1,810 research outputs found
The definability criterions for convex projective polyhedral reflection groups
Following Vinberg, we find the criterions for a subgroup generated by
reflections \Gamma \subset \SL^{\pm}(n+1,\mathbb{R}) and its finite-index
subgroups to be definable over where is an integrally
closed Noetherian ring in the field . We apply the criterions for
groups generated by reflections that act cocompactly on irreducible properly
convex open subdomains of the -dimensional projective sphere. This gives a
method for constructing injective group homomorphisms from such Coxeter groups
to \SL^{\pm}(n+1,\mathbb{Z}). Finally we provide some examples of
\SL^{\pm}(n+1,\mathbb{Z})-representations of such Coxeter groups. In
particular, we consider simplicial reflection groups that are isomorphic to
hyperbolic simplicial groups and classify all the conjugacy classes of the
reflection subgroups in \SL^{\pm}(n+1,\mathbb{R}) that are definable over
. These were known by Goldman, Benoist, and so on previously.Comment: 31 pages, 8 figure
Multiple merging events in Abell 521
We present a detailed spatial and dynamical analysis of the central
~2.2~\h~Mpc region of the galaxy cluster Abell~521 (z=0.247), based on
238 spectra obtained at the 3.6~m Telescope of ESO and at the CFHT. From the
analysis of the 125 galaxies confirmed members of the cluster, we derive a mean
velocity of km/s and detect a complex velocity
distribution with high velocity dispersion, km/s), but
clear departure from a single gaussian component. The general structure of the
cluster follows a NW/SE direction, crossed by a perpendicular high density
``ridge'' of galaxies in the core region. The northern region of the cluster is
characterized by a lower velocity dispersion as compared to the whole cluster
value; it hosts the BCG and a dynamically bound complex of galaxies, and it is
associated to a group detected in X-ray (Arnaud et al 2000). This region could
be in pre-merger stage onto the main cluster nearly in the plane of the sky.
These results, taken together with the fact that most of the clumps detected on
the isodensity maps, as well as the early type galaxies and the brightest ones
are aligned, suggest that this NW/SE direction is the preferred one for the
formation of this cluster. The central high dense region shows a lower velocity
location ( km/s) and significantly higher scale ( km/s) as compared to the whole cluster values. This is due to
the presence of a low-velocity group of galaxies with a high fraction of
emission line objects. This can be explained in a scenario in which a merging
of subclusters has recently occurred along the direction of the ``ridge'' with
a significant component along the line of sight.Comment: 21 pages, 32 figures, uses aa.cls style, Latex. Accepted for
publication in A&
Properties of Very Luminous Galaxies
Recent analysis of the SSRS2 data based on cell-counts and two-point
correlation function has shown that very luminous galaxies are much more
strongly clustered than fainter galaxies. In fact, the amplitude of the
correlation function of very luminous galaxies () asymptotically
approaches that of clusters. In this paper we investigate the
properties of the most luminous galaxies, with blue absolute magnitude . We find that: 1) the population mix is comparable to that in other ranges
of absolute magnitudes; 2) only a small fraction are located in bona fide
clusters; 3) the bright galaxy-cluster cross-correlation function is
significantly higher on large scales than that measured for fainter galaxies;
4) the correlation length of galaxies brighter than \MB ,
expressed as a function of the mean interparticle distance, appears to follow
the universal dimensionless correlation function found for clusters and radio
galaxies; 5) a large fraction of the bright galaxies are in interacting pairs,
others show evidence for tidal distortions, while some appear to be surrounded
by faint satellite galaxies. We conclude that very luminous optical galaxies
differ from the normal population of galaxies both in the clustering and other
respects. We speculate that this population is highly biased tracers of mass,
being associated to dark halos with masses more comparable to clusters than
typical loose groups.Comment: 29 pages (6 figures) + 2 tables; paper with all figures and images
available at http://boas5.bo.astro.it/~cappi/papers.html; The Astronomical
Journal, in pres
Family Scents: Developmental Changes in the Perception of Kin Body Odor?
