1,343 research outputs found
Acoustic driving of rotor
Sound waves are utilized to apply torque to a body in an enclosure of square cross section, by driving two transducers located on perpendicular walls of an enclosure, at the same frequency but at a predetermined phase difference such as 90 degrees. The torque is a first order effect, so that large and controlled rotational speeds can be obtained
Testing the Modern Merger Hypothesis via the Assembly of Massive Blue Elliptical Galaxies in the Local Universe
The modern merger hypothesis offers a method of forming a new elliptical
galaxy through merging two equal-mass, gas-rich disk galaxies fuelling a
nuclear starburst followed by efficient quenching and dynamical stabilization.
A key prediction of this scenario is a central concentration of young stars
during the brief phase of morphological transformation from highly-disturbed
remnant to new elliptical galaxy. To test this aspect of the merger hypothesis,
we use integral field spectroscopy to track the stellar Balmer absorption and
4000\AA\ break strength indices as a function of galactic radius for 12 massive
(), nearby (),
visually-selected plausible new ellipticals with blue-cloud optical colours and
varying degrees of morphological peculiarities. We find that these index values
and their radial dependence correlate with specific morphological features such
that the most disturbed galaxies have the smallest 4000\AA\ break strengths and
the largest Balmer absorption values. Overall, two-thirds of our sample are
inconsistent with the predictions of the modern merger hypothesis. Of these
eight, half exhibit signatures consistent with recent minor merger
interactions. The other half have star formation histories similar to local,
quiescent early-type galaxies. Of the remaining four galaxies, three have the
strong morphological disturbances and star-forming optical colours consistent
with being remnants of recent, gas-rich major mergers, but exhibit a weak,
central burst consistent with forming of their stars. The final
galaxy possesses spectroscopic signatures of a strong, centrally-concentrated
starburst and quiescent core optical colours indicative of recent quenching
(i.e., a post-starburst signature) as prescribed by the modern merger
hypothesis.Comment: 25 pages, 37 figures, accepted to MNRA
Reaction-Diffusion Process Driven by a Localized Source: First Passage Properties
We study a reaction-diffusion process that involves two species of atoms,
immobile and diffusing. We assume that initially only immobile atoms, uniformly
distributed throughout the entire space, are present. Diffusing atoms are
injected at the origin by a source which is turned on at time t=0. When a
diffusing atom collides with an immobile atom, the two atoms form an immobile
stable molecule. The region occupied by molecules is asymptotically spherical
with radius growing as t^{1/d} in d>=2 dimensions. We investigate the survival
probability that a diffusing atom has not become a part of a molecule during
the time interval t after its injection and the probability density of such a
particle. We show that asymptotically the survival probability (i) saturates in
one dimension, (ii) vanishes algebraically with time in two dimensions (with
exponent being a function of the dimensionless flux and determined as a zero of
a confluent hypergeometric function), and (iii) exhibits a stretched
exponential decay in three dimensions.Comment: 7 pages; version 2: section IV is re-written, references added, 8
pages (final version
Measurement of the Integrated Faraday Rotations of BL Lac Objects
We present the results of multi-frequency polarization VLA observations of
radio sources from the complete sample of northern, radio-bright BL Lac objects
compiled by H. Kuhr and G. Schmidt. These were used to determine the integrated
rotation measures of 18 objects, 15 of which had never been measured
previously, which hindered analysis of the intrinsic polarization properties of
objects in the complete sample. These measurements make it possible to correct
the observed orientations of the linear polarizations of these sources for the
effect of Faraday rotation. The most probable origin for Faraday rotation in
these objects is the Galactic interstellar medium. The results presented
complete measurements of the integrated rotation measures for all 34 sources in
the complete sample of BL Lac objects.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
High resolution Ge/Li/ spectrometer reduces rate-dependent distortions at high counting rates
Modified spectrometer system with a low-noise preamplifier reduces rate-dependent distortions at high counting rates, 25,000 counts per second. Pole-zero cancellation minimizes pulse undershoots due to multiple time constants, baseline restoration improves resolution and prevents spectral shifts
Radio Galaxy Zoo: Cosmological Alignment of Radio Sources
We study the mutual alignment of radio sources within two surveys, FIRST and
TGSS. This is done by producing two position angle catalogues containing the
preferential directions of respectively and extended
sources distributed over more than and square degrees. The
identification of the sources in the FIRST sample was performed in advance by
volunteers of the Radio Galaxy Zoo project, while for the TGSS sample it is the
result of an automated process presented here. After taking into account
systematic effects, marginal evidence of a local alignment on scales smaller
than is found in the FIRST sample. The probability of this happening
by chance is found to be less than per cent. Further study suggests that on
scales up to the alignment is maximal. For one third of the sources,
the Radio Galaxy Zoo volunteers identified an optical counterpart. Assuming a
flat CDM cosmology with , we
convert the maximum angular scale on which alignment is seen into a physical
scale in the range Mpc . This result supports recent
evidence reported by Taylor and Jagannathan of radio jet alignment in the
deg ELAIS N1 field observed with the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope. The
TGSS sample is found to be too sparsely populated to manifest a similar signal
Winning quick and dirty: the greedy random walk
As a strategy to complete games quickly, we investigate one-dimensional
random walks where the step length increases deterministically upon each return
to the origin. When the step length after the kth return equals k, the
displacement of the walk x grows linearly in time. Asymptotically, the
probability distribution of displacements is a purely exponentially decaying
function of |x|/t. The probability E(t,L) for the walk to escape a bounded
domain of size L at time t decays algebraically in the long time limit, E(t,L)
~ L/t^2. Consequently, the mean escape time ~ L ln L, while ~
L^{2n-1} for n>1. Corresponding results are derived when the step length after
the kth return scales as k^alpha$ for alpha>0.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, 2-column revtext4 forma
Cluster magnetic fields through the study of polarized radio halos in the SKA era
Galaxy clusters are unique laboratories to investigate turbulent fluid
motions and large scale magnetic fields. Synchrotron radio halos at the center
of merging galaxy clusters provide the most spectacular and direct evidence of
the presence of relativistic particles and magnetic fields associated with the
intracluster medium. The study of polarized emission from radio halos is
extremely important to constrain the properties of intracluster magnetic fields
and the physics of the acceleration and transport of the relativistic
particles. However, detecting this polarized signal is a very hard task with
the current radio facilities.We use cosmological magneto-hydrodynamical
simulations to predict the expected polarized surface brightness of radio halos
at 1.4 GHz. We compare these expectations with the sensitivity and the
resolution reachable with the SKA1. This allows us to evaluate the potential
for studying intracluster magnetic fields in the surveys planned for SKA1.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures; to appear as part of 'Cosmic Magnetism' in
Proceedings 'Advancing Astrophysics with the SKA (AASKA14)', PoS(AASKA14)10
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