6,420 research outputs found
On a link between a species survival time in an evolution model and the Bessel distributions
We consider a stochastic model for species evolution. A new species is born
at rate lambda and a species dies at rate mu. A random number, sampled from a
given distribution F, is associated with each new species at the time of birth.
Every time there is a death event, the species that is killed is the one with
the smallest fitness. We consider the (random) survival time of a species with
a given fitness f. We show that the survival time distribution depends
crucially on whether ff_c where f_c is a critical fitness that
is computed explicitly.Comment: 13 page
A stochastic model of evolution
We propose a stochastic model for evolution. Births and deaths of species
occur with constant probabilities. Each new species is associated with a
fitness sampled from the uniform distribution on [0,1]. Every time there is a
death event then the type that is killed is the one with the smallest fitness.
We show that there is a sharp phase transition when the birth probability is
larger than the death probability. The set of species with fitness higher than
a certain critical value approach an uniform distribution. On the other hand
all the species with fitness less than the critical disappear after a finite
(random) time.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, TeX, Added references, To appear in Markov
Processes and Related Field
A Far-infrared Characterization of 24 μm Selected Galaxies at 0 < z < 2.5 using Stacking at 70 μm and 160 μm in the COSMOS Field
We present a study of the average properties of luminous infrared galaxies detected directly at 24 μm in the COSMOS field using a median stacking analysis at 70 μm and 160 μm. Over 35,000 sources spanning 0 ≤ z ≤ 3 and 0.06 mJy ≤ S_(24) ≤ 3.0 mJy are stacked, divided into bins of both photometric redshift and 24 μm flux. We find no correlation of S_(70)/S_(24) flux density ratio with S_(24), but find that galaxies with higher S_(24) have a lower S_(160)/S_(24) flux density ratio. These observed ratios suggest that 24 μm selected galaxies have warmer spectral energy distributions (SEDs) at higher mid-IR fluxes, and therefore have a possible higher fraction of active galactic nuclei. Comparisons of the average S_(70)/S_(24) and S_(160)/S_(24) colors with various empirical templates and theoretical models show that the galaxies detected at 24 μm are consistent with "normal" star-forming galaxies and warm mid-IR galaxies such as Mrk 231, but inconsistent with heavily obscured galaxies such as Arp 220. We perform a χ^2 analysis to determine best-fit galactic model SEDs and total IR luminosities for each of our bins. We compare our results to previous methods of estimating L IR and find that previous methods show considerable agreement over the full redshift range, except for the brightest S_(24) sources, where they overpredict the bolometric IR luminosity at high redshift, most likely due to their warmer dust SED. We present a table that can be used as a more accurate and robust method for estimating bolometric infrared luminosity from 24 μm flux densities
Encoding the infrared excess (IRX) in the NUVrK color diagram for star-forming galaxies
We present an empirical method of assessing the star formation rate (SFR) of
star-forming galaxies based on their locations in the rest-frame color-color
diagram (NUV-r) vs (r-K). By using the Spitzer 24 micron sample in the COSMOS
field (~16400 galaxies with 0.2 < z < 1.3) and a local GALEX-SDSS-SWIRE sample
(~700 galaxies with z = <
L_IR / L_UV > can be described by a single vector, NRK, that combines the two
colors. The calibration between and NRK allows us to recover the IR
luminosity, L_IR, with an accuracy of ~0.21 dex for the COSMOS sample and ~0.27
dex for the local one. The SFRs derived with this method agree with the ones
based on the observed (UV+IR) luminosities and on the spectral energy
distribution fitting for the vast majority (~85 %) of the star-forming
population. Thanks to a library of model galaxy SEDs with realistic
prescriptions for the star formation history, we show that we need to include a
two-component dust model (i.e., birth clouds and diffuse ISM) and a full
distribution of galaxy inclinations in order to reproduce the behavior of the
stripes in the NUVrK diagram. In conclusion, the NRK method, based only
