29,481 research outputs found

    No Crisis for Big Bang Nucleosynthesis

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    Contrary to a recent claim, the inferred primordial abundances of the light elements are quite consistent with the expectations from standard big bang nucleosynthesis when attention is restricted to direct observations rather than results from chemical evolution models. The number of light neutrino (or equivalent particle) species (NνN_\nu) can be as high as 4.53 if the nucleon-to-photon ratio (η\eta) is at its lower limit of 1.65×10101.65 \times 10^{-10}, as constrained by the upper bound on the deuterium abundance in high redshift quasar absorption systems. Alternatively, with Nν=3N_\nu = 3, η\eta can be as high as 8.90×10108.90 \times 10^{-10} if the deuterium abundance is bounded from below by its interstellar value.Comment: 10 pages LaTeX (uses ReVTeX), including 3 PostScript figures (uses epsf); Full paper available from ftp://ftp.physics.ox.ac.uk/pub/local/users/sarkar/BBNcrisisnot.ps.gz ; Revised to include discussion of new deuterium observations in quasar absorption systems and helium-3 measurement in local interstellar gas, updated Fig 1, no change in conclusions, resubmitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    Flaring stellar disk in the low surface brightness galaxy UGC 7321

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    We theoretically study the vertical structure of the edge-on low surface brightness (LSB) galaxy UGC 7321. This is one of the few well-observed LSBs. We modeled it as a gravitationally coupled disk system of stars and atomic hydrogen gas in the potential of the dark matter halo and treated the realistic case where the rotation velocity varies with radius. We used a dense and compact halo as implied by the observed rotation curve in this model. We calculated the thickness of stellar and HI disks in terms of the half-width at half-maximum of the vertical density distribution in a region of R=0 to 12 kpc using input parameters constrained by observations. We obtain a mildly increasing disk thickness up to R=6 kpc, in a good agreement with the observed trend, and predict a strong flaring beyond this. To obtain this trend, the stellar velocity dispersion has to fall exponentially at a rate of 3.2R_D , while the standard value of 2R_D gives a decreasing thickness with radius. Interestingly, both stellar and HI disks show flaring in the outer disk region although they are dynamically dominated by the dark matter halo from the very inner radii. The resulting vertical stellar density distribution cannot be fit by a single sech^2/n function, in agreement with observations, which show wings at larger distances above the mid-plane. Invoking a double-disk model to explain the vertical structure of LSBs as done in the literature may therefore not be necessary.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, published in A&

    The constraining effect of gas and the dark matter halo on the vertical stellar distribution of the Milky Way

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    We study the vertical stellar distribution of the Milky Way thin disk in detail with particular focus on the outer disk. We treat the galactic disk as a gravitationally coupled, three-component system consisting of stars, atomic hydrogen gas, and molecular hydrogen gas in the gravitational field of the dark matter halo. The self-consistent vertical distribution for stars and gas in such a realistic system is obtained for radii between 4-22 kpc. The inclusion of an additional gravitating component constrains the vertical stellar distribution toward the mid-plane, so that the mid-plane density is higher, the disk thickness is reduced, and the vertical density profile is steeper than in the one-component, isothermal, stars-alone case. We show that the stellar distribution is constrained mainly by the gravitational field of gas and dark matter halo in the inner and the outer Galaxy, respectively. We find that the thickness of the stellar disk (measured as the HWHM of the vertical density distribution) increases with radius, flaring steeply beyond R=17 kpc. The disk thickness is reduced by a factor of 3-4 in the outer Galaxy as a result of the gravitational field of the halo, which may help the disk resist distortion at large radii. The disk would flare even more if the effect of dark matter halo were not taken into account. Thus it is crucially important to include the effect of the dark matter halo when determining the vertical structure and dynamics of a galactic disk in the outer region.Comment: 8 pages,7 figures, Accepted for publication in A &
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