31,695 research outputs found
Cosmic acceleration: Inhomogeneity versus vacuum energy
In this essay, I present an alternative explanation for the cosmic
acceleration which appears as a consequence of recent high redshift Supernova
data. In the usual interpretation, this cosmic acceleration is explained by the
presence of a positive cosmological constant or vacuum energy, in the
background of Friedmann models. Instead, I will consider a Local Rotational
Symmetric (LRS) inhomogeneous spacetime, with a barotropic equation of state
for the cosmic matter. Within this framework the kinematical acceleration of
the cosmic fluid or, equivalently, the inhomogeneity of matter, is just the
responsible of the SNe Ia measured cosmic acceleration. Although in our model
the Cosmological Principle is relaxed, it maintains local isotropy about our
worldline in agreement with the CBR experiments.Comment: LATEX, 7 pags, no figs, Honorable Mention in the 1999 Essay
Competition of the Gravity Research Foundatio
Na/K pump regulation of cardiac repolarization: Insights from a systems biology approach
The sodium-potassium pump is widely recognized as the principal mechanism for active ion transport across the cellular membrane of cardiac tissue, being responsible for the creation and maintenance of the transarcolemmal sodium and potassium gradients, crucial for cardiac cell electrophysiology. Importantly, sodium-potassium pump activity is impaired in a number of major diseased conditions, including ischemia and heart failure. However, its subtle ways of action on cardiac electrophysiology, both directly through its electrogenic nature and indirectly via the regulation of cell homeostasis, make it hard to predict the electrophysiological consequences of reduced sodium-potassium pump activity in cardiac repolarization. In this review, we discuss how recent studies adopting the Systems Biology approach, through the integration of experimental and modeling methodologies, have identified the sodium-potassium pump as one of the most\ud
important ionic mechanisms in regulating key properties of cardiac repolarization and its rate-dependence, from subcellular to whole organ levels. These include the role of the pump in the biphasic modulation of cellular repolarization and refractoriness, the rate control of intracellular sodium and calcium dynamics and therefore of the adaptation of repolarization to changes in heart rate, as well as its importance in regulating pro-arrhythmic substrates through modulation of dispersion of repolarization and restitution. Theoretical findings are consistent across a variety of cell types and species including human, and widely in agreement with experimental findings. The novel insights and hypotheses on the role of the pump in cardiac electrophysiology obtained through this integrative approach could eventually lead to novel therapeutic and diagnostic strategies
The properties of the extended warm ionised gas around low-redshift QSOs and the lack of extended high-velocity outflows
(Abridged) We present a detailed analysis of a large sample of 31
low-redshift, mostly radio-quiet type 1 QSOs observed with integral field
spectroscopy to study their extended emission-line regions (EELRs). We focus on
the ionisation state of the gas, size and luminosity of extended narrow line
regions (ENLRs), which corresponds to those parts of the EELR dominated by
ionisation from the QSO, as well as the kinematics of the ionised gas. We
detect EELRs around 19 of our 31 QSOs (61%) after deblending the unresolved QSO
emission and the extended host galaxy light in the integral field data. We
identify 13 EELRs to be entirely ionised by the QSO radiation, 3 EELRs are
composed of HII regions and 3 EELRs display signatures of both ionisation
mechanisms at different locations. The typical size of the ENLR is 10kpc at a
median nuclear [OIII] luminosity of log(L([OIII])/[erg/s])=42.7+-0.15. We show
that the ENLR sizes are least a factor of 2 larger than determined with HST,
but are consistent with those of recently reported type 2 QSOs at matching
[OIII] luminosities. The ENLR of type 1 and type 2 QSOs appear to follow the
same size-luminosity relation. Furthermore, we show for the first time that the
ENLR size is much better correlated with the QSO continuum luminosity than with
the total/nuclear [OIII] luminosity. We show that ENLR luminosity and radio
luminosity are correlated, and argue that radio jets even in radio-quiet QSOs
are important for shaping the properties of the ENLR. Strikingly, the
kinematics of the ionised gas is quiescent and likely gravitationally driven in
the majority of cases and we find only 3 objects with radial gas velocities
exceeding 400km/s in specific regions of the EELR that can be associate with
radio jets. In general, these are significantly lower outflow velocities and
detection rates compared to starburst galaxies or radio-loud QSOs.Comment: 34 page, 22 figures (slightly degraded in resolution), 10 tables,
accepted for publication in A&A, minor corrections to match with the
publisher versio
The low-metallicity QSO HE 2158-0107: A massive galaxy growing by the accretion of nearly pristine gas from its environment?
[abridged] The metallicities of AGN are usually well above solar in their
NLR, often reaching up to several times solar in their broad-line regions.
Low-metallicity AGN are rare objects which have so far always been associated
with low-mass galaxies hosting low-mass BHs (M_BH<10^6Msun). In this paper we
present IFS data of the low-redshift QSO HE 2158-0107 for which we find strong
evidence for sub-solar NLR metallicities associated with a massive BH
(M_BH~3x10^8Msun). The QSO is surrounded by a large extended emission-line
region reaching out to 30kpc from the QSO in a tail-like geometry. We present
optical and near-IR images and investigate the properties of the host galaxy.
