41,782 research outputs found
Kinematics of the southern galaxy cluster Abell 3733
We report radial velocities for 99 galaxies with projected positions within
30 arcmin of the center of the cluster A3733 obtained with the MEFOS multifiber
spectrograph at the 3.6-m ESO telescope. These measurements are combined with
39 redshifts previously published by Stein (1996) to built a collection of 112
galaxy redshifts in the field of A3733, which is used to examine the kinematics
and structure of this cluster. We assign cluster membership to 74 galaxies with
heliocentric velocities in the interval 10500-13000 km/s. From this sample of
cluster members, we infer a heliocentric systemic velocity for A3733 of
11653{+74}{-76} km/s, which implies a mean cosmological redshift of 0.0380, and
a velocity dispersion of 614{+42}{-30} km/s. The application of statistical
substructure tests to a magnitude-limited subset of the latter sample reveals
evidence of non-Gaussianity in the distribution of ordered velocities in the
form of lighter tails and possible multimodality. Spatial substructure tests do
not find, however, any significant clumpiness in the plane of the sky, although
the existence of subclustering along the line-of-sight cannot be excluded.Comment: AA-LaTeX2e style; 10 pages, 2 Postscript figures, Table 1 appended.
To be published in Astronomy and Astrophysics. Also available at
ftp://pcess1.am.ub.es/pub/AA/a3733.ps.g
Numerical analysis and parametric studies of the buckling of composite orthotropic compression and shear panels
A computer program is presented which was developed for the combined compression and shear of stiffened variable thickness orthotropic composite panels on discrete springs: boundary conditions are general and include elastic boundary restraints. Buckling solutions are obtained by using a newly developed trigonometric finite difference procedure which improves the solution convergence rate over conventional finite difference methods. The classical general shear buckling results which exist only for simply supported panels over a limited range of orthotropic properties, were extended to the complete range of these properties for simply supported panels and, in addition, to the complete range of orthotropic properties for clamped panels. The program was also applied to parametric studies which examine the effect of filament orientation upon the buckling of graphite-epoxy panels. These studies included an examination of the filament orientations which yield maximum shear or compressive buckling strength for panels having all four edges simply supported or clamped over a wide range of aspect ratios. Panels with such orientations had higher buckling loads than comparable, equal weight, thin skinned aluminum panels. Also included among the parameter studies were examinations of combined axial compression and shear buckling and examinations of panels with rotational elastic edge restraints
Cycles are strongly Ramsey-unsaturated
We call a graph H Ramsey-unsaturated if there is an edge in the complement of
H such that the Ramsey number r(H) of H does not change upon adding it to H.
This notion was introduced by Balister, Lehel and Schelp who also proved that
cycles (except for ) are Ramsey-unsaturated, and conjectured that,
moreover, one may add any chord without changing the Ramsey number of the cycle
, unless n is even and adding the chord creates an odd cycle.
We prove this conjecture for large cycles by showing a stronger statement: If
a graph H is obtained by adding a linear number of chords to a cycle ,
then , as long as the maximum degree of H is bounded, H is either
bipartite (for even n) or almost bipartite (for odd n), and n is large.
This motivates us to call cycles strongly Ramsey-unsaturated. Our proof uses
the regularity method
Estimating Third-Order Moments for an Absorber Catalog
Thanks to the recent availability of large surveys, there has been renewed
interest in third-order correlation statistics. Measures of third-order
clustering are sensitive to the structure of filaments and voids in the
universe and are useful for studying large-scale structure. Thus, statistics of
these third-order measures can be used to test and constrain parameters in
cosmological models. Third-order measures such as the three-point correlation
function are now commonly estimated for galaxy surveys. Studies of third-order
clustering of absorption systems will complement these analyses. We define a
statistic, which we denote K, that measures third-order clustering of a data
set of point observations and focus on estimating this statistic for an
absorber catalog. The statistic K can be considered a third-order version of
the second-order Ripley K-function and allows one to study the abundance of
various configurations of point triplets. In particular, configurations
consisting of point triplets that lie close to a straight line can be examined.
