12,521 research outputs found

    The Accretion and Cooling of Preheated Gas in Dark Matter Halos

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    (abridged) We use a one-dimensional hydrodynamical code to investigate the effects of preheating on gas accretion and cooling in cold dark matter halos. In the absence of radiative cooling, preheating reduces the amount of gas that can be accreted into a halo, and the accreted gas fraction is determined by the ratio of the initial specific entropy of the gas to the virial entropy of the halo. In the presence of radiative cooling, preheating affects the gas fraction that can cool in two different ways. For small halos with masses <10^12Msun, preheating suppresses gas accretion, but most of the accreted gas can cool. For more massive halos, preheating not only reduces the amount of accreted gas, but also reduces the cooling efficiency. For both small and massive halos, gas cooling is delayed by preheating and in an inside-out fashion if the halo gas is assumed to be a single-phase medium. However, cooling can occur over a wider range of redshifts and radii, if we assume a multi-phase medium. As examples, two specific preheating cases are investigated. In the first case, the preheating entropy is assumed to be proportional to the virial entropy of the halo, as expected from AGN feedback. Such preheating effectively suppresses radiative cooling in halos with M>10^13Msun. We suggest that this may be the reason why the stellar mass function of galaxies breaks sharply at the massive end. Such preheating also helps create the hot diffused halos within which the "radio mode" feedback of AGNs can act effectively. In the second case, we assume the intergalactic medium is warm. Here the total amount of gas that can cool in a halo scales with halo mass as ~M^2, as would be required to match the observed stellar- and HI-mass functions in the current CDM model at the small mass end.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures, submitted to MNRA

    Improved Relation Extraction with Feature-Rich Compositional Embedding Models

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    Compositional embedding models build a representation (or embedding) for a linguistic structure based on its component word embeddings. We propose a Feature-rich Compositional Embedding Model (FCM) for relation extraction that is expressive, generalizes to new domains, and is easy-to-implement. The key idea is to combine both (unlexicalized) hand-crafted features with learned word embeddings. The model is able to directly tackle the difficulties met by traditional compositional embeddings models, such as handling arbitrary types of sentence annotations and utilizing global information for composition. We test the proposed model on two relation extraction tasks, and demonstrate that our model outperforms both previous compositional models and traditional feature rich models on the ACE 2005 relation extraction task, and the SemEval 2010 relation classification task. The combination of our model and a log-linear classifier with hand-crafted features gives state-of-the-art results.Comment: 12 pages for EMNLP 201

    Galaxy Ecosystems: gas contents, inflows and outflows

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    We use a set of observational data for galaxy cold gas mass fraction and gas phase metallicity to constrain the content, inflow and outflow of gas in central galaxies hosted by halos with masses between 1011M⊙10^{11} M_{\odot} to 1012M⊙10^{12} M_{\odot}. The gas contents in high redshift galaxies are obtained by combining the empirical star formation histories of Lu et al. (2014) and star formation models that relate star formation rate with the cold gas mass in galaxies. We find that the total baryon mass in low-mass galaxies is always much less than the universal baryon mass fraction since z=2z = 2, regardless of star formation model adopted. The data for the evolution of the gas phase metallicity require net metal outflow at z≲2z\lesssim 2, and the metal loading factor is constrained to be about 0.010.01, or about 60%60\% of the metal yield. Based on the assumption that galactic outflow is more enriched in metal than both the interstellar medium and the material ejected at earlier epochs, we are able to put stringent constraints on the upper limits for both the net accretion rate and the net mass outflow rate. The upper limits strongly suggest that the evolution of the gas phase metallicity and gas mass fraction for low-mass galaxies at z<2z < 2 is not compatible with strong outflow. We speculate that the low star formation efficiency of low-mass galaxies is owing to some preventative processes that prevent gas from accreting into galaxies in the first place.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, submitted to MNRA
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