1,733 research outputs found
Performance Limitations of Flat Histogram Methods and Optimality of Wang-Landau Sampling
We determine the optimal scaling of local-update flat-histogram methods with
system size by using a perfect flat-histogram scheme based on the exact density
of states of 2D Ising models.The typical tunneling time needed to sample the
entire bandwidth does not scale with the number of spins N as the minimal N^2
of an unbiased random walk in energy space. While the scaling is power law for
the ferromagnetic and fully frustrated Ising model, for the +/- J
nearest-neighbor spin glass the distribution of tunneling times is governed by
a fat-tailed Frechet extremal value distribution that obeys exponential
scaling. We find that the Wang-Landau algorithm shows the same scaling as the
perfect scheme and is thus optimal.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Mid-infrared imaging of the massive young star AFGL 2591: Probing the circumstellar environment of an outflow source
Most, if not all, stars are now believed to produce energetic outflows during
their formation. Yet, almost 20 years after the discovery of bipolar outflows
from young stars, the origins of this violent phenomenon are not well
understood. One of the difficulties of probing the outflow process,
particularly in the case of massive embedded stars, is a deficit of high
spatial resolution observations. Here, we present sub-arcsecond-resolution
mid-infrared images of one massive young stellar object, AFGL 2591, and its
immediate surroundings. Our images, at 11.7, 12.5 and 18.0 microns, reveal a
knot of emission ~6'' SW of the star, which may be evidence for a recent
ejection event or an embedded companion star. This knot is roughly coincident
with a previously seen near-infrared reflection nebula and a radio source, and
lies within the known large-scale CO outflow. We also find a new faint NW
source which may be another embedded lower-luminosity star. The IRAS
mid-infrared spectrum of AFGL 2591 shows a large silicate absorption feature at
10 microns, implying that the primary source is surrounded by an optically
thick dusty envelope. We discuss the interrelationship of these phenomena and
suggest that mid-infrared imaging and spectroscopy provide powerful tools for
probing massive star birth.Comment: 14 pages, 3 PostScript figures, accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journal Letter
Collective Charge Excitation in a Dimer Mott Insulating System
Charge dynamics in a dimer Mott insulating system, where a non-polar
dimer-Mott (DM) phase and a polar charge-ordered (CO) phase compete with each
other, are studied. In particular, collective charge excitations are analyzed
in the three different models where the internal-degree of freedom in a dimer
is taken into account. Collective charge excitation exists both in the
non-polar DM phase and the polar CO phase, and softens in the phase boundary.
This mode is observable by the optical conductivity spectra where the light
polarization is parallel to the electric polarization in the polar CO phase.
Connections between the present theory and the recent experimental results in
kappa-(BEDT-TTF)2Cu2(CN)3 are discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Dust temperature and density profiles of AGB and post-AGB stars from mid-infrared observations
First mid-infrared images of a sample of AGB and post-AGB carbon stars (V
Hya, IRC +10216, CIT 6 and Roberts 22) obtained at La Silla Observatory (ESO,
Chile) are reported. CIT 6 presents a cometary-like feature clearly seen in the
9.7m image, Roberts 22 shows an envelope slightly elongated in the
north-east direction while images of V Hya and IRC+10216 are roughly
spherically symmetric. Using inversion technique, the dust emissivity was
derived from the observed intensity profiles, allowing a determination of the
grain temperature and density distributions inside the envelope for these
stars. Dust masses and mass-loss rates were estimated for V Hya and IRC +10216.
