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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Towards Gross-Pitaevskiian Description Of Solar System & Galaxies, Florentin Smarandache, Victor Christianto, Yunita Umniyati May 2020

Towards Gross-Pitaevskiian Description Of Solar System & Galaxies, Florentin Smarandache, Victor Christianto, Yunita Umniyati

Branch Mathematics and Statistics Faculty and Staff Publications

In this paper, we argue that Gross-Pitaevskii model can be a more complete description of both solar system and spiral galaxies, especially taking into account the nature of chirality and vortices in galaxies. We also hope to bring out some correspondence among existing models, e.g., the topological vortex approach, Burgers equation in the light of KAM theory, and the Cantorian Navier-Stokes approach. We hope further investigation can be done around this line of approach.


A Hierarchical Model For The Ages Of Galactic Halo White Dwarfs, Shijing Si, Ted Von Hippel, David A. Van Dyk, Elliot Robinson, Aaron Webster, Et Al. Mar 2017

A Hierarchical Model For The Ages Of Galactic Halo White Dwarfs, Shijing Si, Ted Von Hippel, David A. Van Dyk, Elliot Robinson, Aaron Webster, Et Al.

Publications

In astrophysics, we often aim to estimate one or more parameters for each member object in a population and study the distribution of the fitted parameters across the population. In this paper, we develop novel methods that allow us to take advantage of existing software designed for such case-by-case analyses to simultaneously fit parameters of both the individual objects and the parameters that quantify their distribution across the population. Our methods are based on Bayesian hierarchical modelling which is known to produce parameter estimators for the individual objects that are on average closer to their true values than estimators based …


The Acs Survey Of Galactic Globular Clusters Xiv: Bayesian Single-Population Analysis Of 69 Globular Clusters, R. Wagner-Kaiser, Ted Von Hippel, A. Sarajedini, D. C. Stenning, D. A. Van Dyck, Et Al. Mar 2017

The Acs Survey Of Galactic Globular Clusters Xiv: Bayesian Single-Population Analysis Of 69 Globular Clusters, R. Wagner-Kaiser, Ted Von Hippel, A. Sarajedini, D. C. Stenning, D. A. Van Dyck, Et Al.

Publications

We use Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging from the ACS Treasury Survey to determine fits for single population isochrones of 69 Galactic globular clusters. Using robust Bayesian analysis techniques, we simultaneously determine ages, distances, absorptions, and helium values for each cluster under the scenario of a \single" stellar population on model grids with solar ratio heavy element abundances. The set of cluster parameters is determined in a consistent and reproducible manner for all clusters using the Bayesian analysis suite BASE-9. Our results are used to re-visit the age-metallicity relation. We find correlations with helium and several other parameters such as …


A Re-Interpretation Of The Triangulum-Andromeda Stellar Clouds: A Population Of Halo Stars Kicked Out Of The Galactic Disk, Adrian M. Price-Whelan, Kathryn V. Johnston, Allyson A. Sheffield, Chervin F. P. Laporte, Branimir Sesar Jul 2015

A Re-Interpretation Of The Triangulum-Andromeda Stellar Clouds: A Population Of Halo Stars Kicked Out Of The Galactic Disk, Adrian M. Price-Whelan, Kathryn V. Johnston, Allyson A. Sheffield, Chervin F. P. Laporte, Branimir Sesar

Publications and Research

The Triangulum–Andromeda stellar clouds (TriAnd1 and TriAnd2) are a pair of concentric ring- or shell-like overdensities at large R (≈30 kpc) and Z (≈−10 kpc) in the Galactic halo that are thought to have been formed from the accretion and disruption of a satellite galaxy. This paper critically reexamines this formation scenario by comparing the number ratio of RR Lyrae to M giant stars associated with the TriAnd clouds with other structures in the Galaxy. The current data suggest a stellar population for these overdensities (fRR: MG < 0.38 at 95 per cent confidence) quite unlike any of the known satellites of the Milky Way (fRR: MG ≈ 0.5 for the very largest and f …


Abundance Patterns In The Spiral Galaxy Messier 33, Melissa A. Siemer, Ravi Sankrit Jan 2013

Abundance Patterns In The Spiral Galaxy Messier 33, Melissa A. Siemer, Ravi Sankrit

STAR Program Research Presentations

Messier 33 (M33) is a spiral disk galaxy, similar to our galaxy, approximately 3 million light-years from Earth. Because of its proximity to Earth and face-on viewing angle, it is easy to see individual objects. Consequently, M33 is in an ideal position for obtaining data on elemental abundances. By studying M33, we learn how galaxies like our own form and change over time.

