9,075 research outputs found
Heating of the Intracluster Gas in the Triangulum Australis Cluster
ASCA and ROSAT X-ray data are used to obtain two-dimensional maps of the gas
temperature, pressure and specific entropy in the Triangulum Australis cluster
of galaxies. We find that this hot (T_e=10.3+-0.8 keV) system probably has a
temperature peak (T_e>12 keV) at the cluster core, which approximately
corresponds to the adiabatic relation. An underdense gas sector, found in the
ROSAT cluster image eastward of the core, has a higher temperature than average
at that radius. At this higher temperature, the gas pressure in this region is
equal to that of the rest of the cluster at the same radius, but the specific
entropy of this gas is significantly higher (although the temperature
difference itself is only marginally significant). We speculate that the
existence of this region of underdense high-entropy gas, as well as the
adiabatic central temperature peak, indicate recent or ongoing heating of the
intergalactic medium in this cluster. The most probable source of such heating
is a subcluster merger, for which the hydrodynamic simulations predict a
qualitatively similar temperature structure. We point out that entropy maps can
provide a physically meaningful way of diagnosing merging clusters and
comparing the predictions of merger simulations to the data.Comment: Text revised to give more technical details and clarify discussion.
Accepted for ApJ Letters. Latex, 5 pages incl. figures, macros include
Boundary operators in the O(n) and RSOS matrix models
We study the new boundary condition of the O(n) model proposed by Jacobsen
and Saleur using the matrix model. The spectrum of boundary operators and their
conformal weights are obtained by solving the loop equations. Using the
diagrammatic expansion of the matrix model as well as the loop equations, we
make an explicit correspondence between the new boundary condition of the O(n)
model and the "alternating height" boundary conditions in RSOS model.Comment: 29 pages, 4 figures; version to appear in JHE
What Makes Theatrical Performances Successful in China's Tourism Industry?
This study aims to explore the factors affecting the success of a popular tourist product, namely, theatrical performance, within the context of China's tourism industry and develop a model based on previously successful productions. Using qualitative software, 22 Chinese-language articles on theatrical performances are analyzed to generate a list of success factors, classified as internal and external. The internal factors are storyline and performing, market positioning and marketing strategy, investment and financial support, operation and management, performing team, outdoor venue, indoor/outdoor stage supporting facilities, continuous improvement, and production team. The external factors are collaboration between cultural industries and local tourism, government support, privatization, and social and cultural effect. This study also provides suggestions for the future development of theatrical performances in China
Review: revisiting the human cholinergic nucleus of the diagonal band of Broca
Although the nucleus of the vertical limb of the diagonal band of Broca (nvlDBB) is the second largest cholinergic nucleus in the basal forebrain, after the nucleus basalis of Meynert (nbM), it has not generally been a focus for studies of neurodegenerative disorders. However, the nvlDBB does have an important projection to the hippocampus and discrete lesions of the rostral basal forebrain have been shown to disrupt retrieval memory function, a major deficit seen in patients with Lewy body disorders. One reason for its neglect is that the anatomical boundaries of the nvlDBB are ill defined and this area of the brain is not part of routine diagnostic sampling protocols. We have reviewed the history and anatomy of the nvlDBB and now propose guidelines for distinguishing nvlDBB from other neighbouring cholinergic cell groups for standardising future clinicopathological work. Thorough review of the literature regarding neurodegenerative conditions reveals inconsistent results in terms of cholinergic neuronal loss within the nvlDBB. This is likely to be due to the use of variable neuronal inclusion criteria and omission of cholinergic immunohistochemical markers. Extrapolating from those studies showing significant nvlDBB neuronal loss in Lewy body dementia, we propose an anatomical and functional connection between the cholinergic component of the nvlDBB (Ch2) and the CA2 subfield in the hippocampus which may be especially vulnerable in Lewy body disorders. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved
Monitoring health inequalities: life expectancy and small area deprivation in New Zealand
BACKGROUND: Socioeconomic and ethnic inequalities in health are of great concern, and life expectancy provides a readily understood means of monitoring such inequalities. The objectives of this study are to (1) measure life expectancy by socioeconomic deprivation and ethnicity, and (2) describe trends in the deprivation gradient in life expectancy since the mid-1990s. METHODS: Three years of national mortality data have been combined with mid-point population denominators to produce life tables within nationally determined levels of small area deprivation (NZDep96) for three ethnic group: European, MĂ€ori and Pacific peoples. This process has been repeated for the periods 1995â97, 1996â98, 1997â99 and 1998â2000. RESULTS: There was a strong relationship between increasing small area deprivation and decreasing life expectancy. Through the mid- to late 1990s, males living in the most deprived small areas in New Zealand experienced life expectancies at birth approximately nine years less than their counterparts living in the least deprived areas; for females the corresponding difference was under seven years. MĂ€ori and Pacific life expectancies at birth were lower than those of Europeans at each level of deprivation. Over the study period (1995â2000) the gradient in life expectancy across deprivation deciles remained stable. CONCLUSION: Small area deprivation analyses of life expectancy could be repeated routinely at regular intervals, which would provide a useful approach to monitoring trends in socioeconomic, geographic, ethnic and gender inequalities in mortality
