957 research outputs found
Luminosity versus Phase-Space-Density Relation of Galaxies Revisited
We reexamined the correlation between the B-T magnitude and the phase-space-density parameter w = (D-2(25) v(o))(-1) of galaxies for the Virgo, the Coma, the Fornax, and the Perseus clusters in an effort to better understand the physical underpinning of the fundamental plane. A tight correlation (B-T = a log w + b) common to different morphological types of galaxies (E, S0, S) was found for the Virgo and the Coma clusters, with a = 1.87 +/- 0.10 and 1.33 +/- 0.11, respectively. An investigation using only E galaxies was made for the four clusters. The results indicated that the empirical linear relation might be common among the Coma, the Fornax, and the Perseus clusters, with the Virgo Cluster showing deviation. This relation, which is another way to project the fundamental plane, has an expression insensitive to the morphology and may be suitable for treating galaxies of different morphological types collectively.ArticleThe Astrophysical Journal. 531:665-675 (2000)journal articl
Extension of holomorphic functions and cohomology classes from non reduced analytic subvarieties
The goal of this survey is to describe some recent results concerning the L 2
extension of holomorphic sections or cohomology classes with values in vector
bundles satisfying weak semi-positivity properties. The results presented here
are generalized versions of the Ohsawa-Takegoshi extension theorem, and borrow
many techniques from the long series of papers by T. Ohsawa. The recent
achievement that we want to point out is that the surjectivity property holds
true for restriction morphisms to non necessarily reduced subvarieties,
provided these are defined as zero varieties of multiplier ideal sheaves. The
new idea involved to approach the existence problem is to make use of L 2
approximation in the Bochner-Kodaira technique. The extension results hold
under curvature conditions that look pretty optimal. However, a major unsolved
problem is to obtain natural (and hopefully best possible) L 2 estimates for
the extension in the case of non reduced subvarieties -- the case when Y has
singularities or several irreducible components is also a substantial issue.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1703.00292,
arXiv:1510.0523
Large Cosmic Variance in the Clustering Properties of Lyman Alpha Emitters at z~5
We reported in a previous paper the discovery of large-scale structure of
Lyman Alpha emitters (LAEs) at z=4.86+-0.03 with a projected size of 20 Mpc x
50 Mpc in narrow-band data of a 25' x 45' area of the Subaru Deep Field
(Omega_0=0.3, lambda_0=0.7, H0=70 km/s/Mpc). However, the surveyed area, which
corresponds to 55 Mpc x 100 Mpc, was not large enough that we can conclude that
we are seeing a typical distribution of z~5 LAEs. In this Letter, we report the
results of follow-up imaging of the same sky area using a new narrow-band
filter (NB704, lambda_c=7046 A and FWHM=100 A) to detect LAEs at z=4.79, i.e.,
LAEs lying closer to us by 39 Mpc on average than the z=4.86 objects. We detect
51 LAEs at z=4.79+-0.04 down to NB704=25.7, and find that their sky
distribution is quite different from the z=4.86 LAEs'. The clustering of z=4.79
LAEs is very weak on any scales and there is no large-scale high- contrast
structure. The shape and the amplitude of the angular correlation function are
thus largely different between the two samples. These results demonstrate a
large cosmic variance in the clustering properties of LAEs on scales of ~ 50
Mpc.Comment: 4 pages (uses emulateapj5.sty), accepted for ApJ
Massive galaxies in cosmological simulations: UV-selected sample at redshift z=2
We study the properties of galaxies at z=2 in a Lambda CDM universe, using
two different types of hydrodynamic simulation methods (Eulerian TVD and SPH)
and a spectrophotometric analysis in the Un, G, R filter set. The simulated
galaxies at z=2 satisfy the color-selection criteria proposed by Adelberger et
al. (2004) when we assume Calzetti extinction with E(B-V)=0.15. We find that
the number density of simulated galaxies brighter than R<25.5 at z=2 is about
2e-2 h^3/Mpc^3, roughly one order of magnitude larger than that of Lyman break
galaxies at z=3. The most massive galaxies at z=2 have stellar masses >~1e11
Msun, and their observed-frame G-R colors lie in the range 0.0<G-R<1.0. They
typically have been continuously forming stars with a rate exceeding 30 Msun/yr
over a few Gyrs from z=10 to z=2, although the TVD simulation indicates a more
sporadic star formation history than the SPH simulations. Of order half of
their stellar mass was already assembled by z~4. The reddest massive galaxies
at z=2 with G-R >= 1.0 and Mstar>1e10 Msun/h finished the build-up of their
stellar mass by z~3. Interestingly, our study suggests that the majority of the
most massive galaxies at z=2 should be detectable at rest-frame UV wavelengths,
contrary to some recent claims made on the basis of near-IR studies of galaxies
at the same epoch, provided the median extinction is less than E(B-V)<0.3.
