228 research outputs found
The problem of misrepresentation meets connectionist representations : a thesis submitted for the degree of Master of Philosophy
Page 162 is missing from the original copyTheories of semantics try to explain the relationship between a mental representation and the thing it represents; to explain, for instance, how my coffee representation represents coffee. (Here and in the rest of this thesis, I use the convention of writing the label for a representation in bold type.) In many traditional theories of semantics, the relationship between my coffee representation and coffee is usually explained by recourse to causal relations between coffee and this representation. But attempts at explanations along these lines have many problems, among them the problem that it is difficult to find a plausible way of accounting for the fact that representations are able to misrepresent-or have false content. Sometimes I can think "that's coffee" when what's actually in the cup being handed to me is tea. Getting this fact to sit happily with accounts of the relation between my coffee representation and coffee hasn't been an easy task. Traditional approaches to this problem haven't had a lot of success so far in explaining how a representation can misrepresent. In this thesis I aim to avoid the problems with these traditional approaches, and find a causally-based, biologically realistic way to explain semantic relations between mental representations and objects in the world, which is also capable of explaining misrepresentation. The best place to start such an endeavour is to examine what the problem of representation and misrepresentation is, and the general tactics used in traditional attempts to solve this problem. This will illustrate why misrepresentation appears to be so intractable. Through such an examination we can get a close look at the traditional approaches, and their assumptions about what representations are, what sorts of things they represent, and how they can represent what they represent. We can also get a good view of the unquestioned assumptions these traditional theories are based on. This will give us a good place to start. I'm going to argue that if we want to achieve our aim of a biologically realistic theory of semantics which shows how representations can misrepresent, we'll need an approach to the problem which does not take these assumptions as foundations. In this thesis I aim to construct an account which isn't based on these assumptions.[FROM INTRODUCTION
The Fundamentals of Garbology
The Fundamentals of Garbology
The goal of our project is to help people realize how much trash they are wasting, and we are doing this by analyzing each other\u27s garbage and using other scientific articles for evidence. An interesting fact of our research was the dissonance between what people thought garbage production (both their own and others) looked like, versus what was revealed. Our research led us to understand that peopleâs perceptions of garbage often misalign with the reality of garbage.
In our research, we have learned about how analyzing people\u27s garbage can be misleading. For example, if you see a lot of healthy foods in a person\u27s garbage you can assume that they eat exceptionally clean or they are on a diet until you see a half-eaten slice of pizza. Furthermore, we have learned that it is difficult to determine the number of people producing trash. An example of this is from one group member is that it was determined that about five people lived in the household when there were nine. Among the best uses of garbology is that it helps people to realize how much garbage they are producing. Our focus in garbology is to help people realize how much of one food they are wasting, or how certain things that could easily be recycled are just being thrown away. One common themes found in our research is people tend to either have a lot of food in their garbage or little to none. One person in our group had ramen, plastic utensils, and thrown away food, while another group member had dog pills and materials used for doing nails. Our studies have proven that people have different lifestyles. However, the number of people living in their households reflected the amount of trash that was collected
X-rays from Saturn: A study with XMM-Newton and Chandra over the years 2002-05
We present the results of the two most recent (2005) XMM-Newton observations
of Saturn together with the re-analysis of an earlier (2002) observation from
the XMM-Newton archive and of three Chandra observations in 2003 and 2004.
While the XMM-Newton telescope resolution does not enable us to resolve
spatially the contributions of the planet's disk and rings to the X-ray flux,
we can estimate their strengths and their evolution over the years from
spectral analysis, and compare them with those observed with Chandra. The
spectrum of the X-ray emission is well fitted by an optically thin coronal
model with an average temperature of 0.5 keV. The addition of a fluorescent
oxygen emission line at ~0.53 keV improves the fits significantly. In
accordance with earlier reports, we interpret the coronal component as emission
from the planetary disk, produced by the scattering of solar X-rays in Saturn's
upper atmosphere, and the line as originating from the Saturnian rings. The
strength of the disk X-ray emission is seen to decrease over the period 2002 -
2005, following the decay of solar activity towards the current minimum in the
solar cycle. By comparing the relative fluxes of the disk X-ray emission and
the oxygen line, we suggest that the line strength does not vary over the years
in the same fashion as the disk flux. We consider possible alternatives for the
origin of the line. The connection between solar activity and the strength of
Saturn's disk X-ray emission is investigated and compared with that of Jupiter.
