104,625 research outputs found
A Partition Theorem for a Randomly Selected Large Population
We state and prove a proposition on partitioning of a randomly selected large
population into stationary and non-stationary populations by using a property
of stationary population identity. Applicability of this theorem for practical
purposes is summarized at the end.Comment: 7 pages, a new result in population dynamic
Clinical and radiographic observation of the periodontium in patients undergoing orthodontic therapy: first twenty-seven months
Thesis (MSD) --Boston University (Periodontics).Includes bibliographic references: leaves 84-89.Twenty-two male patients from 12-14 years of age were selected prior to active orthodontic therapy at Boston University School of Graduate
Dentistry's Departmant of Orthodontics. These patients were projected
to undergo full-banded orthodontic treatnent.
The objective of this investigation was designed as a long tenn project
to document the quantitative and qualitative changes occurring in the
periodontium during and following orthodontic therapy.
The patients were examined for the first 9 month period by
Dr. Stuart Sears and Dr. Sergio Tejedor-Leon.
Relocation of two families reduced the number of patients to twenty
which were examined for the second 9 nonth period by Dr. Robert E. Roe
and Dr. Robert P. Rubins. [TRUNCATED
Photo-heating and the fate of hard photons during the reionisation of HeII by quasars
We use a combination of analytic and numerical arguments to consider the
impact of quasar photo-heating during HeII reionisation on the thermal
evolution of the intergalactic medium (IGM). We demonstrate that rapid (\Delta
z 10^4 K) photo-heating is difficult to achieve
across the entire IGM unless quasar spectra are significantly harder than
implied by current observational constraints. Although filtering of intrinsic
quasar radiation through dense regions in the IGM does increase the mean excess
energy per HeII photo-ionisation, it also weakens the radiation intensity and
lowers the photo-ionisation rate, preventing rapid heating over time intervals
shorter than the local photo-ionisation timescale. Moreover, the hard photons
responsible for the strongest heating are more likely to deposit their energy
inside dense clumps. The abundance of such clumps is, however, uncertain and
model-dependent, leading to a fairly large uncertainty in the photo-heating
rates. Nevertheless, although some of the IGM may be exposed to a hardened and
weakened ionising background for long periods, most of the IGM must instead be
reionised by the more abundant, softer photons and with accordingly modest
heating rates (\Delta T < 10^4 K). The repeated ionisation of fossil quasar
HeIII regions does not increase the net heating because the recombination times
in these regions typically exceed the IGM cooling times and the average time
lag between successive rounds of quasar activity. Detailed line-of-sight
radiative transfer simulations confirm these expectations and predict a rich
thermal structure in the IGM during HeII reionisation. [Abridged]Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, accepted by MNRA
Cold Dark Matter Substructure and Galactic Disks
We perform a set of high-resolution, dissipationless N-body simulations to
investigate the influence of cold dark matter (CDM) substructure on the
dynamical evolution of thin galactic disks. Our method combines cosmological
simulations of galaxy-sized CDM halos to derive the properties of substructure
populations and controlled numerical experiments of consecutive subhalo impacts
onto initially-thin, fully-formed disk galaxies. We demonstrate that close
encounters between massive subhalos and galactic disks since z~1 should be
common occurrences in LCDM models. In contrast, extremely few satellites in
present-day CDM halos are likely to have a significant impact on the disk
structure. One typical host halo merger history is used to seed controlled
N-body experiments of subhalo-disk encounters. As a result of these accretion
events, the disk thickens considerably at all radii with the disk scale height
increasing in excess of a factor of 2 in the solar neighborhood. We show that
interactions with the subhalo population produce a wealth of distinctive
morphological signatures in the disk stars including: conspicuous flares; bars;
low-lived, ring-like features in the outskirts; and low-density, filamentary
structures above the disk plane. We compare a resulting dynamically-cold,
ring-like feature in our simulations to the Monoceros ring stellar structure in
the MW. The comparison shows quantitative agreement in both spatial
distribution and kinematics, suggesting that such observed complex stellar
components may arise naturally as disk stars are excited by encounters with
subhalos. These findings highlight the significant role of CDM substructure in
setting the structure of disk galaxies and driving galaxy evolution.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. To appear in the proceedings of the IAU
Symposium No. 254 "The Galaxy Disk in Cosmological Context", Copenhagen 9-13
June 2008, Denmark, (Eds.) J. Andersen, J. Bland-Hawthorn & B. Nordstrom,
Cambridge University Pres
- …