24,415 research outputs found
Extinction in neutrally stable stochastic Lotka-Volterra models
Populations of competing biological species exhibit a fascinating interplay
between the nonlinear dynamics of evolutionary selection forces and random
fluctuations arising from the stochastic nature of the interactions. The
processes leading to extinction of species, whose understanding is a key
component in the study of evolution and biodiversity, are influenced by both of
these factors.
In this paper, we investigate a class of stochastic population dynamics
models based on generalized Lotka-Volterra systems. In the case of neutral
stability of the underlying deterministic model, the impact of intrinsic noise
on the survival of species is dramatic: it destroys coexistence of interacting
species on a time scale proportional to the population size. We introduce a new
method based on stochastic averaging which allows one to understand this
extinction process quantitatively by reduction to a lower-dimensional effective
dynamics. This is performed analytically for two highly symmetrical models and
can be generalized numerically to more complex situations. The extinction
probability distributions and other quantities of interest we obtain show
excellent agreement with simulations.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figure
Driven lattice gas of dimers coupled to a bulk reservoir
We investigate the non-equilibrium steady state of a one-dimensional (1D)
lattice gas of dimers. The dynamics is described by a totally asymmetric
exclusion process (TASEP) supplemented by attachment and detachment processes,
mimicking chemical equilibrium of the 1D driven transport with the bulk
reservoir. The steady-state phase diagram, current and density profiles are
calculated using both a refined mean-field theory and extensive stochastic
simulations. As a consequence of the on-off kinetics, a new phase coexistence
region arises intervening between low and high density phases such that the
discontinuous transition line of the TASEP splits into two continuous ones. The
results of the mean-field theory and simulations are found to coincide. We show
that the physical picture obtained in the corresponding lattice gas model with
monomers is robust, in the sense that the phase diagram changes quantitatively,
but the topology remains unaltered. The mechanism for phase separation is
identified as generic for a wide class of driven 1D lattice gases.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, 1tabl
Identification of Potential Weak Target Radio Quasars for ASTRO-G In-Beam Phase-Referencing
We apply an efficient selection method to identify potential weak Very Long
Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) target quasars simply using optical (SDSS) and
low-resolution radio (FIRST) catalogue data. Our search is restricted to within
12" from known compact radio sources that are detectable as phase-reference
calibrators for ASTRO-G at 8.4 GHz frequency. These calibrators have estimated
correlated flux density >20 mJy on the longest ground-space VLBI baselines. The
search radius corresponds to the primary beam size of the ASTRO-G antenna. We
show that ~20 quasars with at least mJy-level expected flux density can be
pre-selected as potential in-beam phase-reference targets for ASTRO-G at 8.4
GHz frequency. Most of them have never been imaged with VLBI. The sample of
these dominantly weak sources offers a good opportunity to study their radio
structures with unprecedented angular resolution provided by Space VLBI. The
method of in-beam phase-referencing is independent from the ability of the
orbiting radio telescope to do rapid position-switching manoeuvres between the
calibrators and the nearby reference sources, and less sensitive to the
satellite orbit determination uncertainties.Comment: 5 pages, accepted for the Publ. Astron. Soc. Japan (Vol. 61, No. 1,
Feb 2009
Reaffirming Human Dignity in Disputes Over Children Born From Assisted Reproductive Technologies
Phase perturbation measurements through a heated ionosphere
High frequency radiowaves incident on an overdense (i.e., HF-frequency penetration frequency) ionosphere produce electron density irregularities. The effect of such ionospheric irregularities on the phase of UHF-radiowaves was determined. For that purpose the phase of radiowaves originating from celestial radio sources was observed with two antennas. The radiosources were chosen such that the line of sight to at least one of the antennas (usually both) passed through the modified volume of the ionosphere. Observations at 430 MHz and at 2380 MHz indicate that natural irregularities have a much stronger effect on the UHF phase fluctuations than the HF-induced irregularities for presently achieved HF-power densities of 20-80 uW/sq m. It is not clear whether some of the effects observed are the result of HF-modification of the ionosphere. Upper limits on the phase perturbations produced by HF-modification are 10 deg at 2380 MHz and 80 deg at 430 MHz
Dynamic Light Scattering from Semidilute Actin Solutions: A Study of Hydrodynamic Screening, Filament Bending Stiffness and the Effect of Tropomyosin/Troponin-Binding
Quasi-elastic light scattering (QELS) is applied to investigate the effect of
the tropomyosin/troponin complex (Tm/Tn) on the stiffness of actin filaments.