We also discuss the apparent lack of X-ray aurorae on Saturn and conclude that
they are likely to lie below the sensitivity threshold of current Earth-bound
observatories. A similar comparison for Uranus and Neptune leads to the same
disappointing conclusion.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures; to be published in 'Astronomy and Astrophysics
Simultaneous Swift X-ray and UV views of comet C/2007 N3 (Lulin)
We present an analysis of simultaneous X-Ray and UV observations ofcomet
C/2007 N3 (Lulin) taken on three days between January 2009 and March 2009 using
the Swift observatory. For our X-ray observations, we used basic transforms to
account for the movement of the comet to allow the combination of all available
data to produce an exposure-corrected image. We fit a simple model to the
extracted spectrum and measured an X-ray flux of 4.3+/-1.3 * 10^-13 ergs cm-2
s-1 in the 0.3 to 1.0 keV band. In the UV, we acquired large-aperture
photometry and used a coma model to derive water production rates given
assumptions regarding the distribution of water and its dissociation into OH
molecules about the comet's nucleus.
We compare and discuss the X-ray and UV morphology of the comet. We show that
the peak of the cometary X-ray emission is offset sunward of the UV peak
emission, assumed to be the nucleus, by approximately 35,000 km. The offset
observed, the shape of X-ray emission and the decrease of the X-ray emission
comet-side of the peak, suggested that the comet was indeed collisionally thick
to charge exchange, as expected from our measurements of the comet's water
production rate (6--8 10^28 mol. s-1). The X-ray spectrum is consistent with
solar wind charge exchange emission, and the comet most likely interacted with
a solar wind depleted of very highly ionised oxygen. We show that the measured
X-ray lightcurve can be very well explained by variations in the comet's gas
production rates, the observing geometry and variations in the solar wind flux.Comment: Paper accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics, 6 March
2012, 12 pages, 8 colour figures, one tabl
XMM-Newton 13H Deep field - I. X-ray sources
We present the results of a deep X-ray survey conducted with XMM-Newton,
centred on the UK ROSAT 13H deep field area. This region covers 0.18 deg^2 and
is the first of two areas covered with XMM-Newton as part of an extensive
multi-wavelength survey designed to study the nature and evolution of the faint
X-ray source population. We have produced detailed Monte-Carlo simulations to
obtain a quantitative characterisation of the source detection procedure and to
assess the reliability of the resultant sourcelist. We use the simulations to
establish a likelihood threshold above which we expect less than 7 (3%) of our
sources to be spurious. We present the final catalogue of 225 sources. Within
the central 9 arcmin, 68 per cent of source positions are accurate to 2 arcsec,
making optical follow-up relatively straightforward. We construct the N(>S)
relation in four energy bands: 0.2-0.5 keV, 0.5-2 keV, 2-5 keV and 5-10 keV. In
all but our highest energy band we find that the source counts can be
represented by a double powerlaw with a bright end slope consistent with the
Euclidean case and a break around 10^-14 cgs. Below this flux the counts
exhibit a flattening. Our source counts reach densities of 700, 1300, 900 and
300 deg^-2 at fluxes of 4.1x10^-16, 4.5x10^-16, 1.1x10^-15 and 5.3x10^-15 cgs
in the 0.2-0.5, 0.5-2, 2-5 and 5-10 keV energy bands respectively. We have
compared our source counts with those in the two Chandra deep fields and
Lockman hole and find our source counts to be amongst the highest of these
