13,345 research outputs found
Microwave radiometric studies and ground truth measurements of the NASA/USGS Southern California test site
The field measurement program conducted at the NASA/USGS Southern California Test Site is discussed. Ground truth data and multifrequency microwave brightness data were acquired by a mobile field laboratory operating in conjunction with airborne instruments. The ground based investigations were performed at a number of locales representing a variety of terrains including open desert, cultivated fields, barren fields, portions of the San Andreas Fault Zone, and the Salton Sea. The measurements acquired ground truth data and microwave brightness data at wavelengths of 0.8 cm, 2.2 cm, and 21 cm
The Arp 220 merger on kpc scales
For the first time we study the Eastern nucleus in greater detail and search
for the more extended emission in the molecular gas in different CO line
transitions of the famous ULIRG Arp 220. Furthermore we present a model of the
merger in Arp 220 on large scales with the help of the CO data and an optical
and near-infrared composite HST image of the prototypical ULIRG. Using the
Plateau de Bure Interferometer (PdBI) we obtained CO(2-1) and (1-0) data at
wavelengths of 1 and 3 mm in 1994, 1996, 1997 and 2006 at different beam sizes
and spatial resolutions. The simulations of the merger in Arp 220 were
performed with the Identikit modeling tool. The model parameters that describe
the galaxy merger best give a mass ratio of 1:2 and result in a merger of
~6x10^8 yrs. The low resolution CO(1-0) PdBI observations suggest that there
are indications for emission ~10" towards the south, as well as to the north
and to the west of the two nuclei.Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ, 14 pages 10 figure
An alternative attractor in gauged NJL inflation
We have investigated the attractor structure for the CMB fluctuations in
composite inflation scenario within the gauged Nambu-Jona-Lasinio (NJL) model.
Such composite inflation represents an attractor which can not be found in a
fundamental scalar model. As is known, the number of inflationary models
contains the attractor classified by the -attractor model. It is found
that the attractor inflation in the gauged NJL model corresponds to the case.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Probing the Gamma-Ray Burst Rate with Trigger Simulations of the Swift Burst Alert Telescope
The long gamma-ray burst (GRB) rate is essential for revealing the connection
between GRBs, supernovae and stellar evolution. Additionally, the GRB rate at
high redshift provides a strong probe of star formation history in the early
universe. While hundreds of GRBs are observed by Swift, it remains difficult to
determine the intrinsic GRB rate due to the complex trigger algorithm of Swift.
Current studies usually approximate the Swift trigger algorithm by a single
detection threshold. However, unlike the previously flown GRB instruments,
Swift has over 500 trigger criteria based on photon count rate and additional
image threshold for localization. To investigate possible systematic biases and
explore the intrinsic GRB properties, we developed a program that is capable of
simulating all the rate trigger criteria and mimicking the image trigger
threshold. We use this program to search for the intrinsic GRB rate. Our
simulations show that adopting the complex trigger algorithm of Swift increases
the detection rate of dim bursts. As a result, we find that either the GRB rate
is much higher than previously expected at large redshift, or the luminosity
evolution is non-negligible. We will discuss the best results of the GRB rate
in our search, and their impact on the star-formation history.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, 7th Huntsville Gamma-Ray Burst Symposium, GRB
2013: paper 35 in eConf Proceedings C130414
Evidence From HETE-2 For GRB Evolution With Redshift
After taking into account threshold effects, we find that the
isotropic-equivalent energies E_iso and luminosities L_iso of gamma-ray bursts
(GRBs) are correlated with redshift at the 5% and 0.9% signficance levels,
respectively. Our results are based on 10 BeppoSAX GRBs and 11 HETE-2 GRBs with
known redshifts. Our results suggest that the isotropic-equivalent energies and
luminosities of GRBs increase with redshift. They strengthen earlier clues to
this effect from analyses of the BATSE catalog of GRBs, using the variability
of burst time histories as an estimator of burst luminosities (and therefore
redshifts), and from an analysis of BeppoSAX bursts only. If the
isotropic-equivalent energies and luminosities of GRBs really do increase with
redshift, it suggests that GRB jets at high redshifts may be narrower and thus
the cores of GRB progenitor stars at high redshifts may be rotating more
rapidly. It also suggests that GRBs at very high redshifts may be more luminous
-- and therefore easier to detect -- than has been thought, which would make
GRBs a more powerful probe of cosmology and the early universe than has been
thought.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, to appear in proc. 2003 GRB Conference, Santa Fe,
N
Magnetic translation groups in an n-dimensional torus
A charged particle in a uniform magnetic field in a two-dimensional torus has
a discrete noncommutative translation symmetry instead of a continuous
commutative translation symmetry. We study topology and symmetry of a particle
in a magnetic field in a torus of arbitrary dimensions. The magnetic
translation group (MTG) is defined as a group of translations that leave the
gauge field invariant. We show that the MTG on an n-dimensional torus is
isomorphic to a central extension of a cyclic group Z_{nu_1} x ... x
Z_{nu_{2l}} x T^m by U(1) with 2l+m=n. We construct and classify irreducible
unitary representations of the MTG on a three-torus and apply the
representation theory to three examples. We shortly describe a representation
theory for a general n-torus. The MTG on an n-torus can be regarded as a
generalization of the so-called noncommutative torus.Comment: 29 pages, LaTeX2e, title changed, re-organized, to be published in
Journal of Mathematical Physic
Kinematics of Tidal Debris from Omega Centauri's Progenitor Galaxy
We present the kinematic properties of a tidally disrupted dwarf galaxy in
the Milky Way, based on the hypothesis that its central part once contained the
most massive Galactic globular cluster, omega Cen. Dynamical evolution of a
self-gravitating progenitor galaxy that follows the present-day and likely past
orbits of omega Cen is calculated numerically and the kinematic nature of their
tidal debris is analyzed, combined with randomly generated stars comprising
spheroidal halo and flat disk components. We show that the retrograde rotation
of the debris stars at km/s accords with a recently discovered,
large radial velocity stream at km/s towards the Galactic longitude
of . These stars also contribute, only in part, to a reported
retrograde motion of the outer halo at the North Galactic Pole. The prospects
for future debris searches and the implications for the early evolution of the
Galaxy are briefly presented.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
- …