There is increasing evidence that human body odors are involved in adaptive behaviors, such as parental attachment in infants or partner choice in adults. The aim of the present study was to investigate changes in body-odor perception around puberty, a period largely ignored for odor-mediated behavioral changes, despite major changes in social needs and in odor emission and perception. Nine families with two children (8 pre-pubertal, aged 7-10, and 10 pubertal, aged 11-18) evaluated body odors of family members and unfamiliar individuals for pleasantness, intensity, and masculinity, and performed a recognition task. The hypothesized emergence of a parent-child mutual aversion for the odor of opposite-sex family members at puberty was not found, contradicting one of the few studies on the topic (Weisfeld et al., J. Exp. Child Psychol. 85:279-295, 2003). However, some developmental changes were observed, including reduced aversion for odor of the same-sex parent, and increased ability of adults, compared to children, to recognize odor of family members. Sex and personality (depressive and aggressive traits) also significantly influenced odor judgments. Further research with larger samples is needed to investigate the poorly explored issue of how olfactory perception of self and family members develops, and how it could correlate with normal reorganizations in social interactions at adolescenc
Human olfactory communication: current challenges and future prospects
Although anthropologists frequently report the centrality of odours in the daily lives and cultural beliefs of many small-scale communities, Western scholars have historically considered the sense of smell as minimally involved in human communication. Here, we suggest that the origin and persistence of this latter view might be a consequence of the fact that most research is conducted on participants from Western societies who, collectively, were rather old (adults), deodorized and desensitized (ODD) to various aspects of olfactory perception. The view is rapidly changing, however, and this themed issue provides a timely overview of the current state-of-the-art on human chemocommunication. Based on evolutionary models of communication, the papers cover both general mechanisms of odour production by âsendersâ and odour perception by âreceiversâ. Focus on specific functional contexts includes reciprocal impact of odours between infants and mothers, the role of odour in mate choice and how odours communicate emotion and disease. Finally, a position paper outlines pitfalls and opportunities for the future, against the context of the replication crisis in psychology. We believe a more nuanced view of human chemical communication is within our grasp if we can continue to develop inter-disciplinary insights and expand research activities beyond ODD people
Spectroscopic confirmation of clusters from the ESO imaging survey
We measure redshifts for 67 galaxies in the field of six cluster candidates
from the ESO Imaging Survey (EIS). The cluster candidates are selected in the
EIS patches C and D among those with estimated mean redshifts between 0.5 and
0.7. The observations were made with EFOSC2 at the 3.6m ESO telescope.
In the six candidate cluster fields, we identify 19 possible sets of 2 to 7
galaxies in redshift space. In order to establish which of the 19 sets are
likely to correspond to real dense systems we compare our counts with those
expected from a uniform distribution of galaxies with given luminosity
function. In order to take into account the effect of the Large Scale
Structure, we modulate the probability computed from the luminosity function
with random samplings of the Canada-France Redshift Survey.
We find that four out of six candidate EIS clusters are likely to correspond
to real systems in redshift space (> 95 % confidence level). Two of these
systems have mean redshift in agreement with the redshift estimate given by the
matched filter algorithm. The other two systems have significantly lower
redshifts.
We discuss the implications of our results in the context of our ongoing
research projects aimed at defining high-redshift optically-selected cluster
samples.Comment: To appear in A&A, main journal -- 12 pages, 9 figure
The First VLT FORS1 spectra of Lyman-break candidates in the HDF-S and AXAF Deep Field
We report on low-resolution multi-object spectroscopy of 30 faint targets (R
\~ 24-25) in the HDF-S and AXAF deep field obtained with the VLT Focal
Reducer/low dispersion Spectrograph (FORS1). Eight high-redshift galaxies with
2.75< z < 4 have been identified. The spectroscopic redshifts are in good
agreement with the photometric ones with a dispersion at z<2
and at z>2. The inferred star formation rates of the
individual objects are moderate, ranging from a few to a few tens solar masses
per year. Five out of the eight high-z objects do not show prominent emission
lines. One object has a spectrum typical of an AGN. In the AXAF field two
relatively close pairs of galaxies have been identified, with separations of
8.7 and 3.1 proper Mpc and mean redshifts of 3.11 and 3.93, respectively.Comment: 5 pages Latex, with 2 PostScript figures. Astronomy and Astrophysics,
in pres
ESO Imaging survey: Optical Deep Public Survey
This paper presents new five passbands (UBVRI) optical wide-field imaging
data accumulated as part of the DEEP Public Survey (DPS) carried out as a
public survey by the ESO Imaging Survey (EIS) project. Out of the 3 square
degrees originally proposed, the survey covers 2.75 square degrees, in at least
one band (normally R), and 1.00 square degrees in five passbands. The median
seeing, as measured in the final stacked images, is 0.97", ranging from 0.75"
to 2.0". The median limiting magnitudes (AB system, 2" aperture, 5 sigma
detection limit) are U_(AB)=25.65, B_(AB)=25.54, V_(AB)=25.18, R_(AB) = 24.8
and I_(AB)=24.12 mag, consistent with those proposed in the original survey
design. The paper describes the observations and data reduction using the EIS
Data Reduction System and its associated EIS/MVM library. The quality of the
individual images were inspected, bad images discarded and the remaining used
to produce final image stacks in each passband, from which sources have been
extracted. Finally, the scientific quality of these final images and associated
catalogs was assessed qualitatively by visual inspection and quantitatively by
comparison of statistical measures derived from these data with those of other
authors as well as model predictions, and from direct comparison with the
results obtained from the reduction of the same dataset using an independent
(hands-on) software system. Finally to illustrate one application of this
survey, the results of a preliminary effort to identify sub-mJy radio sources
are reported. To the limiting magnitude reached in the R and I passbands the
success rate ranges from 66 to 81% (depending on the fields). These data are
publicly available at CDS.Comment: 24 pages, 26 figures. Accepted for pubblication in A&
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