9,379 research outputs found
Reasons to Ban? The Anti-Burqa Movement in Western Europe
Originally published at http://www.mmg.mpg.de/en/publications/working-papers/2012/
'Our Working Papers are refereed and may be downloaded from this site by individuals, for their own use, subject to the ordinary rules governing the fair use of professional scholarship. Working Papers may be cited without seeking prior permission from the author.
On the Initial Mass Function and tilt of the Fundamental Plane of massive early-type galaxies
We investigate the most plausible stellar Initial Mass Function (IMF) and the
main origin of the tilt of the Fundamental Plane (FP) for old, massive
early-type galaxies. We consider a sample of 13 bright galaxies of the Coma
cluster and combine our results with those obtained from a sample of 57 lens
galaxies in the same luminous mass range. We estimate the luminous mass and
stellar mass-to-light ratio values of the sample galaxies by fitting their SDSS
multi-band photometry with composite stellar population models computed with
different dust-free, solar-metallicity templates and IMFs. We compare these
measurements and those derived from two-component orbit-based dynamical
modelling. The photometric and dynamical luminous mass estimates of the
galaxies in our sample are consistent, within the errors, if a Salpeter IMF is
adopted. On the contrary, with a Kroupa or Chabrier IMF the two luminous mass
diagnostics differ at a more than 4 \sigma level. For the massive Coma
galaxies, their stellar mass-to-light ratio scales with luminous mass as the
corresponding effective quantities are observed to scale on the FP. This
indicates that the tilt of the FP is primarily caused by stellar population
properties. We conclude that old, massive lens and non-lens early-type galaxies
obey the same luminous and dynamical scaling relations, favour a Salpeter IMF,
and suggest a stellar population origin for the tilt of the FP. The validity of
these results for samples of early-type galaxies with different age and mass
properties still remains to be tested.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted by MNRA
Diquark condensation in two colour QCD
Unquenched lattice SU(2) is studied at nonzero chemical potential in the
strong coupling limit. The topic of diquark condensation is addressed analyzing
the probability distribution function of the diquark condensate. We present
results at zero external source without using any potentially dangerous
extrapolation procedure. We find strong evidences for a (high density) second
order phase transition where a diquark condensate appears, and show
quantitative agreement of lattice calculations with low-energy effective
Lagrangian calculations.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, to be published in the proceedings of the
``International Workshop on Non-Perturbative Methods and Lattice QCD'',
Guangzhou, China, 15-21 May 200
Propagation of UHECRs in cosmological backgrounds: some results from SimProp
Ultra-High-Energy Cosmic Ray (UHECR) nuclei propagating in cosmological
radiation backgrounds produce secondary particles detectable at Earth. SimProp
is a one dimensional code for extragalactic propagation of UHECR nuclei,
inspired by the kinetic approach of Aloisio et al. As in this approach, only a
subset of nuclei and nuclear channels are used as representative. We discuss
the validation of the code and present applications to UHECR experimental
results. In particular we present the expected fluxes of neutrinos produced in
some astrophysical scenario.Comment: Poster presented by A. Di Matteo at the 33rd International Cosmic Ray
Conference, Rio De Janeiro (Brasil) July 2-9 201
Cosmogenic neutrinos and ultra-high energy cosmic ray models
We use an updated version of {\it SimProp}, a Monte Carlo simulation scheme
for the propagation of ultra-high energy cosmic rays, to compute cosmogenic
neutrino fluxes expected on Earth in various scenarios. These fluxes are
compared with the newly detected IceCube events at PeV energies and with recent
experimental limits at EeV energies of the Pierre Auger Observatory. This
comparison allows us to draw some interesting conclusions about the source
models for ultra-high energy cosmic rays. We will show how the available
experimental observations are almost at the level of constraining such models,
mainly in terms of the injected chemical composition and cosmological evolution
of sources. The results presented here will also be important in the evaluation
of the discovery capabilities of the future planned ultra-high energy cosmic
ray and neutrino observatories.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, some reference added, version accepted for
publication in JCA
Strongly Coupled QCD at Finite Baryon Density
The analytical results obtained in the infinite mass and strong coupling
limits of QCD are difficult to reconcile with the predictions of the Monomer
Dimer Polymer algorithm. We have reconsidered in detail the results obtained
with this simulation scheme and evidences of severe convergence problems are
presented for the SU(3) and SU(2) gauge group.Comment: LATTICE99(Finite Temperature and Density), 3 pages, 3 postscript
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