2,246 research outputs found

    Three-dimensional orbits of metal-poor halo stars and the formation of the Galaxy

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    We present the three-dimensional orbital motions of metal-poor stars in conjunction with their metal abundances, for the purpose of getting insight into the formation process of the Galaxy. Our sample stars, which include metal-deficient red giants and RR Lyrae variables observed by the Hipparcos satellite, are least affected by known systematics, stemmed from kinematic bias, metallicity calibration, and secondary metal contamination of stellar surface. We find, for the stars in the metallicity range of [Fe/H]<-1, that there is no evidence for the correlation between [Fe/H] and their orbital eccentricities e. Even for [Fe/H]<-1.6, about 16% of the stars have e less than 0.4. We show that the e distribution of orbits for [Fe/H]<-1.6 is independent of the height |z| away from the Galactic plane, whereas for [Fe/H]>-1.6 the stars at |z|>1 kpc are systematically devoid of low-e orbits with e<0.6. This indicates that low-e stars with [Fe/H]<-1.6 belong to the halo component, whereas the rapidly-rotating thick disk with a scale height about 1 kpc has a metal-weak tail in the range of -1.6<[Fe/H]<-1. The fraction of this metal-weak thick disk appears to be only less than 20%. The significance of these results for the early evolution of the Galaxy is briefly discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, AASTeX, to appear in ApJ Letter

    Spin-Glass-like Transition and Hall Resistivity of Y2-xBixIr2O7

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    Various physical properties of the pyrochlore oxide Y2-xBixIr2O7 have been studied. The magnetizations M measured under the conditions of the zero-field-cooling(ZFC) and the field-cooling(FC) have different values below the temperature T=TG. The anomalous T-dependence of the electrical resistivities r and the thermoelectric powers S observed at around TG indicates that the behavior of the magnetization is due to the transition to the state with the spin freezing. In this spin-frozen state, the Hall resistivities rH measured with the ZFC and FC conditions are found to have different values, too, in the low temperature phase (T<TG). Possible mechanisms which induce such the hysteretic behavior are discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 72 (2003) No.

    Evolution of the Luminosity Density in the Universe: Implications for the Nonzero Cosmological Constant

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    We show that evolution of the luminosity density of galaxies in the universe provides a powerful test for the geometry of the universe. Using reasonable galaxy evolution models of population synthesis which reproduce the colors of local galaxies of various morphological types, we have calculated the luminosity density of galaxies as a function of redshift zz. Comparison of the result with recent measurements by the Canada-France Redshift Survey in three wavebands of 2800{\AA}, 4400{\AA}, and 1 micron at z<1 indicates that the \Lambda-dominated flat universe with \lambda_0 \sim 0.8 is favored, and the lower limit on \lambda_0 yields 0.37 (99% C.L.) or 0.53 (95% C.L.) if \Omega_0+\lambda_0=1. The Einstein-de Sitter universe with (\Omega_0, \lambda_0)=(1, 0) and the low-density open universe with (0.2, 0) are however ruled out with 99.86% C.L. and 98.6% C.L., respectively. The confidence levels quoted apply unless the standard assumptions on galaxy evolution are drastically violated. We have also calculated a global star formation rate in the universe to be compared with the observed rate beyond z \sim 2. We find from this comparison that spiral galaxies are formed from material accretion over an extended period of a few Gyrs, while elliptical galaxies are formed from initial star burst at z >~ 5 supplying enough amount of metals and ionizing photons in the intergalactic medium.Comment: 11 pages including 3 figures, LaTeX, uses AASTeX. To Appear in ApJ Letter

    Kinematics of Metal-Poor Stars in the Galaxy. II. Proper Motions for a Large Non-Kinematically Selected Sample

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    We present a revised catalog of 2106 Galactic stars, selected without kinematic bias, and with available radial velocities, distance estimates, and metal abundances in the range 0.0 <= [Fe/H] <= -4.0. This update of the Beers and Sommer-Larsen (1995) catalog includes newly-derived homogeneous photometric distance estimates, revised radial velocities for a number of stars with recently obtained high-resolution spectra, and refined metallicities for stars originally identified in the HK objective-prism survey (which account for nearly half of the catalog) based on a recent re-calibration. A subset of 1258 stars in this catalog have available proper motions, based on measurements obtained with the Hipparcos astrometry satellite, or taken from the updated Astrographic Catalogue (AC 2000; second epoch positions from either the Hubble Space Telescope Guide Star Catalog or the Tycho Catalogue), the Yale/San Juan Southern Proper Motion (SPM) Catalog 2.0, and the Lick Northern Proper Motion (NPM1) Catalog. Our present catalog includes 388 RR Lyrae variables (182 of which are newly added), 38 variables of other types, and 1680 non-variables, with distances in the range 0.1 to 40 kpc.Comment: 31 pages, including 8 figures, to appear in AJ (June 2000), full paper with all figures embedded available at http://pluto.mtk.nao.ac.jp/people/chiba/preprint/halo4

