485 research outputs found
Differential Bundles in Commutative Algebra and Algebraic Geometry
In this paper, we explain how the abstract notion of a differential bundle in
a tangent category provides a new way to think about the category of modules
over a commutative ring and its opposite category. MacAdam previously showed
that differential bundles in the tangent category of smooth manifolds are
precisely smooth vector bundles. Here we provide characterizations of
differential bundles in the tangent categories of commutative rings and
(affine) schemes. For commutative rings, the category of differential bundles
over a commutative ring is equivalent to the category of modules over that
ring. For affine schemes, the category of differential bundles over the Spec of
a commutative ring is equivalent to the opposite category of modules over said
ring. Finally, for schemes, the category of differential bundles over a scheme
is equivalent to the opposite category of quasi-coherent sheaves of modules
over that scheme
The XXL Survey VIII: MUSE characterisation of intracluster light in a z0.53 cluster of galaxies
Within a cluster, gravitational effects can lead to the removal of stars from
their parent galaxies. Gas hydrodynamical effects can additionally strip gas
and dust from galaxies. The properties of the ICL can therefore help constrain
the physical processes at work in clusters by serving as a fossil record of the
interaction history. The present study is designed to characterise this ICL in
a ~10^14 M_odot and z~0.53 cluster of galaxies from imaging and spectroscopic
points of view. By applying a wavelet-based method to CFHT Megacam and WIRCAM
images, we detect significant quantities of diffuse light. These sources were
then spectroscopically characterised with MUSE. MUSE data were also used to
compute redshifts of 24 cluster galaxies and search for cluster substructures.
An atypically large amount of ICL has been detected in this cluster. Part of
the detected diffuse light has a very weak optical stellar component and
apparently consists mainly of gas emission, while other diffuse light sources
are clearly dominated by old stars. Furthermore, emission lines were detected
in several places of diffuse light. Our spectral analysis shows that this
emission likely originates from low-excitation parameter gas. The stellar
contribution to the ICL is about 2.3x10^9 yrs old even though the ICL is not
currently forming a large number of stars. On the other hand, the contribution
of the gas emission to the ICL in the optical is much greater than the stellar
contribution in some regions, but the gas density is likely too low to form
stars. These observations favour ram pressure stripping, turbulent viscous
stripping, or supernovae winds as the origin of the large amount of
intracluster light. Since the cluster appears not to be in a major merging
phase, we conclude that ram pressure stripping is the most plausible process
that generates the observed ICL sources.Comment: Accepted in A&A, english enhanced, figure location different than in
the A&A version due to different style files, shortened abstrac
Cardiac protective effects of Moringa oleifera seeds in spontaneous hypertensive rats
BACKGROUND Hypertension is characterized by a maintained high blood pressure leading to cardiac complications such as left ventricular hypertrophy and fibrosis and an increased risk of heart failure and myocardial infarction. This study investigated the cardiac effects of oral administration of Moringa oleifera (MOI) seed powder in spontaneous hypertensive rats (SHR).
METHODS SHR received food containing MOI seed powder (750mg/d, 8 weeks) or normal food. In vivo measurement of hemodynamic parameters by telemetry and cardiac structure and function analysis by echocardiography were performed. Histological studies were performed to determine fibrosis and protein expression.
RESULTS MOI treatment did not modify blood pressure in SHR but reduced nocturnal heart rate and improved cardiac diastolic function (reduction of isovolumetric relaxation time and deceleration time of the E wave, increase of ejection volume and cardiac output compared to nontreated SHR). Left ventricular anterior wall thickness, interseptal thickness on diastole, and relative wall thickness were reduced after MOI treatment. Furthermore, we found a significant reduction of fibrosis in the left ventricle of MOI-treated SHR. This antihypertrophic and antifibrotic effect of MOI was associated with increased expression of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-α and δ, reduced cardiac triglyceride level, and enhanced plasmatic prostacyclins.
