4,058 research outputs found
Gravitational Lensing in Clusters of Galaxies
Gravitational lensing in clusters of galaxies is an efficient tool to probe
the mass distribution of galaxies and clusters, high redshift objects thanks to
the gravitational amplification, and the geometry of the universe. We review
some important aspects of cluster lensing and related issues in observational
cosmology.Comment: invited review of the journal: Progress of Theoretical Physics (in
press) 51 pages - 33 figure
Cluster Mass Estimate and a Cusp of the Mass Density Distribution in Clusters of Galaxies
We study density cusps in the center of clusters of galaxies to reconcile
X-ray mass estimates with gravitational lensing masses. For various mass
density models with cusps we compute X-ray surface brightness distribution, and
fit them to observations to measure the range of parameters in the density
models. The Einstein radii estimated from these density models are compared
with Einstein radii derived from the observed arcs for Abell 2163, Abell 2218,
and RX J1347.5-1145. The X-ray masses and lensing masses corresponding to these
Einstein radii are also compared. While steeper cusps give smaller ratios of
lensing mass to X-ray mass, the X-ray surface brightnesses estimated from
flatter cusps are better fits to the observations. For Abell 2163 and Abell
2218, although the isothermal sphere with a finite core cannot produce giant
arc images, a density model with a central cusp can produce a finite Einstein
radius, which is smaller than the observed radii. We find that a total mass
density profile which declines as produces the largest radius
in models which are consistent with the X-ray surface brightness profile. As
the result, the extremely large ratio of the lensing mass to the X-ray mass is
improved from 2.2 to 1.4 for Abell 2163, and from 3 to 2.4 for Abell 2218. For
RX J1347.5-1145, which is a cooling flow cluster, we cannot reduce the mass
discrepancy.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures, Latex, uses aasms4.sty, accepted for
publication in ApJ, Part
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Biosynthesis, structure, and biological activities of envelope protein gp65 of murine coronavirus.
We have previously shown that gp65 (E3) is a virion structural protein which varies widely in quantity among different strains of mouse hepatitis virus (MHV). In this study, the biosynthetic pathway and possible biological activities of this protein were examined. The glycosylation of gp65 in virus-infected cells was inhibited by tunicamycin but not by monensin, suggesting that it contains an N-glycosidic linkage. Glycosylation is cotranslational and appears to be complete before the glycoprotein reaches the Golgi complex. Pulse-chase experiments showed that this protein decreased in size after 30 min of chase, suggesting that the carbohydrate chains of gp65 undergo trimming during its transport across the Golgi. This interpretation is supported by the endoglycosidase treatment of gp65, which showed that the peptide backbone of gp65 did not decrease in size after pulse-chase periods. This maturation pathway is distinct from that of the E1 or E2 glycoproteins. Partial endoglycosidase treatment indicated that gp65 contains 9 to 10 carbohydrate side chains; thus, almost all of the potential glycosylation sites of gp65 were glycosylated. In vitro translation studies coupled with protease digestion suggest that gp65 is an integral membrane protein. The presence of gp65 in the virion is correlated with the presence of an acetylesterase activity. No hemagglutinin activity was detected
Post-Oligarchic Evolution of Protoplanetary Embryos and the Stability of Planetary Systems
We investigate the orbit-crossing time (T_c) of protoplanet systems both with
and without a gas-disk background. The protoplanets are initially with equal
masses and separation (EMS systems) scaled by their mutual Hill's radii. In a
gas-free environment, we find log (T_c/yr) = A+B \log (k_0/2.3). Through a
simple analytical approach, we demonstrate that the evolution of the velocity
dispersion in an EMS system follows a random walk. The stochastic nature of
random-walk diffusion leads to (i) an increasing average eccentricity ~
t^1/2, where t is the time; (ii) Rayleigh-distributed eccentricities
(P(e,t)=e/\sigma^2 \exp(-e^2/(2\sigma^2)) of the protoplanets; (iii) a
power-law dependence of T_c on planetary separation. As evidence for the
chaotic diffusion, the observed eccentricities of known extra solar planets can
be approximated by a Rayleigh distribution. We evaluate the isolation masses of
the embryos, which determine the probability of gas giant formation, as a
function of the dust and gas surface densities.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures (2 color ones), accepted for publication in Ap
Structure of Dark Matter Halos From Hierarchical Clustering
We investigate the structure of the dark matter halo formed in the cold dark
