Archive for Astrophysics of Galaxies

Four New Publications at the Open Journal of Astrophysics

Posted in OJAp Papers, Open Access, The Universe and Stuff with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on July 29, 2023 by telescoper

The rate of publication at the Open Journal of Astrophysics has now reached the point at which I think I’ll have to limit myself to weekly updates here rather than announcing every paper as it appears. We still announce individual papers on social media of course, meaning Mastodon, Facebook and the platform formerly known as Twitter…

This week we have published four papers which I now present to you here. These four take the count in Volume 6 (2023) up to 31 and the total published by OJAp up to 96. I speculated earlier this year that we might reach 100 before the end of 2023, now it looks certain we will reach the century mark as early as August! It is gratifying to see the range of papers published increasing, with all four of these in different categories.

In chronological order, the four papers published this week, with their overlays, are as follows. You can click on the images of the overlays to make them larger should you wish to do so.

First one up is “M-σ relations across cosmic time” by David Garofalo (1), Damian J. Christian (2), Chase Hames (1), Max North (3), Keegan Thottam (1) & Alisaie Eckelbarger (1). The author affiliations are: (1) Department of Physics, Kennesaw State University, USA; (2) Department of Physics and Astronomy, California State University, Northridge, USA; (3) Department of Information Systems, Kennesaw State University, USA. This is a discussion of the relationship between black hole mass and stellar velocity dispersion discovered in low redshift galaxies and its evolution with cosmic time. The paper was published on 25th July, is in the folder marked Astrophysics of Galaxies and can be found here.

Here is a screen grab of the overlay, which includes the abstract:

You can find the officially accepted version of the paper on the arXiv here.

The second paper to announce is “The fastest stars in the Galaxy” by Kareem El-Badry et al. (21 authors. This one is the fourth item in the folder marked Solar and Stellar Astrophysics and it reports the spectroscopic discovery of 6 new “runaway” stars, probably the surviving members of binary star systems in which one star exploded in a Type 1a supernova. The paper was published on 27th July 2023 and you can see the overlay here:

The accepted version of this paper can be found on the arXiv here.

The next paper is in the Earth and Planetary Astrophysics folder. It is in fact only the second paper we have published in that area. It is entitled “WHFast512: A symplectic N-body integrator for planetary systems optimized with AVX512 instructions” by Pejvak Javaheri & Hanno Rein (University of Toronto, Canada) and Daniel Tamayo (Harvey Mudd College, USA). This paper presents a fast direct N-body integrator for gravitational systems, and demonstrates it using a 40 Gyr integration of the Solar System.

Here is the overlay:

 

You can find the full text for this one on the arXiv here.

Last but by no means least, published yesterday (29th July), we have a paper that asks the question “Can Einstein (rings) surf Gravitational Waves?” by Leonardo Giani, Cullan Howlett and Tamara M. Davis of the University of Queensland, Australia. The primary classification for this one is Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics and it discusses the possible effect(s) of gravitational waves on gravitational lensing observations.

 

You can click on the image of the overlay to make it larger should you wish to do so. You can find the officially accepted version of the paper on the arXiv here.

New Publication at the Open Journal of Astrophysics

Posted in OJAp Papers, Open Access, The Universe and Stuff with tags , , , on January 12, 2023 by telescoper

Time to announce another new paper at the Open Journal of Astrophysics. This one was published officially on 9th January 2023. The latest paper is the second paper in Volume 6 (2023) as well as the 67th in all. This one is in the Astrophysics of Galaxies folder.

The latest publication is entitled “Wide Binaries as a Modified Gravity test: prospects for detecting triple-system contamination” and the authors – Dhruv Manchanda, Will Sutherland Charalambos Pittordis – are all based at Queen Mary, University of London.

Here is a screen grab of the overlay which includes the  abstract:

 

 

You can click on the image to make it larger should you wish to do so. You can find the officially accepted version of the paper on the arXiv here.

New Publication at the Open Journal of Astrophysics

Posted in OJAp Papers, Open Access, The Universe and Stuff with tags , , , , , on June 7, 2021 by telescoper

Time to announce another publication in the Open Journal of Astrophysics. This one was actually published on Friday actually, but I didn’t get time to post about it until just now. It is the fourth paper in Volume 4 (2021) and the 35th paper in all.

The latest publication is entitled The local vertical density distribution of ultracool dwarfs M7 to L2.5 and their luminosity function and the ultracool authors are Steve Warren (Imperial College), Saad Ahmed (Open University) and Richard Laithwaite (Imperial College).

Here is a screen grab of the overlay which includes the abstract:

You can click on the image to make it larger should you wish to do so. You can find the arXiv version of the paper here. This one is in the Astrophysics of Galaxies section but it also has overlap with Solar and Stellar Astrophysics.

Over the last few months I have noticed that it has taken a bit longer to get referee reports on papers and also for authors to complete their revisions. I think that’s probably a consequence of the pandemic and people being generally overworked. We do have a number of papers at various stages of the pipeline, so although we’re a bit behind where we were last year in terms of papers published I think may well catch up in the next month or two.

I’ll end with a reminder to prospective authors that the OJA  now has the facility to include supplementary files (e.g. code or data sets) along with the papers we publish. If any existing authors (i.e. of papers we have already published) would like us to add supplementary files retrospectively then please contact us with a request!

New Publication at the Open Journal of Astrophysics

Posted in OJAp Papers, Open Access, The Universe and Stuff with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , on December 24, 2020 by telescoper

Just time before Christmas to announce another paper in the Open Journal of Astrophysics. This one was actually published a few days ago but because of holiday delays it took some time to get the metadata and DOI registered so I held off announcing it until that was done.

The latest publication is by my colleague* John Regan (of the Department of Theoretical Physics at Maynooth), John Wise (Georgia Tech), Tyrone Woods (NRC Canada), Turlough Downes (DCU), Brian O’Shea (Michigan State) and Michael Norman (UCSD). It is entitled The Formation of Very Massive Stars in Early Galaxies and Implications for Intermediate Mass Black Holes and appears in the Astrophysics of Galaxies section of the arXiv.

Here is a screen grab of the overlay:

You can click on the image to make it larger should you wish to do so. You can find the arXiv version of the paper here.

I think that will be that for for 2020 at the Open Journal of Astrophysics. We have published 15 papers this year, up 25% on last year. Growth is obviously modest, but there’s obviously a lot of inertia in the academic community. After the end of this year we will have two full consecutive years of publishing.

I’d like to take this opportunity to thank all our authors, readers, referees, and editors for supporting the Open Journal of Astrophysics and wish you all the very best for 2021!

*Obviously, owing to the institutional conflict I recused myself from the editorial process on this paper.