CONCLUSIONS Our data show a beneficial effect of MOI on the cardiac structure and function in SHR associated with an upregulation of PPAR-α and δ signaling. This study thus provides scientific rational support for the empirical use of MOI in the traditional Malagasy medicine against cardiac diseases associated with blood pressure overload
The XMM-LSS survey: the Class 1 cluster sample over the extended 11 deg and its spatial distribution
This paper presents 52 X-ray bright galaxy clusters selected within the 11
deg XMM-LSS survey. 51 of them have spectroscopic redshifts
(), one is identified at , and all together make
the high-purity "Class 1" (C1) cluster sample of the XMM-LSS, the highest
density sample of X-ray selected clusters with a monitored selection function.
Their X-ray fluxes, averaged gas temperatures (median keV),
luminosities (median ergs/s) and total mass
estimates (median ) are measured, adapting to
the specific signal-to-noise regime of XMM-LSS observations. The redshift
distribution of clusters shows a deficit of sources when compared to the
cosmological expectations, regardless of whether WMAP-9 or Planck-2013 CMB
parameters are assumed. This lack of sources is particularly noticeable at . However, after quantifying uncertainties due to small
number statistics and sample variance we are not able to put firm (i.e. ) constraints on the presence of a large void in the cluster
distribution. We work out alternative hypotheses and demonstrate that a
negative redshift evolution in the normalization of the relation
(with respect to a self-similar evolution) is a plausible explanation for the
observed deficit. We confirm this evolutionary trend by directly studying how
C1 clusters populate the space, properly accounting for selection
biases. We point out that a systematically evolving, unresolved, central
component in clusters and groups (AGN contamination or cool core) can impact
the classification as extended sources and be partly responsible for the
observed redshift distribution.[abridged]Comment: 33 pages, 21 figures, 3 tables ; accepted for publication in MNRA
The XXL Survey X: K-band luminosity - weak-lensing mass relation for groups and clusters of galaxies
We present the K-band luminosity-halo mass relation, ,
for a subsample of 20 of the 100 brightest clusters in the XXL Survey observed
with WIRCam at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT). For the first time,
we have measured this relation via weak-lensing analysis down to . This allows us to investigate whether the slope
of the relation is different for groups and clusters, as seen in other
works. The clusters in our sample span a wide range in mass, , at . The K-band luminosity
scales as with and an
intrinsic scatter of . Combining our
sample with some clusters in the Local Cluster Substructure Survey (LoCuSS)
present in the literature, we obtain a slope of and an
intrinsic scatter of . The flattening in the seen
in previous works is not seen here and might be a result of a bias in the mass
measurement due to assumptions on the dynamical state of the systems. We also
study the richness-mass relation and find that group-sized halos have more
galaxies per unit halo mass than massive clusters. However, the brightest
cluster galaxy (BCG) in low-mass systems contributes a greater fraction to the
total cluster light than BCGs do in massive clusters; the luminosity gap
between the two brightest galaxies is more prominent for group-sized halos.
This result is a natural outcome of the hierarchical growth of structures,
where massive galaxies form and gain mass within low-mass groups and are
ultimately accreted into more massive clusters to become either part of the BCG
or one of the brighter galaxies. [Abridged]Comment: A&A, in pres
The XXL Survey VII: A supercluster of galaxies at z=0.43
The XXL Survey is the largest homogeneous and contiguous survey carried out
with XMM-Newton. Covering an area of 50 square degrees distributed over two
fields, it primarily investigates the large-scale structures of the Universe
using the distribution of galaxy clusters and active galactic nuclei as tracers
of the matter distribution. Given its depth and sky coverage, XXL is
particularly suited to systematically unveiling the clustering of X-ray
clusters and to identifying superstructures in a homogeneous X-ray sample down
to the typical mass scale of a local massive cluster. A friends-of-friends
algorithm in three-dimensional physical space was run to identify large-scale
structures. In this paper we report the discovery of the highest redshift
supercluster of galaxies found in the XXL Survey. We describe the X-ray
properties of the clusters members of the structure and the optical follow-up.
