27,513 research outputs found
The spectra of mixed He-He droplets
The diffusion Monte Carlo technique is used to calculate and analyze the
excitation spectrum of He atoms bound to a cluster of He atoms, by
using a previously determined optimum filling of single-fermion orbits with
well defined orbital angular momentum , spin and parity quantum numbers.
The study concentrates on the energies and shapes of the three kinds of states
for which the fermionic part of the wave function is a single Slater
determinant: maximum or maximum states within a given orbit, and fully
polarized clusters. The picture that emerges is that of systems with strong
shell effects whose binding and excitation energies are essentially determined
over configuration at fixed number of particles and spin, i.e., by the monopole
properties of an effective Hamiltonian.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figure
Correction of diffraction effects in confocal raman microspectroscopy
A mathematical approach developed to correct depth profiles of
wet-chemically modified polymer films obtained by confocal Raman
microscopy is presented which takes into account scattered contributions originated from a diffraction-limited laser focal volume. It is demonstrated that the problem can be described using a linear Fredholm integral equation of the first kind which correlates apparent and true Raman intensities with the depth resolution curve of the instrument.
The calculations of the corrected depth profiles show that considerable differences between apparent and corrected depth profiles exist at the surface, especially when profiles with strong concentration gradients are dealt with or an instrument with poor depth resolution is used. Degrees of modification at the surface obtained by calculation of the corrected depth profiles are compared with those measured by FTIR-ATR and show an excellent concordance.</p
Excitation spectra of a 3He impurity on 4He clusters
The diffusion Monte Carlo technique is used to calculate and analyze the
excitation spectrum of a single 3He atom bound to a cluster with N 4He atoms,
with the aim of establishing the most adequate filling ordering of
single-fermion orbits to the mixed clusters with a large number of 3He atoms.
The resulting ordering looks like the rotational spectrum of a diatomic
molecule, being classified only by the angular momentum of the level, although
vibrational-like excitations appear at higher energies for sufficiently large
N
Toxicity and Neuropharmacological Effects of Elenine
Elenine is the aglycone of elenoside, a cytotoxic arylnaphthalene lignan (NSC
644013-W/1) derived from Justicia hyssopifolia. (Family: Acanthaceae). Elenoside
is a β-D-glucoside, with a similar chemical structure to etoposide, exhibiting
central depressant activity. In the present study, elenine was given to mice and
rats at doses of 10, 20, and 40 mg/kg. Acute toxicity (24 h) and general
behaviour in mice was studied as well as its effects on muscular relaxant
activity, locomotor activity (Varimex test), and the open-field test and were compared
with 10 mg/kg of chlorpromazine. Elenine produced a reduction in the
permanence time in muscular relaxant activity (traction test). Spontaneous
activity was lower in the Varimex test. The ambulation and rearing were lower
compared with the control group, and an increase in boluses was observed in the
open-field test. Thus, it can be concluded that elenine has central sedative
effects at lower doses than those used with elenoside and has a possible
application in conditions of anxiety
The cosmological origin of the Tully-Fisher relation
We use high-resolution cosmological simulations that include the effects of
gasdynamics and star formation to investigate the origin of the Tully-Fisher
relation in the standard Cold Dark Matter cosmogony. Luminosities are computed
for each model galaxy using their full star formation histories and the latest
spectrophotometric models. We find that at z=0 the stellar mass of model
galaxies is proportional to the total baryonic mass within the virial radius of
their surrounding halos. Circular velocity then correlates tightly with the
total luminosity of the galaxy, reflecting the equivalence between mass and
circular velocity of systems identified in a cosmological context. The slope of
the relation steepens slightly from the red to the blue bandpasses, and is in
fairly good agreement with observations. Its scatter is small, decreasing from
\~0.45 mag in the U-band to ~0.34 mag in the K-band. The particular
cosmological model we explore here seems unable to account for the zero-point
of the correlation. Model galaxies are too faint at z=0 (by about two
magnitudes) if the circular velocity at the edge of the luminous galaxy is used
as an estimator of the rotation speed. The Tully-Fisher relation is brighter in
the past, by about ~0.7 magnitudes in the B-band at z=1, at odds with recent
observations of z~1 galaxies. We conclude that the slope and tightness of the
Tully-Fisher relation can be naturally explained in hierarchical models but
that its normalization and evolution depend strongly on the star formation
algorithm chosen and on the cosmological parameters that determine the
universal baryon fraction and the time of assembly of galaxies of different
mass.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures included, submitted to ApJ (Letters
From Theory to Practice: Plug and Play with Succinct Data Structures
Engineering efficient implementations of compact and succinct structures is a
time-consuming and challenging task, since there is no standard library of
easy-to- use, highly optimized, and composable components. One consequence is
that measuring the practical impact of new theoretical proposals is a difficult
task, since older base- line implementations may not rely on the same basic
components, and reimplementing from scratch can be very time-consuming. In this
paper we present a framework for experimentation with succinct data structures,
providing a large set of configurable components, together with tests,
benchmarks, and tools to analyze resource requirements. We demonstrate the
functionality of the framework by recomposing succinct solutions for document
retrieval.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 3 table
Simulations of galaxy formation in a Λ cold dark matter universe : I : dynamical and photometric properties of a simulated disk galaxy.
