2,391 research outputs found
Some Congruence Modulo 2 Statements of Primitive Conway Vassiliev Invariants.
Polynomial knot invariants can often be used to define Vassiliev invariants on singu- lar knots. Here Vassiliev invariants form the Conway, Jones, HOMFLY, and Kauffman polynomials are explored. Also, some explanation is given about how symbols of the Jones and Conway polynomial can evaluated on suitable chord diagrams. These in- variants are further used to find expressions that are congruent modulo 2 to some low degree invariants derived from the Primitive Conway polynomial
MC: Multi-wavelength and dynamical analysis of the merging galaxy cluster ZwCl 0008.8+5215: An older and less massive Bullet Cluster
We analyze a rich dataset including Subaru/SuprimeCam, HST/ACS and WFC3,
Keck/DEIMOS, Chandra/ACIS-I, and JVLA/C and D array for the merging galaxy
cluster ZwCl 0008.8+5215. With a joint Subaru/HST weak gravitational lensing
analysis, we identify two dominant subclusters and estimate the masses to be
M
and 1.2 M. We estimate the
projected separation between the two subclusters to be
924 kpc. We perform a clustering analysis on
confirmed cluster member galaxies and estimate the line of sight velocity
difference between the two subclusters to be 92164 km s. We
further motivate, discuss, and analyze the merger scenario through an analysis
of the 42 ks of Chandra/ACIS-I and JVLA/C and D polarization data. The X-ray
surface brightness profile reveals a remnant core reminiscent of the Bullet
Cluster. The X-ray luminosity in the 0.5-7.0 keV band is
1.70.110 erg s and the X-ray
temperature is 4.900.13 keV. The radio relics are polarized up to 40.
We implement a Monte Carlo dynamical analysis and estimate the merger velocity
at pericenter to be 1800 km s. ZwCl
0008.8+5215 is a low-mass version of the Bullet Cluster and therefore may prove
useful in testing alternative models of dark matter. We do not find significant
offsets between dark matter and galaxies, as the uncertainties are large with
the current lensing data. Furthermore, in the east, the BCG is offset from
other luminous cluster galaxies, which poses a puzzle for defining dark matter
-- galaxy offsets.Comment: 22 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal on March 13, 201
The effect of trim angle on the take-off performance
Data obtained at the N.A.C.A. tank from tests on the models of three flying-boat hulls - N.A.C.A. models 11-A, 16, and 22 - are used to demonstrate the effect of trim angle on water resistance. A specific example is taken, and data from Model 11-A are used to show that the trim angle giving the minimum water resistance will give minimum total air-plus-water resistance. Total-resistance curves for best trimmed angles and other angles are compared for the same example. The effect of wind on best trim angles and upon the take-off and run is shown by the working of an example. The possibility of using tank data on trim angles as aid in piloting is discussed, and an instrument for use in determining the trim angle of seaplanes is described. The importance of maintaining the best trim angle throughout the take-off is indicated
MC: Subaru and Hubble Space Telescope Weak-Lensing Analysis of the Double Radio Relic Galaxy Cluster PLCK G287.0+32.9
The second most significant detection of the Planck Sunyaev Zel'dovich
survey, PLCK~G287.0+32.9 () boasts two similarly bright radio relics
and a radio halo. One radio relic is located kpc northwest of the
X-ray peak and the other Mpc to the southeast. This large difference
suggests that a complex merging scenario is required. A key missing puzzle for
the merging scenario reconstruction is the underlying dark matter distribution
in high resolution. We present a joint Subaru Telescope and {\it Hubble Space
Telescope} weak-lensing analysis of the cluster. Our analysis shows that the
mass distribution features four significant substructures. Of the
substructures, a primary cluster of mass
$M_{200\text{c}}=1.59^{+0.25}_{-0.22}\times 10^{15} \ h^{-1}_{70} \
\text{M}_{\odot}M_{200\text{c}}=1.16^{+0.15}_{-0.13}\times 10^{14} \ h^{-1}_{70} \
\text{M}_{\odot}\sim 400\sim 2M_{200\text{c}}=1.68^{+0.22}_{-0.20}\times
10^{14} \ h^{-1}_{70} \ \text{M}_{\odot}M_{200\text{c}}=1.87^{+0.24}_{-0.22}\times 10^{14} \ h^{-1}_{70} \
\text{M}_{\odot}$, is northwest of the X-ray peak and beyond the NW radio
relic.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures; Accepted to Ap
Defect-Driven Anomalous Transport in Fast-Ion Conducting Solid Electrolytes
Solid-state ionic conduction is a key enabler of electrochemical energy
storage and conversion. The mechanistic connections between material
processing, defect chemistry, transport dynamics, and practical performance are
of considerable importance, but remain incomplete. Here, inspired by studies of
fluids and biophysical systems, we re-examine anomalous diffusion in the iconic
two-dimensional fast-ion conductors, the - and
-aluminas. Using large-scale simulations, we reproduce
the frequency dependence of alternating-current ionic conductivity data. We
show how the distribution of charge-compensating defects, modulated by
processing, drives static and dynamic disorder, which lead to persistent
sub-diffusive ion transport at macroscopic timescales. We deconvolute the
effects of repulsions between mobile ions, the attraction between the mobile
ions and charge-compensating defects, and geometric crowding on ionic
conductivity. Our quantitative framework based on these model solid
electrolytes connects their atomistic defect chemistry to macroscopic
performance with minimal assumptions and enables mechanism-driven
'atoms-to-device' optimization of fast-ion conductors.Comment: 45 pages, 23 figures. Additional code is available at
https://github.com/apoletayev/anomalous_ion_conductio
The rise and fall of star-formation in merging galaxy clusters
CIZA J2242.8+5301 (`Sausage') and 1RXS J0603.3+4213 (`Toothbrush') are two
low-redshift (), massive (), post-core
passage merging clusters, which host shock waves traced by diffuse radio
emission. To study their star-formation properties, we uniformly survey the
`Sausage' and `Toothbrush' clusters in broad and narrow band filters and select
a sample of and line emitters, down to a rest-frame equivalent
width ({\AA}). We robustly separate between H and higher redshift
emitters using a combination of optical multi-band (B, g, V, r, i, z) and
spectroscopic data. We build H luminosity functions for the entire
cluster region, near the shock fronts, and away from the shock fronts and find
striking differences between the two clusters. In the dynamically younger,
Gyr old `Sausage' cluster we find numerous () H emitters above a
star-formation rate (SFR) of M_{\sun} yr surprisingly located
in close proximity to the shock fronts, embedded in very hot intra-cluster
medium plasma. The SFR density for the cluster population is at least at the
level of typical galaxies at . Down to the same star-formation rate,
the possibly dynamically more evolved `Toothbrush' cluster has only
H galaxies. The cluster H galaxies fall on the SFR-stellar mass
relation for the field. However, the `Sausage' cluster has an
H emitter density times that of blank fields. If the shock passes
through gas-rich cluster galaxies, the compressed gas could collapse into dense
clouds and excite star-formation for a few Myr. This process ultimately
leads to a rapid consumption of the molecular gas, accelerating the
transformation of gas-rich field spirals into cluster S0s or ellipticals.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS after minor referee report. 21
pages, 15 figures, 5 table
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