The newly discovered supercluster is composed of six clusters of galaxies at a
median redshift z around 0.43 and distributed across approximately 30 by 15 arc
minutes (10 by 5 Mpc on sky) on the sky. This structure is very compact with
all the clusters residing in one XMM pointing; for this reason this is the
first supercluster discovered with the XXL Survey. Spectroscopic follow-up with
WHT (William Herschel Telescope) and NTT (New Technology Telescope) confirmed a
median redshift of z = 0.43. An estimate of the X-ray mass and luminosity of
this supercluster and of its total gas mass put XLSSC-e at the average mass
range of superclusters; its appearance, with two members of equal size, is
quite unusual with respect to other superclusters and provides a unique view of
the formation process of a massive structure.Comment: A&A, accepted; special XXL issu
The 2-10 keV unabsorbed luminosity function of AGN from the XMM-Newton LSS, CDFS and COSMOS surveys
The XMM-LSS, XMM-COSMOS, and XMM-CDFS surveys are complementary in terms of
sky coverage and depth. Together, they form a clean sample with the least
possible variance in instrument effective areas and PSF. Therefore this is one
of the best samples available to determine the 2-10 keV luminosity function of
AGN and its evolution. The samples and the relevant corrections for
incompleteness are described. A total of 2887 AGN is used to build the LF in
the luminosity interval 10^42-10^46 erg/s, and in the redshift interval
0.001-4. A new method to correct for absorption by considering the probability
distribution for the column density conditioned on the hardness ratio is
presented. The binned luminosity function and its evolution is determined with
a variant of the Page-Carrera method, improved to include corrections for
absorption and to account for the full probability distribution of photometric
redshifts. Parametric models, namely a double power-law with LADE or LDDE
evolution, are explored using Bayesian inference. We introduce the
Watanabe-Akaike information criterion (WAIC) to compare the models and estimate
their predictive power. Our data are best described by the LADE model, as
hinted by the WAIC indicator. We also explore the 15-parameter extended LDDE
model recently proposed by Ueda et al., and find that this extension is not
supported by our data. The strength of our method is that it provides:
un-absorbed non-parametric estimates; credible intervals for luminosity
function parameters; model choice according to which one has more predictive
power for future data.Comment: In press on A&A. The revised version corrects typos and the LF
normalisations in tables 1,2,5 and figs.9-12, which were on an incorrect
scale. Online material available at
http://www.astro.lu.se/~piero/xlf/xlf-paper-tables2.tgz . The software is
available on the author's website
http://www.astro.lu.se/~piero/LFTools/index.html and on github:
https://github.com/piero-ranalli/LFTool
The XXL Survey: XII. Optical spectroscopy of X-ray-selected clusters and the frequency of AGN in superclusters
This article belongs to the first series of XXL publications. It presents
multifibre spectroscopic observations of three 0.55 sq.deg. fields in the XXL
Survey, which were selected on the basis of their high density of
X-ray-detected clusters. The observations were obtained with the
AutoFib2+WYFFOS (AF2) wide-field fibre spectrograph mounted on the 4.2m William
Herschel Telescope. The paper first describes the scientific rationale, the
preparation, the data reduction, and the results of the observations, and then
presents a study of active galactic nuclei (AGN) within three superclusters. We
obtained redshifts for 455 galaxies in total, 56 of which are counterparts of
X-ray point-like sources. We were able to determine the redshift of the merging
supercluster XLSSC-e, which consists of six individual clusters at z~0.43, and
we confirmed the redshift of supercluster XLSSC-d at z~0.3. More importantly,
we discovered a new supercluster, XLSSC-f, that comprises three galaxy clusters
also at z~0.3. We find a significant 2D overdensity of X-ray point-like sources
only around the supercluster XLSSC-f. This result is also supported by the
spatial (3D) analysis of XLSSC-f, where we find four AGN with compatible
spectroscopic redshifts and possibly one more with compatible photometric
redshift. In addition, we find two AGN (3D analysis) at the redshift of
XLSSC-e, but no AGN in XLSSC-d. Comparing these findings with the optical
galaxy overdensity we conclude that the total number of AGN in the area of the
three superclusters significantly exceeds the field expectations. The
difference in the AGN frequency between the three superclusters cannot be
explained by the present study because of small number statistics. Further
analysis of a larger number of superclusters within the 50 sq. deg. of the XXL
is needed before any conclusions on the effect of the supercluster environment
on AGN can be reached.Comment: 11 pages, published by A&
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