64 research outputs found

    When are permutation invariants Cohen-Macaulay?

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    Over a field of characteristic 0, every ring of invariants of any finite group is Cohen-Macaulay. This is not true for fields of positive characteristic. We consider permutation representations and their invariant rings over fields Fp\mathbb{F}_p of prime order. We give an efficient algorithm which for any given permutation representation, determines those primes pp for which the invariant ring over Fp\mathbb{F}_p is Cohen-Macaulay. Extensions to subgroups of reflection groups other than the symmetric group are indicated

    New Codes from Old; A New Geometric Construction

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    AbstractWe describe a new technique for obtaining new codes from old ones using geometric methods. Several applications are described

    HST Snaphot Study of Variable Stars in Globular Clusters: Inner Region of NGC 6441

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    [Abridged] We present the results of a Hubble Space Telescope snapshot program to survey the inner region of the globular cluster NGC 6441 for its variable stars. A total of 57 variable stars was found including 38 RR Lyrae stars, 6 Population II Cepheids, and 12 long period variables. Of the RR Lyrae stars observed in this survey, 26 are pulsating in the fundamental mode with a mean period of 0.753d and 12 are first-overtone mode pulsators with a mean period of 0.365d. These values match up very well with those found in ground-based surveys. Combining all the available data for NGC 6441, we find mean periods of 0.759d and 0.375d for the RRab and RRc stars, respectively. We also find that the RR Lyrae in this survey are located in the same regions of a period-amplitude diagram as those found in ground-based surveys. Although NGC 6441 is a metal-rich globular cluster, its RR Lyrae more closely resemble those in Oosterhoff type II globular clusters. However, even compared to typical Oosterhoff type II systems, the mean period of its RRab stars is unusually long. We also derived I-band period-luminosity relations for the RR Lyrae stars. Of the six Population II Cepheids, five are of W Virginis type and one is a BL Herculis variable stars. This makes NGC 6441, along with NGC 6388, the most metal-rich globular cluster known to contain these types of variable stars. Another variable, V118, may also be a Population II Cepheid given its long period and its separation in magnitude from the RR Lyrae stars. We argue that there does not appear to be a change in the period-luminosity relation slope between the BL Herculis and W Virginis stars, but that a change of slope does occur when the RV Tauri stars are added to the period-luminosity relation.Comment: 28 pages, including 9 figures and 8 tables, emulateapj5/apjfonts style. Accepted by the Astronomical Journal. Approximate publication date September 2003. We recommend the interested reader to download the preprint with full-resolution figures, which can be found at http://www.astro.puc.cl/~mcatelan/Pritzl.zi

    Cubic Curves, Finite Geometry and Cryptography

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    Some geometry on non-singular cubic curves, mainly over finite fields, is surveyed. Such a curve has 9,3,1 or 0 points of inflexion, and cubic curves are classified accordingly. The group structure and the possible numbers of rational points are also surveyed. A possible strengthening of the security of elliptic curve cryptography is proposed using a `shared secret' related to the group law. Cubic curves are also used in a new way to construct sets of points having various combinatorial and geometric properties that are of particular interest in finite Desarguesian planes.Comment: This is a version of our article to appear in Acta Applicandae Mathematicae. In this version, we have corrected a sentence in the third paragraph. The final publication is available at springerlink.com at http://www.springerlink.com/content/xh85647871215644

    Far-Ultraviolet Observations of RR Lyrae Stars in the Core of NGC 1851

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    There are extraordinarily few far ultraviolet observations of RR Lyrae stars in the literature. We present Hubble Space Telescope FUV (~1600 A) imaging of the core of the globular cluster NGC 1851. Eleven new variables whose light curves are consistent with those of RR Lyr stars are discovered, increasing the total number of RR Lyr known in this cluster by a substantial amount. In agreement with basic physical theory, the observed amplitude of the variables in the FUV is enormous compared with the century of past optical observations, ranging up to 4 mag. HST STIS FUV observations of cluster cores may prove an especially effective means of obtaining a near-complete census of RR Lyr stars, combining high angular resolution, suppression of luminous red stars, and data where the stellar pulsation amplitudes are greatly enhanced. Attention is also drawn to a peculiar blue object in the cluster that is most probably a low mass x-ray binary system in quiescence.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal, Vol. 128, Nov. 2004, 13 pages, 4 figures, AASTeX v5.

    A Far-UV Variability Survey of the Globular Cluster M80

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    We have searched for variable sources in the core region of M80, using far ultra-violet data taken with the Advanced Camera for Surveys on board the Hubble Space Telescope. We found three sources that exhibit strong signs of variability in our data. Among these is source TDK1, which we believe to be an RR Lyrae star that reached maximum brightness during our observations. The light curve shows a >3 mag FUV brightening over the course of ~5 hours, with an estimated peak brightness of ~16.7 mag, followed by a decrease to ~20 mag. Archival optical data obtained with WFPC2 confirm that TDK1 is variable in all wavebands. TDK1's SED is reasonably fit by a star with temperature T(eff)=6700K and radius R=4.2R(sun), consistent with the suggestion that it is an RR Lyrae. Based on the photometric and variability characteristics of the other two variables, we suggest that TDK2 is likely to be an SX Phoenicis star with ~55 minutes period, and TDK3 is likely another RR Lyrae. Finally, we briefly discuss the FUV counterparts to two previously known variables in M80, the classical nova T Sco and the dwarf nova DN1.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures and 3 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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