However, our results also suggest that the fraction of stellar mass contained
in galaxies that pass the color-selection criteria could be as low as 50% of
the total stellar mass in the Universe at z=2. Our simulations suggest that the
missing stellar mass is contained in fainter (R>25.5) and intrinsically redder
galaxies. Our results do not suggest that hierarchical galaxy formation fails
to account for the massive galaxies at z>=1. (abridged)Comment: 35 pages, 11 figures. Submitted to ApJ. Error in AB magnitude
calculation corrected. Higher resolution version available at
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~knagamine/redgal.ps.g
Soft-gluon effects in WW production at hadron colliders
We consider QCD radiative corrections to WW pair production in hadron
collisions. We perform a calculation that consistently combines next-to-leading
order predictions with soft-gluon resummation valid at small transverse momenta
ptWW of the WW pair. We present results for the ptWW distribution at the LHC up
to (almost) next-to-next-to-leading logarithmic accuracy, and study the effect
of resummation on the charged-lepton distributions. Soft-gluon effects are
typically mild, but they can be strongly enhanced when hard cuts are applied.
The relevant distributions are generally well described by the MC@NLO event
generator.Comment: 15 pages, 12 postscript figures. Error corrected in NLO plot for WW
transverse-mass distribution. Results unchange
Implications of the Lyman alpha Emission Line from a Candidate z=10 Galaxy
The recently discovered z=10 galaxy (Pello et al 2004) has a strong Lyman
alpha emission line that is consistent with being surprisingly symmetric, even
given the relatively poor quality of its spectrum. The blue wing of a Lyman
alpha line originating at high redshift should be strongly suppressed by
resonant hydrogen absorption along the line of sight, an expectation borne out
by the observed asymmetric shapes of the existing sample of Lyman alpha
emitting sources at lower redshifts (3< z < 6.7). Absorption on the blue side
of the line of the Pello et al. source could be reduced if the intergalactic
medium (IGM) in the vicinity of the galaxy is highly ionized, but we show that
this requires an unrealistically high ionizing emissivity. We suggest instead
that the Lyman alpha emitting gas be receding relative to the surrounding gas
with a velocity of >= 35km/s, a large velocity that is plausible only if the
galaxy is part of a larger system (group of galaxies) with a velocity
dispersion >= 35km/s. We find that with this velocity shift, the observed
strength and shape of the line is still consistent with the galaxy being
surrounded by its own Stromgren sphere embedded in a fully neutral IGM. More
generally, we predict that at any given redshift, the bright Lyman alpha
emitters with broader lines would exhibit stronger asymmetry than fainter ones.
Bright galaxies with symmetric Lyman alpha lines may be signposts for groups
and clusters of galaxies, within which they can acquire random velocities
comparable to or larger than their linewidths.Comment: 5 pages, submitted to ApJ
Was the Universe Reionized at Redshift 10?
Recently, Pello et al. (2004) claimed to have discovered a galaxy at a
redshift z=10, and identified a feature in its spectrum with a hydrogen
Lyman-alpha emission line. If this identification is correct, we show that the
intergalactic medium (IGM) around the galaxy must be significantly ionized;
otherwise, the damping wing of Lyman-alpha absorption by the neutral IGM would
have greatly suppressed the emission line. We find either that the large-scale
region surrounding this galaxy must have been largely reionized by z=10 (with a
neutral fraction <0.4) or that the stars within the galaxy must be massive
(>100 solar masses), and hence capable of producing a sufficiently large HII
region around it. We generalize these conclusions and derive the maximum
Lyman-alpha line flux for a given UV continuum flux of galaxies prior to the
epoch of reionization.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, ApJ, submitte
RAPTOR observations of delayed explosive activity in the high-redshift gamma-ray burst GRB 060206
The RAPid Telescopes for Optical Response (RAPTOR) system at Los Alamos
National Laboratory observed GRB 060206 starting 48.1 minutes after gamma-ray
emission triggered the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) on-board the Swift
satellite. The afterglow light curve measured by RAPTOR shows a spectacular
re-brightening by ~1 mag about 1 h after the trigger and peaks at R ~ 16.4 mag.
Shortly after the onset of the explosive re-brightening the OT doubled its flux
on a time-scale of about 4 minutes. The total R-band fluence received from GRB
060206 during this episode is 2.3e-9 erg/cm2. In the rest frame of the burst (z
= 4.045) this yields an isotropic equivalent energy release of ~0.7e50 erg in
just a narrow UV band 130 +/- 22 nm. We discuss the implications of RAPTOR
observations for untriggered searches for fast optical transients and studies
of GRB environments at high redshift.Comment: Submitted to ApJ Letter
Fibrations of genus two on complex surfaces
We consider fibrations of genus 2 over complex surfaces. The purpose of this
paper is primarily to provide a geometric description of the possible
structures of the fibration on a neighborhood of a singular fiber. In
particular it is shown that the "geometric data" of the singular fiber
determines the fibration on its neighborhood up to a transversely holomorphic
-diffeomorphism. The method employed is quite flexible and it
applies to good extent to fibrations of arbitrary genus.Comment: This is the final version, June 201
The renormalization of the axial anomaly in dimensional regularization
The prescription for the -matrix within dimensional regularization
in multiloop calculations is elaborated. The three-loop anomalous dimension of
the singlet axial current is calculated.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure available on request from the author,
NIKHEF-H/92-1
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