587 research outputs found
Irregular sloshing cold fronts in the nearby merging groups NGC 7618 and UGC 12491: evidence for Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities
We present results from two \sim30 ks Chandra observations of the hot
atmospheres of the merging galaxy groups centered around NGC 7618 and UGC
12491. Our images show the presence of arc-like sloshing cold fronts wrapped
around each group center and \sim100 kpc long spiral tails in both groups. Most
interestingly, the cold fronts are highly distorted in both groups, exhibiting
'wings' along the fronts. These features resemble the structures predicted from
non-viscous hydrodynamic simulations of gas sloshing, where Kelvin-Helmholtz
instabilities (KHIs) distort the cold fronts. This is in contrast to the
structure seen in many other sloshing and merger cold fronts, which are smooth
and featureless at the current observational resolution. Both magnetic fields
and viscosity have been invoked to explain the absence of KHIs in these smooth
cold fronts, but the NGC 7618/UGC 12491 pair are two in a growing number of
both sloshing and merger cold fronts that appear distorted. Magnetic fields
and/or viscosity may be able to suppress the growth of KHIs at the cold fronts
in some clusters and groups, but clearly not in all. We propose that the
presence or absence of KHI-distortions in cold fronts can be used as a measure
of the effective viscosity and/or magnetic field strengths in the ICM.Comment: ApJ, accepted. Uses emulateapj styl
Two-loop Renormalization Group Equations in General Gauge Field Theories
The complete set of two-loop renormalization group equations in general gauge
field theories is presented. This includes the \beta functions of parameters
with and without a mass dimension
The Mysterious Merger of NGC6868 and NGC6861 in the Telescopium Group
We use Chandra X-ray observations of the hot gas in and around NGC6868 and
NGC6861 in the Telescopium galaxy group (AS0851) to probe the interaction
history between these galaxies. Mean surface brightness profiles for NGC6868
and NGC6861 are each well described by double beta-models, suggesting that they
are each the dominant galaxy in a galaxy subgroup about to merge. Surface
brightness and temperature maps of the brightest group galaxy NGC6868 show a
cold front edge ~23 kpc to the north, and a cool 0.62 keV spiral-shaped tail to
the south. Analysis of the temperature and density across the cold front
constrains the relative motion between NGC6868 and the ambient group gas to be
at most transonic; while the spiral morphology of the tail strongly suggests
that the cold front edge and tail are the result of gas sloshing due to the
subgroup merger. The cooler central region of NGC6861 is surrounded by a sheath
of hot gas to the east and hot, bifurcated tails of X-ray emission to the west
and northwest. We discuss supersonic infall of the NGC6861 subroup, sloshing
from the NGC6868 and NGC6861 subgroup merger, and AGN heating as possible
explanations for these features, and discuss possible scenarios that may
contribute to the order of magnitude discrepancy between the Margorrian and
black hole mass - sigma predictions for its central black hole.Comment: 17 pages, 23 figures, submitted to Ap
On the Unification of Couplings in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model
The unification of gauge and Yukawa couplings within the minimal
supersymmetric standard model is studied at the two loop level. We derive an
expression for the effective scale, , which characterizes the
supersymmetric particle threshold corrections to the gauge couplings, and
demonstrate that is only slightly dependent on the squark and
slepton masses, and strongly dependent on the Higgsino masses as well as on the
mass ratio of the gauginos of the strong and weak interactions. Moreover, the
value of the top quark Yukawa coupling necessary to achieve the unification of
bottom and tau Yukawa couplings is also governed by , and it yields
predictions for the top quark mass which are close to the quasi infrared fixed
point results associated with the triviality bounds on this quantity. From the
requirement of perturbative consistency of the top quark Yukawa sector of the
theory, we obtain constraints on the allowed splitting of the supersymmetric
spectrum, which, for certain values of the running bottom quark mass, are
stronger than those ones coming from the experimental constraints on the strong
gauge coupling.Comment: 40 pages, MPI-Ph/93-1
Universal Evolution of CKM Matrix Elements
We derive the two-loop evolution equations for the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa
matrix. We show that to leading order in the mass and CKM hierarchies the
scaling of the mixings , , ,
and of the rephase-invariant CP-violating parameter is universal to all
orders in perturbation theory. In leading order the other CKM elements do not
scale. Imposing the constraint at the GUT scale
determines the CKM scaling factor to be in the MSSM.Comment: 17 pages + 2 figures not included (available upon request), revised
version fixes discrepancy between S and S^{1/2}, no other changes, MAD/PH/72
Stripped elliptical galaxies as probes of ICM physics : III. Deep Chandra observation of NGC 4552 - Measuring the viscosity of the intracluster medium
We present results from a deep (200 ks) Chandra observation of the early-type galaxy NGC 4552 (M89) which is falling into the Virgo cluster. Previous shallower X-ray observations of this galaxy showed a remnant gas core, a tail to the South of the galaxy, and twin `horns' attached to the northern edge of the gas core [machacek05a]. In our deeper data, we detect a diffuse, low surface brightness extension to the previously known tail, and measure the temperature structure within the tail. We combine the deep Chandra data with archival XMM-Newton observations to put a strong upper limit on the diffuse emission of the tail out to a large distance (10×the radius of the remnant core) from the galaxy center. In our two previous papers [roediger15a,roediger15b], we presented the results of hydrodynamical simulations of ram pressure stripping specifically for M89 falling into the Virgo cluster and investigated the effect of ICM viscosity. In this paper, we compare our deep data with our specifically tailored simulations and conclude that the observed morphology of the stripped tail in NGC 4552 is most similar to the inviscid models. We conclude that, to the extent the transport processes can be simply modeled as a hydrodynamic viscosity, the ICM viscosity is negligible. More generally, any micro-scale description of the transport processes in the high-β plasma of the cluster ICM must be consistent with the efficient mixing observed in the stripped tail on macroscopic scales
RG Invariance of the Pole Mass in the Minimal Subtraction Scheme
We prove the renormalization group(RG) invariance of the pole mass with
respect to the RG functions of the minimal subtraction(MS) scheme and
illustrate this in case of the the neutral scalar field theory both in the
symmetric and in the broken symmetry phase
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