636 research outputs found
A method for the reconstruction of unknown non-monotonic growth functions in the chemostat
We propose an adaptive control law that allows one to identify unstable
steady states of the open-loop system in the single-species chemostat model
without the knowledge of the growth function. We then show how one can use this
control law to trace out (reconstruct) the whole graph of the growth function.
The process of tracing out the graph can be performed either continuously or
step-wise. We present and compare both approaches. Even in the case of two
species in competition, which is not directly accessible with our approach due
to lack of controllability, feedback control improves identifiability of the
non-dominant growth rate.Comment: expansion of ideas from proceedings paper (17 pages, 8 figures),
proceedings paper is version v
Generation of rotationally dominated galaxies by mergers of pressure-supported progenitors
Through the analysis of a set of numerical simulations of major mergers
between initially non-rotating, pressure supported progenitor galaxies with a
range of central mass concentrations, we have shown that: (1) it is possible to
generate elliptical-like galaxies, with v/sigma > 1 outside one effective
radius, as a result of the conversion of orbital- into internal-angular
momentum; (2) the outer regions acquire part of the angular momentum first; (3)
both the baryonic and the dark matter components of the remnant galaxy acquire
part of the angular momentum, the relative fractions depend on the initial
concentration of the merging galaxies. For this conversion to occur the initial
baryonic component must be sufficiently dense and/or the encounter should take
place on a orbit with high angular momentum. Systems with these hybrid
properties have been recently observed through a combination of stellar
absorption lines and planetary nebulae for kinematic studies of early-type
galaxies. Our results are in qualitative agreement with such observations and
demonstrate that even mergers composed of non-rotating, pressure-supported
progenitor galaxies can produce early-type galaxies with significant rotation
at large radii.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A Letter
Correlated X-ray/Ultraviolet/Optical variability in the very low mass AGN NGC 4395
We report the results of a one year Swift X-ray/UV/optical programme
monitoring the dwarf Seyfert nucleus in NGC 4395 in 2008-2009. The UV/optical
flux from the nucleus was found to vary dramatically over the monitoring
period, with a similar pattern of variation in each of the observed UV/optical
bands (spanning 1900 - 5500 {\AA}). In particular, the luminosity of NGC 4395
in the 1900 {\AA} band changed by more than a factor of eight over the
monitoring period. The fractional variability was smaller in the UV/optical
bands than that seen in the X-rays, with the X-ray/optical ratio increasing
with increasing flux. Pseudo-instantaneous flux measurements in the X-ray and
each UV/optical band were well correlated, with cross correlation coefficients
of >0.7, significant at 99.9 per cent confidence. Archival Swift observations
from 2006 sample the intra-day X-ray/optical variability on NGC 4395. These
archival data show a very strong correlation between the X-ray and b bands,
with a cross-correlation coefficient of 0.84 (significant at >99 per cent
confidence). The peak in the cross correlation function is marginally resolved
and asymmetric, suggesting that X-rays lead the b band, but by 1 hour. In
response to recent (August 2011) very high X-ray flux levels from NGC4395 we
triggered Swift ToO observations, which sample the intra-hour X-ray/UV
variability. These observations indicate, albeit with large uncertainties, a
lag of the 1900 {\AA} band behind the X-ray flux of ~400 s. The tight
correlation between the X-ray and UV/optical lightcurves, together with the
constraints we place on lag time-scale are consistent with the UV/optical
variability of NGC 4395 being primarily due to reprocessing of X-ray photons by
the accretion disc.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Reproductive (In)Justice: Exploring young women’s experiences of reproductive saliency in an oppressive environment
Young North American women are currently coming of age in a sociopolitical context governed by neoliberal ideology, post-feminist assumptions, agentic femininities, and demographic trends that have lengthened pathways to adulthood. Consequently, the avoidance of early reproductive experiences has become a key requisite governing the success of the young female subject. This project explores the diverse reproductive experiences of eleven young (≤ 24 years of age) women residing in Prince Edward Island, Canada. Prince Edward Island’s conservative community culture, anti-choice policies, and limited youth focused sexual-reproductive health services produces a unique experiential setting for young women who encounter reproductive events. Through interpretative phenomenological analysis, 5 superordinate themes were identified in participant’s communications; Transformation, Negotiation, Gender as Experience, Gender as Category, and Island Observation(s). These themes highlight how interactions between the larger sociocultural context and the localized environment function to structure young women’s reproductive experiences and influence material realities. It was found that young women residing in Prince Edward Island experience distinct barriers to sexual-reproductive health and wellbeing, and that these barriers become particularly oppressive in the context of reproductive experiences