    Hierarchical Formation of Galaxies with Dynamical Response to Supernova-Induced Gas removal

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    We reanalyze the formation and evolution of galaxies in the hierarchical clustering scenario. Using a semi-analytic model (SAM) of galaxy formation described in this paper, which we hereafter call the Mitaka model, we extensively investigate the observed scaling relations of galaxies among photometric, kinematic, structural and chemical characteristics. In such a scenario, spheroidal galaxies are assumed to be formed by major merger and subsequent starburst, in contrast to the traditional scenario of monolithic cloud collapse. As a new ingredient of SAMs, we introduce the effects of dynamical response to supernova-induced gas removal on size and velocity dispersion, which play an important role on dwarf galaxy formation. In previous theoretical studies of dwarf galaxies based on the monolithic cloud collapse given by Yoshii & Arimoto and Dekel & Silk, the dynamical response was treated in the extremes of a purely baryonic cloud and a baryonic cloud fully supported by surrounding dark matter. To improve this simple treatment, in our previous paper, we formulated the dynamical response in more realistic, intermediate situations between the above extremes. While the effects of dynamical response depend on the mass fraction of removed gas from a galaxy, how much amount of the gas remains just after major merger depends on the star formation history. A variety of star formation histories are generated through the Monte Carlo realization of merging histories of dark halos, and it is found that our SAM naturally makes a wide variety of dwarf galaxies and their dispersed characteristics as observed. (Abridged)Comment: 24 pages including 29 figures, using emulateapj.cls; accepted for publication in Ap

    Spectrophotometric Redshifts. A New Approach to the Reduction of Noisy Spectra and its Application to GRB090423

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    We have developed a new method, close in philosophy to the photometric redshift technique, which can be applied to spectral data of very low signal-to-noise ratio. Using it we intend to measure redshifts while minimising the dangers posed by the usual extraction techniques. GRB afterglows have generally very simple optical spectra over which the separate effects of absorption and reddening in the GRB host, the intergalactic medium, and our own Galaxy are superimposed. We model all these effects over a series of template afterglow spectra to produce a set of clean spectra that reproduce what would reach our telescope. We also model carefully the effects of the telescope-spectrograph combination and the properties of noise in the data, which are then applied on the template spectra. The final templates are compared to the two-dimensional spectral data, and the basic parameters (redshift, spectral index, Hydrogen absorption column) are estimated using statistical tools. We show how our method works by applying it to our data of the NIR afterglow of GRB090423. At z ~ 8.2, this was the most distant object ever observed. We use the spectrum taken by our team with the Telescopio Nazionale Galileo to derive the GRB redshift and its intrinsic neutral Hydrogen column density. Our best fit yields z=8.4^+0.05/-0.03 and N(HI)<5x10^20 cm^-2, but with a highly non-Gaussian uncertainty including the redshift range z [6.7, 8.5] at the 2-sigma confidence level. Our method will be useful to maximise the recovered information from low-quality spectra, particularly when the set of possible spectra is limited or easily parameterisable while at the same time ensuring an adequate confidence analysis.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic

    Magnetization plateaux in the classical Shastry-Sutherland lattice

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    We investigated the classical Shastry-Sutherland lattice under an external magnetic field in order to understand the recently discovered magnetization plateaux in the rare-earth tetraborides compounds RB4_4. A detailed study of the role of thermal fluctuations was carried out by mean of classical spin waves theory and Monte-Carlo simulations. Magnetization quasi-plateaux were observed at 1/3 of the saturation magnetization at non zero temperature. We showed that the existence of these quasi-plateaux is due to an entropic selection of a particular collinear state. We also obtained a phase diagram that shows the domains of existence of different spin configurations in the magnetic field versus temperature plane.Comment: 4 pages, proceedings of HFM200

    New limits on a cosmological constant from statistics of gravitational lensing

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    We present new limits on cosmological parameters from the statistics of gravitational lensing, based on the recently revised knowledge of the luminosity function and internal dynamics of E/S0 galaxies that are essential in lensing high-redshift QSOs. We find that the lens models using updated Schechter parameters for such galaxies, derived from the recent redshift surveys combined with morphological classification, are found to give smaller lensing probabilities than earlier calculated. Inconsistent adoption of these parameters from a mixture of various galaxy surveys gives rise to systematic biases in the results. We also show that less compact dwarf-type galaxies which largely dominate the faint part of the Schechter-form luminosity function contribute little to lensing probabilities, so that earlier lens models overestimate incidents of small separation lenses. Applications of the lens models to the existing lens surveys indicate that reproduction of both the lensing probability of optical sources and the image separations of optical and radio lenses is significantly improved in the revised lens models. The likelihood analyses allow us to conclude that a flat universe with Omega=0.3(+0.2-0.1) and Omega+Lambda=1 is most preferable, and a matter-dominated flat universe with Lambda=0 is ruled out at 98 % confidence level. These new limits are unaffected by inclusion of uncertainties in the lens properties.Comment: 30 pages, 9 ps figures, AASTeX, ApJ in pres
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