995 research outputs found
Higgs decay into four charged leptons in the presence of dimension-six operators
We study the indirect effects of New Physics in the Higgs decay into four
charged leptons, using an Effective Field Theory (EFT) approach to Higgs
interactions. We evaluate the deviations induced by the EFT dimension-six
operators in observables like partial decay width and various kinematic
distributions, including angular observables, and compare them with the
contribution of the full SM electroweak corrections. The calculation is
implemented in an improved version of the event generator Hto4l, which can
provide predictions in terms of different EFT-bases and is available for data
analysis at the LHC. We also perform a phenomenological study in order to
assess the benefits coming from the inclusion of differential information in
the future analyses of very precise data which will be collected during the
high luminosity phase of the LHC.Comment: 31 pages, 8 figures, 1 table. Version to appear on JHEP, expanded
phenomenological section including an analysis for HL-LH
1.65 micrometers (H-band) surface photometry of galaxies. III: observations of 558 galaxies with the TIRGO 1.5m telescope
We present near-infrared H-band (1.65 micron) surface photometry of 558
galaxies in the Coma Supercluster and in the Virgo cluster. This data set,
obtained with the Arcetri NICMOS3 camera ARNICA mounted on the Gornergrat
Infrared Telescope, is aimed at complementing, with observations of mostly
early-type objects, our NIR survey of spiral galaxies in these regions,
presented in previous papers of this series. Magnitudes at the optical radius,
total magnitudes, isophotal radii and light concentration indices are derived.
We confirm the existence of a positive correlation between the near-infrared
concentration index and the galaxy H-band luminosity. (Tables 1 and 2 are only
available in electronic form upon request to [email protected])Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
Non-linear Dependence of L(B) on L(FIR) and M(H2) among Spiral Galaxies and Effects of Tidal Interaction
Through the study of a carefully selected sample of isolated spiral galaxies,
we have established that two important global physical quantities for tracing
star forming activities, L(FIR) and M(H2), have non-linear dependence on
another commonly cited global quantity L(B). Furthermore we show that simple
power law relations can effectively describe these non-linear relations for
spiral galaxies spanning four orders of magnitude in FIR and M(H2) and nearly
three orders of magnitude in L(B). While the existence of non-linear dependence
of M(H2) (assuming a constant CO-to-H2 conversion) and L(FIR) on optical
luminosity L(B) has been previously noted in the literature, an improper
normalization of simple scaling by L(B) has been commonly used in many previous
studies to claim enhanced molecular gas content and induced activities among
tidally interacting and other types of galaxies. We remove these non-linear
effects using the template relations derived from the isolated galaxy sample
and conclude that strongly interacting galaxies do not have enhanced molecular
gas content, contrary to previous claims. With these non-linear relations among
L(B), L(FIR) and M(H2) properly taken into account, we confirm again that the
FIR emission and the star formation efficiency L(FIR)/M(H2) are indeed enhanced
by tidal interactions. Virgo galaxies show the same level of M(H2) and L(FIR)
as isolated galaxies. We do not find any evidence for enhanced star forming
activity among barred galaxies.Comment: 19 pages and 5 figures, requires AAS style files, ApJ, accepte
Hole spin polarization in GaAlAs:Mn structures
A self-consistent calculation of the electronic properties of GaAlAs:Mn
magnetic semiconductor quantum well structures is performed including the
Hartree term and the sp-d exchange interaction with the Mn magnetic moments.
The spin polarization density is obtained for several structure configurations.
Available experimental results are compared with theory.Comment: 4 page
On Measuring the Infrared Luminosity of Distant Galaxies with the Space Infrared Telescope Facility
The Space Infrared Telescope Facility (SIRTF) will revolutionize the study of
dust-obscured star formation in distant galaxies. Although deep images from the
Multiband Imaging Photometer for SIRTF (MIPS) will provide coverage at 24, 70,
and 160 micron, the bulk of MIPS-detected objects may only have accurate
photometry in the shorter wavelength bands due to the confusion noise.
