8,880 research outputs found

    Cluster mass estimation from lens magnification

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    The mass of a cluster of galaxies can be estimated from its lens magnification, which can be determined from the variation in number counts of background galaxies. In order to derive the mass one needs to make assumptions for the lens shear, which is unknown from the variation in number counts alone. Furthermore, one needs to go beyond the weak lensing (linear) approximation as most of the observational data is concentrated in the central parts of clusters, where the lensing is strong. By studying the lensing properties of a complete catalogue of galaxy cluster models, one can find reasonable approximations about the lens shear as a function of the lens convergence. We show that using these approximations one can fairly well reconstruct the surface mass distribution from the magnification alone.Comment: 4 pages including 1 figure, LaTex, using sprocl.sty (included), To appear in proceedings "Large Scale Structure: tracks and traces", Potsdam 1997, World Scientifi

    Long delay times in reaction rates increase intrinsic fluctuations

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    In spatially distributed cellular systems, it is often convenient to represent complicated auxiliary pathways and spatial transport by time-delayed reaction rates. Furthermore, many of the reactants appear in low numbers necessitating a probabilistic description. The coupling of delayed rates with stochastic dynamics leads to a probability conservation equation characterizing a non-Markovian process. A systematic approximation is derived that incorporates the effect of delayed rates on the characterization of molecular noise, valid in the limit of long delay time. By way of a simple example, we show that delayed reaction dynamics can only increase intrinsic fluctuations about the steady-state. The method is general enough to accommodate nonlinear transition rates, allowing characterization of fluctuations around a delay-induced limit cycle.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Physical Review

    Momentum conservation and correlation analyses in heavy-ion collisions at ultrarelativistic energies

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    Global transverse-momentum conservation induces correlations between any number of particles, which contribute in particular to the two- and three-particle correlations measured in heavy-ion collisions. These correlations are examined in detail, and their importance for studies of jets and their interaction with the medium is discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. v2: corrected typos and added a paragrap

    Statistics of 3-dimensional Lagrangian turbulence

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    We consider a superstatistical dynamical model for the 3-d movement of a Lagrangian tracer particle embedded in a high-Reynolds number turbulent flow. The analytical model predictions are in excellent agreement with recent experimental data for flow between counter-rotating disks. In particular, we calculate the Lagrangian scaling exponents zeta_j for our system, and show that they agree well with the measured exponents reported in [X. Hu et al., PRL 96, 114503 (2006)]. Moreover, the model correctly predicts the shape of velocity difference and acceleration probability densities, the fast decay of component correlation functions and the slow decay of the modulus, as well as the statistical dependence between acceleration components. Finally, the model explains the numerically [P.K. Yeung and S.B. Pope, J. Fluid Mech. 207, 531 (1989)] and experimentally observed fact [B.W. Zeff et al., Nature 421, 146 (2003)] that enstrophy lags behind dissipation.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Replaced by final version accepted by Phys. Rev. Let

    Transient rectification of Brownian diffusion with asymmetric initial distribution

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    In an ensemble of non-interacting Brownian particles, a finite systematic average velocity may temporarily develop, even if it is zero initially. The effect originates from a small nonlinear correction to the dissipative force, causing the equation for the first moment of velocity to couple to moments of higher order. The effect may be relevant when a complex system dissociates in a viscous medium with conservation of momentum

    Distribution functions for clusters of galaxies from N-body simulations

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    We present the results of an attempt to adapt the distribution function formalism to characterize large-scale structures like clusters of galaxies that form in a cosmological N-body simulation. While galaxy clusters are systems that are not strictly in equilibrium, we show that their evolution can nevertheless be studied using a physically motivated extension of the language of equilibrium stellar dynamics. Restricting our analysis to the virialized region, a prescription to limit the accessible phase-space is presented, which permits the construction of both the isotropic and the anisotropic distribution functions f(E)f(E) and f(E,L)f(E,L). The method is applied to models extracted from a catalogue of simulated clusters. Clusters evolved in open and flat background cosmologies are followed during the course of their evolution, and are found to transit through a sequence of what we define as `quasi-equilibrium' states. An interesting feature is that the computed f(E)f(E) is well fit by an exponential form. We conclude that the dynamical evolution of a cluster, undergoing relaxation punctuated by interactions and violent mergers with consequent energy-exchange, can be studied both in a qualitative and quantitative fashion by following the time evolution of f(E)f(E).Comment: 16 pages, LaTeX file, all figures included, revised version, accepted for publication in MNRA
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