396 research outputs found

    On the medial surface approximations of extrusions

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    Generating the medial surface for a general boundary representation model raises several difficulties. Problems might emerge from the complexity of the resulting equations, singularities caused by unforeseen relative boundary element positions and orientations, etc. The majority of the current algorithms are based on the topology of the boundary representation model and produce wireframes composed of straight lines regardless of the real medial surfaces. Many of the solids used in engineering can be represented by extrusions, delimited by a cross-section and an extrusion distance. This paper develops a fast and efficient method for creating the facetted approximations of the medial surfaces of extrusions generated by sweeping along the normal direction to the generating cross-sectio

    Quantum Criticality at the Origin of Life

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    Why life persists at the edge of chaos is a question at the very heart of evolution. Here we show that molecules taking part in biochemical processes from small molecules to proteins are critical quantum mechanically. Electronic Hamiltonians of biomolecules are tuned exactly to the critical point of the metal-insulator transition separating the Anderson localized insulator phase from the conducting disordered metal phase. Using tools from Random Matrix Theory we confirm that the energy level statistics of these biomolecules show the universal transitional distribution of the metal-insulator critical point and the wave functions are multifractals in accordance with the theory of Anderson transitions. The findings point to the existence of a universal mechanism of charge transport in living matter. The revealed bio-conductor material is neither a metal nor an insulator but a new quantum critical material which can exist only in highly evolved systems and has unique material properties.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure

    Reconstructing Galaxy Spectral Energy Distributions from Broadband Photometry

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    We present a novel approach to photometric redshifts, one that merges the advantages of both the template fitting and empirical fitting algorithms, without any of their disadvantages. This technique derives a set of templates, describing the spectral energy distributions of galaxies, from a catalog with both multicolor photometry and spectroscopic redshifts. The algorithm is essentially using the shapes of the templates as the fitting parameters. From simulated multicolor data we show that for a small training set of galaxies we can reconstruct robustly the underlying spectral energy distributions even in the presence of substantial errors in the photometric observations. We apply these techniques to the multicolor and spectroscopic observations of the Hubble Deep Field building a set of template spectra that reproduced the observed galaxy colors to better than 10%. Finally we demonstrate that these improved spectral energy distributions lead to a photometric-redshift relation for the Hubble Deep Field that is more accurate than standard template-based approaches.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figures, LaTeX AASTeX, accepted for publication in A

    Fotometriai vöröseltolódások és az SDSS adatbázis = Photometric redshifts and the SDSS Science Archive

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    A kitűzött célokat messzemenően teljesítettük. Az általunk folyamatosan fejlesztett fotometrikus vöröseltolódás becslésének technika az SDSS hivatalos módszerévé vált, ennek segítségével készítettük el a publikus adatkibocsátások katalógusait. A fotometrikus vöröseltolódás becslés felhasználásával MgII abszorberek távolságát határoztuk meg spektroszkópiai észlelések nélkül, LRG-MgII korrelációs függvényeket, és halo tömeget becsültünk. Kimutattuk, hogy az MgII felhők nem virializálódnak, melyből sejtéseket lehet felállítani keletkezésük körülményeire. Az adatbázis indexelési technológiákat fejlesztve kialakítottunk egy több-dimenziós (pl. fotometriai) térben hatékonyan kereső keretrendszert, melyet integráltuk az SDSS adatbázis architektúrájába, újfajta kereséseket lehetővé téve. Elkészültek prototípusok, amelyek az adatok 2 és 3 dimenziós, az adatbázissal közvetlenül kölcsönható vizualizációját szolgálják. Bekapcsolódtunk a nemzetközi Virtuális Obszervatórium munkájába, és büszkén mondhatjuk, hogy a valójában működő eszközök (Spectrum and Filter Services, Footprint Services, SkyServer, CasJobs, SDSS WorldWind) jelentős hányada elsősorban a pályázatban résztvevő kollégák munkájának eredménye. A pályázat lehetővé tette számos diák bekapcsolódását a nemzetközi kutatásokba, mely több diploma- és PhD munka alapját képezte, hozzájárult a témavezető MTA doktori disszertációjának elkészítéséhez valamint új alapkutatási és kutatás-fejlesztési pályázatok elnyeréséhez. | The goals of the proposal have been fulfilled. Our photometric estimation technique became the official method to estimate galaxy redshifts for the SDSS. With our algorithm we have created the public catalogs for the yearly data releases. With the help of the estimated photometric redshifts we were able to measure the distance of MgII absorbers without spectroscopic observations, and estimated the LRG-MgII correlation function and the mass of halos. We have shown, that the MgII clouds are not virialized, which fact contributes to the understanding of their formation. The development of new database indexing techniques resulted in a new multidimensional search method, which has been integrated into the SDSS archive to search the magnitude space. We have created prototypes for interactive data visualization in 2 and 3 dimensions. We have joined the International Virtual Observatory Alliance, and most of the flagship tools (Spectrum and Filter Services, Footprint Services, SkyServer, CasJobs, SDSS WorldWind) are results of mostly colleagues participating in this project. The support of the project made possible for several students to join the international astronomical research community, several theses were based on this research, and it was a solid base for further grant proposals, where the work can be continued

