548 research outputs found
HST Observations of the Serendipitous X-ray Companion to Mrk 273: Cluster at z=0.46?
We have used HST I-band images to identify Mrk 273X, the very unusual
high-redshift X-ray-luminous Seyfert 2 galaxy found by ROSAT in the same
field-of-view as Mrk 273. We have measured the photometric properties of Mrk
273X and have also analyzed the luminosity distribution of the faint galaxy
population seen in the HST image. The luminosity of the galaxy and the
properties of the surrounding environment suggest that Mrk 273X is the
brightest galaxy in a relatively poor cluster at a redshift near 0.46. Its
off-center location in the cluster and the presence of other galaxy groupings
in the HST image may indicate that this is a dynamically young cluster on the
verge of merging with its neighboring clusters. We find that Mrk 273X is a
bright featureless elliptical galaxy with no evidence for a disk. It follows
the de Vaucouleurs (r^{1/4}) surface brightness law very well over a range of 8
magnitudes. Though the surface brightness profile does not appear to be
dominated by the AGN, the galaxy has very blue colors that do appear to be
produced by the AGN. Mrk 273X is most similar to the IC 5063 class of active
galaxies --- a hybrid Sy 2 / powerful radio galaxy.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 8 pages,
including 4 postscript figures. Uses emulateapj.sty and psfig.sty. Higher
quality version of Figure 1 is available at
http://rings.gsfc.nasa.gov/~borne/fig1-markgals.gi
Spallation Neutron Production by 0.8, 1.2 and 1.6 GeV Protons on various Targets
Spallation neutron production in proton induced reactions on Al, Fe, Zr, W,
Pb and Th targets at 1.2 GeV and on Fe and Pb at 0.8, and 1.6 GeV measured at
the SATURNE accelerator in Saclay is reported. The experimental
double-differential cross-sections are compared with calculations performed
with different intra-nuclear cascade models implemented in high energy
transport codes. The broad angular coverage also allowed the determination of
average neutron multiplicities above 2 MeV. Deficiencies in some of the models
commonly used for applications are pointed out.Comment: 20 pages, 32 figures, revised version, accepted fpr publication in
Phys. Rev.
10x224-Gb/s POLMUX-16QAM transmission over 656 km of large-Aeff PSCF with a special efficiency of 5.6 b/s/Hz
We demonstrate the successful transmission of 10 channels with 224-Gb/s POLMUX-16QAM modulation (28 GBaud) on a 37.5-GHz wavelength grid. Using large-Aeff pure-silica-core fibers we show a 656-km transmission distance with a spectral efficiency of 5.6 b/s/Hz. We report a back-to-back performance penalty of 3.5 dB compared to theoretical limits at the forward-error correction (FEC) limit (bit-error rate of 3.8·10-3), and a margin of 0.5 dB in Q-factor with respect to the FEC-limit after 656 km of transmission
A comparison between SSMF and large-Aeff Pure-Silica core fiber for Ultra Long-Haul 100G transmission
We compare the transmission performance of 112-Gb/s POLMUX-QPSK modulation over large-Aeff Pure-Silica core fiber and SSMF using EDFA-only amplification. The higher nonlinear threshold of the large-Aeff Pure-Silica core fiber allows for a 55% increase in transmission distance. By using back-propagation an additional 10% increase is observed. In case spans with equal length for both fiber types and two splices per span only would have been used, resulting in a lower span loss for the large-Aeff Pure-Silica core fiber, the total increase grows to 85%
Data Mining and Machine Learning in Astronomy
We review the current state of data mining and machine learning in astronomy.
