79,507 research outputs found
Asteroseismology of Massive Stars : Some Words of Caution
Although playing a key role in the understanding of the supernova phenomenon,
the evolution of massive stars still suffers from uncertainties in their
structure, even during their "quiet" main sequence phase and later on during
their subgiant and helium burning phases. What is the extent of the mixed
central region? In the local mixing length theory (LMLT) frame, are there
structural differences using Schwarzschild or Ledoux convection criterion?
Where are located the convective zone boundaries? Are there intermediate
convection zones during MS and post-MS phase, and what is their extent and
location? We discuss these points and show how asteroseismology could bring
some light on these questions.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, IAU Symposium 307, New windows on massive stars:
asteroseismology, interferometry, and spectropolarimetry, G. Meynet, C.
Georgy, J.H. Groh & Ph. Stee, ed
Categorical perception of tactile distance
The tactile surface forms a continuous sheet covering the body. And yet, the perceived distance between two touches varies across stimulation sites. Perceived tactile distance is larger when stimuli cross over the wrist, compared to when both fall on either the hand or the forearm. This effect could reflect a categorical distortion of tactile space across body-part boundaries (in which stimuli crossing the wrist boundary are perceptually elongated) or may simply reflect a localised increased in acuity surrounding anatomical landmarks (in which stimuli near the wrist are perceptually elongated). We tested these two interpretations, by comparing a well-documented bias to perceive mediolateral tactile distances across the forearm/hand as larger than proximodistal ones along the forearm/hand at three different sites (hand, wrist, and forearm). According to the ‘categorical’ interpretation, tactile distances should be elongated selectively in the proximodistal axis thus reducing the anisotropy. According to the ‘localised acuity’ interpretation, distances will be perceptually elongated in the vicinity of the wrist regardless of orientation, leading to increased overall size without affecting anisotropy. Consistent with the categorical account, we found a reduction in the magnitude of anisotropy at the wrist, with no evidence of a corresponding specialized increase in precision. These findings demonstrate that we reference touch to a representation of the body that is categorically segmented into discrete parts, which consequently influences the perception of tactile distance
Regularized pointwise map recovery from functional correspondence
The concept of using functional maps for representing dense correspondences between deformable shapes has proven to be extremely effective in many applications. However, despite the impact of this framework, the problem of recovering the point-to-point correspondence from a given functional map has received surprisingly little interest. In this paper, we analyse the aforementioned problem and propose a novel method for reconstructing pointwise correspondences from a given functional map. The proposed algorithm phrases the matching problem as a regularized alignment problem of the spectral embeddings of the two shapes. Opposed to established methods, our approach does not require the input shapes to be nearly-isometric, and easily extends to recovering the point-to-point correspondence in part-to-whole shape matching problems. Our numerical experiments demonstrate that the proposed approach leads to a significant improvement in accuracy in several challenging cases
Analytic mode matching for a circular dissipative silencer containing mean flow and a perforated pipe
An analytic mode matching scheme that includes higher order modes is developed for a straight-through circular dissipative silencer. Uniform mean flow is added to the central airway and a concentric perforated screen separates the mean flow from a bulk reacting porous material. Transmission loss predictions are compared with experimental measurements and good agreement is demonstrated for three different silencers. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that, when mean flow is present, the axial kinematic matching condition should equate to that chosen for the radial kinematic boundary condition over the interface between the airway and the material. Accordingly, if the radial matching conditions are continuity of pressure and displacement, then the axial matching conditions should also be continuity of pressure and displacement, rather than pressure and velocity as previously thought. When a perforated screen is present the radial pressure condition changes, but the radial kinematic condition should always remain equivalent to that chosen for the axial kinematic matching condition; here, results indicate that continuity of displacement should be retained when a perforated screen is present
Discriminating quantum-optical beam-splitter channels with number-diagonal signal states: Applications to quantum reading and target detection
We consider the problem of distinguishing, with minimum probability of error,
two optical beam-splitter channels with unequal complex-valued reflectivities
using general quantum probe states entangled over M signal and M' idler mode
pairs of which the signal modes are bounced off the beam splitter while the
idler modes are retained losslessly. We obtain a lower bound on the output
state fidelity valid for any pure input state. We define number-diagonal signal
(NDS) states to be input states whose density operator in the signal modes is
diagonal in the multimode number basis. For such input states, we derive series
formulas for the optimal error probability, the output state fidelity, and the
Chernoff-type upper bounds on the error probability. For the special cases of
quantum reading of a classical digital memory and target detection (for which
the reflectivities are real valued), we show that for a given input signal
photon probability distribution, the fidelity is minimized by the NDS states
with that distribution and that for a given average total signal energy N_s,
the fidelity is minimized by any multimode Fock state with N_s total signal
photons. For reading of an ideal memory, it is shown that Fock state inputs
minimize the Chernoff bound. For target detection under high-loss conditions, a
no-go result showing the lack of appreciable quantum advantage over coherent
state transmitters is derived. A comparison of the error probability
performance for quantum reading of number state and two-mode squeezed vacuum
state (or EPR state) transmitters relative to coherent state transmitters is
presented for various values of the reflectances. While the nonclassical states
in general perform better than the coherent state, the quantitative performance
gains differ depending on the values of the reflectances.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures. This closely approximates the published version.
