4,279 research outputs found
UV observations of the globular cluster M10 from HST and GALEX. The BSS population
We present a combination of high-resolution Hubble Space Telescope and
wide-field ground-based and Galaxy Evolution Explorer data of the Galactic
Globular Cluster M10 (NGC6254). By using this large data-set we determined the
center of gravity of the cluster and we built its density profile from star
counts over its entire radial extension. We find that the density profile is
well reproduced by a single-mass King model with structural parameters c=1.41
and r_c=41". We also studied the Blue Straggler Star population and its radial
distribution. We count a total number of 120 BSS within the tidal radius. Their
radial distribution is bimodal: highly peaked in the cluster center, decreasing
at intermediate distances and rising again outwards. We discuss these results
in the context of the dynamical clock scheme presented by Ferraro et al. (2012)
and of recent results about the radial distribution of binary systems in this
cluster.Comment: Accepted for publication by ApJ; 26 pages, 11 figures, 1 tabl
UV Properties of Galactic Globular Clusters with GALEX II. Integrated colors
We present ultraviolet (UV) integrated colors of 44 Galactic globular
clusters (GGCs) observed with the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) in both FUV
and NUV bands. This data-base is the largest homogeneous catalog of UV colors
ever published for stellar systems in our Galaxy. The proximity of GGCs makes
it possible to resolve many individual stars even with the somewhat low spatial
resolution of GALEX. This allows us to determine how the integrated UV colors
are driven by hot stellar populations, primarily horizontal branch stars and
their progeny. The UV colors are found to be correlated with various parameters
commonly used to define the horizontal branch morphology. We also investigate
how the UV colors vary with parameters like metallicity, age, helium abundance
and concentration. We find for the first time that GCs associated with the
Sagittarius dwarf galaxy have (FUV-V) colors systematically redder than GGCs
with the same metallicity. Finally, we speculate about the presence of an
interesting trend, suggesting that the UV color of GCs may be correlated with
the mass of the host galaxy, in the sense that more massive galaxies possess
bluer clusters.Comment: Accepted for publication by The Astronomical Journal. 36 pages, 9
figures, 1 tabl
Disentanglement and Decoherence without dissipation at non-zero temperatures
Decoherence is well understood, in contrast to disentanglement. According to
common lore, irreversible coupling to a dissipative environment is the
mechanism for loss of entanglement. Here, we show that, on the contrary,
disentanglement can in fact occur at large enough temperatures even for
vanishingly small dissipation (as we have shown previously for decoherence).
However, whereas the effect of on decoherence increases exponentially with
time, the effect of on disentanglement is constant for all times,
reflecting a fundamental difference between the two phenomena. Also, the
possibility of disentanglement at a particular increases with decreasing
initial entanglement.Comment: 3 page
Far-Ultraviolet Color Gradients in Early-Type Galaxies
We discuss far-UV (1500 A) surface photometry and FUV-B color profiles for 8
E/S0 galaxies from images taken with the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope,
primarily during the Astro-2 mission. In three cases, the FUV radial profiles
are more consistent with an exponential than a de Vaucouleurs function, but
there is no other evidence for the presence of a disk or of young, massive
stars. In all cases except M32 the FUV-B color becomes redder at larger radii.
There is a wide range of internal radial FUV-B color gradients. However, we
find no correlation between the FUV-B color gradients and internal metallicity
gradients based on Mg absorption features. We conclude that metallicity is not
the sole parameter controlling the "UV upturn component" in old populations.Comment: 11 pages; tar.gz file includes LaTeX text file, 3 PostScript figures.
Paper to be published in ApJ Letter
Reply to Comment on "Completely positive quantum dissipation"
This is the reply to a Comment by R. F. O'Connell (Phys. Rev. Lett. 87 (2001)
028901) on a paper written by the author (B. Vacchini, ``Completely positive
quantum dissipation'', Phys.Rev.Lett. 84 (2000) 1374, arXiv:quant-ph/0002094).Comment: 2 pages, revtex, no figure
Electrical characterization of the soft breakdown failure mode in MgO layers
The soft breakdown (SBD) failure mode in 20 nm thick MgO dielectric layers grown on Si substrates was investigated. We show that during a constant voltage stress, charge trapping and progressive breakdown coexist, and that the degradation dynamics is captured by a power-law time dependence. We also show that the SBD current-voltage (I-V) characteristics follow the power-law model I = aVb typical of this conduction mechanism but in a wider voltage window than the one reported in the past for SiO2. The relationship between the magnitude of the current and the normalized differential conductance was analyzed
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