Studying third-order clustering of absorbers requires consideration of the
absorbers as a three-dimensional process, observed on QSO lines of sight that
extend radially in three-dimensional space from Earth. Since most of this
three-dimensional space is not probed by the lines of sight, edge corrections
become important. We use an analytical form of edge correction weights and
construct an estimator of the statistic K for use with an absorber catalog. We
show that with these weights, ratio-unbiased estimates of K can be obtained.
Results from a simulation study also verify unbiasedness and provide
information on the decrease of standard errors with increasing number of lines
of sight.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figure
Nature vs. Nurture: Predictability in Low-Temperature Ising Dynamics
Consider a dynamical many-body system with a random initial state
subsequently evolving through stochastic dynamics. What is the relative
importance of the initial state ("nature") vs. the realization of the
stochastic dynamics ("nurture") in predicting the final state? We examined this
question for the two-dimensional Ising ferromagnet following an initial deep
quench from to . We performed Monte Carlo studies on the
overlap between "identical twins" raised in independent dynamical environments,
up to size . Our results suggest an overlap decaying with time as
with ; the same exponent holds for a
quench to low but nonzero temperature. This "heritability exponent" may equal
the persistence exponent for the 2D Ising ferromagnet, but the two differ more
generally.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; new version includes results for nonzero
temperatur
Percolation in the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick Spin Glass
We present extended versions and give detailed proofs of results concerning
percolation (using various sets of two-replica bond occupation variables) in
Sherrington-Kirkpatrick spin glasses (with zero external field) that were first
given in an earlier paper by the same authors. We also explain how
ultrametricity is manifested by the densities of large percolating clusters.
Our main theorems concern the connection between these densities and the usual
spin overlap distribution. Their corollaries are that the ordered spin glass
phase is characterized by a unique percolating cluster of maximal density
(normally coexisting with a second cluster of nonzero but lower density). The
proofs involve comparison inequalities between SK multireplica bond occupation
variables and the independent variables of standard Erdos-Renyi random graphs.Comment: 18 page
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A comparison among four different retrieval methods for ice-cloud properties using data from CloudSat, CALIPSO, and MODIS
The A-Train constellation of satellites provides a new capability to measure vertical cloud profiles that leads to more detailed information on ice-cloud microphysical properties than has been possible up to now. A variational radar–lidar ice-cloud retrieval algorithm (VarCloud) takes advantage of the complementary nature of the CloudSat radar and Cloud–Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO) lidar to provide a seamless retrieval of ice water content, effective radius, and extinction coefficient from the thinnest cirrus (seen only by the lidar) to the thickest ice cloud (penetrated only by the radar). In this paper, several versions of the VarCloud retrieval are compared with the CloudSat standard ice-only retrieval of ice water content, two empirical formulas that derive ice water content from radar reflectivity and temperature, and retrievals of vertically integrated properties from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) radiometer. The retrieved variables typically agree to within a factor of 2, on average, and most of the differences can be explained by the different microphysical assumptions. For example, the ice water content comparison illustrates the sensitivity of the retrievals to assumed ice particle shape. If ice particles are modeled as oblate spheroids rather than spheres for radar scattering then the retrieved ice water content is reduced by on average 50% in clouds with a reflectivity factor larger than 0 dBZ. VarCloud retrieves optical depths that are on average a factor-of-2 lower than those from MODIS, which can be explained by the different assumptions on particle mass and area; if VarCloud mimics the MODIS assumptions then better agreement is found in effective radius and optical depth is overestimated. MODIS predicts the mean vertically integrated ice water content to be around a factor-of-3 lower than that from VarCloud for the same retrievals, however, because the MODIS algorithm assumes that its retrieved effective radius (which is mostly representative of cloud top) is constant throughout the depth of the cloud. These comparisons highlight the need to refine microphysical assumptions in all retrieval algorithms and also for future studies to compare not only the mean values but also the full probability density function
Research review: young people leaving care
This paper reviews the international research on young people leaving care. Set in the context of a social exclusion framework, it explores young people's accelerated and compressed transitions to adulthood, and discusses the development and classification of leaving care services in responding to their needs. It then considers the evidence from outcome studies and argues that adopting a resilience framework suggests that young people leaving care may fall into three groups: young people 'moving on', 'survivors' and 'victims'. In concluding, it argues that these three pathways are associated with the quality of care young people receive, their transitions from care and the support they receive after care
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