The SED of the host is rather blue, indicative of a significant young age
stellar population formed within the last 1Gyr. A 3sigma upper limit of
L_bulge<4.5x10^10Lsun for the H band luminosity and a corresponding stellar
mass upper limit of M_bulge<3.4x10^10Msun show that the host is offset from the
local BH-bulge relations. This is independently supported by the kinematics of
the gas. Although the stellar mass of the host galaxy is lower than expected,
it cannot explain the exceptionally low metallicity of the gas. We suggest that
the extended emission-line region and the galaxy growth are caused by the
infall of nearly pristine gas from the environment of the QSO host. Minor
mergers of dwarf galaxies or the theoretically predicted smooth accretion of
cold gas are both potential drivers behind that process. Since the metallicity
of the gas in the NLR is much lower than expected, we suspect that the external
gas has already reached the galaxy centre and may even contribute to the
current feeding of the BH. HE 2158-0107 appears to represent a particular phase
of substantial BH and galaxy growth that can be observationally linked with the
accretion of external material from its environment.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Kink stability, propagation, and length scale competition in the periodically modulated sine-Gordon equation
We have examined the dynamical behavior of the kink solutions of the
one-dimensional sine-Gordon equation in the presence of a spatially periodic
parametric perturbation. Our study clarifies and extends the currently
available knowledge on this and related nonlinear problems in four directions.
First, we present the results of a numerical simulation program which are not
compatible with the existence of a radiative threshold, predicted by earlier
calculations. Second, we carry out a perturbative calculation which helps
interpret those previous predictions, enabling us to understand in depth our
numerical results. Third, we apply the collective coordinate formalism to this
system and demonstrate numerically that it accurately reproduces the observed
kink dynamics. Fourth, we report on a novel occurrence of length scale
competition in this system and show how it can be understood by means of linear
stability analysis. Finally, we conclude by summarizing the general physical
framework that arises from our study.Comment: 19 pages, REVTeX 3.0, 24 figures available from A S o
Breathers in inhomogeneous nonlinear lattices: an analysis via centre manifold reduction
We consider an infinite chain of particles linearly coupled to their nearest
neighbours and subject to an anharmonic local potential. The chain is assumed
weakly inhomogeneous. We look for small amplitude discrete breathers. The
problem is reformulated as a nonautonomous recurrence in a space of
time-periodic functions, where the dynamics is considered along the discrete
spatial coordinate. We show that small amplitude oscillations are determined by
finite-dimensional nonautonomous mappings, whose dimension depends on the
solutions frequency. We consider the case of two-dimensional reduced mappings,
which occurs for frequencies close to the edges of the phonon band. For an
homogeneous chain, the reduced map is autonomous and reversible, and
bifurcations of reversible homoclinics or heteroclinic solutions are found for
appropriate parameter values. These orbits correspond respectively to discrete
breathers, or dark breathers superposed on a spatially extended standing wave.
Breather existence is shown in some cases for any value of the coupling
constant, which generalizes an existence result obtained by MacKay and Aubry at
small coupling. For an inhomogeneous chain the study of the nonautonomous
reduced map is in general far more involved. For the principal part of the
reduced recurrence, using the assumption of weak inhomogeneity, we show that
homoclinics to 0 exist when the image of the unstable manifold under a linear
transformation intersects the stable manifold. This provides a geometrical
understanding of tangent bifurcations of discrete breathers. The case of a mass
impurity is studied in detail, and our geometrical analysis is successfully
compared with direct numerical simulations
Optimal energy quanta to current conversion
We present a microscopic discussion of a nano-sized structure which uses the
quantization of energy levels and the physics of single charge Coulomb
interaction to achieve an optimal conversion of heat flow to directed current.
In our structure the quantization of energy levels and the Coulomb blockade
lead to the transfer of quantized packets of energy from a hot source into an
electric conductor to which it is capacitively coupled. The fluctuation
generated transfer of a single energy quantum translates into the directed
motion of a single electron. Thus in our structure the ratio of the charge
current to the heat current is determined by the ratio of the charge quantum to
the energy quantum. An important novel aspect of our approach is that the
direction of energy flow and the direction of electron motion are decoupled.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
El reto de vincular reputación online de destinos turísticos con competitividad
The aim of this study is to evidence how 2.0 conversations in social media impact the reputation of destinations. Additionally, the influence of co-creation practices is analysed. The five most competitive destinations worldwide have been chosen for the research. This paper demonstrates that monitoring social media is a challenge in tourism and is a strategic tool to support process decision making and for destination brand building in a sustainable way. Currently, there are several monitoring and analytic tools, but there is a lack of models to systematise and harness it for the Destination Management Organization (DMOs). In conclusion, how tourists play the main role in the competitiveness of Destinations with their experiences and opinions are considered, along with some keys for successful management of social media are given in the view of the results.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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