7,787 research outputs found
Triggering at High Luminosity Colliders
This article discusses the techniques used to select online promising events
at high energy and high luminosity colliders. After a brief introduction,
explaining some general aspects of triggering, the more specific implementation
options for well established machines like the Tevatron and Large Hadron
Collider are presented. An outlook on what difficulties need to be met is given
when designing trigger systems at the Super Large Hadron Collider, or at the
International Linear ColliderComment: Accepted for publication in New Journal of Physic
How blockchain impacts cloud-based system performance: a case study for a groupware communication application
This paper examines the performance trade-off when implementing a blockchain architecture for a cloud-based groupware communication application. We measure the additional cloud-based resources and performance costs of the overhead required to implement a groupware collaboration system over a blockchain architecture. To evaluate our groupware application, we develop measuring instruments for testing scalability and performance of computer systems deployed as cloud computing applications. While some details of our groupware collaboration application have been published in earlier work, in this paper we reflect on a generalized measuring method for blockchain-enabled applications which may in turn lead to a general methodology for testing cloud-based system performance and scalability using blockchain. Response time and transaction throughput metrics are collected for the blockchain implementation against the non-blockchain implementation and some conclusions are drawn about the additional resources that a blockchain architecture for a groupware collaboration application impose
A new method to suppress the bias in polarized intensity
Computing polarised intensities from noisy data in Stokes U and Q suffers
from a positive bias that should be suppressed. To develop a correction method
that, when applied to maps, should provide a distribution of polarised
intensity that closely follows the signal from the source. We propose a new
method to suppress the bias by estimating the polarisation angle of the source
signal in a noisy environment with help of a modified median filter. We then
determine the polarised intensity, including the noise, by projection of the
observed values of Stokes U and Q onto the direction of this polarisation
angle. We show that our new method represents the true signal very well. If the
noise distribution in the maps of U and Q is Gaussian, then in the corrected
map of polarised intensity it is also Gaussian. Smoothing to larger Gaussian
beamsizes, to improve the signal-to-noise ratio, can be done directly with our
method in the map of the polarised intensity. Our method also works in case of
non-Gaussian noise distributions. The maps of the corrected polarised
intensities and polarisation angles are reliable even in regions with weak
signals and provide integrated flux densities and degrees of polarisation
without the cumulative effect of the bias, which especially affects faint
sources. Features at low intensity levels like 'depolarisation canals' are
smoother than in the maps using the previous methods, which has broader
implications, for example on the interpretation of interstellar turbulence.Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
A mechanical model for guided motion of mammalian cells
We introduce a generic, purely mechanical model for environment sensitive
motion of mammalian cells that is applicable to chemotaxis, haptotaxis, and
durotaxis as modes of motility. It is able to theoretically explain all
relevant experimental observations, in particular, the high efficiency of
motion, the behavior on inhomogeneous substrates, and the fixation of the
lagging pole during motion. Furthermore, our model predicts that efficiency of
motion in following a gradient depends on cell geometry (with more elongated
cells being more efficient).Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, 5 pages Supplemental Materia
The NOD3 software package: A graphical user interface-supported reduction package for single-dish radio continuum and polarisation observations
The venerable NOD2 data reduction software package for single-dish radio
continuum observations, developed for use at the 100-m Effelsberg radio
telescope, has been successfully applied over many decades. Modern computing
facilities call for a new design.
We aim to develop an interactive software tool with a graphical user
interface (GUI) for the reduction of single-dish radio continuum maps. Special
effort is given on the reduction of distortions along the scanning direction
(scanning effects) by combining maps scanned in orthogonal directions or dual-
or multiple-horn observations that need to be processed in a restoration
procedure. The package should also process polarisation data and offer the
possibility to include special tasks written by the individual user.
Based on the ideas of the NOD2 package we developed NOD3, which includes all
necessary tasks from the raw maps to the final maps in total intensity and
linear polarisation. Furthermore, plot routines and several methods for map
analysis are available. The NOD3 package is written in Python which allows to
extend the package by additional tasks. The required data format for the input
maps is FITS.
NOD3 is a sophisticated tool to process and analyse maps from single-dish
observations that are affected by 'scanning effects' due to clouds, receiver
instabilities, or radio-frequency interference (RFI). The 'basket-weaving' tool
combines orthogonally scanned maps to a final map that is almost free of
scanning effects. The new restoration tool for dual-beam observations reduces
the noise by a factor of about two compared to the NOD2 version. Combining
single-dish with interferometer data in the map plane ensures the full recovery
of the total flux density.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, Accepted for publication in A&
Influence of polarizability on metal oxide properties studied by molecular dynamics simulations
We have studied the dependence of metal oxide properties in molecular
dynamics (MD) simulations on the polarizability of oxygen ions. We present
studies of both liquid and crystalline structures of silica (SiO2), magnesia
(MgO) and alumina (Al2O3). For each of the three oxides, two separately
optimized sets of force fields were used: (i) Long-range Coulomb interactions
between oxide and metal ions combined with a short-range pair potential. (ii)
Extension of force field (i) by adding polarizability to the oxygen ions. We
show that while an effective potential of type (i) without polarizable oxygen
ions can describe radial distributions and lattice constants reasonably well,
potentials of type (ii) are required to obtain correct values for bond angles
and the equation of state. The importance of polarizability for metal oxide
properties decreases with increasing temperature.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Synthetic X-ray and radio maps for two different models of Stephan's Quintet
We present simulations of the compact galaxy group Stephan's Quintet (SQ)
including magnetic fields, performed with the N-body/smoothed particle
hydrodynamics (SPH) code \textsc{Gadget}. The simulations include radiative
cooling, star formation and supernova feedback. Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) is
implemented using the standard smoothed particle magnetohydrodynamics (SPMHD)
method. We adapt two different initial models for SQ based on Renaud et al. and
Hwang et al., both including four galaxies (NGC 7319, NGC 7320c, NGC 7318a and
NGC 7318b). Additionally, the galaxies are embedded in a magnetized, low
density intergalactic medium (IGM). The ambient IGM has an initial magnetic
field of G and the four progenitor discs have initial magnetic fields
of G. We investigate the morphology, regions of star
formation, temperature, X-ray emission, magnetic field structure and radio
emission within the two different SQ models. In general, the enhancement and
propagation of the studied gaseous properties (temperature, X-ray emission,
magnetic field strength and synchrotron intensity) is more efficient for the SQ
model based on Renaud et al., whose galaxies are more massive, whereas the less
massive SQ model based on Hwang et al. shows generally similar effects but with
smaller efficiency. We show that the large shock found in observations of SQ is
most likely the result of a collision of the galaxy NGC 7318b with the IGM.
This large group-wide shock is clearly visible in the X-ray emission and
synchrotron intensity within the simulations of both SQ models. The order of
magnitude of the observed synchrotron emission within the shock front is
slightly better reproduced by the SQ model based on Renaud et al., whereas the
distribution and structure of the synchrotron emission is better reproduced by
the SQ model based on Hwang et al..Comment: 20 pages, 15 figures, accepted to MNRA
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