We use published optical spectroscopic data, obtained and assembled from online sources, to map the abundances of various elements (Helium, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Neon, Argon, Sulfur) in the planetary nebula and HII region populations of M33. We classify …


A Four-Year Xmm-Newton/Chandra Monitoring Campaign Of The Galactic Centre: Analysing The X-Ray Transients, N. Degenaar, R. Wijnands, E. M. Cackett, J. Homan, J. J. M. In 'T Zand, E. Kuulkers, T. J. Maccarone, M. Van Der Klis Sep 2012

A Four-Year Xmm-Newton/Chandra Monitoring Campaign Of The Galactic Centre: Analysing The X-Ray Transients, N. Degenaar, R. Wijnands, E. M. Cackett, J. Homan, J. J. M. In 'T Zand, E. Kuulkers, T. J. Maccarone, M. Van Der Klis

Physics and Astronomy Faculty Research Publications

We report on the results of a four-year long X-ray monitoring campaign of the central 1.2 square degrees of our Galaxy, performed with Chandra and XMM-Newton between 2005 and 2008. Our study focuses on the properties of transient X-ray sources that reach 2-10 keV luminosities of LX ≳ 1034 erg s-1 for an assumed distance of 8 kpc. There are 17 known X-ray transients within the field of view of our campaign, eight of which were detected in outburst during our observations: the transient neutron star low-mass X-ray binaries GRS 1741-2853, AX J1745.6-2901, SAX J1747.0-2853, KS 1741-293 …


Stellar Fossils: Globular Clusters As Probes Of The Galaxy, Shane L. Larson Jul 2011

Stellar Fossils: Globular Clusters As Probes Of The Galaxy, Shane L. Larson

Public Talks

No abstract provided.


The Dark Side Of The Universe: Dark Matter In The Galaxy And Cosmos, Shane L. Larson Jan 2011

The Dark Side Of The Universe: Dark Matter In The Galaxy And Cosmos, Shane L. Larson

Public Talks

No abstract provided.


The Acs Survey Of Galactic Globular Clusters. Vii. Relative Ages, Antonio Marín-Franch, Antonio Aparicio, Giampaolo Piotto, Alfred Rosenberg, Brian Chaboyer Apr 2009

The Acs Survey Of Galactic Globular Clusters. Vii. Relative Ages, Antonio Marín-Franch, Antonio Aparicio, Giampaolo Piotto, Alfred Rosenberg, Brian Chaboyer

Dartmouth Scholarship

The ACS Survey of Galactic globular clusters is a Hubble Space Telescope Treasury program designed to provide a new large, deep, and homogeneous photometric database. Based on observations from this program, we have measured precise relative ages for a sample of 64 Galactic globular clusters by comparing the relative position of the clusters' main-sequence (MS) turnoffs, using MS fitting to cross-compare clusters within the sample. This method provides relative ages to a formal precision of 2%-7%. We demonstrate that the calculated relative ages are independent of the choice of theoretical model. We find that the Galactic globular cluster sample can …


The Acs Survey Of Galactic Globular Clusters. Iii. The Double Subgiant Branch Of Ngc 1851, A. P. Milone, L. R. Bedin, G. Piotto, J. Anderson, I. R. King, A. Sarajedini, A. Dotter, B. Chaboyer, A. Marin Franch, S. Majewski, A. Aparicio, M. Hempel, N. E.Q Paust, I. N. Reid, A. Rosenberg, M. Siegel Sep 2008

