.6e11 M_sun h^-1. The simulations include the effects of a
uniform UV background, radiative cooling, star formation and energetic feedback
from SNII. The importance of stellar accretion increases with galaxy mass and
towards lower redshift. In our simulations lower mass galaxies (M_* > 1.7e11 M_sun h^-1) assembly is dominated by accretion and
merging with about 80 per cent of the stars added by the present-day. In
general the simulated galaxies approximately double their mass since z=1. For
massive systems this mass growth is not accompanied by significant star
formation. The majority of the in-situ created stars is formed at z>2,
primarily out of cold gas flows. We recover the observational result of
archaeological downsizing, where the most massive galaxies harbor the oldest
stars. We find that this is not in contradiction with hierarchical structure
formation. Most stars in the massive galaxies are formed early on in smaller
structures, the galaxies themselves are assembled late.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
The bulge luminosity functions in the MSX infrared bands
We use an inversion technique to derive the luminosity functions of the
Galactic bulge from point source counts extracted from the Midcourse Space
Experiment's Point Source Catalog (version 1.2).Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, to be published in A&
A yellowwood by any other name: molecular systematics and the taxonomy of Podocarpus and the Podocarpaceae in southern Africa
We briefly review the taxonomic history of the Podocarpaceae, with an emphasis on the recognition of numerous segregate genera out of Podocarpus sensu lato. Despite some controversy over the recognition of these genera, molecular data (DNA sequences) provide evidence that supports this taxonomy. The implications for African Podocarpaceae are discussed. In particular, molecular data support the recognition of Afrocarpus as distinct from Podocarpus. Additional taxonomic problems concerning the possible segregation of Podocarpus milanjianus from P. latifolius are addressed using DNA sequence data from the nuclear internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) region. Results of this are inconclusive, and suggest that alternative DNA-based evidence, such as from AFLPs or microsatellites, may be more informative in resolving such species complexes in African Podocarpus
Compactifiable classes of compacta
We introduce the notion of compactifiable classes -- these are classes of
metrizable compact spaces that can be up to homeomorphic copies ``disjointly
combined'' into one metrizable compact space. This is witnessed by so-called
compact composition of the class. Analogously, we consider Polishable classes
and Polish compositions. The question of compactifiability or Polishability of
a class is related to hyperspaces. Strongly compactifiable and strongly
Polishable classes may be characterized by the existence of a corresponding
family in the hyperspace of all metrizable compacta. We systematically study
the introduced notions -- we give several characterizations, consider
preservation under various constructions, and raise several questions.Comment: 32 pages, 1 figure, revised versio
Magnetic excitations in a new anisotropic Kagom\'{e} antiferromagnet
The Nd-langasite compound contains planes of magnetic Nd3+ ions on a lattice
topologically equivalent to a kagom\'{e} net. The magnetic susceptibility does
not reveal any signature of long-range ordering down to 2 K but rather a
correlated paramagnetism with significant antiferromagnetic interactions
between the Nd and a single-ion anisotropy due to crystal field effect.
Inelastic neutron scattering on Nd-langasite powder and single-crystal allowed
to probe its very peculiar low temperature dynamical magnetic correlations.
They present unusual dispersive features and are broadly localized in
wave-vector Q revealing a structure factor associated to characteristics short
range-correlations between the magnetic atoms. From comparison with theoretical
calculations, these results are interpreted as a possible experimental
observation of a spin liquid state in an anisotropic kagom\'{e}
antiferromagnet.Comment: to appear in Physica
Prenatal maternal immune activation causes epigenetic differences in adolescent mouse brain
Epigenetic processes such as DNA methylation have been implicated in the pathophysiology of neurodevelopmental disorders including schizophrenia and autism. Epigenetic changes can be induced by environmental exposures such as inflammation. Here we tested the hypothesis that prenatal inflammation, a recognized risk factor for schizophrenia and related neurodevelopmental conditions, alters DNA methylation in key brain regions linked to schizophrenia, namely the dopamine rich striatum and endocrine regulatory centre, the hypothalamus. DNA methylation across highly repetitive elements (long interspersed element 1 (LINE1) and intracisternal A-particles (IAPs)) were used to proxy global DNA methylation. We also investigated the Mecp2 gene because it regulates transcription of LINE1 and has a known association with neurodevelopmental disorders. Brain tissue was harvested from 6 week old offspring of mice exposed to the viral analog PolyI:C or saline on gestation day 9. We used Sequenom EpiTYPER assay to quantitatively analyze differences in DNA methylation at IAPs, LINE1 elements and the promoter region of Mecp2. In the hypothalamus, prenatal exposure to PolyI:C caused significant global DNA hypomethylation (t=2.44, P=0.019, PolyI:C mean 69.67%, saline mean 70.19%), especially in females, and significant hypomethylation of the promoter region of Mecp2, (t=3.32, P=0.002; PolyI:C mean 26.57%, saline mean 34.63%). IAP methylation was unaltered. DNA methylation in the striatum was not significantly altered. This study provides the first experimental evidence that exposure to inflammation during prenatal life is associated with epigenetic changes, including Mecp2 promoter hypomethylation. This suggests that environmental and genetic risk factors associated with neurodevelopmental disorders may act upon similar pathways. This is important because epigenetic changes are potentially modifiable and their investigation may open new avenues for treatment
Like trainer, like bot? Inheritance of bias in algorithmic content moderation
The internet has become a central medium through which `networked publics'
express their opinions and engage in debate. Offensive comments and personal
attacks can inhibit participation in these spaces. Automated content moderation
aims to overcome this problem using machine learning classifiers trained on
large corpora of texts manually annotated for offence. While such systems could
help encourage more civil debate, they must navigate inherently normatively
contestable boundaries, and are subject to the idiosyncratic norms of the human
raters who provide the training data. An important objective for platforms
implementing such measures might be to ensure that they are not unduly biased
towards or against particular norms of offence. This paper provides some
exploratory methods by which the normative biases of algorithmic content
moderation systems can be measured, by way of a case study using an existing
dataset of comments labelled for offence. We train classifiers on comments
labelled by different demographic subsets (men and women) to understand how
differences in conceptions of offence between these groups might affect the
performance of the resulting models on various test sets. We conclude by
discussing some of the ethical choices facing the implementers of algorithmic
moderation systems, given various desired levels of diversity of viewpoints
amongst discussion participants.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 9th International Conference on Social
Informatics (SocInfo 2017), Oxford, UK, 13--15 September 2017 (forthcoming in
Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science
European âfreedomsâ: a critical analysis
Faced with the present migrant crisis and the dismal record of Europe in protecting vulnerable refugeesâ and migrantsâ rights, what could be the view of the moral philosopher? The contrast between the principles enshrined in the European Charter of Fundamental Rights and the reality of present policies is shocking, but more scrutiny will show that it is the result of a larger trend towards an understanding of freedom mostly in economic terms, at a time when economists such as Amartya Sen have revised their approach to economic growth and prosperity, noting the central role played by a much richer conception of freedom. The paper will scrutinize these inconsistencies and the conception of the person from which they derive and will provide an alternative and more coherent moral vision that could strengthen the legitimacy of the European Charter, at a time of growing dissatisfaction and so-called democratic deficit. Such a vision could help reconnect the Charter with a conception of the human person as in need not solely of passive legal protection, but also of active promotion of her self-respect and capabilities, and of her aspiration to a valuable life
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