508 research outputs found
On the thermal conductivities of certain poor conductors
We have been engaged for several years in an attempt to measure, by the aid of the so called "Wall Method," the thermal conductivities of certain relatively poor conductors; and the variations of these conductivities with the temperature. ..
Tailoring laser pulses with spectral and fluence constraints using optimal control theory
Within the framework of optimal control theory we develop a simple iterative
scheme to determine optimal laser pulses with spectral and fluence constraints.
The algorithm is applied to a one-dimensional asymmetric double well where the
control target is to transfer a particle from the ground state, located in the
left well, to the first excited state, located in the right well. Extremely
high occupations of the first excited state are obtained for a variety of
spectral and/or energetic constraints. Even for the extreme case where no
resonance frequency is allowed in the pulse the algorithm achieves an
occupation of almost 100%
Shear stress fluctuations in the granular liquid and solid phases
We report on experimentally observed shear stress fluctuations in both
granular solid and fluid states, showing that they are non-Gaussian at low
shear rates, reflecting the predominance of correlated structures (force
chains) in the solidlike phase, which also exhibit finite rigidity to shear.
Peaks in the rigidity and the stress distribution's skewness indicate that a
change to the force-bearing mechanism occurs at the transition to fluid
behaviour, which, it is shown, can be predicted from the behaviour of the
stress at lower shear rates. In the fluid state stress is Gaussian distributed,
suggesting that the central limit theorem holds. The fibre bundle model with
random load sharing effectively reproduces the stress distribution at the yield
point and also exhibits the exponential stress distribution anticipated from
extant work on stress propagation in granular materials.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, latex. Replacement adds journal reference and
addresses referee comment
The discourse of Olympic security 2012 : London 2012
This paper uses a combination of CDA and CL to investigate the discursive realization of the security operation for the 2012 London Olympic Games. Drawing on Didier Bigoâs (2008) conceptualisation of the âbanopticonâ, it address two questions: what distinctive
linguistic features are used in documents relating to security for London 2012; and, how is Olympic security realized as a discursive practice in these documents? Findings suggest that the documents indeed realized key banoptic features of the banopticon: exceptionalism, exclusion and prediction, as well as what we call âpedagogisationâ. Claims were made for the
exceptional scale of the Olympic events; predictive technologies were proposed to assess the
threat from terrorism; and documentary evidence suggests that access to Olympic venues
was being constituted to resemble transit through national boundarie
Beyond element-wise interactions: identifying complex interactions in biological processes
Background: Biological processes typically involve the interactions of a number of elements (genes, cells) acting on each others. Such processes are often modelled as networks whose nodes are the elements in question and edges pairwise relations between them (transcription, inhibition). But more often than not, elements actually work cooperatively or competitively to achieve a task. Or an element can act on the interaction between two others, as in the case of an enzyme controlling a reaction rate. We call âcomplexâ these types of interaction and propose ways to identify them from time-series observations.
Methodology: We use Granger Causality, a measure of the interaction between two signals, to characterize the influence of an enzyme on a reaction rate. We extend its traditional formulation to the case of multi-dimensional signals in order to capture group interactions, and not only element interactions. Our method is extensively tested on simulated data and applied to three biological datasets: microarray data of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast, local field potential recordings of two brain areas and a metabolic reaction.
Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that complex Granger causality can reveal new types of relation between signals and is particularly suited to biological data. Our approach raises some fundamental issues of the systems biology approach since finding all complex causalities (interactions) is an NP hard problem
The role of chaotic resonances in the solar system
Our understanding of the Solar System has been revolutionized over the past
decade by the finding that the orbits of the planets are inherently chaotic. In
extreme cases, chaotic motions can change the relative positions of the planets
around stars, and even eject a planet from a system. Moreover, the spin axis of
a planet-Earth's spin axis regulates our seasons-may evolve chaotically, with
adverse effects on the climates of otherwise biologically interesting planets.
Some of the recently discovered extrasolar planetary systems contain multiple
planets, and it is likely that some of these are chaotic as well.Comment: 28 pages, 9 figure
Asteroseismology from multi-month Kepler photometry: the evolved Sun-like stars KIC 10273246 and KIC 10920273
The evolved main-sequence Sun-like stars KIC 10273246 (F-type) and KIC
10920273 (G-type) were observed with the NASA Kepler satellite for
approximately ten months with a duty cycle in excess of 90%. Such continuous
and long observations are unprecedented for solar-type stars other than the
Sun.
We aimed mainly at extracting estimates of p-mode frequencies - as well as of
other individual mode parameters - from the power spectra of the light curves
of both stars, thus providing scope for a full seismic characterization.
The light curves were corrected for instrumental effects in a manner
independent of the Kepler Science Pipeline. Estimation of individual mode
parameters was based both on the maximization of the likelihood of a model
describing the power spectrum and on a classic prewhitening method. Finally, we
employed a procedure for selecting frequency lists to be used in stellar
modeling.
A total of 30 and 21 modes of degree l=0,1,2 - spanning at least eight radial
orders - have been identified for KIC 10273246 and KIC 10920273, respectively.
Two avoided crossings (l=1 ridge) have been identified for KIC 10273246,
whereas one avoided crossing plus another likely one have been identified for
KIC 10920273. Good agreement is found between observed and predicted mode
amplitudes for the F-type star KIC 10273246, based on a revised scaling
relation. Estimates are given of the rotational periods, the parameters
describing stellar granulation and the global asteroseismic parameters
and .Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures, to be published in Astronomy & Astrophysic
What is the Value of Vagueness?
Classically, vagueness has been considered something bad. It leads to the Sorites paradox, borderline cases, and the (apparent) violation of the logical principle of bivalence. Nevertheless, there have always been scholars claiming that vagueness is also valuable. Many have pointed out that we could not communicate as successfully or efficiently as we do if we would not use vague language. Indeed, we often use vague terms when we could have used more precise ones instead. Many scholars (implicitly or explicitly) assume that we do so because their vagueness has a positive function. But how and in what sense can vagueness be said to have a function or value? This paper is an attempt to give an answer to this question. After clarifying the concepts of vagueness and value, it examines nine arguments for the value of vagueness, which have been discussed in the literature. The (negative) result of this examination is, however, that there is not much reason to believe that vagueness has a value or positive function at all because none of the arguments is conclusive. A tenth argument that has not been discussed so far seems most promising but rests on a solely strategic notion of function
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