The 2dF QSO Redshift Survey - XII. The spectroscopic catalogue and luminosity function
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 349 (2004) 1397-1418
200 Mpc Sized Structure in the 2dF QSO Redshift Survey
ArXiv astro-ph/0403065 (2004)
Abstract:
The completed 2dF QSO Redshift (2QZ) Survey has been used to search for extreme large-scale cosmological structure (around 200 Mpc) over the redshift range 0The 2dF QSO Redshift Survey - XIII. A measurement of Λ from the quasi-stellar object power spectrum, Ps(k≺, k⊥)
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 348:3 (2004) 745-752
Abstract:
We report on measurements of the cosmological constant, Λ, and the redshift space distortion parameter β= Ωm0.6/b, based on an analysis of the quasi-stellar object (QSO) power spectrum parallel and perpendicular to the observer's line of sight, Ps(k≺, k⊥), from the final catalogue of the Two-Degree Field (2dF) QSO Redshift Survey. We derive a joint Λ - β constraint from the geometric and redshift-space distortions in the power spectrum. By combining this result with a second constraint based on mass clustering evolution, we break this degeneracy and obtain strong constraints on both parameters. Assuming a flat (Ωm + Ωλ = 1) cosmology and a Λ cosmology r(z) function to convert from redshift into comoving distance, we find best-fitting values of Ωλ = 0.71 -0.17+0.09 and βq(z ∼ 1.4) = 0.45 -0.11+0.09 Assuming instead an Einstein-de Sitter cosmology r(z) we find that the best-fitting model obtained, with Ω λ = 0.64+0.16+0.11 and β q(z ∼ 1.4) = 0-40-0.09+0.09, is consistent with the Λ r(z) results, and inconsistent with a Ω λ = 0 flat cosmology at over 95 per cent confidence.Turbulent ambipolar diffusion: Numerical studies in two dimensions
Astrophysical Journal 603:1 I (2004) 165-179
Abstract:
Under ideal MHD conditions the magnetic field strength should be correlated with density in the interstellar medium (ISM). However, observations indicate that this correlation is weak. Ambipolar diffusion can decrease the flux-to-mass ratio in weakly ionized media; however, it is generally thought to be too slow to play a significant role in the ISM except in the densest molecular clouds. Turbulence is often invoked in astrophysical problems to increase transport rates above the (very slow) laminar values predicted by kinetic theory. We describe a series of numerical experiments addressing the problem of turbulent transport of magnetic fields in weakly ionized gases. We show, subject to various geometrical and physical restrictions, that turbulence in a weakly ionized medium rapidly diffuses the magnetic flux-to-mass ratio B/ρ through the buildup of appreciable ion-neutral drifts on small scales. These results are applicable to the field strength-density correlation in the ISM, as well as the merging of flux systems such as protostar and accretion disk fields or protostellar jets with ambient matter, and the vertical transport of galactic magnetic fields.A Deep, High-Resolution Survey at 74 MHz
\apjs 150 (2004) 417-430-417-430