'Data Mining' can have a somewhat mixed connotation from the point of view of a
researcher in this field. If used correctly, it can be a powerful approach,
holding the potential to fully exploit the exponentially increasing amount of
available data, promising great scientific advance. However, if misused, it can
be little more than the black-box application of complex computing algorithms
that may give little physical insight, and provide questionable results. Here,
we give an overview of the entire data mining process, from data collection
through to the interpretation of results. We cover common machine learning
algorithms, such as artificial neural networks and support vector machines,
applications from a broad range of astronomy, emphasizing those where data
mining techniques directly resulted in improved science, and important current
and future directions, including probability density functions, parallel
algorithms, petascale computing, and the time domain. We conclude that, so long
as one carefully selects an appropriate algorithm, and is guided by the
astronomical problem at hand, data mining can be very much the powerful tool,
and not the questionable black box.Comment: Published in IJMPD. 61 pages, uses ws-ijmpd.cls. Several extra
figures, some minor additions to the tex
Electronic structure in underdoped cuprates due to the emergence of a pseudogap
The phenomenological Green's function developed in the works of Yang, Rice
and Zhang has been very successful in understanding many of the anomalous
superconducting properties of the deeply underdoped cuprates. It is based on
considerations of the resonating valence bond spin liquid approximation and is
designed to describe the underdoped regime of the cuprates. Here we emphasize
the region of doping, , just below the quantum critical point at which the
pseudogap develops. In addition to Luttinger hole pockets centered around the
nodal direction, there are electron pockets near the antinodes which are
connected to the hole pockets by gapped bridging contours. We determine the
contours of nearest approach as would be measured in angular resolved
photoemission experiments and emphasize signatures of the Fermi surface
reconstruction from the large Fermi contour of Fermi liquid theory (which
contains hole states) to the Luttinger pocket (which contains hole
states). We find that the quasiparticle effective mass renormalization
increases strongly towards the edge of the Luttinger pockets beyond which it
diverges.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Clustering of the AKARI NEP deep field 24<i>μ</i>m selected galaxies
Aims. We present a method of selection of 24 μm galaxies from the AKARI north ecliptic pole (NEP) deep field down to 150 μJy and measurements of their two-point correlation function. We aim to associate various 24 μm selected galaxy populations with present day galaxies and to investigate the impact of their environment on the direction of their subsequent evolution.
Methods. We discuss using of Support Vector Machines (SVM) algorithm applied to infrared photometric data to perform star-galaxy separation, in which we achieve an accuracy higher than 80%. The photometric redshift information, obtained through the CIGALE code, is used to explore the redshift dependence of the correlation function parameter (r0) as well as the linear bias evolution. This parameter relates galaxy distribution to the one of the underlying dark matter. We connect the investigated sources to their potential local descendants through a simplified model of the clustering evolution without interactions.
Results. We observe two different populations of star-forming galaxies, at zmed ∼ 0.25, zmed ∼ 0.9. Measurements of total infrared luminosities (LTIR) show that the sample at zmed ∼ 0.25 is composed mostly of local star-forming galaxies, while the sample at zmed ∼ 0.9 is composed of luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs) with LTIR ∼ 1011.62 L⨀. We find that dark halo mass is not necessarily correlated with the LTIR: for subsamples with LTIR = 1011.15 L⨀ at zmed ∼ 0.7 we observe a higher clustering length (r0 = 6.21 ± 0.78 [h−1Mpc]) than for a subsample with mean LTIR = 1011.84 L⨀ at zmed ∼ 1.1 (r0 = 5.86 ± 0.69 h−1Mpc). We find that galaxies at zmed ∼ 0.9 can be ancestors of present day L∗ early type galaxies, which exhibit a very high r0 ∼ 8h−1 Mpc.</p
Potentiation of thrombus instability: a contributory mechanism to the effectiveness of antithrombotic medications
© The Author(s) 2018The stability of an arterial thrombus, determined by its structure and ability to resist endogenous fibrinolysis, is a major determinant of the extent of infarction that results from coronary or cerebrovascular thrombosis. There is ample evidence from both laboratory and clinical studies to suggest that in addition to inhibiting platelet aggregation, antithrombotic medications have shear-dependent effects, potentiating thrombus fragility and/or enhancing endogenous fibrinolysis. Such shear-dependent effects, potentiating the fragility of the growing thrombus and/or enhancing endogenous thrombolytic activity, likely contribute to the clinical effectiveness of such medications. It is not clear how much these effects relate to the measured inhibition of platelet aggregation in response to specific agonists. These effects are observable only with techniques that subject the growing thrombus to arterial flow and shear conditions. The effects of antithrombotic medications on thrombus stability and ways of assessing this are reviewed herein, and it is proposed that thrombus stability could become a new target for pharmacological intervention.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
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