34,417 research outputs found
Constraining ultra large-scale cosmology with multiple tracers in optical and radio surveys
Multiple tracers of the cosmic density field, with different bias, number and
luminosity evolution, can be used to measure the large-scale properties of the
Universe. We show how an optimal combination of tracers can be used to detect
general-relativistic effects in the observed density of sources. We forecast
for the detectability of these effects, as well as measurements of primordial
non-Gaussianity and large-scale lensing magnification with current and upcoming
large-scale structure experiments. In particular we quantify the significance
of these detections in the short term with experiments such as the Dark Energy
Survey (DES), and in the long term with the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope
(LSST) and the Square Kilometre Array (SKA). We review the main observational
challenges that must be overcome to carry out these measurements.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figure
On the galloping instability of two-dimensional bodies having elliptical cross sections.
Galloping, also known as Den Hartog instability, is the large amplitude, low frequency oscillation of a structure in the direction transverse to the mean wind direction. It normally appears in the case of bodies with small stiffness and structural damping, when they are placed in a flow provided the incident velocity is high enough. Galloping depends on the slope of the lift coefficient versus angle of attack curve, which must be negative. Generally speaking this implies that the body is stalled after boundary layer separation, which, as it is known in non-wedged bodies, is a Reynolds number dependent phenomenon. Wind tunnel experiments have been conducted aiming at establishing the characteristics of the galloping motion of elliptical cross-section bodies when subjected to a uniform flow, the angles of attack ranging from 0° to 90°. The results have been summarized in stability maps, both in the angle of attack versus relative thickness and in the angle of attack versus Reynolds number planes, where galloping instability regions are identified
Energy consumption for ion transport in a segmented Paul trap
There is recent interest in determining energy costs of shortcuts to
adiabaticity (STA), but different definitions of "cost" have been used. We
demonstrate the importance of taking into account the Control System (CS) for a
fair assessment of energy flows and consumptions. We model the energy
consumption and power to transport an ion by a STA protocol in a multisegmented
Paul trap. The ion is driven by an externally controlled, moving harmonic
oscillator. Even if no net ion- energy is gained at destination, setting the
time-dependent control parameters is a macroscopic operation that costs energy
and results in energy dissipation for the short time scales implied by the
intrinsically fast STA processes. The potential minimum is displaced by
modulating the voltages on control (dc) electrodes. A secondary effect of the
modulation, usually ignored as it does not affect the ion dynamics, is the
time- dependent energy shift of the potential minimum. The non trivial part of
the energy consumption is due to the electromotive forces to set the electrode
voltages through the low-pass filters required to preserve the electronic noise
from decohering the ion's motion. The results for the macroscopic CS (the Paul
trap) are compared to the microscopic power and energy of the ion alone.
Similarities are found -and may be used quantitatively to minimize costs- only
when the CS-dependent energy shift of the harmonic oscillator is included in
the ion energy
Energetic metabolism in fasting sheep: regularization of metabolic profile by treatment with oral glucose, with prior handling of gastric groove
The objective of this research was to evaluate a possible corrective measure against negative metabolic states, as occurs in the advanced stage of gestation in ewes, and that sometimes produces a disease called pregnancy toxaemia. In the present research, we found that the joint administration of i.v. lysine-vasopressin (0.08 IU/kg body weight, BW) and an oral glucose solution (50 g) produces an increase in blood glucose, which persists for some time (up to 6 h); therefore, it could be used in the treatment of pregnancy toxaemia. This therapy is based on the fact that lysine-vasopressin induces gastric groove closure in adult ruminants, enabling orally administered glucose to reach the abomasum directly, from where it rapidly passes into the intestine and is immediately absorbed. We can say that the tested treatment causes a significant increase in blood glucose in ewes affected by toxaemia caused by fasting, which, although less marked than conventional therapy with intravenous drip glucose, remains longer, regularizing other parameters indicative of energy metabolism in fasting ewes
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The relationship of drug reimbursement with the price and the quality of pharmaceutical innovations
This paper studies the strategic interaction between pharmaceutical firms' pricing decisions and government agencies' reimbursement decisions which discriminate between patients by giving reimbursement rights to patients for whom the drug is most effective. We show that if the reimbursement decision preceeds the pricing decision, the agency only reimburses some patients if the private and public health benefits from the new drug diverge. That is, when (i) there are large externalities of consuming the drug and (ii) the difference in costs between the new drug and the alternative treatment is large. Alternatively, if the firm can commit to a price in advance of the reimbursement decision, we identify a strategic effect which implies that by committing to a high price ex ante, the firm can force a listing outcome and make the agency more willing to reimburse than in the absence of commitment
Metallicity of high stellar mass galaxies with signs of merger events
We focus on an analysis of galaxies of high stellar mass and low metallicity.
