49,208 research outputs found
Is a Simple Collisionless Relic Dark Matter Particle Ruled Out?
The central densities of dark matter (DM) halos are much lower than predicted
in cold DM models of structure formation. Confirmation that they have cores
with a finite central density would allow us to rule out many popular types of
collisionless particle as candidates for DM. Any model that leads to cusped
halos (such as cold DM) is already facing serious difficulties on small scales
and hot DM models have been excluded. Here I show that fermionic warm DM is
inconsistent with the wide range of phase space densities in the DM halos of
well-observed nearby galaxies.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, LaTeX uses emulateapj.sty, revised version to
appear in ApJ Letters. Argument clarified and strengthened in response to
criticism, conclusions little change
CANOZE measurements of the Arctic ozone hole
In CANOZE 1 (Canadian Ozone Experiment), a series of 20 ozone profile measurements were made in April, 1986 from Alert at 82.5 N. CANOZE is the Canadian program for study of the Arctic winter ozone layer. In CANOZE 2, ozone profile measurements were made at Saskatoon, Edmonton, Churchill and Resolute during February and March, 1987 with ECC ozonesondes. Ground based measurements of column ozone, nitrogen dioxide and hydrochloric acid were conducted at Saskatoon. Two STRATOPROBE balloon flights were conducted on February 26 and March 19, 1987. Two aerosol flights were conducted by the University of Wyoming. The overall results of this study will be reported and compared with the NOZE findings. The results from CANOZE 3 in 1988, are also discussed. In 1988, as part of CANOZE 3, STRATOPROBE balloon flights were conducted from Saskatchewan on January 27 and February 13. A new lightweight infrared instrument was developed and test flown. A science flight was successfully conducted from Alert (82.5 N) on March 9, 1988 when the vortex was close to Alert; a good measurement of the profile of nitric acid was obtained. Overall, the Arctic spring ozone layer exhibits many of the features of the Antarctic ozone phenomenon, although there is obviously not a hole present every year. The Arctic ozone field in March, 1986 demonstrated many similarities to the Antarctic ozone hole. The TOMS imagery showed a crater structure in the ozone field similar to the Antarctic crater in October. Depleted layers of ozone were found in the profiles around 15 km, very similar to those reported from McMurdo. Enhanced levels of nitric acid were measured in air which had earlier been in the vortex. The TOMS imagery for March 1987 did not show an ozone crater, but will be examined for an ozone crater in February and March, 1988, the target date for the CANOZE 3 project
The measurement of ultraviolet radiation and sunburn time over southern Ontario
Studies of the depletion of ozone which have been conducted from the TOMS instrument on the NIMBUS 7 satellite indicate that total ozone has declined by 5 percent over the last 12 years at most mid-latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere typical of southern Ontario. The measurement of the actual resultant increases in UVB is now important. A monitoring program of UVB (biologically active solar ultraviolet radiation) has been conducted for the last 24 months at a site near Bolton, Ontario. The sunburn time varies from less than 17 minutes in late July, to over 4 hours in December on clear days. The levels depend on solar insolation and total ozone column. The ultraviolet levels are strongly affected by cloud and sky conditions. The implications of present and future depletion on the sunburn time are discussed
A Note on the Relativistic Covariance of the Cyclic Relations
It is shown that the Evans-Vigier modified electrodynamics is compatible with
the Relativity Theory.Comment: ReVTeX file, 14pp., no figure
Superintegrability on N-dimensional spaces of constant curvature from so(N+1) and its contractions
The Lie-Poisson algebra so(N+1) and some of its contractions are used to
construct a family of superintegrable Hamiltonians on the ND spherical,
Euclidean, hyperbolic, Minkowskian and (anti-)de Sitter spaces. We firstly
present a Hamiltonian which is a superposition of an arbitrary central
potential with N arbitrary centrifugal terms. Such a system is quasi-maximally
superintegrable since this is endowed with 2N-3 functionally independent
constants of the motion (plus the Hamiltonian). Secondly, we identify two
maximally superintegrable Hamiltonians by choosing a specific central potential
and finding at the same time the remaining integral. The former is the
generalization of the Smorodinsky-Winternitz system to the above six spaces,
while the latter is a generalization of the Kepler-Coulomb potential, for which
the Laplace-Runge-Lenz N-vector is also given. All the systems and constants of
the motion are explicitly expressed in a unified form in terms of ambient and
polar coordinates as they are parametrized by two contraction parameters
(curvature and signature of the metric).Comment: 14 pages. Based on the contribution presented at the "XII
International Conference on Symmetry Methods in Physics", Yerevan (Armenia),
July 2006. To appear in Physics of Atomic Nucle
The beginnings of geography teaching and research in the University of Glasgow: the impact of J.W. Gregory
J.W. Gregory arrived in Glasgow from Melbourne in 1904 to take up the post of foundation Professor of Geology in the University of Glasgow. Soon after his arrival in Glasgow he began to push for the setting up of teaching in Geography in Glasgow, which came to pass in 1909 with the appointment of a Lecturer in Geography. This lecturer was based in the Department of Geology in the University's East Quad. Gregory's active promotion of Geography in the University was matched by his extensive writing in the area, in textbooks, journal articles and popular books. His prodigious output across a wide range of subject areas is variably accepted today, with much of his geomorphological work being judged as misguided to varying degrees. His 'social science' publications - in the areas of race, migration, colonisation and economic development of Africa and Australia - espouse a viewpoint that is unacceptable in the twenty-first century. Nonetheless, that viewpoint sits squarely within the social and economic traditions of Gregory's era, and he was clearly a key 'Establishment' figure in natural and social sciences research in the first half of the twentieth century. The establishment of Geography in the University of Glasgow remains enduring testimony of J.W. Gregory's energy, dedication and foresight
Do current WIMP direct measurements constrain light relic neutralinos?
New upper bounds on direct detection rates have recently been presented by a
number of experimental collaborations working on searches for WIMPs. In this
paper we analyze how the constraints on relic neutralinos which can be derived
from these results is affected by the uncertainties in the distribution
function of WIMPs in the halo. Various different categories of velocity
distribution functions are considered, and the ensuing implications for
supersymmetric configurations derived. We conservatively conclude that current
experimental data do not constrain neutralinos of small mass (below 50 GeV).Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, typeset with ReVTeX4. The paper may also be found
at http://www.to.infn.it/~fornengo/papers/constraints05.ps.gz or through
http://www.astroparticle.to.infn.it/index.htm
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