The importance of hydrodynamic screening in semidilute solutions is
demonstrated. A new concentration dependent expression for the dynamic
structure factor of semiflexible polymers in semidilute solutions
is used to analyze the experimental QELS data. A concentration independent
value for the bending modulus is thus obtained. It increases by 50\%
as a consequence of Tm/Tn binding in a 7:1:1 molar ratio of actin/Tm/Tn. In
addition a new expression for the initial slope of the dynamic structure factor
of a semiflexible polymer is used to determine the effective hydrodynamic
diameter of the actin filament. Our results confirm the general relevance of
the concept of (intrinsic) semiflexibility to polymer dynamics.Comment: 9 pages, RevTeX, 9 figures, all uuencoded gzipe
Exact results for the Kardar--Parisi--Zhang equation with spatially correlated noise
We investigate the Kardar--Parisi--Zhang (KPZ) equation in spatial
dimensions with Gaussian spatially long--range correlated noise ---
characterized by its second moment --- by means of dynamic field theory and the
renormalization group. Using a stochastic Cole--Hopf transformation we derive
{\em exact} exponents and scaling functions for the roughening transition and
the smooth phase above the lower critical dimension . Below
the lower critical dimension, there is a line marking the stability
boundary between the short-range and long-range noise fixed points. For , the general structure of the renormalization-group equations
fixes the values of the dynamic and roughness exponents exactly, whereas above
, one has to rely on some perturbational techniques. We discuss the
location of this stability boundary in light of the exact results
derived in this paper, and from results known in the literature. In particular,
we conjecture that there might be two qualitatively different strong-coupling
phases above and below the lower critical dimension, respectively.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figure
Two in one? A possible dual radio-emitting nucleus in the quasar SDSS J1425+3231
The radio-emitting quasar SDSS J1425+3231 (z=0.478) was recently found to
have double-peaked narrow [O III] optical emission lines. Based on the analysis
of the optical spectrum, Peng et al. (2011) suggested that this object harbours
a dual active galactic nucleus (AGN) system, with two supermassive black holes
(SMBHs) separated on the kpc scale. SMBH pairs should be ubiquitous according
to hierarchical galaxy formation scenarios in which the host galaxies and their
central black holes grow together via interactions and eventual mergers. Yet
the number of presently-confirmed dual SMBHs on kpc or smaller scales remains
small. A possible way to obtain direct observational evidence for duality is to
conduct high-resolution radio interferometric measurements, provided that both
AGN are in an evolutionary phase when some activity is going on in the radio.
We used the technique of Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) to image SDSS
J1425+3231. Observations made with the European VLBI Network (EVN) at 1.7 GHz
and 5 GHz frequencies in 2011 revealed compact radio emission at sub-mJy flux
density levels from two components with a projected linear separation of
\sim2.6 kpc. These two components support the possibility of a dual AGN system.
The weaker component remained undetected at 5 GHz, due to its steep radio
spectrum. Further study will be necessary to securely rule out a jet--shock
interpretation of the less dominant compact radio source. Assuming the dual AGN
interpretation, we discuss black hole masses, luminosities, and accretion rates
of the two components, using available X-ray, optical, and radio data. While
high-resolution radio interferometric imaging is not an efficient technique to
search blindly for dual AGN, it is an invaluable tool to confirm the existence
of selected candidates.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of
the Royal Astronomical Societ
Four hot DOGs eaten up with the EVN
Hot dust-obscured galaxies (hot DOGs) are a rare class of hyperluminous
infrared galaxies recently identified with the Wide-field Infrared Survey
Explorer (WISE) satellite. The majority of the ~1000-member all-sky population
should be at high redshifts (z~2-3), at the peak of star formation in the
history of the Universe. This class most likely represents a short phase during
galaxy merging and evolution, a transition from starburst- to AGN-dominated
phases. For the first time, we observed four hot DOGs with known mJy-level
radio emission using the European VLBI Network (EVN) at 1.7 GHz, in a hope to
find compact radio features characteristic to AGN activity. All four target
sources are detected at ~15-30 mas angular resolution, confirming the presence
of an active nucleus. The sources are spatially resolved, i.e. the flux density
of the VLBI-detected components is smaller than the total flux density,
suggesting that a fraction of the radio emission originates from larger-scale
(partly starburst-related) activity. Here we show the preliminary results of
our e-EVN observations made in 2014 February, and discuss WISE J1814+3412, an
object with kpc-scale symmetric radio structure, in more detail.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure; appears in the proceedings of the 12th European
VLBI Network Symposium and Users Meeting (7-10 October 2014, Cagliari,
Italy), eds. A. Tarchi, M. Giroletti & L. Feretti. JREF Proceedings of
Science, PoS(EVN 2014)003,
http://pos.sissa.it/archive/conferences/230/003/EVN%202014_003.pd
- …
