3,558 research outputs found
Infrared Surface Brightness Fluctuations of the Coma Elliptical NGC 4874 and the Value of the Hubble Constant
We have used the Keck I Telescope to measure K-band surface brightness
fluctuations (SBFs) of NGC 4874, the dominant elliptical galaxy in the Coma
cluster. We use deep HST WFPC2 optical imaging to account for the contamination
due to faint globular clusters and improved analysis techniques to derive
measurements of the SBF apparent magnitude. Using a new SBF calibration which
accounts for the dependence of K-band SBFs on the integrated color of the
stellar population, we measure a distance modulus of 34.99+/-0.21 mag (100+/-10
Mpc) for the Coma cluster. The resulting value of the Hubble constant is 71+/-8
km/s/Mpc, not including any systematic error in the HST Cepheid distance scale.Comment: ApJ Letters, in press. Uses emulateapj5.st
Existence and uniqueness of limit cycles in a class of second order ODE's with inseparable mixed terms
We prove a uniqueness result for limit cycles of the second order ODE . Under mild additional conditions, we
show that such a limit cycle attracts every non-constant solution. As a special
case, we prove limit cycle's uniqueness for an ODE studied in \cite{ETA} as a
model of pedestrians' walk. This paper is an extension to equations with a
non-linear of the results presented in \cite{S}
Globular Clusters in Dense Clusters of Galaxies
Deep imaging data from the Keck II telescope are employed to study the
globular cluster (GC) populations in the cores of six rich Abell clusters. The
sample includes A754, A1644, A2124, A2147, A2151, and A2152, and spans the
redshift range z = 0.035-0.066. The clusters also range in morphology from
spiral-rich, irregular systems to centrally concentrated cD clusters rich in
early-type galaxies. Globular cluster specific frequencies S_N and luminosity
function dispersions are measured for a total of 9 galaxies in six central
fields. The measured values of S_N for the six brightest cluster galaxies
(BCGs) are all higher than typical values for giant ellipticals, in accord with
the known S_N-density correlations. The three non-BCGs analyzed also have
elevated values of S_N, confirming that central location is a primary factor.
The number of GCs per unit mass for these fields are consistent with those
found in an earlier sample, giving further evidence that GC number scales with
mass and that the S_N variations are due to a deficit of halo light, i.e., S_N
reflects mass-to-light ratio.
The discussion builds on an earlier suggestion that the GCs (both metal rich
and metal poor) around the central cluster galaxies were assembled at early
times, and that star formation halted prematurely in the central galaxies at
the epoch of cluster collapse. This is consistent with recent simulations of
BCG/cluster formation. The subsequent addition of luminous material through
cluster dynamical evolution can cause S_N to decrease, and we may be seeing the
first evidence of this. Finally, the GC luminosity function measurements are
used to constrain the relative distances of the three clusters that make up the
Hercules supercluster.Comment: Uses emulateapj.sty (included); 17 pages with 9 included PostScript
figures. Figures 1-6 are separate GIF images (so 15 figures total) available
from http://astro.caltech.edu/~jpb/clusters -- the full PostScript version of
the paper (20 pages; 2.2 Mb compressed) incorporating Figures 1-6 can also be
grabbed from this URL. Accepted for publication in A
UGC 3995: A Close Pair of Spiral Galaxies
UGC 3995 is a close pair of spiral galaxies whose eastern component hosts a
Seyfert 2 nucleus. We present a detailed analysis of this system using long
slit spectroscopy and narrow (\ha + \nii) as well as broad band (B, R) imaging
and an archive WFPC2 image. The component galaxies reveal surprisingly small
signs of interaction considering their spatial proximity and almost identical
recession velocities, as the bright filament is probably an optical illusion
due to the superposition of the bar of the Seyfert galaxy and of the spiral
arms of the companion. The broad band morphology, a B--R color map, and a
continuum-subtracted \ha + \nii image demonstrate that the western component
UGC 3995B is in front of the Seyfert-hosting component UGC 3995A, partly
obscuring its western side. The small radial velocity difference leaves the
relative motion of the two galaxies largely unconstrained. The observed lack of
major tidal deformations, along with some morphological peculiarities, suggests
that the galaxies are proximate in space but may have recently approached each
other on the plane of the sky. The geometry of the system and the radial
velocity curve at P. A. = 106 suggest that the encounter may be retrograde or,
alternatively, prograde before perigalacticon. The partial overlap of the two
galaxies allows us to estimate the optical thickness of the disk of component
B. We derive an extinction = 0.18 visual magnitudes in the infra-arms parts of
the foreground galaxy disk, and >= 1-1.5 visual magnitudes in correspondence of
the spiral arms.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal (June 1999
issue
Redshift-Distance Survey of Early-type Galaxies. I. Sample Selection, Properties and Completeness
This is the first in a series of papers describing the recently completed
all-sky redshift-distance survey of nearby early-type galaxies (ENEAR) carried
out for peculiar velocity analysis. The sample is divided into two parts and
consists of 1607 elliptical and lenticular galaxies with cz < 7000 km/s and
with blue magnitudes brighter than m_B=14.5 (ENEARm), and of galaxies in
clusters (ENEARc). Galaxy distances based on the Dn-sigma and Fundamental Plane
(FP) relations are now available for 1359 and 1107 ENEARm galaxies,
respectively, with roughly 80% based on new data gathered by our group. The
Dn-sigma and FP template distance relations are derived by combining 569 and
431 galaxies in 28 clusters, respectively, of which about 60% are based on our
new measurements. The ENEARm redshift-distance survey extends the earlier work
of the 7S and the recent Tully-Fisher surveys sampling a comparable volume. In
subsequent papers of this series we intend to use the ENEAR sample by itself or
in combination with the SFI Tully-Fisher survey to analyze the properties of
the local peculiar velocity field and to test how sensitive the results are to
different sampling and to the distance indicators. We also anticipate that the
homogeneous database assembled will be used for a variety of other applications
and serve as a benchmark for similar studies at high-redshift.Comment: 43 pages, 15 figures, submitted to the Astronomical Journa
Cognitive ability and risk for substance misuse in men : genetic and environmental correlations in a longitudinal nation-wide family study.