Therefore, we have explored the potential for constraining the total infrared
(IR) fluxes of distant galaxies with solely the 24 micron flux density, and for
the combination of 24 micron and 70 micron data. We also discuss the inherent
systematic uncertainties in making these transitions. Under the assumption that
distant star-forming galaxies have IR spectral energy distributions (SEDs) that
are represented somewhere in the local Universe, the 24 micron data (plus
optical and X-ray data to allow redshift estimation and AGN rejection)
constrains the total IR luminosity to within a factor of 2.5 for galaxies with
0.4 < z < 1.6. Incorporating the 70 micron data substantially improves this
constraint by a factor < 6. Lastly, we argue that if the shape of the IR SED is
known (or well constrained; e.g., because of high IR luminosity, or low
ultraviolet/IR flux ratio), then the IR luminosity can be estimated with more
certainty.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures (2 in color). Accepted for Publication in the
Astrophysical Journal Letters, 2002 Nov
The fate of spiral galaxies in clusters: The star formation history of the anemic Virgo cluster galaxy NGC 4569
We present a new method for studying the star formation history of late-type cluster galaxies undergoing gas starvation or a ram pressure stripping event by combining bidimensional multifrequency observations with multizone models of galactic chemical and spectrophotometric evolution. This method is applied to the Virgo Cluster anemic galaxy NGC 4569. We extract radial profiles from recently obtained UV GALEX images at 1530 and 2310 Ă
, from visible and near-IR narrow (Hα) and broadband images at different wavelengths (u, B, g, V, r, i, z, J, H, and K), from Spitzer IRAC and MIPS images, and from atomic and molecular gas maps. The model in the absence of interaction (characterized by its rotation velocity and spin parameter) is constrained by the unperturbed H-band light profile and by the Hα rotation curve. We can reconstruct the observed total gas radial density profile and the light surface brightness profiles at all wavelengths in a ram pressure stripping scenario by making simple assumptions about the gas removal process and the orbit of NGC 4569 inside the cluster. The observed profiles cannot be reproduced by simply stopping gas infall, thus mimicking starvation. Gas removal is required, which is more efficient in the outer disk, inducing radial quenching in the star formation activity, as observed and reproduced by the model. This observational result, consistent with theoretical predictions that a galaxy cluster-IGM interaction is able to modify structural disk parameters without gravitational perturbations, is discussed in the framework of the origin of lenticular galaxies in cluster
The Arecibo Galaxy Environment Survey V : The Virgo Cluster (I)
We present 21 cm observations of a 10 2 degree region in the Virgo
cluster, obtained as part of the Arecibo Galaxy Environment Survey. 289 sources
are detected over the full redshift range (-2,000 + 20,000
km/s) with 95 belonging to the cluster ( 3,000 km/s). We combine
our observations with data from the optically selected Virgo Cluster Catalogue
(VCC) and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). Most of our detections can be
clearly associated with a unique optical counterpart, and 30% of the cluster
detections are new objects fainter than the VCC optical completeness limit. 7
detections may have no optical counterpart and we discuss the possible origins
of these objects. 7 detections appear associated with early-type galaxies. We
perform HI stacking on the HI-undetected galaxies listed in the VCC in this
region and show that they must have significantly less gas than those actually
detected in HI. Galaxies undetected in HI in the cluster appear to be really
devoid of gas, in contrast to a sample of field galaxies from ALFALFA.Comment: 23 pages, 22 figures, 4 table
Further Discoveries of 12CO in Low Surface Brightness Galaxies
Using the IRAM 30m telescope we have obtained seven new, deep CO J(1-0) and
J(2-1) observations of low surface brightness (LSB) galaxies. Five of the
galaxies have no CO detected to extremely low limits (0.1-0.4 K km/s at
J(1-0)), while two of the galaxies, UGC 01922 and UGC 12289, have clear
detections in both line transitions. When these observations are combined with
all previous CO observations taken of LSB systems, we compile a total of 34
observations, in which only 3 galaxies have had detections of their molecular
gas. Comparing the LSB galaxies with and without CO detections to a sample of
high surface brightness (HSB) galaxies with CO observations indicates that it
is primarily the low density of baryonic matter within LSB galaxies which is
causing their low CO fluxes. Finally, we note that one of the massive LSB
galaxies studied in this project, UGC 06968 (a Malin-1 `cousin'), has upper
limits placed on both M_H2 and M_H2/M_HI which are 10-20 times lower than the
lowest values found for any galaxy (LSB or HSB) with similar global properties.
This may be due to an extremely low temperature and metallicity within UGC
06968, or simply due to the CO distribution within the galaxy being too diffuse
to be detected by the IRAM beam.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables. Accepted by Ap
Formation and evolution of dwarf early-type galaxies in the Virgo cluster I. Internal kinematics
We present new medium resolution kinematic data for a sample of 21 dwarf
early-type galaxies (dEs) mainly in the Virgo cluster, obtained with the WHT
and INT telescopes at the Roque de los Muchachos Observatory (La Palma, Spain).
These data are used to study the origin of the dwarf elliptical galaxy
population inhabiting clusters. We confirm that dEs are not dark matter
dominated galaxies, at least up to the half-light radius. We also find that the
observed galaxies in the outer parts of the cluster are mostly rotationally
supported systems with disky morphological shapes. Rotationally supported dEs
have rotation curves similar to those of star forming galaxies of similar
luminosity and follow the Tully-Fisher relation. This is expected if dE
galaxies are the descendant of low luminosity star forming systems which
recently entered the cluster environment and lost their gas due to a ram
pressure stripping event, quenching their star formation activity and
transforming into quiescent systems, but conserving their angular momentum.Comment: 24 pages, 15 figures and 7 tables. Replaced to match the journal
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