matter scenario using -body simulations. We simulated 12 halos with the mass
of to . In almost all
runs, the halos have density cusps proportional to developed at the
center, which is consistent with the results of recent high-resolution
calculations. The density structure evolves in a self-similar way, and is
universal in the sense that it is independent of the halo mass and initial
random realization of density fluctuation. The density profile is in good
agreement with the profile proposed by Moore et al. (1999), which has central
slope proportional to and outer slope proportional to . The
halo grows through repeated accretion of diffuse smaller halos. We argue that
the cusp is understood as a convergence slope for the accretion of tidally
disrupted matter.Comment: 34 including 23 figures, revised version, accepted for publication in
Ap
POB5 A MODELLED COST-EFFECTIVENESS EVALUATION OF SIBUTRAMINE THERAPY IN A HIGH RISK OBESE POPULATION
Ultra-high dynamic range quantum measurement retaining its sensitivity
ダイヤモンド量子センサ、室温で感度を維持しつつ計測範囲を低温従来値の100倍にすることに成功 --量子センサの応用環境や測定空間を広げる成果--. 京都大学プレスリリース. 2021-01-13.Quantum sensors are highly sensitive since they capitalise on fragile quantum properties such as coherence, while enabling ultra-high spatial resolution. For sensing, the crux is to minimise the measurement uncertainty in a chosen range within a given time. However, basic quantum sensing protocols cannot simultaneously achieve both a high sensitivity and a large range. Here, we demonstrate a non-adaptive algorithm for increasing this range, in principle without limit, for alternating-current field sensing, while being able to get arbitrarily close to the best possible sensitivity. Therefore, it outperforms the standard measurement concept in both sensitivity and range. Also, we explore this algorithm thoroughly by simulation, and discuss the T−2 scaling that this algorithm approaches in the coherent regime, as opposed to the T−1/2 of the standard measurement. The same algorithm can be applied to any modulo-limited sensor
Compton Echoes from Gamma-ray Bursts
Recent observations of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) have provided growing evidence
for collimated outflows and emission, and strengthened the connection between
GRBs and supernovae. If massive stars are the progenitors of GRBs, the hard
photon pulse will propagate in the pre-burst, dense environment. Circumstellar
material will Compton scatter the prompt GRB radiation and give rise to a
reflection echo. We calculate luminosities, spectra, and light curves of such
Compton echoes in a variety of emission geometries and ambient gas
distributions, and show that the delayed hard X-ray flash from a pulse
propagating into a red supergiant wind could be detectable by Swift out to
z~0.2. Independently of the gamma-ray spectrum of the prompt burst, reflection
echoes will typically show a high-energy cutoff between m_ec^2/2 and m_ec^2
because of Compton downscattering. At fixed burst energy per steradian, the
luminosity of the reflected echo is proportional to the beaming solid angle,
Omega_b, of the prompt pulse, while the number of bright echoes detectable in
the sky above a fixed limiting flux increases as Omega_b^{1/2}, i.e. it is
smaller in the case of more collimated jets. The lack of an X-ray echo at one
month delay from the explosion poses severe constraints on the possible
existence of a lateral GRB jet in SN 1987A. The late r-band afterglow observed
in GRB990123 is fainter than the optical echo expected in a dense red
supergiant environment from a isotropic prompt optical flash. Significant MeV
delayed emission may be produced through the bulk Compton (or Compton drag)
effect resulting from the interaction of the decelerating fireball with the
scattered X-ray radiation.Comment: LaTeX, 18 pages, 4 figures, revised version accepted for publication
in the Ap
Statistical properties of spectral fluctuations for a quantum system with infinitely many components
Extending the idea formulated in Makino {\it{et al}}[Phys.Rev.E
{\bf{67}},066205], that is based on the Berry--Robnik approach [M.V. Berry and
M. Robnik, J. Phys. A {\bf{17}}, 2413], we investigate the statistical
properties of a two-point spectral correlation for a classically integrable
quantum system. The eigenenergy sequence of this system is regarded as a
superposition of infinitely many independent components in the semiclassical
limit. We derive the level number variance (LNV) in the limit of infinitely
many components and discuss its deviations from Poisson statistics. The slope
of the limiting LNV is found to be larger than that of Poisson statistics when
the individual components have a certain accumulation. This property agrees
with the result from the semiclassical periodic-orbit theory that is applied to
a system with degenerate torus actions[D. Biswas, M.Azam,and S.V.Lawande, Phys.
Rev. A {\bf 43}, 5694].Comment: 6 figures, 10 page
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