13,878 research outputs found
On the usefulness of finding charts Or the runaway carbon stars of the Blanco & McCarthy field 37
We have been recently faced with the problem of cross--identifying stars
recorded in historical catalogues with those extracted from recent fully
digitized surveys (such as DENIS and 2MASS). Positions mentioned in the old
catalogues are frequently of poor precision, but are generally accompanied by
finding charts where the interesting objects are flagged. Those finding charts
are sometimes our only link with the accumulated knowledge of past literature.
While checking the identification of some of these objects in several
catalogues, we had the surprise to discover a number of discrepancies in recent
works.The main reason for these discrepancies was generally the blind
application of the smallest difference in position as the criterion to identify
sources from one historical catalogue to those in more recent surveys. In this
paper we give examples of such misidentifications, and show how we were able to
find and correct them.We present modern procedures to discover and solve
cross--identification problems, such as loading digitized images of the sky
through the Aladin service at CDS, and overlaying entries from historical
catalogues and modern surveys. We conclude that the use of good finding charts
still remains the ultimate (though time--consuming) tool to ascertain
cross--identifications in difficult cases.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, accepted by A&
Stationary states of a spherical Minority Game with ergodicity breaking
Using generating functional and replica techniques, respectively, we study
the dynamics and statics of a spherical Minority Game (MG), which in contrast
with a spherical MG previously presented in J.Phys A: Math. Gen. 36 11159
(2003) displays a phase with broken ergodicity and dependence of the
macroscopic stationary state on initial conditions. The model thus bears more
similarity with the original MG. Still, all order parameters including the
volatility can computed in the ergodic phases without making any
approximations. We also study the effects of market impact correction on the
phase diagram. Finally we discuss a continuous-time version of the model as
well as the differences between on-line and batch update rules. Our analytical
results are confirmed convincingly by comparison with numerical simulations. In
an appendix we extend the analysis of the earlier spherical MG to a model with
general time-step, and compare the dynamics and statics of the two spherical
models.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures; typo correcte
Reversible Intercalation of Fluoride-Anion Receptor Complexes in Graphite
We have demonstrated a route to reversibly intercalate fluoride-anion receptor complexes in graphite via a nonaqueous electrochemical process. This approach may find application for a rechargeable lithium–fluoride dual-ion intercalating battery with high specific energy. The cell chemistry presented here uses graphite cathodes with LiF dissolved in a nonaqueous solvent through the aid of anion receptors. Cells have been demonstrated with reversible cathode specific capacity of approximately 80 mAh/g at discharge plateaus of upward of 4.8 V, with graphite staging of the intercalant observed via in situ synchrotron X-ray diffraction during charging. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and 11B nuclear magnetic resonance studies suggest that co-intercalation of the anion receptor with the fluoride occurs during charging, which likely limits the cathode specific capacity. The anion receptor type dictates the extent of graphite fluorination, and must be further optimized to realize high theoretical fluorination levels. To find these optimal anion receptors, we have designed an ab initio calculations-based scheme aimed at identifying receptors with favorable fluoride binding and release properties
Sparse 3D Point-cloud Map Upsampling and Noise Removal as a vSLAM Post-processing Step: Experimental Evaluation
The monocular vision-based simultaneous localization and mapping (vSLAM) is
one of the most challenging problem in mobile robotics and computer vision. In
this work we study the post-processing techniques applied to sparse 3D
point-cloud maps, obtained by feature-based vSLAM algorithms. Map
post-processing is split into 2 major steps: 1) noise and outlier removal and
2) upsampling. We evaluate different combinations of known algorithms for
outlier removing and upsampling on datasets of real indoor and outdoor
environments and identify the most promising combination. We further use it to
convert a point-cloud map, obtained by the real UAV performing indoor flight to
3D voxel grid (octo-map) potentially suitable for path planning.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, camera-ready version of paper for "The 3rd
International Conference on Interactive Collaborative Robotics (ICR 2018)
Tomato growth and dry matter partitioning as a function of the irrigation water quality.
Neste estudo, foram avaliados o crescimento e a partição de matéria seca do tomateiro industrial cv IPA 6, cultivado sob irrigação com águas de diferentes condutividades elétricas (ECw) e proporções de sódio, em um delineamento fatorial 5x2, inteiramente casualizado. As mudas foram transplantadas para rizotrons e irrigadas diariamente, sendo as matérias secas da haste, ramos, inflorescências e frutos determinadas no final do ciclo da cultura. O solo foi retirado dos rizotrons em intervalos de 15 cm de profundidade, lavado e peneirado para determinação da matéria seca das raízes em camada do solo. A matéria seca da parte aérea foi reduzida em 6,9% por incremento unitário da salinidade
Irrigation efficiency and water-policy implications for river basin resilience
Rising demand for food, fiber, and biofuels drives
expanding irrigation withdrawals from surface water and groundwater. Irrigation
efficiency and water savings have become watchwords in response to
climate-induced hydrological variability, increasing freshwater demand for
other uses including ecosystem water needs, and low economic productivity of
irrigation compared to most other uses. We identify three classes of
unintended consequences, presented here as paradoxes. Ever-tighter cycling
of water has been shown to increase resource use, an example of the
<i>efficiency paradox</i>. In the absence of effective policy to
constrain irrigated-area expansion using "saved water", efficiency can
aggravate scarcity, deteriorate resource quality, and impair river basin
resilience through loss of flexibility and redundancy. Water scarcity and
salinity effects in the lower reaches of basins (symptomatic of the
<i>scale paradox</i>) may partly be offset over the short-term through
groundwater pumping or increasing surface water storage capacity. However,
declining ecological flows and increasing salinity have important
implications for riparian and estuarine ecosystems and for non-irrigation
human uses of water including urban supply and energy generation, examples
of the <i>sectoral paradox</i>. This paper briefly considers three
regional contexts with broadly similar climatic and water-resource
conditions – central Chile, southwestern US, and south-central
Spain – where irrigation efficiency directly influences basin resilience.
The comparison leads to more generic insights on water policy in relation to
irrigation efficiency and emerging or overdue needs for environmental protection
Geometry preserving numerical methods for physical systems with finite-dimensional Lie algebras
In this paper we propose a geometric integrator to numerically approximate
the flow of Lie systems. The highlight of this paper is to present a novel
procedure that integrates the system on a Lie group intrinsically associated to
the Lie system, and then generating the discrete solution of this Lie system
through a given action of the Lie group on the manifold where the system
evolves.
One major result from the integration on the Lie group is that one is able to
solve all automorphic Lie systems at the same time, and that they can be
written as first-order systems of linear homogeneous ODEs in normal form. This
brings a lot of advantages, since solving a linear ODE involves less numerical
cost. Specifically, we use two families of numerical schemes on the Lie group,
which are designed to preserve its geometrical structure: the first one based
on the Magnus expansion, whereas the second is based on RKMK methods. Moreover,
since the aforementioned action relates the Lie group and the manifold where
the Lie system evolves, the resulting integrator preserves any geometric
structure of the latter. We compare both methods for Lie systems with geometric
invariants, particularly a class on Lie systems on curved spaces.
As already mentioned, the milestone of this paper is to show that the method
we propose preserves all the geometric invariants very faithfully, in
comparison with nongeometric numerical methods.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2204.0004
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