fields in all energy bands. We resolve >51% (>50%) of the X-ray background
emission in the 1-2 keV (2-5 keV) energy bands.Comment: 27 pages, 18 figures, MNRAS accepte
First high-resolution detection of a warm absorber in the Broad Line Radio Galaxy 3C 382
Recent high-resolution measurements suggest that the soft X-ray spectrum of
obscured Radio Galaxies (RG) exhibits signatures of photoionised gas (e.g. 3C
445 and 3C 33) similar to those observed in radio-quiet obscured Active
Galactic Nuclei (AGN). While signatures of warm absorbing gas covering a wide
range of temperature and ionisation states have been detected in about one half
of the population of nearby Seyfert 1 galaxies, no traces of warm absorber gas
have been reported to date in the high-resolution spectra of Broad Line Radio
Galaxies (BLRG). We present here the first detection of a soft X-ray warm
absorber in the powerful FRII BLRG 3C 382 using the Reflection Grating
Spectrometer (RGS) on-board XMM-Newton. The absorption gas appears to be highly
ionised, with column density of the order of 10^{22} cm^{-2}, ionisation
parameter log\xi>2 erg cm s^{-1} and outflow velocities of the order of 10^{3}
km s^{-1}. The absorption lines may come from regions located outside the
torus, however at distances less than 60 pc. This result may indicate that a
plasma ejected at velocities near the speed of light and a photoionised gas
with slower, outflow velocities can coexist in the same source beyond the Broad
Line Regions.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRAS
Letter
Unveiling the nature of the highly obscured AGN in NGC5643 with XMM-Newton
We present results from an XMM-Newton observation of the nearby Seyfert 2
galaxy NGC5643. The nucleus exhibits a very flat X-ray continuum above 2 keV,
together with a prominent K-alpha fluorescent iron line. This indicates heavy
obscuration. We measure an absorbing column density N_H in the range 6-10 x
10^{23} atoms/cm/cm, either directly covering the nuclear emission, or covering
its Compton-reflection. In the latter case, we might be observing a rather
unusual geometry for the absorber, whereby reflection from the inner far side
of a torus is in turn obscured by its near side outer atmosphere. The nuclear
emission might be then either covered by a Compton-thick absorber, or
undergoing a transient state of low activity. A second source (christened "X-1"
in this paper) at the outskirts of NGC5643 optical surface outshines the
nucleus in X-rays. If belonging to NGC5643, it is the third brightest (L_X ~ 4
x 10^{40} erg/s) known Ultra Luminous X-ray source. Comparison with past large
aperture spectra of NGC 5643 unveils dramatic X-ray spectral changes above 1
keV. We interpret them as due to variability of the active nucleus and of
source X-1 intrinsic X-ray powers by a factor >10 and 5, respectively.Comment: 11 LATEX pages, 12 figures, to appear in Monthly Notices of the Royal
Astronomical Societ
A medium deep Chandra and Subaru survey of the 13hr XMM/ROSAT deep survey area
We present the results of a Chandra ACIS-I survey of a high latitude region
at 13h +38 which was earlier observed with ROSAT (McHardy et al. 1998) and
which has recently been observed by XMM-Newton for 200ksec. XMM-Newton will
provide good quality X-ray spectra for over 200 sources with fluxes around the
knee of the logN/logS, which are responsible for the bulk of the X-ray
background (XRB). The main aim of the Chandra observations is to provide
arcsecond, or better, positions, and hence reliable identifications, for the
XMM-Newton sources. The ACIS-I observations were arranged in a mosaic of four
30ksec pointings, covering almost all of the 15' radius XMM-Newton/ROSAT field.