Observational evidence for matter propagation in accretion flows
We study simultaneous X-ray and optical observations of three intermediate
polars EX Hya, V1223 Sgr and TV Col with the aim to understand the propagation
of matter in their accretion flows. We show that in all cases the power spectra
of flux variability of binary systems in X-rays and in optical band are similar
to each other and the majority of X-ray and optical fluxes are correlated with
time lag <1 sec. These findings support the idea that optical emission of
accretion disks, in these binary systems,largely originates as reprocessing of
X-ray luminosity of their white dwarfs. In the best obtained dataset of EX Hya
we see that the optical lightcurve unambiguously contains some component, which
leads the X-ray emission by ~7 sec. We interpret this in the framework of the
model of propagating fluctuations and thus deduce the time of travel of the
matter from the innermost part of the truncated accretion disk to the white
dwarf surface. This value agrees very well with the time expected for matter
threaded onto the magnetosphere of the white dwarf to fall to its surface. The
datasets of V1223 Sgr and TV Col in general confirm these findings,but have
poorer quality.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
The core fundamental plane of B2 radio galaxies
The photometric, structural and kinematical properties of the centers of
elliptical galaxies, harbor important information of the formation history of
the galaxies. In the case of non active elliptical galaxies these properties
are linked in a way that surface brightness, break radius and velocity
dispersion of the core lie on a fundamental plane similar to that found for
their global properties. We construct the Core Fundamental Plane (CFP) for a
sizeable sample of low redshift radio galaxies and compare it with that of non
radio ellipticals. To pursue this aim we combine data obtained from high
resolution HST images with medium resolution optical spectroscopy to derive the
photometric and kinematic properties of ~40 low redshift radio galaxies. We
find that the CFPs of radio galaxies is indistinguishable from that defined by
non radio elliptical galaxies of similar luminosity. The characteristics of the
CFP of radio galaxies are also consistent (same slope) with those of the
Fundamental Plane (FP) derived from the global properties of radio (and non
radio) elliptical galaxies. The similarity of CFP and FP for radio and non
radio ellipticals suggests that the active phase of these galaxies has minimal
effects for the structure of the galaxies.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Measuring the mass of the central black hole in the bulgeless galaxy ngc 4395 from gas dynamical modeling
NGC 4395 is a bulgeless spiral galaxy, harboring one of the nearest known type 1 Seyfert nuclei. Although there is no consensus on the mass of its central engine, several estimates suggest it is one of the lightest massive black holes (MBHs) known. We present the first direct dynamical measurement of the mass of this MBH from a combination of two-dimensional gas kinematic data, obtained with the adaptive optics assisted near-infrared integral field spectrograph Gemini/NIFS and high-resolution multiband photometric data from Hubble Space Telescope's Wide Field Camera 3. We use the photometric data to model the shape and stellar mass-to-light ratio of the nuclear star cluster (NSC). From the Gemini/NIFS observations, we derive the kinematics of warm molecular hydrogen gas as traced by emission through the H2 1–0 S(1) transition. These kinematics show a clear rotational signal, with a position angle orthogonal to NGC 4395's radio jet. Our best-fitting tilted ring models of the kinematics of the molecular hydrogen gas contain a black hole with mass M={4}-3+8× {10}5 M⊙ (3σ uncertainties) embedded in an NSC of mass M=2× {10}6 M⊙. Our black hole mass measurement is in excellent agreement with the reverberation mapping mass estimate of Peterson et al. but shows some tension with other mass measurement methods based on accretion signals
How special are Brightest Group and Cluster Galaxies?
We use the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to construct a sample of 625 brightest
group and cluster galaxies (BCGs) together with control samples of non-BCGs
matched in stellar mass, redshift, and color. We investigate how the systematic
properties of BCGs depend on stellar mass and on their privileged location near
the cluster center. The groups and clusters that we study are drawn from the C4
catalogue of Miller et al. (2005) but we have developed improved algorithms for
identifying the BCG and for measuring the cluster velocity dispersion. Since
the SDSS photometric pipeline tends to underestimate the luminosities of large
galaxies in dense environments, we have developed a correction for this effect
which can be readily applied to the published catalog data. We find that BCGs
are larger and have higher velocity dispersions than non-BCGs of the same
stellar mass, which implies that BCGs contain a larger fraction of dark matter.
