568 research outputs found
Quantum Fermion Hair
It is shown that the Dirac operator in the background of a magnetic
%Reissner-Nordstr\"om black hole and a Euclidean vortex possesses normalizable
zero modes in theories containing superconducting cosmic strings. One
consequence of these zero modes is the presence of a fermion condensate around
magnetically charged black holes which violates global quantum numbers.Comment: 16pp (harvmac (l)) and 2 figs.(not included
Cooling Radiation and the Lyman-alpha Luminosity of Forming Galaxies
We examine the cooling radiation from forming galaxies in hydrodynamic
simulations of the LCDM model (cold dark matter with a cosmological constant),
focusing on the Ly-alpha line luminosities of high-redshift systems. Primordial
composition gas condenses within dark matter potential wells, forming objects
with masses and sizes comparable to the luminous regions of observed galaxies.
As expected, the energy radiated in this process is comparable to the
gravitational binding energy of the baryons, and the total cooling luminosity
of the galaxy population peaks at z ~= 2. However, in contrast to the classical
picture of gas cooling from the \sim 10^6 K virial temperature of a typical
dark matter halo, we find that most of the cooling radiation is emitted by gas
with T < 20,000 K. As a consequence, roughly 50% of this cooling radiation
emerges in the Ly-alpha line. While a galaxy's cooling luminosity is usually
smaller than the ionizing continuum luminosity of its young stars, the two are
comparable in the most massive systems, and the cooling radiation is produced
at larger radii, where the Ly-alpha photons are less likely to be extinguished
by dust. We suggest, in particular, that cooling radiation could explain the
two large (\sim 100 kpc), luminous (L_{Ly-alpha} \sim 10^{44} erg s^{-1})
``blobs'' of Ly-alpha emission found in Steidel et al.'s (1999) narrow band
survey of a z = 3 proto-cluster. Our simulations predict objects of the
observed luminosity at about the right space density, and radiative transfer
effects can account for the observed sizes and line widths. We discuss
observable tests of this hypothesis for the nature of the Ly-alpha blobs, and
we present predictions for the contribution of cooling radiation to the
Ly-alpha luminosity function of galaxies as a function of redshift.Comment: Submitted to ApJ. 28 pages including 9 PS figures. Version with color
figures available at
http://donald.astro.umass.edu/~fardal/papers/cooling/cooling.htm
Psoriasis: embarking a dynamic shift in the skin microbiota
Recent interest has arisen regarding the role of microbiome and its composition in the pathogenesis of psoriasis. Numerous studies have shown that there are alterations in skin flora arrangement between normal individuals and psoriatic patients. Psoriasis exacerbation could be interconnected with epidermal or mucosal colonization with streptococci, Malassezia, Staphylococcus aureus, or Candida albicans. The role of cutaneous and gut microbiome in psoriasis pathogenesis has recently been studied in both human and animal models. In this review, we try to evaluate various pathogenic mechanisms linking the microbiota and psoriasis. The literature research included peer-reviewed articles which included clinical trials, original reports, and scientific reviews. MEDLINE and PubMed databases were searched from January 1990 to March 2021, including the reference lists of articles meeting our criteria
Testing Cosmological Models Against the Abundance of Damped Lyman-Alpha Absorbers
We calculate the number of damped Lyman-alpha absorbers expected in various
popular cosmological models as a function of redshift and compare our
predictions with observed abundances. The Press-Schechter formalism is used to
obtain the distribution of halos with circular velocity in different
cosmologies, and we calibrate the relation between circular velocity and
absorption cross-section using detailed gas dynamical simulations of a
``standard'' cold dark matter (CDM) model. Because of this calibration, our
approach makes more realistic assumptions about the absorption properties of
collapsed objects than previous, analytic calculations of the damped
Lyman-alpha abundance. CDM models with Omega_0=1, H_0=50, baryon density
Omega_b=0.05, and scale-invariant primeval fluctuations reproduce the observed
incidence and redshift evolution of damped Lyman-alpha absorption to within
