477 research outputs found
Effects of the Sound Speed of Quintessence on the Microwave Background and Large Scale Structure
We consider how quintessence models in which the sound speed differs from the
speed of light and varies with time affect the cosmic microwave background and
the fluctuation power spectrum. Significant modifications occur on length
scales related to the Hubble radius during epochs in which the sound speed is
near zero and the quintessence contributes a non-negligible fraction of the
total energy density. For the microwave background, we find that the usual
enhancement of the lowest multipole moments by the integrated Sachs-Wolfe
effect can be modified, resulting in suppression or bumps instead. Also, the
sound speed can produce oscillations and other effects at wavenumbers h/Mpc in the fluctuation power spectrum.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, typo in acknowledgments correcte
Hubble Space Telescope Imaging of the Ultra-Compact High Velocity Cloud AGC 226067: A stripped remnant in the Virgo Cluster
We analyze the optical counterpart to the ultra-compact high velocity cloud
AGC 226067, utilizing imaging taken with the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS)
on the Hubble Space Telescope. The color magnitude diagram of the main body of
AGC 226067 reveals an exclusively young stellar population, with an age of
7--50 Myr, and is consistent with a metallicity of [Fe/H]0.3 as
previous work has measured via HII region spectroscopy. Additionally, the color
magnitude diagram is consistent with a distance of 17 Mpc,
suggesting an association with the Virgo cluster. A secondary stellar system
located 1.6' (8 kpc) away in projection has a similar stellar
population. The lack of an old red giant branch (5 Gyr) is contrasted
with a serendipitously discovered Virgo dwarf in the ACS field of view (Dw
J122147+132853), and the total diffuse light from AGC~226067 is consistent with
the luminosity function of the resolved 7--50 Myr stellar population. The
main body of AGC~226067 has a =11.30.3, or
=5.41.310 given the stellar population.
We searched 20 deg of imaging data adjacent to AGC~226067 in the Virgo
Cluster, and found two similar stellar systems dominated by a blue stellar
population, far from any massive galaxy counterpart -- if this population has
similar star formation properties as AGC~226067, it implies 0.1
yr in Virgo intracluster star formation. Given its unusual
stellar population, AGC~226067 is likely a stripped remnant and is plausibly
the result of compressed gas from the ram pressure stripped M86 subgroup
(350 kpc away in projection) as it falls into the Virgo Cluster.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Accepted by the Astrophysical Journa
A Comprehensive Archival Search for Counterparts to Ultra-Compact High Velocity Clouds: Five Local Volume Dwarf Galaxies
We report five Local Volume dwarf galaxies (two of which are presented here
for the first time) uncovered during a comprehensive archival search for
optical counterparts to ultra-compact high velocity clouds (UCHVCs). The UCHVC
population of HI clouds are thought to be candidate gas-rich, low mass halos at
the edge of the Local Group and beyond, but no comprehensive search for stellar
counterparts to these systems has been presented. Careful visual inspection of
all publicly available optical and ultraviolet imaging at the position of the
UCHVCs revealed six blue, diffuse counterparts with a morphology consistent
with a faint dwarf galaxy beyond the Local Group. Optical spectroscopy of all
six candidate dwarf counterparts show that five have an H-derived
velocity consistent with the coincident HI cloud, confirming their association,
the sixth diffuse counterpart is likely a background object. The size and
luminosity of the UCHVC dwarfs is consistent with other known Local Volume
dwarf irregular galaxies. The gas fraction () of the five
dwarfs are generally consistent with that of dwarf irregular galaxies in the
Local Volume, although ALFALFA-Dw1 (associated with ALFALFA UCHVC
HVC274.68+74.70123) has a very high 40. Despite the
heterogenous nature of our search, we demonstrate that the current dwarf
companions to UCHVCs are at the edge of detectability due to their low surface
brightness, and that deeper searches are likely to find more stellar systems.
If more sensitive searches do not reveal further stellar counterparts to
UCHVCs, then the dearth of such systems around the Local Group may be in
conflict with CDM simulations.Comment: 18 pages, 4 tables, 4 figures, ApJ Accepte
BVRIJK light curves and radial velocity curves for selected Magellanic Cloud Cepheids
We present high precision and well sampled BVRIJK light curves and radial
velocity curves for a sample of five Cepheids in the SMC. In addition we
present radial velocity curves for three Cepheids in the LMC. The low
metallicity (Fe/H ~ -0.7) SMC stars have been selected for use in a
Baade-Wesselink type analysis to constrain the metallicity effect on the
Cepheid Period-Luminosity relation. The stars have periods of around 15 days so
they are similar to the Cepheids observed by the Extragalactic Distance Scale
Key Project on the Hubble Space Telescope. We show that the stars are
representative of the SMC Cepheid population at that period and thus will
provide a good sample for the proposed analysis. The actual Baade-Wesselink
analysis are presented in a companion paper.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 23 pages, 10 figures, data tables
will be made available electronically from the CD
Dielectric Haloscopes: A New Way to Detect Axion Dark Matter
We propose a new strategy to search for dark matter axions in the mass range of 40-400 µeV by introducing dielectric haloscopes, which consist of dielectric disks placed in a magnetic field. The changing dielectric media cause discontinuities in the axion-induced electric field, leading to the generation of propagating electromagnetic waves to satisfy the continuity requirements at the interfaces. Large-area disks with adjustable distances boost the microwave signal (10-100 GHz) to an observable level and allow one to scan over a broad axion mass range. A sensitivity to QCD axion models is conceivable with 80 disks of 1 m2 area contained in a 10 T field
A Second Giant Planet in 3:2 Mean-Motion Resonance in the HD 204313 System
We present 8 years of high-precision radial velocity (RV) data for HD 204313
from the 2.7 m Harlan J. Smith Telescope at McDonald Observatory. The star is
known to have a giant planet (M sin i = 3.5 M_J) on a ~1900-day orbit, and a
Neptune-mass planet at 0.2 AU. Using our own data in combination with the
published CORALIE RVs of Segransan et al. (2010), we discover an outer Jovian
(M sin i = 1.6 M_J) planet with P ~ 2800 days. Our orbital fit suggests the
planets are in a 3:2 mean motion resonance, which would potentially affect
their stability. We perform a detailed stability analysis, and verify the
planets must be in resonance.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Effects of Non-Pharmacological Interventions as Vaccine Adjuvants in Humans:a systematic review and network meta-analysis
Declaration of interest: We have read and understood the policy on declaration of interests and declare that CMT has received funding from Nestle Nutrition for projects unconnected with this study. All other authors do not have any conflicting interests
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