1,503 research outputs found
Goldstone Fermion Dark Matter
We propose that the fermionic superpartner of a weak-scale Goldstone boson
can be a natural WIMP candidate. The p-wave annihilation of this `Goldstone
fermion' into pairs of Goldstone bosons automatically generates the correct
relic abundance, whereas the XENON100 direct detection bounds are evaded due to
suppressed couplings to the Standard Model. Further, it is able to avoid
indirect detection constraints because the relevant s-wave annihilations are
small. The interactions of the Goldstone supermultiplet can induce non-standard
Higgs decays and novel collider phenomenology.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures. References added, minor typos corrected.
Submitted to JHE
The Initial Mass Function of Low-Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs in Young Clusters
We have obtained images of the Trapezium Cluster (140" x 140"; 0.3 pc x 0.3
pc) with the Hubble Space Telescope Near-Infrared Camera and Multi-Object
Spectrometer (NICMOS). Combining these data with new ground-based K-band
spectra (R=800) and existing spectral types and photometry and the models of
D'Antona & Mazzitelli, we find that the distributions of ages of comparable
samples of stars in the Trapezium, rho Oph, and IC 348 indicate median ages of
\~0.4 Myr for the first two regions and ~1-2 Myr for the latter. The low-mass
IMFs in these sites of clustered star formation are similar over a wide range
of stellar densities and other environmental conditions. With current data, we
cannot rule out modest variations in the substellar mass functions among these
clusters. We then make the best estimate of the true form of the IMF in the
Trapezium by using the evolutionary models of Baraffe et al. and an empirically
adjusted temperature scale and compare this mass function to recent results for
the Pleiades and the field. All of these data are consistent with an IMF that
is flat or rises slowly from the substellar regime to about 0.6 Msun, and then
rolls over into a power law that continues from about 1 Msun to higher masses
with a slope similar to or somewhat larger than the Salpeter value of 1.35. For
the Trapezium, this behavior holds from our completeness limit of ~0.02 Msun
and probably, after a modest completeness correction, even from 0.01-0.02 Msun.
These data include ~50 likely brown dwarfs. We test the predictions of theories
of the IMF against various properties of the observed IMF.Comment: 34 pages, 13 figures, for color image see
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~kluhman/trap/colorimage.jp
Submillimeter Studies of Prestellar Cores and Protostars: Probing the Initial Conditions for Protostellar Collapse
Improving our understanding of the initial conditions and earliest stages of
protostellar collapse is crucial to gain insight into the origin of stellar
masses, multiple systems, and protoplanetary disks. Observationally, there are
two complementary approaches to this problem: (1) studying the structure and
kinematics of prestellar cores observed prior to protostar formation, and (2)
studying the structure of young (e.g. Class 0) accreting protostars observed
soon after point mass formation. We discuss recent advances made in this area
thanks to (sub)millimeter mapping observations with large single-dish
telescopes and interferometers. In particular, we argue that the beginning of
protostellar collapse is much more violent in cluster-forming clouds than in
regions of distributed star formation. Major breakthroughs are expected in this
field from future large submillimeter instruments such as Herschel and ALMA.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the conference
"Chemistry as a Diagnostic of Star Formation" (C.L. Curry & M. Fich eds.
Reward processing in autism: a thematic series
This thematic series presents theoretical and empirical papers focused on understanding autism from the perspective of reward processing deficits. Although the core symptoms of autism have not traditionally been conceptualized with respect to altered reward-based processes, it is clear that brain reward circuitry plays a critical role in guiding social and nonsocial learning and behavior throughout development. Additionally, brain reward circuitry may respond to social sources of information in ways that are similar to responses to primary rewards, and recent clinical data consistently suggest abnormal behavioral and neurobiologic responses to rewards in autism. This thematic series presents empirical data and review papers that highlight the utility of considering autism from the perspective of reward processing deficits. Our hope is that this novel framework may further elucidate autism pathophysiology, with the ultimate goal of yielding novel insights with potential therapeutic implications
The stellar and sub-stellar IMF of simple and composite populations
The current knowledge on the stellar IMF is documented. It appears to become
top-heavy when the star-formation rate density surpasses about 0.1Msun/(yr
pc^3) on a pc scale and it may become increasingly bottom-heavy with increasing
metallicity and in increasingly massive early-type galaxies. It declines quite
steeply below about 0.07Msun with brown dwarfs (BDs) and very low mass stars
having their own IMF. The most massive star of mass mmax formed in an embedded
cluster with stellar mass Mecl correlates strongly with Mecl being a result of
gravitation-driven but resource-limited growth and fragmentation induced
starvation. There is no convincing evidence whatsoever that massive stars do
form in isolation. Various methods of discretising a stellar population are
introduced: optimal sampling leads to a mass distribution that perfectly
represents the exact form of the desired IMF and the mmax-to-Mecl relation,
while random sampling results in statistical variations of the shape of the
IMF. The observed mmax-to-Mecl correlation and the small spread of IMF
power-law indices together suggest that optimally sampling the IMF may be the
more realistic description of star formation than random sampling from a
universal IMF with a constant upper mass limit. Composite populations on galaxy
scales, which are formed from many pc scale star formation events, need to be
described by the integrated galactic IMF. This IGIMF varies systematically from
top-light to top-heavy in dependence of galaxy type and star formation rate,
with dramatic implications for theories of galaxy formation and evolution.Comment: 167 pages, 37 figures, 3 tables, published in Stellar Systems and
Galactic Structure, Vol.5, Springer. This revised version is consistent with
the published version and includes additional references and minor additions
to the text as well as a recomputed Table 1. ISBN 978-90-481-8817-
A previously unrecognized promoter of LMO2 forms part of a transcriptional regulatory circuit mediating LMO2 expression in a subset of T-acute lymphoblastic leukaemia patients
Memory-experience gap in early adolescents' happiness reports
Studies among adult populations show that estimates of how happy one has felt in the past tend
to be more positive than average happiness as assessed using time sampling techniques. This
‘memory-experience gap’ is attributed to cognitive biases, among which fading affect bias. In
this paper we report a study among 352 pupils of a secondary school in the Netherlands. These
youngsters reported subsequently: 1) how happy they had felt yesterday, 2) how happy they had
felt during the last month, 3) what they had done the previous day and 4) how the
The Evolution of Compact Binary Star Systems
We review the formation and evolution of compact binary stars consisting of
white dwarfs (WDs), neutron stars (NSs), and black holes (BHs). Binary NSs and
BHs are thought to be the primary astrophysical sources of gravitational waves
(GWs) within the frequency band of ground-based detectors, while compact
binaries of WDs are important sources of GWs at lower frequencies to be covered
by space interferometers (LISA). Major uncertainties in the current
understanding of properties of NSs and BHs most relevant to the GW studies are
discussed, including the treatment of the natal kicks which compact stellar
remnants acquire during the core collapse of massive stars and the common
envelope phase of binary evolution. We discuss the coalescence rates of binary
NSs and BHs and prospects for their detections, the formation and evolution of
binary WDs and their observational manifestations. Special attention is given
to AM CVn-stars -- compact binaries in which the Roche lobe is filled by
another WD or a low-mass partially degenerate helium-star, as these stars are
thought to be the best LISA verification binary GW sources.Comment: 105 pages, 18 figure
- …
