782 research outputs found
Self-organized criticality in boson clouds around black holes
Boson clouds around black holes exhibit interesting physical phenomena
through the Penrose process of superradiance, leading to black hole spin-down.
Axionic clouds are of particular interest, since the axion Compton wavelength
could be comparable to the Schwarzschild radius, leading to the formation of
"gravitational atoms" with a black hole nucleus. These clouds collapse under
certain conditions, leading to a "Bosenova". We model the dynamics of such
unstable boson clouds by a simple cellular automaton and show that it exhibits
self-organized criticality. Our results suggest that the evolution through the
black hole Regge plane is due to self-organized criticality
Crowdsourcing Dialect Characterization through Twitter
We perform a large-scale analysis of language diatopic variation using
geotagged microblogging datasets. By collecting all Twitter messages written in
Spanish over more than two years, we build a corpus from which a carefully
selected list of concepts allows us to characterize Spanish varieties on a
global scale. A cluster analysis proves the existence of well defined
macroregions sharing common lexical properties. Remarkably enough, we find that
Spanish language is split into two superdialects, namely, an urban speech used
across major American and Spanish citites and a diverse form that encompasses
rural areas and small towns. The latter can be further clustered into smaller
varieties with a stronger regional character.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Extragalactic Millimeter-wave Point-source Catalog, Number Counts and Statistics from 771 deg^2 of the SPT-SZ Survey
We present a point-source catalog from 771 deg^2 of the South Pole Telescope Sunyaev-Zel'dovich survey at 95, 150, and 220 GHz. We detect 1545 sources above 4.5σ significance in at least one band. Based on their relative brightness between survey bands, we classify the sources into two populations, one dominated by synchrotron emission from active galactic nuclei, and one dominated by thermal emission from dust-enshrouded star-forming galaxies. We find 1238 synchrotron and 307 dusty sources. We cross-match all sources against external catalogs and find 189 unidentified synchrotron sources and 189 unidentified dusty sources. The dusty sources without counterparts are good candidates for high-redshift, strongly lensed submillimeter galaxies. We derive number counts for each population from 1 Jy down to roughly 11, 4, and 11 mJy at 95, 150, and 220 GHz. We compare these counts with galaxy population models and find that none of the models we consider for either population provide a good fit to the measured counts in all three bands. The disparities imply that these measurements will be an important input to the next generation of millimeter-wave extragalactic source population models
Riemannian submersions from almost contact metric manifolds
In this paper we obtain the structure equation of a contact-complex
Riemannian submersion and give some applications of this equation in the study
of almost cosymplectic manifolds with Kaehler fibres.Comment: Abh. Math. Semin. Univ. Hamb., to appea
Finite-Size Bosonization and Self-Consistent Harmonic Approximation
The self-consistent harmonic approximation is extended in order to account
for the existence of Klein factors in bosonized Hamiltonians. This is important
for the study of finite systems where Klein factors cannot be ignored a priori.
As a test we apply the method to interacting spinless fermions with modulated
hopping. We calculate the finite-size corrections to the energy gap and the
Drude weight and compare our results with the exact solution for special values
of the model parameters
ALMA Observations of SPT-Discovered, Strongly Lensed, Dusty, Star-Forming Galaxies
We present Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) 860 micrometer
imaging of four high-redshift (z=2.8-5.7) dusty sources that were detected
using the South Pole Telescope (SPT) at 1.4 mm and are not seen in existing
radio to far-infrared catalogs. At 1.5 arcsec resolution, the ALMA data reveal
multiple images of each submillimeter source, separated by 1-3 arcsec,
consistent with strong lensing by intervening galaxies visible in near-IR
imaging of these sources. We describe a gravitational lens modeling procedure
that operates on the measured visibilities and incorporates
self-calibration-like antenna phase corrections as part of the model
optimization, which we use to interpret the source structure. Lens models
indicate that SPT0346-52, located at z=5.7, is one of the most luminous and
intensely star-forming sources in the universe with a lensing corrected FIR
luminosity of 3.7 X 10^13 L_sun and star formation surface density of 4200
M_sun yr^-1 kpc^-2. We find magnification factors of 5 to 22, with lens
Einstein radii of 1.1-2.0 arcsec and Einstein enclosed masses of 1.6-7.2x10^11
M_sun. These observations confirm the lensing origin of these objects, allow us
to measure the their intrinsic sizes and luminosities, and demonstrate the
important role that ALMA will play in the interpretation of lensed
submillimeter sources.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysics Journa
Measurements of Sub-degree B-mode Polarization in the Cosmic Microwave Background from 100 Square Degrees of SPTpol Data
We present a measurement of the -mode polarization power spectrum (the
spectrum) from 100 of sky observed with SPTpol, a
polarization-sensitive receiver currently installed on the South Pole
Telescope. The observations used in this work were taken during 2012 and early
2013 and include data in spectral bands centered at 95 and 150 GHz. We report
the spectrum in five bins in multipole space, spanning the range , and for three spectral combinations: 95 GHz 95 GHz, 95
GHz 150 GHz, and 150 GHz 150 GHz. We subtract small ( in units of statistical uncertainty) biases from these spectra and
account for the uncertainty in those biases. The resulting power spectra are
inconsistent with zero power but consistent with predictions for the
spectrum arising from the gravitational lensing of -mode polarization. If we
assume no other source of power besides lensed modes, we determine a
preference for lensed modes of . After marginalizing over
tensor power and foregrounds, namely polarized emission from galactic dust and
extragalactic sources, this significance is . Fitting for a single
parameter, , that multiplies the predicted lensed -mode
spectrum, and marginalizing over tensor power and foregrounds, we find
, indicating that our measured spectra are
consistent with the signal expected from gravitational lensing. The data
presented here provide the best measurement to date of the -mode power
spectrum on these angular scales.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figure
Consistency of cosmic microwave background temperature measurements in three frequency bands in the 2500-square-degree SPT-SZ survey
We present an internal consistency test of South Pole Telescope (SPT)
measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature anisotropy
using three-band data from the SPT-SZ survey. These measurements are made from
observations of ~2500 deg^2 of sky in three frequency bands centered at 95,
150, and 220 GHz. We combine the information from these three bands into six
semi-independent estimates of the CMB power spectrum (three single-frequency
power spectra and three cross-frequency spectra) over the multipole range 650 <
l < 3000. We subtract an estimate of foreground power from each power spectrum
and evaluate the consistency among the resulting CMB-only spectra. We determine
that the six foreground-cleaned power spectra are consistent with the null
hypothesis, in which the six cleaned spectra contain only CMB power and noise.
A fit of the data to this model results in a chi-squared value of 236.3 for 235
degrees of freedom, and the probability to exceed this chi-squared value is
46%.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figures, current version matches version published in
JCA
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