observational uncertainty, for both COBE normalization (sigma_8=1.2) and a
lower normalization (sigma_8=0.7) that better matches the observed cluster
abundance at z=0. A tilted (n=0.8, sigma_8=0.7) CDM model tends to underproduce
absorption, especially at z=4. With COBE normalization, a CDM model with
Omega_0=0.4, Omega_{Lambda}=0.6 gives an acceptable fit to the observed
absorption; an open CDM model is marginally acceptable if Omega_0 is at least
0.4 and strongly inconsistent with the z=4 data if Omega_0=0.3. Mixed dark
matter models tend not to produce sufficient absorption, being roughly
comparable to tilted CDM models if Omega_{nu} = 0.2 and failing drastically if
Omega_{nu} = 0.3.Comment: AASlatex, 13 pages w/ 2 embedded ps figures. To be published in ApJ,
Sept. 1, 199
Biomechanical Modeling of Brain Shift During Neurosurgery
https://openworks.mdanderson.org/sumexp22/1051/thumbnail.jp
A gas-rich nuclear bar fuelling a powerful central starburst in NGC 2782
We present evidence that the peculiar interacting starburst galaxy NGC 2782
(Arp 215) harbors a gas-rich nuclear stellar bar feeding an M82-class powerful
central starburst, from a study based on OVRO CO (J=1->0) data, WIYN BVR &
Halpha observations, along with available NIR images, a 5 GHz RC map and HST
images. NGC 2782 harbors a clumpy, bar-like CO feature of radius ~ 7.5'' (1.3
kpc) which leads a nuclear stellar bar of similar size. The nuclear CO bar is
massive: it contains ~2.5x10**9 M_sun of molecular gas, which makes up ~ 8 % of
the dynamical'mass present within a 1.3 kpc radius. Within the CO bar, emission
peaks in two extended clumpy lobes which lie on opposite sides of the nucleus,
separated by ~ 6'' (1 kpc). Between the CO lobes, in the inner 200 pc radius,
resides a powerful central starburst which is forming stars at a rate of 3 to 6
M_sun yr-1. While circular motions dominate the CO velocity field, the CO lobes
show weak bar-like streaming motions on the leading side of the nuclear stellar
bar, suggestive of gas inflow. We estimate semi-analytically the gravitational
torque from the nuclear stellar bar on the gas, and suggest large gas inflow
rates from the CO lobes into the central starburst. These observations, which
are amongst the first ones showing a nuclear stellar bar fuelling molecular gas
into an intense central starburst, are consistent with simulations and theory
which suggest that nuclear bars provide an efficient way of transporting gas
closer to the galactic center to fuel central activity. Furthermore, several
massive clumps are present at low radii, and dynamical friction might produce
further gas inflow. We suggest that the nuclear molecular gas bas and central
activity will be very short-lived, likely disappearing within 5x10**8 years.Comment: Accepted by the Astrophysical Journal, 10 pages, Latex with
emulateapj.sty, apjfonts.sty, 10 postscript & 2 gif figure
The Galaxy Luminosity Function and Luminosity Density at Redshift z=0.1
Using a catalog of 147,986 galaxy redshifts and fluxes from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), we measure the galaxy luminosity density at z = 0.1 in five optical bandpasses corresponding to the SDSS bandpasses shifted to match their rest-frame shape at z = 0.1. We denote the bands (0.1)u, (0.1)g, (0.1)r, (0.1)i, (0.1)z with lambda(eff) = (3216; 4240; 5595; 6792; 8111 Angstrom), respectively. To estimate the luminosity function, we use a maximum likelihood method that allows for a general form for the shape of the luminosity function,fits for simple luminosity and number evolution, incorporates the flux uncertainties, and accounts for the flux limits of the survey. We find luminosity densities at z = 0.1 expressed in absolute AB magnitudes in a Mpc(3) to be (-14.10 +/- 0.15, -15.18 +/- 0.03, - 15.90 +/- 0.03, -16.24 +/- 0.03, -16.56 +/- 0.02) in ((0.1)u, (0.1)g, (0.1)r, (0.1)i, (0.1)z), respectively, for a cosmological model with Omega(0) = 0.3, Omega(Lambda) = 0.7, and h = 1 and using SDSS Petrosian magnitudes. Similar results are obtained using Sersic model magnitudes, suggesting that flux from outside the Petrosian apertures is not a major correction. In the (0.1)r band, the best-fit Schechter function to our results has phi* = (1.49 +/- 0.04) x 10(-2) h(3) Mpc(-3), M-* - 5 log(10) h = - 20.44 +/- 0.01, and alpha = - 1.05 +/- 0.01. In solar luminosities, the luminosity density in (0.1)r is (1.84 +/- 0.04) x 10(8) h L-0.1r,L-. Mpc(-3). Our results in the (0.1)g band are consistent with other estimates of the luminosity density, from the Two-Degree Field Galaxy Redshift Survey and the Millennium Galaxy Catalog. They represent a substantial change ( similar to 0.5 mag) from earlier SDSS luminosity density results based on commissioning data, almost entirely because of the inclusion of evolution in the luminosity function model
The DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: The Evolution of Void Statistics from z~1 to z~0
We present measurements of the void probability function (VPF) at z~1 using
data from the DEEP2 Redshift Survey and its evolution to z~0 using data from
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). We measure the VPF as a function of galaxy
color and luminosity in both surveys and find that it mimics trends displayed
in the two-point correlation function, ; namely that samples of brighter,
red galaxies have larger voids (i.e. are more strongly clustered) than fainter,
blue galaxies. We also clearly detect evolution in the VPF with cosmic time,
with voids being larger in comoving units at z~0. We find that the reduced VPF
matches the predictions of a `negative binomial' model for galaxies of all
colors, luminosities, and redshifts studied. This model lacks a physical
motivation, but produces a simple analytic prediction for sources of any number
density and integrated two-point correlation function, \bar{\xi}. This implies
that differences in the VPF across different galaxy populations are consistent
with being due entirely to differences in the population number density and
\bar{\xi}. The robust result that all galaxy populations follow the negative
binomial model appears to be due to primarily to the clustering of dark matter
halos. The reduced VPF is insensitive to changes in the parameters of the halo
occupation distribution, in the sense that halo models with the same \bar{\xi}
will produce the same VPF. For the wide range of galaxies studied, the VPF
therefore does not appear to provide useful constraints on galaxy evolution
models that cannot be gleaned from studies of \bar{\xi} alone. (abridged)Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures, ApJ accepte
Measuring the Halo Mass of z=3 Damped Ly-alpha Absorbers from the Absorber-Galaxy Cross-correlation
[Abridged] We test the reliability of a method to measure the mean halo mass
of Damped Ly-alpha absorbers (DLAs). The method is based on measuring the ratio
of the cross-correlation between DLAs and galaxies to the auto-correlation of
the galaxies themselves (), which is (in linear theory)
the ratio of their bias factor. This is shown to be true irrespective of the
galaxy redshift distribution, provided that one uses the same galaxies for the
two correlation functions. The method is applicable to all redshifts. Here, we
focus on z=3 DLAs and we demonstrate that the method robustly constrains the
mean DLA halo mass using smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) cosmological
simulations. If we use the bias formalism of Mo & White with the DLA and galaxy
mass distributions of these simulations, we predict a bias ratio of 0.771.
Direct measurement from the simulations of st yields a
ratio of 0.73+/-0.08, in excellent agreement with that prediction.
Equivalently, inverting the measured correlation ratio to infer a mean DLA halo
mass yields (log. averaging, in solar units) =11.13+/-013, in
excellent agreement with the true value in the simulations: 11.16. The cross-
correlation method thus appears to yield a robust estimate of the average host
halo mass even though the DLAs and the galaxies occupy a broad mass spectrum of
halos, and massive halos contain multiple galaxies with DLAs. We show that the
inferred mean DLA halo mass is independent of the galaxy sub-sample used, i.e.
the cross-correlation technique is also reliable. Our results imply that the
cross-correlation length between DLAs and LBGs is predicted to be, at most,
2.85 Mpc. Future observations will soon distinguish models in which DLAs are in
low mass halos from those in which DLAs are in massive halos.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, to be published in ApJ 2005 July 20th (Full
resolution of Fig.2 at
http://www.mpe.mpg.de/~nbouche/papers/Xcorr/f2-orig.eps); minor changes to
match the published tex
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