The Acs Survey Of Galactic Globular Clusters. Iii. The Double Subgiant Branch Of Ngc 1851, A. P. Milone, L. R. Bedin, G. Piotto, J. Anderson, I. R. King, A. Sarajedini, A. Dotter, B. Chaboyer, A. Marin Franch, S. Majewski, A. Aparicio, M. Hempel, N. E.Q Paust, I. N. Reid, A. Rosenberg, M. Siegel

Dartmouth Scholarship

Photometry with the Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys (HST ACS) reveals that the subgiant branch (SGB) of the globular cluster NGC 1851 splits into two well-defined branches. If the split is due only to an age effect, the two SGBs would imply two star formation episodes separated by ~1 Gyr. We discuss other anomalies in NGC 1851 that could be interpreted in terms of a double stellar population. Finally, we compare the case of NGC 1851 with the other two globulars known to host multiple stellar populations, and show that all three clusters differ in several important …


Songs From The Milky Way: Our Galaxy In Low Frequency Gravitational Waves, Shane L. Larson Sep 2008

Songs From The Milky Way: Our Galaxy In Low Frequency Gravitational Waves, Shane L. Larson

Colloquia and Seminars

No abstract provided.


Dark Side Of The Universe: Dark Matter In The Galaxy And Cosmos, Shane L. Larson Aug 2008

Dark Side Of The Universe: Dark Matter In The Galaxy And Cosmos, Shane L. Larson

Public Talks

No abstract provided.


First Glimpse Results On The Stellar Structure Of The Galaxy., R. Benjamin, E. Churchwell, B. Babler, R. Indebetouw, M. Meade, B. Whitney, C. Watson, M. Wolfire, M. Wolff, Richard Ignace, T. Bania, S. Bracker, D. Clemens, L. Chomiuk, M. Cohen, J. Dickey, J. Jackson, H. Kobulnicky, E. Mercer, J. Mathis, S. Stolovy, B. Uzpen Sep 2005

First Glimpse Results On The Stellar Structure Of The Galaxy., R. Benjamin, E. Churchwell, B. Babler, R. Indebetouw, M. Meade, B. Whitney, C. Watson, M. Wolfire, M. Wolff, Richard Ignace, T. Bania, S. Bracker, D. Clemens, L. Chomiuk, M. Cohen, J. Dickey, J. Jackson, H. Kobulnicky, E. Mercer, J. Mathis, S. Stolovy, B. Uzpen

ETSU Faculty Works

The GLIMPSE (Galactic Legacy Mid-Plane Survey Extraordinaire) Point Source Catalog of ~ 30 million mid-infrared sources towards the inner Galaxy, 10 < |l| < 65 degrees and |b| < 1 degree, was used to determine the distribution of stars in Galactic longitude, latitude, and apparent magnitude. The counts versus longitude can be approximated by the modified Bessel function N=N_0*(l/l_0)*K_1(l/l_0), where l_0 is insensitive to limiting magnitude, band choice, and side of Galactic center: l_0= 17-30 degrees with a best fit value in the the 4.5 micron band of l_0=24 +/- 4 degrees. Modeling the source distribution as an exponential disk yields a radial scale length of H= 3.9 +/- 0.6 kpc. There is a pronounced north-south asymmetry in source counts for |l| < 30 degrees, with ~ 25% more stars in the north. For l=10-30 degrees, there is a strong enhancement of stars of m= 11.5-13.5 mag. A linear bar passing through the Galactic center with half-length R_bar=4.4 +/- 0.5 kpc, tilted by phi=44 +/- 10 degrees to the Sun-Galactic Center line, provides the simplest interpretation of this data. We examine the possibility that enhanced source counts at l=26-28 degrees, 31.5-34 degrees, and 306-309 degrees are related to Galactic spiral structure. Total source counts are depressed in regions where the counts of red objects (m_K-m_[8.0] >3) peak. In these areas, the counts are reduced by extinction due to molecular gas and/or high diffuse backgrounds associated with star formation.


