6,704 research outputs found
Statistics of cross sections of Voronoi tessellations
In this paper we investigate relationships between the volumes of cells of
three-dimensional Voronoi tessellations and the lengths and areas of sections
obtained by intersecting the tessellation with a randomly oriented plane. Here,
in order to obtain analytical results, Voronoi cells are approximated to
spheres. First, the probability density function for the lengths of the radii
of the sections is derived and it is shown that it is related to the Meijer
-function; its properties are discussed and comparisons are made with the
numerical results. Next the probability density function for the areas of cross
sections is computed and compared with the results of numerical simulations.Comment: 10 pages and 6 figure
Asteroids dimensions and the Truncated Pareto distribution
In this chapter first the statistics of the standard and truncated Pareto
distributions are derived and used to fit empirical values of asteroids
diameters from different families, namely, Koronis, Eos and Themis, and from
the Astorb database. A theoretical analysis is then carried out and two
possible physical mechanisms are suggested that account for Pareto tails in
distributions of asteroids diameter.Comment: 11 Pages and 6 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap
with arXiv:0804.030
Female vs Males inmates: Authors' reply and sample size calculation
Bruno and colleagues highlighted the relatively low absolute-percentage of psychiatric morbidity that we found in our sample, as compared to their male sample. They invited to the use of diagnostic tools, specific for personality disorders and suicidal risk factors, to better investigate these critical issues.
In summary, our results showed high percentages of psychiatric morbidity (44%), especially anxiety and depression. Female inmates declared to be most stressed by the distance from family and loved ones, and they did not present any antisocial personality diagnosis. They also showed a resilient reaction to their situation, because more than a half of women requested a supportive psychological therapy during their detention (14/25= 56%), and 10 of them were those with a psychiatric disorder (10/11= 90.9%), thus a higher proportion than those reported in male detainees at the Messina jail (56%), by Zoccali and colleagues (Zoccali et al., 2008).
As we have acknowledged, we could further explore other personality disorders and not merely the antisocial personality pathological traits, as we did in our study.
In conclusion, we agree with them about the need to repeat the screening for mental health and a deeper ascertainment of specific suicidal risk factors, with an adequate sample. Nonetheless, we believe that our data were not biased, and likely represented the psychological asset of the ladies’ detainee with a final sentence at the Pagliarelli jail of Palermo
Blue Stragglers in Low-Luminosity Star Clusters
We examine the blue straggler populations of 13 low-luminosity (M_V_t >~
-6) globular clusters and 2 old open clusters. These clusters test blue
straggler formation in environments intermediate between higher luminosity (and
usually higher density) clusters and the Galactic field. The anti-correlation
between the relative frequency of blue stragglers (F_BSS = N_BSS / N_HB) and
cluster luminosity continues to the lowest luminosity clusters, which have
frequencies meeting or exceeding that of field stars. In addition we find that
the anti-correlation between straggler frequency and central density disappears
for clusters with density less than about 300 L_V,sun pc^-3, although this
appears to be an artifact of the correlation between cluster luminosity and
central density. We argue on observational (wide, eccentric binaries containing
blue stragglers in M67, and the existence of very bright stragglers in most of
the clusters in our sample) and theoretical grounds that stellar collisions
still produce a significant fraction of the blue stragglers in low luminosity
star clusters due to the long-term survival of wide binaries.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, accepted to ApJ Letter
Towards the absolute planes: a new calibration of the Bolometric Corrections and Temperature scales for Population II Giants
We present new determinations of bolometric corrections and effective
temperature scales as a function of infrared and optical colors, using a large
database of photometric observations of about 6500 Population II giants in
Galactic Globular Clusters (GGCs), covering a wide range in metallicity
