3,349 research outputs found
Dirichlet L-series with real and complex characters and their application to solving double sums
A description of the properties of \L with complex characters is given. By
using these, together with the more familiar \L with real characters, it is
shown how certain two dimensional lattice sums, which previously could not be
put into closed form, may now be expressed in this way.Comment: 21 pages, 1 tabl
Vacuum energy for the supersymmetric twisted D-brane in constant electromagnetic field
We calculate vacuum energy for twisted SUSY D-brane on toroidal background
with constant magnetic or constant electric field. Its behaviour for toroidal
D-brane (p=2) in constant electric field shows the presence of stable minimum
for twisted versions of the theory. That indicates such a background maybe
reasonable groundstate.Comment: LaTeX, 10 page
Modelling the dynamical evolution of the Bootes dwarf spheroidal galaxy
We investigate a wide range of possible evolutionary histories for the
recently discovered Bootes dwarf spheroidal galaxy, a Milky Way satellite. By
means of N-body simulations we follow the evolution of possible progenitor
galaxies of Bootes for a variety of orbits in the gravitational potential of
the Milky Way. The progenitors considered cover the range from dark-matter-free
star clusters to massive, dark-matter dominated outcomes of cosmological
simulations. For each type of progenitor and orbit we compare the observable
properties of the remnant after 10 Gyr with those of Bootes observed today. Our
study suggests that the progenitor of Bootes must have been, and remains now,
dark matter dominated. In general our models are unable to reproduce the
observed high velocity dispersion in Bootes without dark matter. Our models do
not support time-dependent tidal effects as a mechanism able to inflate
significantly the internal velocity dispersion. As none of our initially
spherical models is able to reproduce the elongation of Bootes, our results
suggest that the progenitor of Bootes may have had some intrinsic flattening.
Although the focus of the present paper is the Bootes dwarf spheroidal, these
models may be of general relevance to understanding the structure, stability
and dark matter content of all dwarf spheroidal galaxies.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted by MNRA
Integrals of K and E from lattice sums
Abstract. We give closed form evaluations for many families of integrals, whose integrands contain algebraic functions of the complete elliptic integrals K and E. Our methods exploit the rich structures connecting complete elliptic integrals, Jacobi theta functions, lattice sums, and Eisenstein series. Various examples are given, and along the way new (including 10-dimensional) lattice sum evaluations are produced
Investigation of the New Local Group Galaxy VV 124
We present the results of our stellar photometry and spectroscopy for the new
Local Group galaxy VV 124 (UGC 4879) obtained with the 6-m BTA telescope. The
presence of a few bright supergiants in the galaxy indicates that the current
star formation process is weak. The apparent distribution of stars with
different ages in VV 124 does not differ from the analogous distributions of
stars in irregular galaxies, but the ratio of the numbers of young and old
stars indicates that VV 124 belongs to the rare Irr/Sph type of galaxies. The
old stars (red giants) form the most extended structure, a thick disk with an
exponential decrease in the star number density to the edge. Definitely, the
young population unresolvable in images makes a great contribution to the
background emission from the central galactic regions. The presence of young
stars is also confirmed by the [O III] emission line visible in the spectra
that belongs to extensive diffuse galactic regions. The mean radial velocity of
several components (two bright supergiants, the unresolvable stellar
population, and the diffuse gas) is v_h = -70+/-15 km/s and the velocity with
which VV 124 falls into the Local Group is v_LG = -12+/-15 km/s. We confirm the
distance to the galaxy D = 1.1+/-0.1 Mpc and the metallicity of red giants
([Fe/H] = -1.37) found by Kopylov et al. (2008).VV 124 is located on the
periphery of the Local Group approximately at the same distance from M 31 and
our Galaxy and is isolated from other galaxies. The galaxy LeoA nearest to it
is 0.5 Mpc away.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy Letters
(2010, Vol. 36, No. 5, pp. 309-318
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