X-Ray Variability During The Quiescent State Of The Neutron Star X-Ray Transient In The Globular Cluster Ngc 6440, Edward M. Cackett, Rudy Wijnands, Craig O. Heinke, Peter D. Edmonds, Walter H. G. Lewin, David Pooley, Jonathan E. Grindlay, Peter G. Jonker, Jon M. Miller Feb 2005

X-Ray Variability During The Quiescent State Of The Neutron Star X-Ray Transient In The Globular Cluster Ngc 6440, Edward M. Cackett, Rudy Wijnands, Craig O. Heinke, Peter D. Edmonds, Walter H. G. Lewin, David Pooley, Jonathan E. Grindlay, Peter G. Jonker, Jon M. Miller

Physics and Astronomy Faculty Research Publications

The globular cluster NGC 6440 is known to harbor a bright neutron star X-ray transient. We observed the globular cluster with Chandra on two occasions when the bright transient was in its quiescent state, in 2000 July and 2003 June (both observations were made nearly 2 yr after the end of their preceding outbursts). The quiescent spectrum during the first observation is well represented by a two-component model (a neutron star atmosphere model plus a power-law component that dominates at energies above 2 keV). During the second observation (which was roughly of equal duration to the first observation) we found …


New Nonthermal Filaments At The Galactic Center: Are They Tracing A Globally Ordered Magnetic Field?, Ted La Rosa, Michael E. Nord, Joseph W. Lazlo, Namir E. Kassim May 2004

New Nonthermal Filaments At The Galactic Center: Are They Tracing A Globally Ordered Magnetic Field?, Ted La Rosa, Michael E. Nord, Joseph W. Lazlo, Namir E. Kassim

Faculty and Research Publications

New high-resolution, wide-field 90 cm VLA observations of the Galactic center (GC) region by Nord and coworkers have revealed 20 nonthermal filament (NTF) candidates. We report 6 cm polarization observations of six of these. All of the candidates have the expected NTF morphology, and two show extended polarization, confirming their identification as NTFs. One of the new NTFs appears to be part of a system of NTFs located in the Sgr B region, 64 pc in projection north of Sgr A. These filaments cross the Galactic plane with an orientation similar to the filaments in the Galactic center radio arc. …


A New System Of Parallel Isolated Nonthermal Filaments Near The Galactic Center: Evidence For A Local Magnetic Field Gradient, Ted N. La Rosa, Joseph W. Lazio, Nasir E. Kassim Dec 2001

A New System Of Parallel Isolated Nonthermal Filaments Near The Galactic Center: Evidence For A Local Magnetic Field Gradient, Ted N. La Rosa, Joseph W. Lazio, Nasir E. Kassim

Faculty and Research Publications

We report the discovery of a system of isolated nonthermal filaments approximately 0fdg5 northwest (75 pc in projection) of Sgr A. Unlike other isolated nonthermal filaments which show subfilamentation, braiding of subfilaments, and flaring at their ends, these filaments are simple linear structures and more closely resemble the parallel bundled filaments in the Galactic center radio arc. However, the most unusual feature of these filaments is that the 20/90 cm spectral index uniformly decreases as a function of length, in contrast to all other nonthermal filaments in the Galactic center. This spectral gradient may not be due to simple particle …


A Search For Previously Unrecognized Metal-Poor Subdwarfs In The Hipparcos Astrometric Catalogue, I. N. Reid, F. Van Wyk, F. Marang, G. Roberts, D. Kilkenny, S. Mahoney Apr 2001

A Search For Previously Unrecognized Metal-Poor Subdwarfs In The Hipparcos Astrometric Catalogue, I. N. Reid, F. Van Wyk, F. Marang, G. Roberts, D. Kilkenny, S. Mahoney

Dartmouth Scholarship

We have identified 317 stars included in the Hipparcos astrometric catalogue that have parallaxes measured to a precision of better than 15 per cent, and the location of which in the (MV,(B−V)T) diagram implies a metallicity comparable to or less than that of the intermediate‐abundance globular cluster M5. We have undertaken an extensive literature search to locate Strömgren, Johnson/Cousins and Walraven photometry for over 120 stars. In addition, we present new UBV(RI)C photometry of 201 of these candidate halo stars, together with similar data for a further 14 known metal‐poor subdwarfs. These …