We present a detailed analysis of the dynamical and photometric properties of a disk galaxy simulated in the cold dark matter (CDM) cosmogony. The galaxy is assembled through a number of high-redshift mergers followed by a period of quiescent accretion after z1 that lead to the formation of two distinct dynamical components: a spheroid of mostly old stars and a rotationally supported disk of younger stars. The surface brightness profile is very well approximated by the superposition of an R1/4 spheroid and an exponential disk. Each photometric component contributes a similar fraction of the total luminosity of the system, although less than a quarter of the stars form after the last merger episode at z1. In the optical bands the surface brightness profile is remarkably similar to that of Sab galaxy UGC 615, but the simulated galaxy rotates significantly faster and has a declining rotation curve dominated by the spheroid near the center. The decline in circular velocity is at odds with observation and results from the high concentration of the dark matter and baryonic components, as well as from the relatively high mass-to-light ratio of the stars in the simulation. The simulated galaxy lies 1 mag off the I-band Tully-Fisher relation of late-type spirals but seems to be in reasonable agreement with Tully-Fisher data on S0 galaxies. In agreement with previous simulation work, the angular momentum of the luminous component is an order of magnitude lower than that of late-type spirals of similar rotation speed. This again reflects the dominance of the slowly rotating, dense spheroidal component, to which most discrepancies with observation may be traced. On its own, the disk component has properties rather similar to those of late-type spirals: its luminosity, its exponential scale length, and its colors are all comparable to those of galaxy disks of similar rotation speed. This suggests that a different form of feedback than adopted here is required to inhibit the efficient collapse and cooling of gas at high redshift that leads to the formation of the spheroid. Reconciling, without fine-tuning, the properties of disk galaxies with the early collapse and high merging rates characteristic of hierarchical scenarios such as CDM remains a challenging, yet so far elusive, proposition
Dark-Halo Cusp: Asymptotic Convergence
We propose a model for how the buildup of dark halos by merging satellites
produces a characteristic inner cusp, of a density profile \rho \prop r^-a with
a -> a_as > 1, as seen in cosmological N-body simulations of hierarchical
clustering scenarios. Dekel, Devor & Hetzroni (2003) argue that a flat core of
a<1 exerts tidal compression which prevents local deposit of satellite
material; the satellite sinks intact into the halo center thus causing a rapid
steepening to a>1. Using merger N-body simulations, we learn that this cusp is
stable under a sequence of mergers, and derive a practical tidal mass-transfer
recipe in regions where the local slope of the halo profile is a>1. According
to this recipe, the ratio of mean densities of halo and initial satellite
within the tidal radius equals a given function psi(a), which is significantly
smaller than unity (compared to being 1 according to crude resonance criteria)
and is a decreasing function of a. This decrease makes the tidal mass transfer
relatively more efficient at larger a, which means steepening when a is small
and flattening when a is large, thus causing converges to a stable solution.
Given this mass-transfer recipe, linear perturbation analysis, supported by toy
simulations, shows that a sequence of cosmological mergers with homologous
satellites slowly leads to a fixed-point cusp with an asymptotic slope a_as>1.
The slope depends only weakly on the fluctuation power spectrum, in agreement
with cosmological simulations. During a long interim period the profile has an
NFW-like shape, with a cusp of 1<a<a_as. Thus, a cusp is enforced if enough
compact satellite remnants make it intact into the inner halo. In order to
maintain a flat core, satellites must be disrupted outside the core, possibly
as a result of a modest puffing up due to baryonic feedback.Comment: 37 pages, Latex, aastex.cls, revised, ApJ, 588, in pres
Gravitational Lensing by Galaxy Groups in the Hubble Deep Field
We investigate strong lensing of galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field by
foreground groups and clusters of galaxies with masses from to
10^{15} \MSun. Over this mass range, groups with the profile of Navarro,
Frenk, & White (1995) are less efficient than singular isothermal spheres at
producing multiple images of galaxies, by factors of to
. This difference highlights the sensitivity of the lensing cross
section to the central density profile. Nonetheless, with either profile we
find that the expected number of galaxies lensed by groups in the Hubble Deep
Field is at most , consistent with the lack of clearly identified
group lens systems.Comment: 33 pages, 12 EPS figures, accepted by Ap
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