Aims. To investigate the association between cognitive ability in late adolescence and
subsequent substance misuse-related events in men, and to study the underlying genetic and
environmental correlations. Design. A population-based longitudinal study with three
different family-based designs. Cox proportional hazards models were conducted to
investigate the association at the individual level. Bivariate quantitative genetic modeling in
(1) full brothers and maternal half-brothers, (2) full brothers reared together and apart, and (3)
monozygotic and dizygotic twin brothers was used to estimate genetic and environmental
correlations. Setting. Register-based study in Sweden.
Participants. The full sample included 1,402,333 Swedish men born 1958-1991 and
conscripted at mean age 18.2 (SD=0.5) years. 1,361,066 men who had no substance misuse
events before cognitive assessment at mandatory military conscription were included in the
Cox regression models with a follow-up time of up to 35.6 years. Measures. Cognitive ability
was assessed at conscription with the Swedish Enlistment Battery. Substance misuse events
included alcohol and drug related court convictions, medical treatments, and deaths, available
from governmental registries Findings. Lower cognitive ability in late adolescence predicted
an increased risk for substance misuse events (hazard ratio [HR] for a 1-stanine unit decrease
in cognitive ability: 1.29, 95% CI: 1.29-1.30). The association was somewhat attenuated
within clusters of full brothers (HR=1.21, 95% CI: 1.20-1.23). Quantitative genetic analyses
indicated that the association was primarily due to genetic influences; the genetic correlations
ranged between -.39 (95% CI: -.45, -.34) and -.52 (-.55, -.48) in the three different designs.
Conclusions. Our findings from different family designs indicate that shared genetic
influences underlie the association between low cognitive ability and subsequent risk for
substance misuse events.The Academy of FinlandThe Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare.The Swedish Research CouncilThe Swedish Research Council through the Swedish Initiative for Research on Microdata in the Social And Medical Sciences (SIMSAM)Manuscrip
A log-quadratic relation for predicting supermassive black hole masses from the host bulge Sersic index
We reinvestigate the correlation between black hole mass and bulge
concentration. With an increased galaxy sample, updated estimates of galaxy
distances, black hole masses, and Sersic indices `n' - a measure of
concentration - we perform a least-squares regression analysis to obtain a
relation suitable for the purpose of predicting black hole masses in other
galaxies. In addition to the linear relation, log(M_bh) = 7.81(+/-0.08) +
2.69(+/-0.28)[log(n/3)] with epsilon_(intrin)=0.31 dex, we investigated the
possibility of a higher order M_bh-n relation, finding the second order term in
the best-fitting quadratic relation to be inconsistent with a value of zero at
greater than the 99.99% confidence level. The optimal relation is given by
log(M_bh) = 7.98(+/-0.09) + 3.70(+/-0.46)[log(n/3)] -
3.10(+/-0.84)[log(n/3)]^2, with epsilon_(intrin)=0.18 dex and a total absolute
scatter of 0.31 dex. Extrapolating the quadratic relation, it predicts black
holes with masses of ~10^3 M_sun in n=0.5 dwarf elliptical galaxies, compared
to ~10^5 M_sun from the linear relation, and an upper bound on the largest
black hole masses in the local universe, equal to 1.2^{+2.6}_{-0.4}x10^9
M_sun}. In addition, we show that the nuclear star clusters at the centers of
low-luminosity elliptical galaxies follow an extrapolation of the same
quadratic relation. Moreover, we speculate that the merger of two such
nucleated galaxies, accompanied by the merger and runaway collision of their
central star clusters, may result in the late-time formation of some
supermassive black holes. Finally, we predict the existence of, and provide
equations for, a relation between M_bh and the central surface brightness of
the host bulge
The Extragalactic Distance Scale Key Project XXVII. A Derivation of the Hubble Constant Using the Fundamental Plane and Dn-Sigma Relations in Leo I, Virgo, and Fornax
Using published photometry and spectroscopy, we construct the fundamental
plane and D_n-Sigma relations in Leo I, Virgo and Fornax. The published Cepheid
P-L relations to spirals in these clusters fixes the relation between angular
size and metric distance for both the fundamental plane and D_n-Sigma
relations. Using the locally calibrated fundamental plane, we infer distances
