6,660 research outputs found
Near Infrared Spectroscopy of Young Brown Dwarfs in Upper Scorpius
Spectroscopic follow-up is a pre-requisite for studies of the formation and
early evolution of brown dwarfs. Here we present IRTF/SpeX near-infrared
spectroscopy of 30 candidate members of the young Upper Scorpius association,
selected from our previous survey work. All 24 high confidence members are
confirmed as young very low mass objects with spectral types from M5 to L1,
15-20 of them are likely brown dwarfs. This high yield confirms that brown
dwarfs in Upper Scorpius can be identified from photometry and proper motions
alone, with negligible contamination from field objects (<4%). Out of the 6
candidates with lower confidence, 5 might still be young very low mass members
of Upper Scorpius, according to our spectroscopy. We demonstrate that some very
low mass class II objects exhibit radically different near infrared (0.6 -
2.5micron) spectra from class III objects, with strong excess emission
increasing towards longer wavelengths and partially filled in features at
wavelengths shorter than 1.25micron. These characteristics can obscure the
contribution of the photosphere within such spectra. Therefore, we caution that
near infrared derived spectral types for objects with discs may be unreliable.
Furthermore, we show that the same characteristics can be seen to some extent
in all class II and even a significant fraction of class III objects (~40%),
indicating that some of them are still surrounded by traces of dust and gas.
Based on our spectra, we select a sample of objects with spectral types of M5
to L1, whose near-infrared emission represents the photosphere only. We
recommend the use of these objects as spectroscopic templates for young brown
dwarfs in the future.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, Accepted in MNRA
Network growth model with intrinsic vertex fitness
© 2013 American Physical SocietyWe study a class of network growth models with attachment rules governed by intrinsic node fitness. Both the individual node degree distribution and the degree correlation properties of the network are obtained as functions of the network growth rules. We also find analytical solutions to the inverse, design, problems of matching the growth rules to the required (e.g., power-law) node degree distribution and more generally to the required degree correlation function. We find that the design problems do not always have solutions. Among the specific conditions on the existence of solutions to the design problems is the requirement that the node degree distribution has to be broader than a certain threshold and the fact that factorizability of the correlation functions requires singular distributions of the node fitnesses. More generally, the restrictions on the input distributions and correlations that ensure solvability of the design problems are expressed in terms of the analytical properties of their generating functions
Interactions of a String Inspired Graviton Field
We continue to explore the possibility that the graviton in two dimensions is
related to a quadratic differential that appears in the anomalous contribution
of the gravitational effective action for chiral fermions. A higher dimensional
analogue of this field might exist as well. We improve the defining action for
this diffeomorphism tensor field and establish a principle for how it interacts
with other fields and with point particles in any dimension. All interactions
are related to the action of the diffeomorphism group. We discuss possible
interpretations of this field.Comment: 12 pages, more readable, references adde
Toward NS5 Branes on the Resolved Cone over Y^{p,q}
Motivated by recent developments in the understanding of the connection
between five branes on resolved geometries and the corresponding
generalizations of complex deformations in the context of the warped resolved
deformed conifold, we consider the construction of five branes solutions on the
resolved cone over Y^{p,q} spaces. We establish the existence of supersymmetric
five branes solutions wrapped on two-cycles of the resolved cone over Y^{p,q}
in the probe limit. We then use calibration techniques to begin the
construction of fully back-reacted five branes; we present an Ansatz and the
corresponding equations of motion. Our results establish a detailed framework
to study back-reacted five branes wrapped on the resolved cone over Y^{p,q} and
as a first step we find explicit solutions and construct an asymptotic
expansion with the expected properties.Comment: 23+17pp, no figures; v2: references added, various clarification
Network properties of written human language
We investigate the nature of written human language within the framework of complex network theory. In particular, we analyse the topology of Orwell's \textit{1984} focusing on the local properties of the network, such as the properties of the nearest neighbors and the clustering coefficient. We find a composite power law behavior for both the average nearest neighbor's degree and average clustering coefficient as a function of the vertex degree. This implies the existence of different functional classes of vertices. Furthermore we find that the second order vertex correlations are an essential component of the network architecture. To model our empirical results we extend a previously introduced model for language due to Dorogovtsev and Mendes. We propose an accelerated growing network model that contains three growth mechanisms: linear preferential attachment, local preferential attachment and the random growth of a pre-determined small finite subset of initial vertices. We find that with these elementary stochastic rules we are able to produce a network showing syntactic-like structures
Bosonic Description of Spinning Strings in Dimensions
We write down a general action principle for spinning strings in 2+1
dimensional space-time without introducing Grassmann variables. The action is
written solely in terms of coordinates taking values in the 2+1 Poincare group,
and it has the usual string symmetries, i.e. it is invariant under a)
diffeomorphisms of the world sheet and b) Poincare transformations. The system
can be generalized to an arbitrary number of space-time dimensions, and also to
spinning membranes and p-branes.Comment: Latex, 12 page
Local molecular field theory for the treatment of electrostatics
We examine in detail the theoretical underpinnings of previous successful
applications of local molecular field (LMF) theory to charged systems. LMF
theory generally accounts for the averaged effects of long-ranged components of
the intermolecular interactions by using an effective or restructured external
field. The derivation starts from the exact Yvon-Born-Green hierarchy and shows
that the approximation can be very accurate when the interactions averaged over
are slowly varying at characteristic nearest-neighbor distances. Application of
LMF theory to Coulomb interactions alone allows for great simplifications of
the governing equations. LMF theory then reduces to a single equation for a
restructured electrostatic potential that satisfies Poisson's equation defined
with a smoothed charge density. Because of this charge smoothing by a Gaussian
of width sigma, this equation may be solved more simply than the detailed
simulation geometry might suggest. Proper choice of the smoothing length sigma
plays a major role in ensuring the accuracy of this approximation. We examine
the results of a basic confinement of water between corrugated wall and justify
the simple LMF equation used in a previous publication. We further generalize
these results to confinements that include fixed charges in order to
demonstrate the broader impact of charge smoothing by sigma. The slowly-varying
part of the restructured electrostatic potential will be more symmetric than
the local details of confinements.Comment: To be published in J Phys-Cond Matt; small misprint corrected in Eq.
(12) in V
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