564 research outputs found
Entry and exit in Missouri's swine industry by medium to large producers, 1964-1968
Cover title
Minkowski Functionals of Abell/ACO Clusters
We determine the Minkowski functionals for a sample of Abell/ACO clusters,
401 with measured and 16 with estimated redshifts. The four Minkowski
functionals (including the void probability function and the mean genus)
deliver a global description of the spatial distribution of clusters on scales
from to 60\hMpc with a clear geometric interpretation. Comparisons with
mock catalogues of N--body simulations using different variants of the CDM
model demonstrate the discriminative power of the description. The standard CDM
model and the model with tilted perturbation spectrum cannot generate the
Minkowski functionals of the cluster data, while a model with a cosmological
constant and a model with breaking of the scale invariance of perturbations
(BSI) yield compatible results.Comment: 10 pages, 13 Postscript figures, uses epsf.sty and mn.sty (included),
submitted to MNRA
CDM models with a steplike initial power spectrum
We investigate the properties of clusters of galaxies in the CDM
models with a steplike initial power spectrum. We examine the mass function,
the peculiar velocities and the power spectrum of clusters in models with
different values of the density parameter , the normalized Hubble
constant h and the spectral parameter p, which describes the shape of the
initial power spectrum. The results are compared with observations. We also
investigate the rms bulk velocity in the models, where the properties of
clusters are consistent with the observed data. We find that the power spectrum
of clusters is in good agreement with the observed power spectrum of the
Abell-ACO clusters, if the spectral parameter p is in the range p=0.6-0.8. The
power spectrum and the rms peculiar velocity of clusters are consistent with
observations only if . The models are consistent
with the observed properties of clusters, if h=0.50-0.63. For h=0.65, we find
that .Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Stellar properties of z ~ 1 Lyman-break galaxies from ACS slitless grism spectra
Lyman-break galaxies are now regularly found in the high redshift Universe by
searching for the break in the galaxy spectrum caused by the Lyman-limit
redshifted into the optical or even near-IR. At lower redshift, this break is
covered by the GALEX UV channels and small samples of z ~ 1 LBGs have been
presented in the literature. Here we give results from fitting the spectral
energy distributions of a small sub-set of low redshift LBGs and demonstrate
the advantage of including photometric points derived from HST ACS slitless
grism observations. The results show these galaxies to have very young, star
forming populations, while still being massive and dusty. LBGs at low and high
redshift show remarkable similarities in their properties, indicating that the
LBG selection method picks similar galaxies throughout the Universe.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, accepted in A&
Percolation in real Wildfires
This paper focuses on the statistical properties of wild-land fires and, in
particular, investigates if spread dynamics relates to simple invasion model.
The fractal dimension and lacunarity of three fire scars classified from
satellite imagery are analysed. Results indicate that the burned clusters
behave similarly to percolation clusters on boundaries and look more dense in
their core. We show that Dynamical Percolation reproduces this behaviour and
can help to describe the fire evolution. By mapping fire dynamics onto the
percolation models the strategies for fire control might be improved.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, epl sytle (epl.cls included
HD 77407 and GJ 577: two new young stellar binaries detected with the Calar Alto Adaptive Optics system ALFA
We present the first results from our search for close stellar and
sub-stellar companions to young nearby stars on the northern sky. Our infrared
imaging observations are obtained with the 3.5 m Calar Alto telescope and the
AO system ALFA. With two epoch observations which were separated by about one
year, we found two co-moving companion candidates, one close to HD 77407 and
one close to GJ 577. For the companion candidate near GJ 577, we obtained an
optical spectrum showing spectral type M4.5; this candidate is a bound low-mass