A Wide Field 90 Cm Vla Image Of The Galactic Center Region, Ted La Rosa, Namir E. Kassim, Joseph W. Lazlo, Scott B. Hyman Jan 2000

A Wide Field 90 Cm Vla Image Of The Galactic Center Region, Ted La Rosa, Namir E. Kassim, Joseph W. Lazlo, Scott B. Hyman

Faculty and Research Publications

We present a wide-field, high dynamic range, high-resolution, long-wavelength (lambda = 90 cm) VLA image of the Galactic center region. The image is centered on Sgr A, covers an area of 4 degrees x 5 degrees with an angular resolution of 43 ", and has a rms sensitivity of approximate to 5 mJy beam-l. The image was constructed from archival (1989 and 1991) VLA data of Pedlar et al. and Anantharamaiah et al. using new three-dimensional image restoration techniques. These three-dimensional imaging techniques resolve the problem of non-coplanar baselines encountered at long wavelengths and yield distortion-free imaging of far-field sources …


A Rigorous Reanalysis Of The Iras Variable Population: Scale Lengths, Asymmetries, And Microlensing, S Nikolaev, Md Weinberg Jan 1997

A Rigorous Reanalysis Of The Iras Variable Population: Scale Lengths, Asymmetries, And Microlensing, S Nikolaev, Md Weinberg

Astronomy Department Faculty Publication Series

Previous work reported a bar signature in color-selected IRAS variable stars. Here, we estimate the source density of these variables while consistently accounting for spatial incompleteness in the data using a likelihood approach. The existence of the bar is confirmed with a shoulder at a approx 3 kpc, an axis ratio of a:b = 2.2-2.7, and a position angle of 19° ± 1°. The ratio of nonaxisymmetric to axisymmetric components gives a similar estimate for the bar size of a = 3.3 ± 0.1 kpc and a position angle of phi0 = 24° ± 2°. We estimate a scale length …


The Effect Of The Galactic Spheroid On Globular Cluster Evolution, C Murali, Md Weinberg Jan 1997

The Effect Of The Galactic Spheroid On Globular Cluster Evolution, C Murali, Md Weinberg

Astronomy Department Faculty Publication Series

We study the combined effects of relaxation, tidal heating and binary heating on globular cluster evolution, exploring the physical consequences of external effects and examining evolutionary trends in the MilkyWay population. Our analysis demonstrates that heating on circular and low-eccentricity orbits can dominate cluster evolution. The results also predict rapid evolution on eccentric orbits either due to strong relaxation caused by the high densities needed for tidal limitation or due to efficient bulge shocking of low density clusters. The combination of effects leads to strong evolution of the population as a whole. For example, within the solar circle, tidally-limited 105M⊙ …


Evolution Of The Galactic Globular Cluster System, C Murali, Md Weinberg Jan 1997

Evolution Of The Galactic Globular Cluster System, C Murali, Md Weinberg

Astronomy Department Faculty Publication Series

We study the dynamical evolution of disk and halo globular clusters in the Milky Way using a series of Fokker-Planck calculations combined with parametric statistical models. Our sample of 113 clusters with velocity data is predicted to descend from an initial population of 250 clusters, implying more than a factor of two decrease in population size due to evolution. Approximately 200 of these clusters are in a halo component and 50 in a disk component. The estimated initial halo population follows a coreless R−3.38 density profile in good agreement with current estimates for the distribution of halo field stars. The …


Sources Of Excitation Of The Interstellar Gas And Galactic Structure, J. J. Cowan, Menas Kafatos, W. K. Rose Jan 1975

Sources Of Excitation Of The Interstellar Gas And Galactic Structure, J. J. Cowan, Menas Kafatos, W. K. Rose

Mathematics, Physics, and Computer Science Faculty Articles and Research

The excitation of the interstellar gas. is discussed in the light of recent evidence from γ-ray, molecular, and 21-cm line observations. Previous studies of the excitation of the interstellar gas have not taken into account the substantial density contrast that exists between spiral arms and interarm regions. We examine the role played by the galactic distribution of three sources of excitation (supernovae, OB stars, and ultraviolet stars) in determining the physical state of the interstellar gas in arm and interarm regions.