(-2.0<[Fe/H]<0.0). New relations for BC_K vs (V-K), (J-K) and BC_V vs (B-V),
(V-I), (V-J), and new calibrations for T_eff, using both an empirical relation
and model atmospheres, are provided. Moreover, an empirical relation to derive
the R parameter of the Infrared Flux Method as a function of the stellar
temperature is also presented.Comment: 10 pages, 12 .ps figures, MN Latex, accepted by MNRA
FLAMES and XSHOOTER spectroscopy along the two BSS sequences of M30
We present spectroscopic observations acquired with FLAMES and XSHOOTER at
the Very Large Telescope for a sample of 15 Blue Straggler Stars (BSSs) in the
globular cluster (GC) M30. The targets have been selected to sample the two BSS
sequences discovered, with 7 BSSs along the blue sequence and 8 along the red
one. No difference in the kinematical properties of the two groups of BSSs has
been found. In particular, almost all the observed BSSs have projected
rotational velocity lower than ~30 km/s, with only one (blue) fast rotating BSS
(>90 km/s), identified as a W UMa binary. This rotational velocity distribution
is similar to those obtained in 47 Tucanae and NGC 6397, while M4 remains the
only GC studied so far harboring a large fraction of fast rotating BSSs. All
stars hotter than ~7800 K (regardless of the parent BSS sequence) show iron
abundances larger than those measured from normal cluster stars, with a
clearcut trend with the effective temperature. This behaviour suggests that
particle trasport mechanisms driven by radiative levitation occur in the
photosphere of these stars, as already observed for the BSSs in NGC 6397.
Finally, 4 BSSs belonging to the red sequence (not affected by radiative
levitation) show a strong depletion of [O/Fe], with respect to the abundance
measured in Red Giant Branch and Horizontal Branch stars. This O-depletion is
compatible with the chemical signature expected in BSSs formed by mass transfer
processes in binary systems, in agreement with the mechanism proposed for the
formation of BSSs in the red sequence.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Horizontal-Branch Models and the Second-Parameter Effect. IV. The Case of M3 and Palomar 3
We present a detailed analysis of the "second-parameter pair" of globular
clusters M3 (NGC 5272) and Palomar 3. Our main results can be summarized as
follows: i) The horizontal-branch (HB) morphology of M3 is significantly bluer
in its inner regions (observed with the Hubble Space Telescope) than in the
cluster outskirts (observed from the ground), i.e., M3 has an internal second
parameter. Most plausibly the mass loss on the red giant branch (RGB) has been
more efficient in the inner than in the outer regions of the cluster. ii) The
dispersion in mass of the Pal 3 HB is found to be very small -- consistent with
zero -- and we argue that this is unlikely to be due to a statistical
fluctuation. It is this small mass dispersion that leads to the most apparent
difference in the HB morphologies of M3 and Pal 3. iii) The relative HB types
of M3 and Pal 3, as measured by mean colors or parameters involving the number
of blue, variable, and red HB stars, can easily be accounted for by a fairly
small difference in age between these clusters, of order 0.5-1 Gyr -- which is
in good agreement with the relative age measurement, based on the clusters'
turnoffs, by VandenBerg (2000).Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures, emulateapj5 style. The Astrophysical Journal,
in press. Figs. 1, 6, 9, 10 are in png format. The preprint (postscript
format) with full resolution (embedded) figures is available from
http://www.astro.virginia.edu/~mc6v
Near-Infrared photometry of four metal-rich Bulge globular clusters: NGC6304, NGC6569, NGC6637, NGC6638
We present high-quality near-Infrared photometry of four Bulge metal-rich
globular clusters, namely: NGC 6304, NGC 6569, NGC 6637 and NGC 6638. By using
the observed Colour-Magnitude Diagrams we derived a photometric estimates of
the cluster reddening and distance. We performed a detailed analysis of the Red
Giant Branch, presenting a complete description of morphologic parameters and
evolutionary features (Bump and Tip). Photometric estimates of the cluster
metallicity have been obtained by using the updated set of relations (published
by our group) linking the metal abundance to a variety of near-Infrared indices
measured along the Red Giant Branch. The detection of the Red Giant Branch Bump
and the Tip is also presented and briefly discussed.Comment: 12 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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