22,362 research outputs found
On the Spectrum and Nature of the Peculiar Type Ia Supernova 1991T
A parameterized supernova synthetic-spectrum code is used to study line
identifications in the photospheric-phase spectra of the peculiar Type Ia SN
1991T, and to extract some constraints on the composition structure of the
ejected matter. The inferred composition structure is not like that of any
hydrodynamical model for Type Ia supernovae. Evidence that SN 1991T was
overluminous for an SN Ia is presented, and it is suggested that this peculiar
event probably was a substantially super-Chandrasekhar explosion that resulted
from the merger of two white dwarfs.Comment: 1 text, 7 figures, submitted to MNRA
On the attenuation coefficient of monomode periodic waveguides
It is widely accepted that, on ensemble average, the transmission T of guided
modes decays exponentially with the waveguide length L due to small
imperfections, leading to the important figure of merit defined as the
attenuation-rate coefficient alpha = -/L. In this letter, we evidence
that the exponential-damping law is not valid in general for periodic monomode
waveguides, especially as the group velocity decreases. This result that
contradicts common beliefs and experimental practices aiming at measuring alpha
is supported by a theoretical study of light transport in the limit of very
small imperfections, and by numerical results obtained for two waveguide
geometries that offer contrasted damping behaviours
Cultural Transmission of Work-Welfare Attitudes and the Intergenerational Correlation in Welfare Receipt
This paper considers the potential for the cultural transmission of attitudes toward work, welfare, and individual responsibility to explain the intergenerational correlation in welfare receipt. Specifically, we investigate whether 18-year oldsâ views about social benefits and the drivers of social inequality depend on their familiesâ welfare histories. We begin by incorporating welfare receipt into a theoretical model of the cultural transmission of work-welfare attitudes across generations. Consistent with the predictions of our model, we find that young peopleâs attitudes towards work and welfare are shaped by socialization within their families. Young people are more likely to oppose generous social benefits and adopt an internal view of social inequality if their mothers support these views, if their mothers were employed while they were growing up, and if their families never received welfare. These results are consistent with âthough do not definitively establishâ the existence of an intergenerational welfare culture.cultural transmission, attitudes, intergenerational welfare receipt
Fast algorithm for border bases of Artinian Gorenstein algebras
Given a multi-index sequence , we present a new efficient algorithm
to compute generators of the linear recurrence relations between the terms of
. We transform this problem into an algebraic one, by identifying
multi-index sequences, multivariate formal power series and linear functionals
on the ring of multivariate polynomials. In this setting, the recurrence
relations are the elements of the kerne l\sigma of the Hankel operator
$H$\sigma associated to . We describe the correspondence between
multi-index sequences with a Hankel operator of finite rank and Artinian
Gorenstein Algebras. We show how the algebraic structure of the Artinian
Gorenstein algebra \sigma\sigma yields the
structure of the terms $\sigma\alpha N nAK[x 1 ,. .. , xnIHIA$ and the tables of multiplication by the variables in these
bases. It is an extension of Berlekamp-Massey-Sakata (BMS) algorithm, with
improved complexity bounds. We present applications of the method to different
problems such as the decomposition of functions into weighted sums of
exponential functions, sparse interpolation, fast decoding of algebraic codes,
computing the vanishing ideal of points, and tensor decomposition. Some
benchmarks illustrate the practical behavior of the algorithm
Preliminary Spectral Analysis of SN 1994I
We present optical spectra of the Type Ic supernova 1994I in M51 and
preliminary non-LTE analysis of the spectra. Our models are not inconsistent
with the explosions of C+O cores of massive stars. While we find no direct
evidence for helium in the optical spectra, our models cannot rule out small
amounts of helium. More than 0.1~\msol\ of helium seems unlikely.Comment: LaTeX, MN style, psfig, and natbib substyles, 7 pages, 4 figures, to
appear in MNRAS. Postscript file available from
http://www.nhn.uoknor.edu/~baro
Detailed Spectral Modeling of a 3-D Pulsating Reverse Detonation Model: Too Much Nickel
We calculate detailed NLTE synthetic spectra of a Pulsating Reverse
Detonation (PRD) model, a novel explosion mechanism for Type Ia supernovae.
While the hydro models are calculated in 3-D, the spectra use an angle averaged
hydro model and thus some of the 3-D details are lost, but the overall average
should be a good representation of the average observed spectra. We study the
model at 3 epochs: maximum light, seven days prior to maximum light, and 5 days
after maximum light. At maximum the defining Si II feature is prominent, but
there is also a prominent C II feature, not usually observed in normal SNe Ia
near maximum. We compare to the early spectrum of SN 2006D which did show a
prominent C II feature, but the fit to the observations is not compelling.
Finally we compare to the post-maximum UV+optical spectrum of SN 1992A. With
the broad spectral coverage it is clear that the iron-peak elements on the
outside of the model push too much flux to the red and thus the particular PRD
realizations studied would be intrinsically far redder than observed SNe Ia. We
briefly discuss variations that could improve future PRD models.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Ap
Arcuate nucleus homeostatic systems reflect blood leptin concentration but not feeding behaviour during scheduled feeding on a high-fat diet in mice
Acknowledgements T.B. was funded by a CASE studentship from the BBSRC and AstraZeneca. J.B. was a summer student from Bordeaux Sciences Agro and funded by student laboratory experience grant from the British Society of Neuroendocrinology. The authors are also grateful for funding from the Scottish Government, and from the European Union Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreements 266408 (Full4Health) and 245009 (NeuroFAST).Peer reviewedPublisher PD
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