on rest-frame UV and optical colors available in most of the extragalactic
fields, offers a simple alternative of assessing the SFR of star-forming
galaxies in the absence of far-IR or spectral diagnostic observations.Comment: 21 pages, 22 figures, in publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Phosphorylation of CENP-A on serine 7 does not control centromere function
CENP-A is the histone H3 variant necessary to specify the location of all eukaryotic centromeres via its CENP-A targeting domain and either one of its terminal regions. In humans, several post-translational modifications occur on CENP-A, but their role in centromere function remains controversial. One of these modifications of CENP-A, phosphorylation on serine 7, has been proposed to control centromere assembly and function. Here, using gene targeting at both endogenous CENP-A alleles and gene replacement in human cells, we demonstrate that a CENP-A variant that cannot be phosphorylated at serine 7 maintains correct CENP-C recruitment, faithful chromosome segregation and long-term cell viability. Thus, we conclude that phosphorylation of CENP-A on serine 7 is dispensable to maintain correct centromere dynamics and function
A Turnover in the Galaxy Main Sequence of Star Formation at for Redshifts
The relationship between galaxy star formation rates (SFR) and stellar masses
() is re-examined using a mass-selected sample of 62,000
star-forming galaxies at in the COSMOS 2-deg field. Using new
far-infrared photometry from -PACS and SPIRE and -MIPS 24
m, along with derived infrared luminosities from the NRK method based on
galaxies' locations in the restframe color-color diagram vs. , we are able to more accurately determine total SFRs for our complete
sample. At all redshifts, the relationship between median and
follows a power-law at low stellar masses, and flattens to nearly constant SFR
at high stellar masses. We describe a new parameterization that provides the
best fit to the main sequence and characterizes the low mass power-law slope,
turnover mass, and overall scaling. The turnover in the main sequence occurs at
a characteristic mass of about at all redshifts.
The low mass power-law slope ranges from 0.9-1.3 and the overall scaling rises
in SFR as a function of . A broken power-law fit below
and above the turnover mass gives relationships of below the turnover mass and above
the turnover mass. Galaxies more massive than have on average, a much lower specific star formation rate (sSFR) than
would be expected by simply extrapolating the traditional linear fit to the
main sequence found for less massive galaxies.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
FIRBACK Source Counts and Cosmological Implications
FIRBACK is a one of the deepest surveys performed at 170 microns with ISOPHOT
onboard ISO, and is aimed at the study of cosmic far infrared background
sources. About 300 galaxies are detected in an area of four square degrees, and
source counts present a strong slope of 2.2 on an integral "logN-logS" plot,
which cannot be due to cosmological evolution if no K-correction is present.
The resolved sources account for less than 10% of the Cosmic Infrared
Background at 170 microns. In order to understand the nature of the sources
contributing to the CIB, and to explain deep source counts at other
wavelengths, we have developed a phenomenological model, which constrains in a
simple way the luminosity function evolution with redshift, and fits all the
existing deep source counts from the mid-infrared to the submillimetre range.
Images, materials and papers available on the FIRBACK web:
http://wwwfirback.ias.u-psud.fr wwwfirback.ias.u-psud.frComment: proceedings of "ISO Surveys of a Dusty Universe", eds. D. Lemke, M.
Stickel, K. Wilke, Ringberg, 8-12 Nov 1999, to appear in Springer 'Lecture
Notes of Physics'. 8 pages, 7 eps figures, .sty include
The EDELWEISS Experiment : Status and Outlook
The EDELWEISS Dark Matter search uses low-temperature Ge detectors with heat
and ionisation read- out to identify nuclear recoils induced by elastic
collisions with WIMPs from the galactic halo. Results from the operation of 70
g and 320 g Ge detectors in the low-background environment of the Modane
Underground Laboratory (LSM) are presented.Comment: International Conference on Dark Matter in Astro and Particle Physics
(Dark 2000), Heidelberg, Germany, 10-16 Jul 2000, v3 minor revision
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