We cross-correlated the Millenium Galaxy Catalogue (MGC) and the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (SDSS) galaxy catalogue to provide a sample of MGC objects with high
resolution imaging and both spectroscopic and photometric information available
in the SDSS database. For each galaxy in our sample, we conducted a systematic
morphological analysis by visual inspection of MGC images using their
luminosity contours. The galaxies are classified as either disturbed or
undisturbed objects. We divide the sample into three metallicity regions,
within wich we compare the properties of disturbed and undisturbed objects. We
find that the fraction of galaxies that are strongly disturbed, indicative of
being merger remnants, is higher when lower metallicity objects are considered.
The three bins analysed consist of approximatively 15%, 20%, and 50% disturbed
galaxies (for high, medium, and low metallicity, respectively). Moreover, the
ratio of the disturbed to undisturbed relative distributions of the population
age indicator, Dn(4000), in the low metallicity bin, indicates that the
disturbed objects have substantially younger stellar populations than their
undisturbed counterparts. In addition, we find that an analysis of colour
distributions provides similar results, showing that low metallicity galaxies
with a disturbed morphology are bluer than those that are undisturbed. The
bluer colours and younger populations of the low metallicity, morphologically
disturbed objects suggest that they have experienced a recent merger with an
associated enhanced star formation rate. [abridged]Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics, in pres
Reconstructing cosmic growth with kSZ observations in the era of Stage IV experiments
Future ground-based CMB experiments will generate competitive large-scale
structure datasets by precisely characterizing CMB secondary anisotropies over
a large fraction of the sky. We describe a method for constraining the growth
rate of structure to sub-1% precision out to , using a combination
of galaxy cluster peculiar velocities measured using the kinetic
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (kSZ) effect, and the velocity field reconstructed from
galaxy redshift surveys. We consider only thermal SZ-selected cluster samples,
which will consist of sources for Stage 3 and 4 CMB
experiments respectively. Three different methods for separating the kSZ effect
from the primary CMB are compared, including a novel blind "constrained
realization" method that improves signal-to-noise by a factor of over
a commonly-used aperture photometry technique. Measurements of the integrated
tSZ -parameter are used to break the kSZ velocity-optical depth degeneracy,
and the effects of including CMB polarization and SZ profile uncertainties are
also considered. A combination of future Stage 4 experiments should be able to
measure the product of the growth and expansion rates, , to
better than 1% in bins of out to -- competitive
with contemporary redshift-space distortion constraints from galaxy surveys.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
Differential susceptibility to noise of mixed Turing and Hopf modes in a photosensitive chemical medium
We report on experiments with the photosensitive chlorine dioxide-iodine-malonic acid reaction (CDIMA) when forced with a random (spatiotemporally) distributed illumination. Acting on a mixed mode consisting of oscillating spots, close enough to the Hopf and Turing codimension-two bifurcation, we observe attenuation of oscillations while the spatial pattern is preserved. Numerical simulations confirm and extend these results. All together these observations point out to a larger vulnerability of the Hopf with respect to the Turing mode when facing noise of intermediate intensity and small correlation parameters.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
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