    rCUR: an R package for CUR matrix decomposition

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    BACKGROUND: Many methods for dimensionality reduction of large data sets such as those generated in microarray studies boil down to the Singular Value Decomposition (SVD). Although singular vectors associated with the largest singular values have strong optimality properties and can often be quite useful as a tool to summarize the data, they are linear combinations of up to all of the data points, and thus it is typically quite hard to interpret those vectors in terms of the application domain from which the data are drawn. Recently, an alternative dimensionality reduction paradigm, CUR matrix decompositions, has been proposed to address this problem and has been applied to genetic and internet data. CUR decompositions are low-rank matrix decompositions that are explicitly expressed in terms of a small number of actual columns and/or actual rows of the data matrix. Since they are constructed from actual data elements, CUR decompositions are interpretable by practitioners of the field from which the data are drawn. RESULTS: We present an implementation to perform CUR matrix decompositions, in the form of a freely available, open source R-package called rCUR. This package will help users to perform CUR-based analysis on large-scale data, such as those obtained from different high-throughput technologies, in an interactive and exploratory manner. We show two examples that illustrate how CUR-based techniques make it possible to reduce significantly the number of probes, while at the same time maintaining major trends in data and keeping the same classification accuracy. CONCLUSIONS: The package rCUR provides functions for the users to perform CUR-based matrix decompositions in the R environment. In gene expression studies, it gives an additional way of analysis of differential expression and discriminant gene selection based on the use of statistical leverage scores. These scores, which have been used historically in diagnostic regression analysis to identify outliers, can be used by rCUR to identify the most informative data points with respect to which to express the remaining data points

    Evidence for a high-z ISW signal from supervoids in the distribution of eBOSS quasars

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    The late-time integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) imprint of R100 h1MpcR\gtrsim 100~h^{-1}{\rm Mpc} super-structures is sourced by evolving large-scale potentials due to a dominant dark energy component in the Λ\LambdaCDM model. The aspect that makes the ISW effect distinctly interesting is the repeated observation of stronger-than-expected imprints from supervoids at z0.9z\lesssim0.9. Here we analyze the un-probed key redshift range 0.8<z<2.20.8<z<2.2 where the ISW signal is expected to fade in Λ\LambdaCDM, due to a weakening dark energy component, and eventually become consistent with zero in the matter dominated epoch. On the contrary, alternative cosmological models, proposed to explain the excess low-zz ISW signals, predicted a sign-change in the ISW effect at z1.5z\approx1.5 due to the possible growth of large-scale potentials that is absent in the standard model. To discriminate, we estimated the high-zz Λ\LambdaCDM ISW signal using the Millennium XXL mock catalogue, and compared it to our measurements from about 800 supervoids identified in the eBOSS DR16 quasar catalogue. At 0.8<z<1.20.8<z<1.2, we found an excess ISW signal with AISW3.6±2.1A_\mathrm{ ISW}\approx3.6\pm2.1 amplitude. The signal is then consistent with the Λ\LambdaCDM expectation (AISW=1A_\mathrm{ ISW}=1) at 1.2<z<1.51.2<z<1.5 where the standard and alternative models predict similar amplitudes. Most interestingly, we also detected an opposite-sign ISW signal at 1.5<z<2.21.5<z<2.2 that is in 2.7σ2.7\sigma tension with the Λ\LambdaCDM prediction. Taken at face value, these moderately significant detections of ISW anomalies suggest an alternative growth rate of structure in low-density environments at 100 h1Mpc\sim100~h^{-1}{\rm Mpc} scales.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, submitted to MNRA

    Spectral Templates from Multicolor Redshift Surveys

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    Understanding how the physical properties of galaxies (e.g. their spectral type or age) evolve as a function of redshift relies on having an accurate representation of galaxy spectral energy distributions. While it has been known for some time that galaxy spectra can be reconstructed from a handful of orthogonal basis templates, the underlying basis is poorly constrained. The limiting factor has been the lack of large samples of galaxies (covering a wide range in spectral type) with high signal-to-noise spectrophotometric observations. To alleviate this problem we introduce here a new technique for reconstructing galaxy spectral energy distributions directly from samples of galaxies with broadband photometric data and spectroscopic redshifts. Exploiting the statistical approach of the Karhunen-Loeve expansion, our iterative training procedure increasingly improves the eigenbasis, so that it provides better agreement with the photometry. We demonstrate the utility of this approach by applying these improved spectral energy distributions to the estimation of photometric redshifts for the HDF sample of galaxies. We find that in a small number of iterations the dispersion in the photometric redshifts estimator (a comparison between predicted and measured redshifts) can decrease by up to a factor of 2.Comment: 25 pages, 9 figures, LaTeX AASTeX, accepted for publication in A

    Communication in networks with hierarchical branching

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    We present a simple model of communication in networks with hierarchical branching. We analyze the behavior of the model from the viewpoint of critical systems under different situations. For certain values of the parameters, a continuous phase transition between a sparse and a congested regime is observed and accurately described by an order parameter and the power spectra. At the critical point the behavior of the model is totally independent of the number of hierarchical levels. Also scaling properties are observed when the size of the system varies. The presence of noise in the communication is shown to break the transition. Despite the simplicity of the model, the analytical results are a useful guide to forecast the main features of real networks.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Final version accepted in PR

    Gamma photometric redshifts for long gamma-ray bursts

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    It is known that the soft tail of the gamma-ray bursts' spectra show excesses from the exact power-law dependence. In this article we show that this departure can be detected in the peak flux ratios of different BATSE DISCSC energy channels. This effect allows to estimate the redshift of the bright long gamma-ray bursts in the BATSE Catalog. A verification of these redshifts is obtained for the 8 GRB which have both BATSE DISCSC data and measured optical spectroscopic redshifts. There is good correlation between the measured and esti redshifts, and the average error is Δz0.33\Delta z \approx 0.33. The method is similar to the photometric redshift estimation of galaxies in the optical range, hence it can be called as "gamma photometric redshift estimation". The estimated redshifts for the long bright gamma-ray bursts are up to z4z \simeq 4. For the the faint long bursts - which should be up to z20z \simeq 20 - the redshifts cannot be determined unambiguously with this method.Comment: accepted in A&A, 7 pages incl. 7 figure
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