In contrast to non-BCGs, the dynamical mass-to-light ratio of BCGs does not
vary as a function of galaxy luminosity. Hence BCGs lie on a different
fundamental plane than ordinary elliptical galaxies. BCGs also follow a steeper
Faber-Jackson relation than non-BCGs, as suggested by models in which BCGs
assemble via dissipationless mergers along preferentially radial orbits. We
find tentative evidence that this steepening is stronger in more massive
clusters. BCGs have similar mean stellar ages and metallicities to non-BCGs of
the same mass, but they have somewhat higher alpha/Fe ratios, indicating that
star formation may have occurred over a shorter timescale in the BCGs. Finally,
we find that BCGs are more likely to host radio-loud active galactic nuclei
than other galaxies of the same mass, but are less likely to host an optical
AGN. The differences we find are more pronounced for the less massive BCGs.Comment: Replaced with slightly modified version accepted by MNRAS. 28 pages,
25 figures. Version with full resolution figures available at
http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~anja/bcgs_avdl.pd
The Shapes of BCGs and normal Ellipticals in Nearby Clusters
We compare the apparent axial ratio distributions of Brightest Cluster
Galaxies (BCGs) and normal ellipticals (Es) in our sample of 75 galaxy clusters
from the WINGS survey. Most BCGs in our clusters (69%) are classified as cD
galaxies. The sample of cDs has been completed by 14 additional cDs (non-BCGs)
we found in our clusters. We find that: (i) Es have triaxial shape, the
triaxiality sharing almost evenly the intrinsic axial ratios parameter space,
with a weak preference for prolateness; (ii) the BCGs have triaxial shape as
well. However, their tendence towards prolateness is much stronger than in the
case of Es. Such a strong prolateness appears entirely due to the sizeable
(dominant) component of cDs inside the WINGS sample of BCGs. In fact, while the
'normal'(non-cD) BCGs do not differ from Es, as far as the shape distribution
is concerned, the axial ratio distribution of BCG_cD galaxies is found to
support quite prolate shapes; (iii) our result turns out to be strongly at
variance with the only similar, previous analysis by Ryden et al.(1993)(RLP93),
where BCGs and Es were found to share the same axial ratio distribution; (iv)
our data suggest that the above discrepancy is mainly caused by the different
criteria that RLP93 and ourselves use to select the cluster samples, coupled
with a preference of cDs to reside in powerful X-ray emitting clusters; (v) the
GIF2 N-body results suggest that the prolateness of the BCGs (in particular the
cDs) could reflect the shape of the associated dark matter halos.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Berkeley Supernova Ia Program I: Observations, Data Reduction, and Spectroscopic Sample of 582 Low-Redshift Type Ia Supernovae
In this first paper in a series we present 1298 low-redshift (z\leq0.2)
optical spectra of 582 Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) observed from 1989 through
2008 as part of the Berkeley SN Ia Program (BSNIP). 584 spectra of 199 SNe Ia
have well-calibrated light curves with measured distance moduli, and many of
the spectra have been corrected for host-galaxy contamination. Most of the data
were obtained using the Kast double spectrograph mounted on the Shane 3 m
telescope at Lick Observatory and have a typical wavelength range of
3300-10,400 Ang., roughly twice as wide as spectra from most previously
published datasets. We present our observing and reduction procedures, and we
describe the resulting SN Database (SNDB), which will be an online, public,
searchable database containing all of our fully reduced spectra and companion
photometry. In addition, we discuss our spectral classification scheme (using
the SuperNova IDentification code, SNID; Blondin & Tonry 2007), utilising our
newly constructed set of SNID spectral templates. These templates allow us to
accurately classify our entire dataset, and by doing so we are able to
reclassify a handful of objects as bona fide SNe Ia and a few other objects as
members of some of the peculiar SN Ia subtypes. In fact, our dataset includes
spectra of nearly 90 spectroscopically peculiar SNe Ia. We also present
spectroscopic host-galaxy redshifts of some SNe Ia where these values were
previously unknown. [Abridged]Comment: 34 pages, 11 figures, 11 tables, revised version, re-submitted to
MNRAS. Spectra will be released in January 2013. The SN Database homepage
(http://hercules.berkeley.edu/database/index_public.html) contains the full
tables, plots of all spectra, and our new SNID template
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