18,460 research outputs found
Non-Supersymmetric Attractors in BI black holes
We study attractor mechanism in extremal black holes of Einstein-Born-Infeld
theories in four dimensions. We look for solutions which are regular near the
horizon and show that they exist and enjoy the attractor behavior. The
attractor point is determined by extremization of the effective potential at
the horizon. This analysis includes the backreaction and supports the validity
of non-supersymmetric attractors in the presence of higher derivative
interactions in the gauge field part.Comment: 15 pages, minor corrections, references adde
Telescoper: de novo assembly of highly repetitive regions.
MotivationWith advances in sequencing technology, it has become faster and cheaper to obtain short-read data from which to assemble genomes. Although there has been considerable progress in the field of genome assembly, producing high-quality de novo assemblies from short-reads remains challenging, primarily because of the complex repeat structures found in the genomes of most higher organisms. The telomeric regions of many genomes are particularly difficult to assemble, though much could be gained from the study of these regions, as their evolution has not been fully characterized and they have been linked to aging.ResultsIn this article, we tackle the problem of assembling highly repetitive regions by developing a novel algorithm that iteratively extends long paths through a series of read-overlap graphs and evaluates them based on a statistical framework. Our algorithm, Telescoper, uses short- and long-insert libraries in an integrated way throughout the assembly process. Results on real and simulated data demonstrate that our approach can effectively resolve much of the complex repeat structures found in the telomeres of yeast genomes, especially when longer long-insert libraries are used.AvailabilityTelescoper is publicly available for download at sourceforge.net/p/[email protected] informationSupplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online
Particle-in-cell and weak turbulence simulations of plasma emission
The plasma emission process, which is the mechanism for solar type II and
type III radio bursts phenomena, is studied by means of particle-in-cell and
weak turbulence simulation methods. By plasma emission, it is meant as a loose
description of a series of processes, starting from the solar flare associated
electron beam exciting Langmuir and ion-acoustic turbulence, and subsequent
partial conversion of beam energy into the radiation energy by nonlinear
processes. Particle-in-cell (PIC) simulation is rigorous but the method is
computationally intense, and it is difficult to diagnose the results. Numerical
solution of equations of weak turbulence (WT) theory, termed WT simulation, on
the other hand, is efficient and naturally lends itself to diagnostics since
various terms in the equation can be turned on or off. Nevertheless, WT theory
is based upon a number of assumptions. It is, therefore, desirable to compare
the two methods, which is carried out for the first time in the present paper
with numerical solutions of the complete set of equations of the WT theory and
with two-dimensional electromagnetic PIC simulation. Upon making quantitative
comparisons it is found that WT theory is largely valid, although some
discrepancies are also found. The present study also indicates that it requires
large computational resources in order to accurately simulate the radiation
emission processes, especially for low electron beam speeds. Findings from the
present paper thus imply that both methods may be useful for the study of solar
radio emissions as they are complementary.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figure
Neutral Gas Properties and Ly Escape in Extreme Green Pea Galaxies
Mechanisms regulating the escape of Ly photons and ionizing radiation
remain poorly understood. To study these processes we analyze VLA 21cm
observations of one Green Pea (GP), J160810+352809 (hereafter J1608), and HST
COS spectra of 17 GP galaxies at . All are highly ionized: J1608 has the
highest [O III] /[O II] for star-forming galaxies in
SDSS, and the 17 GPs have [O III]/[O II] . We set an upper limit on
J1608's HI mass of , near or below average compared to
similar mass dwarf galaxies. In the COS sample, eight GPs show Ly
absorption components, six of which also have Ly emission. The HI
column densities derived from Ly absorption are high, cm, well above the LyC optically thick limit. Using
low-ionization absorption lines, we measure covering fractions
(f_{\mbox{cov}}) of , and find that f_{\mbox{cov}} strongly
anti-correlates with Ly escape fraction. Low covering fractions may
facilitate Ly and LyC escape through dense neutral regions. GPs with
f_{\mbox{cov}}\sim1 all have low neutral gas velocities, while GPs with lower
f_{\mbox{cov}}=0.2-0.6 have a larger range of velocities. Conventional
mechanical feedback may help establish low f_{\mbox{cov}} in some cases,
whereas other processes may be important for GPs with low velocities. Finally,
we compare f_{\mbox{cov}} with proposed indicators of LyC escape. Ionizing
photon escape likely depends on a combination of neutral gas geometry and
kinematics, complicating the use of emission-line diagnostics for identifying
LyC emitters.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Optical identification of ISO far-infrared sources in the Lockman Hole using a deep VLA 1.4 GHz continuum survey
By exploiting the far-infrared(FIR) and radio correlation, we have performed
the Likelihood-Ratio analysis to identify optical counterparts to the
far-infrared sources in the Lockman Hole. Using the likelihood ratio analysis
and the associated reliability, 44 FIR sources have been identified with radio
sources. Redshifts have been obtained for 29 out of 44 identified sources. One
hyper-luminous infrared galaxy (HyLIRG) with and four ultraluminous infrared
galaxies (ULIRGs) are identified in our sample. The space density of the FIR
sources at z = 0.3-0.6 is 4.6\times 10^{-5}Mpc^{-3}, implying a rapid evolution
of the ULIRG population. Most of \ISO FIR sources have their FIR-radio ratios
similar to star-forming galaxies ARP 220 and M82. At least seven of our FIR
sources show evidence for the presence of an active galactic nucleus (AGN) in
optical emission lines, radio continuum excess, or X-ray activity. Three out of
five (60%) of the ULIRG/HyLIRGs are AGN galaxies. Five of the seven AGN
galaxies are within the ROSAT X-ray survey field, and two are within the
XMM-Newton survey fields. X-ray emission has been detected in only one source,
1EX030, which is optically classified as a quasar. The non-detection in the
XMM-Newton 2-10 keV band suggests a very thick absorption obscuring the central
source of the two AGN galaxies. Several sources have an extreme FIR luminosity
relative to the optical R-band, L(90\mu\mathrm{m})/L(R) > 500, which is rare
even among the local ULIRG population. While source confusion or blending might
offer an explanation in some cases, they may represent a new population of
galaxies with an extreme activity of star formation in an undeveloped stellar
system -- i.e., formation of bulges or young ellipticals.Comment: 55 pages, 16 figures. To appear in A
Ring Formation in Magnetically Subcritical Clouds and Multiple Star Formation
We study numerically the ambipolar diffusion-driven evolution of
non-rotating, magnetically subcritical, disk-like molecular clouds, assuming
axisymmetry. Previous similar studies have concentrated on the formation of
single magnetically supercritical cores at the cloud center, which collapse to
form isolated stars. We show that, for a cloud with many Jeans masses and a
relatively flat mass distribution near the center, a magnetically supercritical
ring is produced instead. The supercritical ring contains a mass well above the
Jeans limit. It is expected to break up, through both gravitational and
possibly magnetic interchange instabilities, into a number of supercritical
dense cores, whose dynamic collapse may give rise to a burst of star formation.
Non-axisymmetric calculations are needed to follow in detail the expected ring
fragmentation into multiple cores and the subsequent core evolution.
Implications of our results on multiple star formation in general and the
northwestern cluster of protostars in the Serpens molecular cloud core in
particular are discussed.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Ap
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