15,394 research outputs found
Multiplicity Fluctuations in Au+Au Collisions at RHIC
In the PHOBOS experiment, charged particles are measured in almost the full
solid angle. This enables the study of fluctuations and correlations in the
particle production over a very wide kinematic range. In this paper, we show
results of a direct search for fluctuations identified by an unusual shape of
the pseudorapidity distribution. In addition, we use analysis of correlations
of the multiplicity in similar pseudorapidity bins, placed symmetrically in the
forward and backward hemispheres, to test the hypothesis of production of
particles in clusters.Comment: presented as a poster at the Quark Matter 2006 conferenc
How can double-barred galaxies be long-lived?
Double-barred galaxies account for almost one third of all barred galaxies,
suggesting that secondary stellar bars, which are embedded in large-scale
primary bars, are long-lived structures. However, up to now it has been hard to
self-consistently simulate a disc galaxy that sustains two nested stellar bars
for longer than a few rotation periods. N-body/hydrodynamical simulations
including star formation recipes have been performed. Their properties have
been compared with the most recent observational data in order to prove that
they are representative of double-barred galaxies, even SB0. Overlaps in
dynamical resonances and bar modes have been looked for using Fourier
spectrograms. Double-barred galaxies have been successfully simulated with
lifetimes as long as 7 Gyr. The stellar population of the secondary bar is
younger on average than for the primary large-scale bar. An important feature
of these simulations is the absence of any resonance overlap for several Gyr.
In particular, there is no overlap between the primary bar ILR and the
secondary bar corotation. Therefore, mode coupling cannot sustain the secondary
bar mode. Star formation is identified here as possibly being responsible for
bringing energy to the nuclear mode. Star formation is also responsible for
limiting the amount of gas in the central region which prevents the orbits
sustaining the secondary bar from being destroyed. Therefore, the secondary bar
can dissolve but reappear after approx. 1 Gyr. When star formation is switched
off the dynamical perturbation associated with the secondary bar needs several
Gyr to fully vanish. Double-bars can be long-lived in numerical simulations
with a gaseous component, even in the absence of overlap of resonances or mode
coupling, provided that star formation remains active in the central region
where the nuclear bar lies.Comment: 14 pages, 14 low resolution figures ; high resolution paper available
at http://herve.wozniak.fr/DB.pdf (27 Mb
A New Algorithm For Difference Image Analysis
In the context of difference image analysis (DIA), we present a new method
for determining the convolution kernel matching a pair of images of the same
field. Unlike the standard DIA technique which involves modelling the kernel as
a linear combination of basis functions, we consider the kernel as a discrete
pixel array and solve for the kernel pixel values directly using linear
least-squares. The removal of basis functions from the kernel model is
advantageous for a number of compelling reasons. Firstly, it removes the need
for the user to specify such functions, which makes for a much simpler user
application and avoids the risk of an inappropriate choice. Secondly, basis
functions are constructed around the origin of the kernel coordinate system,
which requires that the two images are perfectly aligned for an optimal result.
The pixel kernel model is sufficiently flexible to correct for image
misalignments, and in the case of a simple translation between images, image
resampling becomes unnecessary. Our new algorithm can be extended to spatially
varying kernels by solving for individual pixel kernels in a grid of image
sub-regions and interpolating the solutions to obtain the kernel at any one
pixel.Comment: MNRAS Letters Accepte
New results on collectivity with ATLAS
The collective phenomena are observed not only in heavy ion collisions, but
also in the proton-nucleus and in high-multiplicity collisions. The latest
results from this area obtained in ATLAS are presented. In +Pb collisions
the emission source of particles is measured using the HBT method. The analysis
of +Pb data collected in 2016 provides information on the elliptic flow of
charged hadrons and muons. Low multiplicity events from , +Pb and
peripheral Pb+Pb collisions are studied with the cumulant methods. A deeper
understanding of Pb+Pb collisions is provided by the analysis of longitudinal
fluctuations of the collective flow parameters.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figure
A new chemodynamical tool to study the evolution of galaxies in the local Universe: a quick and accurate numerical technique to compute gas cooling rate for any chemical composition
We have developed a quick and accurate numerical tool to compute gas cooling
whichever its chemical composition.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of "Heating vs.
Cooling in Galaxies and Clusters of Galaxies", August 2006, Garching
(Germany), Eds. Boehringer, Schuecker, Pratt, Finoguenov, Springer-Verlag
series "ESO Astrophysics Symposia
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