The major change from v2 is that Section IV has been re-organized, with a
no-go result for target detection under high loss conditions highlighted. The
last sentence of the abstract has been deleted to conform to the arXiv word
limit. Please see the PDF for the full abstrac
Efficiency, equality and labelling: an experimental investigation of focal points in explicit bargaining
Efficiency, equality and labelling: an experimental investigation of focal points in explicit bargainin
Equality of Participation Online Versus Face to Face: Condensed Analysis of the Community Forum Deliberative Methods Demonstration
Online deliberation may provide a more cost-effective and/or less inhibiting
environment for public participation than face to face (F2F). But do online
methods bias participation toward certain individuals or groups? We compare F2F
versus online participation in an experiment affording within-participants and
cross-modal comparisons. For English speakers required to have Internet access
as a condition of participation, we find no negative effects of online modes on
equality of participation (EoP) related to gender, age, or educational level.
Asynchronous online discussion appears to improve EoP for gender relative to
F2F. Data suggest a dampening effect of online environments on black
participants, as well as amplification for whites. Synchronous online voice
communication EoP is on par with F2F across individuals. But individual-level
EoP is much lower in the online forum, and greater online forum participation
predicts greater F2F participation for individuals. Measured rates of
participation are compared to self-reported experiences, and other findings are
discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 10 tables, to appear in Efthimios Tambouris, Panos
Panagiotopoulos, {\O}ystein S{\ae}b{\o}, Konstantinos Tarabanis, Michela
Milano, Theresa Pardo, and Maria Wimmer (Editors), Electronic Participation:
Proceedings of the 7th IFIP WG 8.5 International Conference, ePart 2015
(Thessaloniki, August 30-September 2), Springer LNCS Vol. 9249, 201
Momentum fluctuations of heavy quarks in the gauge-string duality
Using the gauge-string duality, I compute two-point functions of the force
acting on an external quark moving through a finite temperature bath of N=4
super-Yang-Mills theory. I comment on the possible relevance of the string
theory calculations to heavy quarks propagating through a quark-gluon plasma.Comment: 37 pages, 2 figures. v2: small improvements, ref added. v3:
substantial revisions. v4: fixed a few typo
Cultural Orientations Framework (COF) assessment questionnaire in cross-cultural coaching: A cross-validation with Wave Focus Styles
This paper outlines a cross-validation of the Cultural Orientations Framework assessment questionnaire (COF, Rosinski, 2007; a new tool designed for cross-cultural coaching) with the Saville Consulting Wave Focus Styles questionnaire (Saville Consulting, 2006; an existing validated measure of occupational personality), using data from UK and German participants (N = 222). The convergent and divergent validity of the questionnaire was adequate. Contrary to previous findings which used different measures (Ronen & Shenkar, 1985; Schwartz, 1999; House et al., 2004; Bartram et al., 2006), the results from this particular study indicated few national differences between UK and Germany, however differences by gender were observed. These findings are discussed in terms of their implications for the development and use of the COF in practice. This may allow for a more finely grained understanding of culture than previous models such as Hofstede’s cultural values framework (1980; 2001), if further evidence for its validity is obtained and published
- …