109,333 research outputs found
Long-Time Evolution of Gas-Free Disc Galaxies in Binary Systems
We present the results of several detailed numerical N-body simulations of
the dynamical interactions of two equal mass disc galaxies. Both galaxies are
embedded in spherical halos of dark matter and contain central bulges. Our
analysis of the dynamical evolution of the binary system focuses on the
morphological evolution of the stellar distribution of the discs. The satellite
galaxy has coplanar or polar disc orientation in relation to the disc of the
primary galaxy and their initial orbits are prograde eccentric (,
or ). Both galaxies have mass and size comparable to the Milky
Way. We show that the merger of the two disc galaxies, depending on the
relative orientation of the discs, can yield either a disc or lenticular
remnant, instead of an elliptical one. These are the first simulations in the
literature to show the formation of S0-like galaxies from protracted binary
galaxy interactions. Additionally, we demonstrate that the time to merger
increases linearly with the initial apocentric distance between the galaxies,
and decreases with the initial orbital eccentricity. We also show that the
tidal forces of the discs excite transient and wave modes, i.e.,
lopsidedness, spiral arms, and bars. However, after the merging of the discs,
such instabilities fade completely, and the remnant is thicker and bigger than
the original discs. The maximum relative amplitude of these waves is at most
about 15 times greater compared to the control case. of these two wave modes.
Finally, the disc settles down quickly, after the merger, in less than one
outer disc rotation period.Comment: 23 pages, 3 tables and 16 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Technique for measuring time-base errors of magnetic instrumentation recorders/reproducers
Time-base error analysis of magnetically recorded and played back digital data using tape flutter spectral density and amplitude probability distribution measurements and rms time plot
How the Charge Can Affect the Formation of Gravastars
In recent work we physically interpreted a special gravastar solution
characterized by a zero Schwarzschild mass. In fact, in that case, none
gravastar was formed and the shell expanded, leaving behind a de Sitter or a
Minkowski spacetime, or collapsed without forming an event horizon, originating
what we called a massive non-gravitational object. This object has two
components of non zero mass but the exterior spacetime is Minkowski or de
Sitter. One of the component is a massive thin shell and the other one is de
Sitter spacetime inside. The total mass of this object is zero Schwarzschild
mass, which characterizes an exterior vacuum spacetime. Here, we extend this
study to the case where we have a charged shell. Now, the exterior is a
Reissner-Nordstr\"om spacetime and, depending on the parameter
of the equation of state of the shell, and the charge, a
gravastar structure can be formed. We have found that the presence of the
charge contributes to the stability of the gravastar, if the charge is greater
than a critical value. Otherwise, a massive non-gravitational object is formed
for small charges.Comment: 17 pages and 7 figures, several typos corrected, accepted for
publication in JCA
The Fusion Activity of HIV-1 gp41 Depends on Interhelical Interactions
Infection by human immunodeficiency virus type I requires the fusogenic activity of gp41, the transmembrane subunit of the viral envelope protein. Crystallographic studies have revealed that fusion-active gp41 is a "trimer-of-hairpins" in which three central N-terminal helices form a trimeric coiled coil surrounded by three antiparallel C-terminal helices. This structure is stabilized primarily by hydrophobic, interhelical interactions, and several critical contacts are made between residues that form a deep cavity in the N-terminal trimer and the C-helix residues that pack into this cavity. In addition, the trimer-of-hairpins structure has an extensive network of hydrogen bonds within a conserved glutamine-rich layer of poorly understood function. Formation of the trimer-of-hairpins structure is thought to directly force the viral and target membranes together, resulting in membrane fusion and viral entry. We test this hypothesis by constructing four series of gp41 mutants with disrupted interactions between the N- and C-helices. Notably, in the three series containing mutations within the cavity, gp41 activity correlates well with the stability of the N-C interhelical interaction. In contrast, a fourth series of mutants involving the glutamine layer residue Gln-653 show fusion defects even though the stability of the hairpin is close to wild-type. These results provide evidence that gp41 hairpin stability is critical for mediating fusion and suggest a novel role for the glutamine layer in gp41 function
Electron paramagnetic resonance g-tensors from state interaction spin-orbit coupling density matrix renormalization group
We present a state interaction spin-orbit coupling method to calculate
electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) -tensors from density matrix
renormalization group wavefunctions. We apply the technique to compute
-tensors for the \ce{TiF3} and \ce{CuCl4^2-} complexes, a [2Fe-2S] model of
the active center of ferredoxins, and a \ce{Mn4CaO5} model of the S2 state of
the oxygen evolving complex. These calculations raise the prospects of
determining -tensors in multireference calculations with a large number of
open shells.Comment: 19 page
Effects of f(R) Model on the Dynamical Instability of Expansionfree Gravitational Collapse
Dark energy models based on f(R) theory have been extensively studied in
literature to realize the late time acceleration. In this paper, we have chosen
a viable f(R) model and discussed its effects on the dynamical instability of
expansionfree fluid evolution generating a central vacuum cavity. For this
purpose, contracted Bianchi identities are obtained for both the usual matter
as well as dark source. The term dark source is named to the higher order
curvature corrections arising from f(R) gravity. The perturbation scheme is
applied and different terms belonging to Newtonian and post Newtonian regimes
are identified. It is found that instability range of expansionfree fluid on
external boundary as well as on internal vacuum cavity is independent of
adiabatic index but depends upon the density profile, pressure
anisotropy and f(R) model.Comment: 26 pages, no figure. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1108.266
Efficiency in the use of a computer for network analysis
Efficiency in use of digital computer for network analysi
A metapopulation model with Markovian landscape dynamics
We study a variant of Hanski's incidence function model that allows habitat
patch characteristics to vary over time following a Markov process. The widely
studied case where patches are classified as either suitable or unsuitable is
included as a special case. For large metapopulations, we determine a recursion
for the probability that a given habitat patch is occupied. This recursion
enables us to clarify the role of landscape dynamics in the survival of a
metapopulation. In particular, we show that landscape dynamics affects the
persistence and equilibrium level of the metapopulation primarily through its
effect on the distribution of a local population's life span.Comment: This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0
license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
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