37,916 research outputs found
Orbital orientation evolution of massive binary black holes at the centres of non-spherical galaxies
At the centre of a spherical and kinematically isotropic galaxy, the
orientation of a massive binary black hole (BBH) orbit (i.e., the direction of
the BBH orbital angular momentum) undergoes a random walk. If the stars in a
spherical system have a non-zero total angular momentum, the BBH orbital
orientation evolves towards aligning with the total stellar angular momentum
direction. In this paper, we show that a triaxial galaxy has an
alignment-erasing effect, that is, the alignment of the BBH orientations
towards the galaxy rotation axis can be decreased significantly or erased. We
also show that in a non-rotating axisymmetric galaxy, the BBH orbital
orientation evolves towards the axisymmetric axis and precesses about it in a
retrograde direction. Our results provide a step towards understanding the spin
orientations of the final merged BH (and hence probable orientation of any jet
produced) within its host galaxy, and may help to constrain the recoiling
velocity of the merged BH arose from gravitational wave radiation as well.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, MNRAS accepte
The source-lens clustering effect in the context of lensing tomography and its self-calibration
Cosmic shear can only be measured where there are galaxies. This source-lens
clustering (SLC) effect has two sources, intrinsic source clustering and cosmic
magnification (magnification/size bias). Lensing tomography can suppress the
former. However, this reduction is limited by the existence of photo-z error
and nonzero redshift bin width. Furthermore, SLC induced by cosmic
magnification cannot be reduced by lensing tomography. Through N-body
simulations, we quantify the impact of SLC on the lensing power spectrum in the
context of lensing tomography. We consider both the standard estimator and the
pixel-based estimator. We find that none of them can satisfactorily handle both
sources of SLC. (1) For the standard estimator, SLC induced by both sources can
bias the lensing power spectrum by O(1)-O(10)%. Intrinsic source clustering
also increases statistical uncertainties in the measured lensing power
spectrum. However, the standard estimator suppresses intrinsic source
clustering in the cross-spectrum. (2) In contrast, the pixel-based estimator
suppresses SLC through cosmic magnification. However, it fails to suppress SLC
through intrinsic source clustering and the measured lensing power spectrum can
be biased low by O(1)-O(10)%. In short, for typical photo-z errors
(sigma_z/(1+z)=0.05) and photo-z bin sizes (Delta_z^P=0.2), SLC alters the
lensing E-mode power spectrum by 1-10%, with ell~10^3$ and z_s~1 being of
particular interest to weak lensing cosmology. Therefore the SLC is a severe
systematic for cosmology in Stage-IV lensing surveys. We present useful scaling
relations to self-calibrate the SLC effect.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, Accepted by AP
An application of adaptive fault-tolerant control to nano-spacecraft
Since nano-spacecraft are small, low cost and do not undergo the same rigor of testing as conventional spacecraft, they have a greater risk of failure. In this paper we address the problem of attitude control of a nano-spacecraft that experiences different types of faults. Based on the traditional quaternion feedback control method, an adaptive fault-tolerant control method is developed, which can ensure that the control system still operates when the actuator fault happens. This paper derives the fault-tolerant control logic under both actuator gain fault mode and actuator deviation fault mode. Taking the parameters of the UKube-1 in the simulation model, a comparison between a traditional spacecraft control method and the adaptive fault-tolerant control method in the presence of a fault is undertaken. It is shown that the proposed controller copes with faults and is able to complete an effective attitude control manoeuver in the presence of a fault
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