A Merger Scenario for the Dynamics of Abell 665
We present new redshift measurements for 55 galaxies in the vicinity of the
rich galaxy cluster Abell 665. When combined with results from the literature,
we have good velocity measurements for a sample of 77 confirmed cluster members
from which we derive the cluster's redshift z=0.1829 +/- 0.0005 and
line-of-sight velocity dispersion of 1390 +/- 120 km/s. Our analysis of the
kinematical and spatial data for the subset of galaxies located within the
central 750 kpc reveals only subtle evidence for substructure and
non-Gaussianity in the velocity distribution. We find that the brightest
cluster member is not moving significantly relative to the other galaxies near
the center of the cluster. On the other hand, our deep ROSAT high resolution
image of A665 shows strong evidence for isophotal twisting and centroid
variation, thereby confirming previous suggestions of significant substructure
in the hot X-ray--emitting intracluster gas. In light of this evident
substructure, we have compared the optical velocity data with N-body
simulations of head-on cluster mergers. We find that a merger of two similar
mass subclusters (mass ratios of 1:1 or 1:2) seen close to the time of
core-crossing produces velocity distributions that are consistent with that
observed.Comment: 30 pages and 7 figures. Accepted by the Astrophysical Journal Full
resoultion figures 1 and 3 available in postscript at
http://www.physics.rutgers.edu/~percy/A665paper.htm
Quantum Hall Effect and Quantum Point Contact in Bilayer-Patched Epitaxial Graphene
We study an epitaxial graphene monolayer with bilayer inclusions via
magnetotransport measurements and scanning gate microscopy at low temperatures.
We find that bilayer inclusions can be metallic or insulating depending on the
initial and gated carrier density. The metallic bilayers act as equipotential
shorts for edge currents, while closely spaced insulating bilayers guide the
flow of electrons in the monolayer constriction, which was locally gated using
a scanning gate probe.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Off-Critical Logarithmic Minimal Models
We consider the integrable minimal models , corresponding
to the perturbation off-criticality, in the {\it logarithmic
limit\,} , where are coprime and the
limit is taken through coprime values of . We view these off-critical
minimal models as the continuum scaling limit of the
Forrester-Baxter Restricted Solid-On-Solid (RSOS) models on the square lattice.
Applying Corner Transfer Matrices to the Forrester-Baxter RSOS models in Regime
III, we argue that taking first the thermodynamic limit and second the {\it
logarithmic limit\,} yields off-critical logarithmic minimal models corresponding to the perturbation of the critical
logarithmic minimal models . Specifically, in accord with the
Kyoto correspondence principle, we show that the logarithmic limit of the
one-dimensional configurational sums yields finitized quasi-rational characters
of the Kac representations of the critical logarithmic minimal models . We also calculate the logarithmic limit of certain off-critical
observables related to One Point Functions and show that the
associated critical exponents
produce all conformal dimensions in the infinitely extended Kac table. The corresponding Kac labels
satisfy . The exponent is obtained from the logarithmic limit of the free energy giving the
conformal dimension for the perturbing field . As befits a non-unitary
theory, some observables diverge at criticality.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures; version 3 contains amplifications and minor
typographical correction
Gauge-invariant theory of pion photoproduction with dressed hadrons
Based on an effective field theory of hadrons in which quantum chromodynamics
is assumed to provide the necessary bare cutoff functions, a gauge-invariant
theory of pion photoproduction with fully dressed nucleons is developed. The
formalism provides consistent dynamical descriptions of pi-N --> pi-N
scattering and Gamma-N --> pi-N production mechanisms in terms of nonlinear
integral equations for fully dressed hadrons. Defining electromagnetic currents
via the gauging of hadronic n-point Green's functions, dynamically detailed
currents for dressed nucleons are introduced. The dressed hadron currents and
the pion photoproduction current are explicitly shown to satisfy gauge
invariance in a self-consistent manner. Approximations are discussed that make
the nonlinear formalism manageable in practice and yet preserve gauge
invariance. This is achieved by recasting the gauge conditions for all
contributing interaction currents as continuity equations with ``surface''
terms for the individual particle legs coming into or going out of the hadronic
interaction region. General procedures are given that approximate any type of
(global) interaction current in a gauge-invariance preserving manner as a sum
of single-particle ``surface'' currents. It is argued that these prescriptions
carry over to other reactions, irrespective of the number or type of
contributing hadrons or hadronic systems.Comment: 33 pages, RevTeX; includes 8 postscript figures (requires psfig.sty).
This version corrects some minor errors, etc.; contains updated references.
Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. C56 (Oct. 97
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Carbon isotope stratigraphy and palynology of an eastern Tethyan Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary section from Sumbar, Turkmenistan
A number of marine sequences across the K/Pg boundary have been identified that offer reasonably continuous records and relatively high sedimentation rates, most notably those near Tethyan continental margins. However, few Eastern Tethys K/Pg localities have been studied compared to the well-known North African and Southern European sites. Here we present a high-resolution stable carbon isotope and palynological record of a 2m thick section across the K/Pg boundary from the eastern Tethys at Sumbar in Turkmenistan (38°28âN, 56°14âE). The stratigraphy and inorganic geochemistry of the section used in this study, SM-4, has been described in detail by [1]
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