stellar companion confirmed by both proper motion and spectroscopy. We estimate
the masses for HD 77407 B and GJ 577 B to be ~0.3 to 0.5 Msun and ~0.16 to 0.2
Msun, respectively. Compared to Siess al.(2000) models, each of the two pairs
appears co-eval with HD 77407 A,B being 10 to 40 Myrs old and GJ 577 A,B being
older than 100 Myrs. We also took multi-epoch high-resolution spectra of HD
77407 to search for sub-stellar companions, but did not find any with 3 Mjup as
upper mass (msin(i)) limit (for up to 4 year orbits); however, we detected a
long-term radial velocity trend in HD 77407 A, consistent with a ~ 0.3 Msun
companion at ~ 50 AU separation, i.e. the one detected by the imaging. Hence,
HD 77407 B is confirmed to be a bound companion to HD 77407 A. We also present
limits for undetected, but detectable companions using a deep image of HD 77407
A and B, also observed with the Keck NIRC2 AO system; any brown dwarfs were
detectable outside of 0.5 arcsec (17 AU at HD 77407), giant planets with masses
from ~ 6.5 to 12 Mjup were detectable at > 1.5 arcsec.Comment: in pres
The Northern ROSAT All-Sky (NORAS) Galaxy Cluster Survey I: X-ray Properties of Clusters Detected as Extended X-ray Sources
In the construction of an X-ray selected sample of galaxy clusters for
cosmological studies, we have assembled a sample of 495 X-ray sources found to
show extended X-ray emission in the first processing of the ROSAT All-Sky
Survey. The sample covers the celestial region with declination and galactic latitude and comprises sources with
a count rate counts s and a source extent likelihood of 7. In
an optical follow-up identification program we find 378 (76%) of these sources
to be clusters of galaxies. ...Comment: 61 pages; ApJS in press; fixed bug in table file; also available at
(better image quality) http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/theorie/NORAS
Quantum Phase Transition in the Frustrated Heisenberg Antiferromagnet
Using the J_1-J_2 model, we present a description of quantum phase transition
from Neel ordered to the spin-liquid state based on the modified spin wave
theory. The general expression for the gap in the spectrum in the spin-liquid
phase is presented.Comment: 8 pages of REVTeX 3.0, one PostScript file appended (Eq. 15
corrected, two recent references added, + some minor changes
Deep 1.1 mm-wavelength imaging of the GOODS-S field by AzTEC/ASTE - I. Source catalogue and number counts
[Abridged] We present the first results from a 1.1 mm confusion-limited map
of the GOODS-S field taken with AzTEC on the ASTE telescope. We imaged a 270
sq. arcmin field to a 1\sigma depth of 0.48 - 0.73 mJy/beam, making this one of
the deepest blank-field surveys at mm-wavelengths ever achieved. Although our
GOODS-S map is extremely confused, we demonstrate that our source
identification and number counts analyses are robust, and the techniques
discussed in this paper are relevant for other deeply confused surveys. We find
a total of 41 dusty starburst galaxies with S/N >= 3.5 within this uniformly
covered region, where only two are expected to be false detections. We derive
the 1.1mm number counts from this field using both a "P(d)" analysis and a
semi-Bayesian technique, and find that both methods give consistent results.
Our data are well-fit by a Schechter function model with (S', N(3mJy), \alpha)
= (1.30+0.19 mJy, 160+27 (mJy/deg^2)^(-1), -2.0). Given the depth of this
survey, we put the first tight constraints on the 1.1 mm number counts at
S(1.1mm) = 0.5 mJy, and we find evidence that the faint-end of the number
counts at S(850\mu m) < 2.0 mJy from various SCUBA surveys towards lensing
clusters are biased high. In contrast to the 870 \mu m survey of this field
with the LABOCA camera, we find no apparent under-density of sources compared
to previous surveys at 1.1 mm. Additionally, we find a significant number of
SMGs not identified in the LABOCA catalogue. We find that in contrast to
observations at wavelengths < 500 \mu m, MIPS 24 \mu m sources do not resolve
the total energy density in the cosmic infrared background at 1.1 mm,
demonstrating that a population of z > 3 dust-obscured galaxies that are
unaccounted for at these shorter wavelengths potentially contribute to a large
fraction (~2/3) of the infrared background at 1.1 mm.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures. Accepted to MNRAS
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