to a sample of clusters with a mean redshift of cz \approx 6000 \kms, and
derive a value of H_0=78+- 5+- 9 km/s/Mpc (random, systematic) for the local
expansion rate. This value includes a correction for depth effects in the
Cepheid distances to the nearby clusters, which decreased the deduced value of
the expansion rate by 5% +- 5%. If one further adopts the metallicity
correction to the Cepheid PL relation, as derived by the Key Project, the value
of the Hubble constant would decrease by a further 6%+- 4%. These two sources
of systematic error, when combined with a +- 6% error due to the uncertainty in
the distance to the Large Magellanic Cloud, a +- 4% error due to uncertainties
in the WFPC2 calibration, and several small sources of uncertainty in the
fundamental plane analysis, combine to yield a total systematic uncertainty of
+- 11%. We find that the values obtained using either the CMB, or a flow-field
model, for the reference frame of the distant clusters, agree to within 1%. The
Dn-Sigma relation also produces similar results, as expected from the
correlated nature of the two scaling relations. A complete discussion of the
sources of random and systematic error in this determination of the Hubble
constant is also given, in order to facilitate comparison with the other
secondary indicators being used by the Key Project.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
Spatio-temporal Bounded Noises, and transitions induced by them in solutions of real Ginzburg-Landau model
In this work, we introduce two spatio-temporal colored bounded noises, based
on the zero-dimensional Cai-Lin and Tsallis-Borland noises. We then study and
characterize the dependence of the defined bounded noises on both a temporal
correlation parameter and on a spatial coupling parameter . The
boundedness of these noises has some consequences on their equilibrium
distributions. Indeed in some cases varying may induce a transition
of the distribution of the noise from bimodality to unimodality. With the aim
to study the role played by bounded noises on nonlinear dynamical systems, we
investigate the behavior of the real Ginzburg-Landau time-varying model
additively perturbed by such noises. The observed phase transitions
phenomenology is quite different from the one observed when the perturbations
are unbounded. In particular, we observed an inverse "order-to-disorder"
transition, and a re-entrant transition, with dependence on the specific type
of bounded noise.Comment: 12 (main text)+5 (supplementary) page
Birth weight as an independent predictor of ADHD symptoms : a within-twin pair analysis
BACKGROUND: Studies have found an association between low birth weight and ADHD,
but the nature of this relation is unclear. First, it is uncertain whether birth
weight is associated with both of the ADHD dimensions, inattentiveness and
hyperactivity-impulsivity. Second, it remains uncertain whether the association
between birth weight and ADHD symptom severity is confounded by familial factors.
METHOD: Parents of all Swedish 9- and 12-year-old twins born between 1992 and
2000 were interviewed for DSM-IV inattentive and hyperactive-impulsive ADHD
symptoms by the Autism - Tics, AD/HD and other Comorbidities (A-TAC) inventory (N= 21,775 twins). Birth weight was collected prospectively through the Medical
Birth Registry. We used a within-twin pair design to control for genetic and
shared environmental factors.
RESULTS: Reduced birth weight was significantly
associated with a mean increase in total ADHD (beta = -.42; 95% CI: -.53, -.30),
inattentive (beta = -.26; 95% CI: -.33, -.19), and hyperactive-impulsive (beta =
-.16; 95% CI: -.22, -.10) symptom severity. These results imply that a change of
one kilogram of birth weight corresponded to parents rating their child nearly
one unit higher (going from "no" to "yes, to some extent" on a given symptom) on
the total ADHD scale. These associations remained within pairs of MZ and DZ
twins, and were also present when restricting the analyses to full term births.
CONCLUSIONS: There is an independent association between low birth weight and all
forms of ADHD symptoms, even after controlling for all environmental and genetic
confounds shared within twin pairs. These results indicate that fetal growth
restriction (as reflected in birth weight differences within twin pairs) and/or
the environmental factors which influence it is in the casual pathway leading to
ADHD.The Swedish Council for Working Life and Social ResearchThe Swedish Research CouncilManuscrip
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