Our results are comparable to those obtained in previous studies if dust grains
have dimensions in the range 0.01 - 0.2 m. Color maps suggest the
presence of temperature inhomogeneities in the central regions of the dust
envelopes. In the case of V Hya, an eccentric hot point, which direction
coincides with the jet previously seen in [SII] emission, suggest that we are
observing a material ejected in a previous mass-loss event. Bipolar lobes are
clearly seen in the color maps of Roberts 22 and IRC +10216.Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
A Mid-Infrared Imaging Survey of Proto-Planetary Nebula Candidates
We present the data from a mid-infrared imaging survey of 66 proto-planetary
nebula candidates using two mid-IR cameras (MIRAC2 and Berkcam) at the NASA
Infrared Telescope Facility and the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope. The goal
of this survey is to determine the size, flux, and morphology of the mid-IR
emission regions, which sample the inner regions of the circumstellar dust
shells of proto-planetary nebulae. We imaged these proto-planetary nebulae with
narrow-band filters () at wavelengths of
notable dust features. With our typical angular resolution of 1\arcsec, we
resolve 17 sources, find 48 objects unresolved, and do not detect 1 source. For
several sources, we checked optical and infrared associations and positions of
the sources. In table format, we list the size and flux measurements for all
the detected objects and show figures of all the resolved sources. Images for
all the detected objects are available on line in FITS format from the
Astronomy Digital Image Library at the National Center for Supercomputing
Application. The proto-planetary nebula candidate sample includes, in addition
to the predominant proto-planetary nebulae, extreme asymptotic giant branch
stars, young planetary nebulae, a supergiant, and a luminous blue variable. We
find that dust shells which are cooler ( K) and brighter in the
infrared are more easily resolved. Eleven of the seventeen resolved sources are
extended and fall into one of two types of mid-IR morphological classes:
core/elliptical or toroidal. Core/elliptical structures show unresolved cores
with lower surface brightness elliptical nebulae. Toroidal structures show
limb-brightened peaks suggesting equatorial density enhancements. We argue that
core/ellipticals have denser dust shells than toroidals.Comment: 32 pages, 5 tables, 2 e/ps figures (fig3 is available through ADIL
[see text]), to be published in ApJS May 1999 issu
Overdensities of Y-dropout Galaxies from the Brightest-of-Reionizing Galaxies Survey: A Candidate Protocluster at Redshift z~8
Theoretical and numerical modeling of dark-matter halo assembly predicts that
the most luminous galaxies at high redshift are surrounded by overdensities of
fainter companions. We test this prediction with HST observations acquired by
our Brightest of Reionizing Galaxies (BoRG) survey, which identified four very
bright z~8 candidates as Y-dropout sources in four of the 23 non-contiguous
WFC3 fields observed. We extend here the search for Y-dropouts to fainter
luminosities (M_* galaxies with M_AB\sim-20), with detections at >5sigma
confidence (compared to >8sigma confidence adopted earlier) identifying 17 new
candidates. We demonstrate that there is a correlation between number counts of
faint and bright Y-dropouts at >99.84% confidence. Field BoRG58, which contains
the best bright z\sim8 candidate (M_AB=-21.3), has the most significant
overdensity of faint Y-dropouts. Four new sources are located within 70arcsec
(corresponding to 3.1 comoving Mpc at z=8) from the previously known brighter
z\sim8 candidate. The overdensity of Y-dropouts in this field has a physical
origin to high confidence (p>99.975%), independent of completeness and
contamination rate of the Y-dropout selection. We modeled the overdensity by
means of cosmological simulations and estimate that the principal dark matter
halo has mass M_h\sim(4-7)x10^11Msun (\sim5sigma density peak) and is
surrounded by several M_h\sim10^11Msun halos which could host the fainter
dropouts. In this scenario, we predict that all halos will eventually merge
into a M_h>2x10^14Msun galaxy cluster by z=0. Follow-up observations with
ground and space based telescopes are required to secure the z\sim8 nature of
the overdensity, discover new members, and measure their precise redshift.Comment: Minor revision: ApJ accepted [17 pages (emulateapj style), 7 figures,
2 tables
Effect of dietary supplementation of cassia auriculata leaf powder on growth and immune responses of milkfish, Chanos chanos
A 30 days feeding trial was conducted to evaluate the effects of Cassia auriculata leaf powder on growth and
immunomological parameters of the juveniles of Milkfish, Chanos chanos and disease resistance against Vibrio
anguillarum. The juvenile fishes with an average weight of 20±3 g were stocked in four treatments each with
three replicates. Four practical diets were prepared with graded level of Cassia auriculata leaf powder (CAL) at the
rate of 0%, 0.5%, 1% and 1.5% and fed to four treatments respectively named as CAL0, CAL0.5, CAL1 and
CAL1.5. At the end of the experiment blood samples were collected for immunological parameters. After
sampling, the remaining fishes were challenged with 0.1 mL of virulent V. anguillarum suspension at a concentration
of 107
CFU mL-1 and mortality was observed for 7 days. Post challenge sampling was performed for the collection
of blood samples. The growth parameters such as Weight gain%, SGR%, PER were positively affected by Cassia
auriculata leaf powder incorporated diet. Higher weight gain %, SGR% and PER were noticed in CAL1.5 group
followed by CAL1, CAL0.5 and CAL0. The respiratory burst, lysozyme and phagocytic activities were increased
with increasing level of CAL in the diet which indicates better immune response of the fishes fed with CAL. The
higher respiratory burst (0.522 ± 0.03), lysozyme (70.07 ± 1.57) and phagocytic (52.91 ± 1.76) activitieswere
observed in CAL1.5, CAL1 and CAL1.5 groups respectively during pre-challenge and post challenge. There was
significant difference in the survival rate of control (CAL0) and CAL incorporated diet fed groups (P<0.05).
