673 research outputs found
Abstracts of theses and related literature indicating current trends in arithmetic for the academically talented elementary school child written between 1957 and 1961
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit
Evolution of the Globular Cluster System in a Triaxial Galaxy
Dynamical friction and tidal disruption are effective mechanisms of evolution
of globular cluster systems, especially in non-axysimmetric galaxies with a
central compact nucleus. With a semi-analytical approach based on the knowledge
of the dependence of the dynamical friction and tidal disruption effects on the
relevant parameters, we are able to follow the time evolution of the globular
cluster system in a model of a triaxial galaxy and give its observable
properties to compare with observational data.
An important result is that the flatter distribution of the globular cluster
system relatively to that of the stellar bulge, as observed in many galaxies,
can be explained by the evolution of the globular cluster system, starting from
the same density profile.Comment: 9 pages, including 7 eps figures; latex file using standard MNRAS
style file. Paper submitted to MNRA
Globular cluster system erosion and nucleus formation in elliptical galaxies
The radial distribution of globular clusters in galaxies is always less
peaked to the centre than the halo stars'. Extending previous work to a sample
of HST globular cluster systems in ellipticals, we evaluate the number of
clusters lost to the galactic centre as the integrals of the difference between
the observed globular cluster system distribution and the underlying halo light
profile.
It results that the initial populations of globular clusters were from 25% to
50% richer than now.
This significant number of missing globular clusters supports the hypothesis
that a large quantity of globular cluster mass in form of globular clusters
decayed and destroyed has been lost to the galactic centres, where plausibly
contributed to formation and feeding of a mas sive object therein.
It is relevant noting that the observed correlation between the core radius
of the globular cluster system and the parent galaxy luminosity can be
interpreted as a result of evolution.Comment: Latex file + 2 figures as postscript files; it needs standard MNRAS
style file and epsf macro for figures. Paper submitted to MNRA
Merging of globular clusters within inner galactic regions. II. The Nuclear Star Cluster formation
In this paper we present the results of two detailed N-body simulations of
the interaction of a sample of four massive globular clusters in the inner
region of a triaxial galaxy. A full merging of the clusters takes place,
leading to a slowly evolving cluster which is quite similar to observed Nuclear
Clusters. Actually, both the density and the velocity dispersion profiles match
qualitatively, and quantitatively after scaling, with observed features of many
nucleated galaxies. In the case of dense initial clusters, the merger remnant
shows a density profile more concentrated than that of the progenitors, with a
central density higher than the sum of the central progenitors central
densities. These findings support the idea that a massive Nuclear Cluster may
have formed in early phases of the mother galaxy evolution and lead to the
formation of a nucleus, which, in many galaxies, has indeed a luminosity
profile similar to that of an extended King model. A correlation with galactic
nuclear activity is suggested.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, 3 tables. Submitted to ApJ, main journa
NBSymple, a double parallel, symplectic N-body code running on Graphic Processing Units
We present and discuss the characteristics and performances, both in term of
computational speed and precision, of a numerical code which numerically
integrates the equation of motions of N 'particles' interacting via Newtonian
gravitation and move in an external galactic smooth field. The force evaluation
on every particle is done by mean of direct summation of the contribution of
all the other system's particle, avoiding truncation error. The time
integration is done with second-order and sixth-order symplectic schemes. The
code, NBSymple, has been parallelized twice, by mean of the Computer Unified
Device Architecture to make the all-pair force evaluation as fast as possible
on high-performance Graphic Processing Units NVIDIA TESLA C 1060, while the
O(N) computations are distributed on various CPUs by mean of OpenMP Application
Program. The code works both in single precision floating point arithmetics or
in double precision. The use of single precision allows the use at best of the
GPU performances but, of course, limits the precision of simulation in some
critical situations. We find a good compromise in using a software
reconstruction of double precision for those variables that are most critical
for the overall precision of the code. The code is available on the web site
astrowww.phys.uniroma1.it/dolcetta/nbsymple.htmlComment: Paper composed by 29 pages, including 9 figures. Submitted to New
Astronomy
High performance astrophysics computing
The application of high end computing to astrophysical problems, mainly in
the galactic environment, is under development since many years at the Dep. of
Physics of Sapienza Univ. of Roma. The main scientific topic is the physics of
self gravitating systems, whose specific subtopics are: i) celestial mechanics
and interplanetary probe transfers in the solar system; ii) dynamics of
globular clusters and of globular cluster systems in their parent galaxies;
iii) nuclear clusters formation and evolution; iv) massive black hole formation
and evolution; v) young star cluster early evolution. In this poster we
describe the software and hardware computational resources available in our
group and how we are developing both software and hardware to reach the
scientific aims above itemized.Comment: 2 pages paper presented at the Conference "Advances in Computational
Astrophysics: methods, tools and outcomes", to be published in the ASP
Conference Series, 2012, vol. 453, R. Capuzzo-Dolcetta, M. Limongi and A.
Tornambe' ed
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