We detect 214 Chandra sources above 5 sigma significance, to a limiting flux of
\~1.3e-15 erg/cm2/s (0.5-7 keV). Optical counterparts are derived from a Subaru
SuprimeCam image reaching to R~27. The very large majority of the Chandra
sources have an optical counterpart, with the distribution peaking at 23<R<24,
although 14 have no counterpart to R=27. The fraction of X-ray sources with no
identification brighter than R=27 is similar to that found in deeper Chandra
surveys. The majority of the identifications are with galaxies. As found in
other Chandra surveys, there is a very wide range of optical magnitude for
given X-ray flux, implying a range of emission mechanisms, and many sources
have high L_X/L_opt ratios, implying absorption at moderate redshift.
Comparison with the earlier ROSAT survey shows that the accuracy of the ROSAT
positions agrees very well with the predictions from simulations in McHardy et
al. (1998) and that the large majority of the identifications were correct
(abridged).Comment: 22 pages, MNRAS in press. A full resolution version is available at
http://www.astro.soton.ac.uk/~kfg/catalogue.ps.g
Is there a compact companion orbiting the late O-type binary star HD 164816?
We present a multi-wavelength (X-ray, -ray, optical and radio) study
of HD 194816, a late O-type X-ray detected spectroscopic binary. X-ray spectra
are analyzed and the X-ray photon arrival times are checked for pulsation. In
addition, newly obtained optical spectroscopic monitoring data on HD 164816 are
presented. They are complemented by available radio data from several large
scale surveys as well as the \emph{FERMI} -ray data from its
\emph{Large Area Telescope}. We report the detection of a low energy excess in
the X-ray spectrum that can be described by a simple absorbed blackbody model
with a temperature of 50 eV as well as a 9.78 s pulsation of the X-ray
source. The soft X-ray excess, the X-ray pulsation, and the kinematical age
would all be consistent with a compact object like a neutron star as companion
to HD 164816. The size of the soft X-ray excess emitting area is consistent
with a circular region with a radius of about 7 km, typical for neutron stars,
while the emission measure of the remaining harder emission is typical for late
O-type single or binary stars. If HD 164816 includes a neutron star born in a
supernova, this supernova should have been very recent and should have given
the system a kick, which is consistent with the observation that the star HD
164816 has a significantly different radial velocity than the cluster mean. In
addition we confirm the binarity of HD 164816 itself by obtaining an orbital
period of 3.82 d, projected masses = 2.355(69) M,
= 2.103(62) M apparently seen at low inclination
angle, determined from high-resolution optical spectra.Comment: Accepted for publication by MNRAS, 11 pages, 6 figures, 4 table
Study of the electro-oxidation of a recreational drug GHB (gamma hydroxybutyric acid) on a platinum catalyst-type electrode through chronoamperometry and spectro-electrochemistry
The electro-oxidation of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB) on a polycrystalline platinum electrode in acidic medium has been studied using chronoamperometry. The study has been performed in a wide interval of potentials and at different concentrations. It was found that at longer times the density currents reached stationary values at more
anodic potentials, whereas it is zero at lower potentials. These characteristics in the j-t curves suggest a different mechanism for the electro-oxidation of GHB, potential dependent, with a catalytic process at high potentials and an adsorption process controlled by mass transport at low potential.
The change in the stationary current obtained at +0.9 V with variable GHB concentrations also suggests an oxidation mechanism catalysed by the platinum surface with platinum hydroxides acting as reaction intermediates to make the final oxidation product for GHB. The results obtained using chronoamperometry are in good agreement with those obtained using cyclic voltammetry where the alcohol group is oxidised at different potentials.
In situ Surface Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS) spectra corresponding to GHB intermediates and water adsorbed species being formed/consumed at the potentialdependent adsorption processes have been analyzed using spectro-electrochemistry. A peak at 1590 cm-1, corresponding to the asymmetric stretching of carboxylic group in a bridge configuration, increases with the potential. This supports the hypothesis of a mechanism of formation of the succinic acid on the platinum surface as reaction product under the experimental conditions studied
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