Maximum survival was witnessed in CAL1 followed by CAL1.5 and least survival was in CAL0 group. The results
indicate that diets supplemented with 1% CAL potentially enhance the immune system and effectively protects the
host against V. anguillarum infection and thereby improve the survivability of the fish against this dreadful
pathogen
Investigating the Near-Infrared Properties of Planetary Nebula II. Medium Resolution Spectra
We present medium-resolution (R~700) near-infrared (lambda = 1 - 2.5 micron)
spectra of a sample of planetary nebulae (PNe). A narrow slit was used which
sampled discrete locations within the nebulae; observations were obtained at
one or more positions in the 41 objects included in the survey. The PN spectra
fall into one of four general categories: H I emission line-dominated PNe, H I
and H_2 emission line PNe, H_2-dominated PNe, and continuum-dominated PNe.
These categories correlate with morphological type, with the elliptical PNe
falling into the first group, and the bipolar PNe primarily in the H_2 and
continuum emission groups. Other spectral features were observed in all
categories, such as continuum emission from the central star, C_2, CN, and CO
emission, and warm dust continuum emission.
Molecular hydrogen was detected for the first time in four PNe. An excitation
analysis was performed using the H_2 line ratios for all of the PN spectra in
the survey where a sufficient number of lines were observed. One unexpected
result from this analysis is that the H_2 is excited by absorption of
ultraviolet photons in most of the PNe surveyed, although for several PNe in
our survey collisional excitation in moderate velocity shocks plays an
important role. The correlation between bipolar morphology and H_2 emission has
been strengthened with the new detections of H_2 in this survey.Comment: 13 pages, 8 tables, 33 figure
A tachyonic scalar field with mutually interacting components
We investigate the tachyonic cosmological potential in two
different cases of the quasi-exponential expansion of universe and discuss
various forms of interaction between the two components---matter and the
cosmological constant--- of the tachyonic scalar field, which leads to the
viable solutions of their respective energy densities. The distinction among
the interaction forms is shown to appear in the diagnostic. Further,
the role of the high- and low-redshift observations of the Hubble parameter is
discussed to determine the proportionality constants and hence the correct form
of matter--cosmological constant interaction.Comment: 14 page
The degradation of p53 and its major E3 ligase Mdm2 is differentially dependent on the proteasomal ubiquitin receptor S5a.
p53 and its major E3 ligase Mdm2 are both ubiquitinated and targeted to the proteasome for degradation. Despite the importance of this in regulating the p53 pathway, little is known about the mechanisms of proteasomal recognition of ubiquitinated p53 and Mdm2. In this study, we show that knockdown of the proteasomal ubiquitin receptor S5a/PSMD4/Rpn10 inhibits p53 protein degradation and results in the accumulation of ubiquitinated p53. Overexpression of a dominant-negative deletion of S5a lacking its ubiquitin-interacting motifs (UIM)s, but which can be incorporated into the proteasome, also causes the stabilization of p53. Furthermore, small-interferring RNA (siRNA) rescue experiments confirm that the UIMs of S5a are required for the maintenance of low p53 levels. These observations indicate that S5a participates in the recognition of ubiquitinated p53 by the proteasome. In contrast, targeting S5a has no effect on the rate of degradation of Mdm2, indicating that proteasomal recognition of Mdm2 can be mediated by an S5a-independent pathway. S5a knockdown results in an increase in the transcriptional activity of p53. The selective stabilization of p53 and not Mdm2 provides a mechanism for p53 activation. Depletion of S5a causes a p53-dependent decrease in cell proliferation, demonstrating that p53 can have a dominant role in the response to targeting S5a. This study provides evidence for alternative pathways of proteasomal recognition of p53 and Mdm2. Differences in recognition by the proteasome could provide a means to modulate the relative stability of p53 and Mdm2 in response to cellular signals. In addition, they could be exploited for p53-activating therapies. This work shows that the degradation of proteins by the proteasome can be selectively dependent on S5a in human cells, and that this selectivity can extend to an E3 ubiquitin ligase and its substrate
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