10,210 research outputs found
Galactic accretion and the outer structure of galaxies in the CDM model
We have combined the semi-analytic galaxy formation model of Guo et al.
(2011) with the particle-tagging technique of Cooper et al. (2010) to predict
galaxy surface brightness profiles in a representative sample of ~1900 massive
dark matter haloes (10^12--10^14 M_sol) from the Millennium II Lambda-CDM
N-body simulation. Here we present our method and basic results focusing on the
outer regions of galaxies, consisting of stars accreted in mergers. These
simulations cover scales from the stellar haloes of Milky Way-like galaxies to
the 'cD envelopes' of groups and clusters, and resolve low surface brightness
substructure such as tidal streams. We find that the surface density of
accreted stellar mass around the central galaxies of dark matter haloes is well
described by a Sersic profile, the radial scale and amplitude of which vary
systematically with halo mass (M_200). The total stellar mass surface density
profile breaks at the radius where accreted stars start to dominate over stars
formed in the galaxy itself. This break disappears with increasing M_200
because accreted stars contribute more of the total mass of galaxies, and is
less distinct when the same galaxies are averaged in bins of stellar mass,
because of scatter in the relation between M_star and M_200. To test our model
we have derived average stellar mass surface density profiles for massive
galaxies at z~0.08 by stacking SDSS images. Our model agrees well with these
stacked profiles and with other data from the literature, and makes predictions
that can be more rigorously tested by future surveys that extend the analysis
of the outer structure of galaxies to fainter isophotes. We conclude that it is
likely that the outer structure of the spheroidal components of galaxies is
largely determined by collisionless merging during their hierarchical assemblyComment: Accepted by MNRAS. Shortened following referee's report, conclusions
unchanged. 21 pages, 15 figure
Ground state phase diagram of 2D electrons in a high Landau level: - DMRG study
The ground state phase diagram of 2D electrons in a high Landau level (index
N=2) is studied by the density matrix renormalization group method. Pair
correlation functions are systematically calculated for various filling factors
from v=1/8 to 1/2. It is shown that the ground state phase diagram consists of
three different CDW states called stripe-phase, bubble-phase, and Wigner
crystal. The boundary between the stripe and the bubble phases is determined to
be v_c = 0.38, and that for the bubble phase and Wigner crystal is v_c = 0.24.
Each transition is of first order.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Adding Environmental Gas Physics to the Semi-Analytic Method for Galaxy Formation: Gravitational Heating
We present results of an attempt to include more detailed gas physics
motivated from hydrodynamical simulations within semi-analytic models (SAM) of
galaxy formation, focusing on the role that environmental effects play. The
main difference to previous SAMs is that we include 'gravitational' heating of
the intra-cluster medium (ICM) by the net surplus of gravitational potential
energy released from gas that has been stripped from infalling satellites.
Gravitational heating appears to be an efficient heating source able to prevent
cooling in environments corresponding to dark matter halos more massive than
M. The energy release by gravitational heating can
match that by AGN-feedback in massive galaxies and can exceed it in the most
massive ones. However, there is a fundamental difference in the way the two
processes operate. Gravitational heating becomes important at late times, when
the peak activity of AGNs is already over, and it is very mass dependent. This
mass dependency and time behaviour gives the right trend to recover down-sizing
in the star-formation rate of massive galaxies. Abridged...Comment: replaced by accepted version to ApJ, some sections have been dropped
and text has been added to others to include the referee's comments, several
typos have been correcte
Symposium in Celebration of the Fixed Target Program with the Tevatron
This document is an abridgement of the commemorative book prepared on the occasion of the symposium "In Celebration of the Fixed Target Program with the Tevatron" held at Fermilab on June 2, 2000. The full text with graphics contains, in addition to the material here, a section for each experiment including a "plain text" description, lists of all physics publications, lists of all degree recipients and a photo from the archives. The full text is available on the web at: http://conferences.fnal.gov/tevft/book
NuSTAR observation of a minuscule microflare in a solar active region
We present X-ray imaging spectroscopy of one of the weakest active region (AR) microflares ever studied. The microflare occurred at ∼11:04 UT on 2018 September 9 and we studied it using the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope ARray (NuSTAR) and the Solar Dynamic Observatory's Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (SDO/AIA). The microflare is observed clearly in 2.5-7 keV with NuSTAR and in Fe XVIII emission derived from the hotter component of the 94 Å SDO/AIA channel. We estimate the event to be three orders of magnitude lower than a GOES A class microflare with an energy of 1.1e26 erg. It reaches temperatures of 6.7 MK with an emission measure of 8.0e43 cm^−3. Non-thermal emission is not detected but we instead determine upper limits to such emission. We present the lowest thermal energy estimate for an AR microflare in literature, which is at the lower limits of what is still considered an X-ray microflare
Vanishing Hall Constant in the Stripe Phase of Cuprates
The Hall constant R_H is considered for the stripe structures. In order to
explain the vanishing of R_H in LNSCO at x = 1/8, we use the relation of R_H to
the Drude weight D as well as direct numerical calculation, to obtain results
within the t-J model, where the stripes are imposed via a charge potential and
a staggered magnetic field. The origin of R_H ~ 0 is related to a maximum in D
and the minimal kinetic energy in stripes with a hole filling ~ 1/2. The same
argument indicates on a possibility of R_H ~ 0 in the whole range of static
stripes for x < 1/8.Comment: RevTeX, 4 pages, 5 figure
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