940 research outputs found
OGO-6 gas-surface energy transfer experiment
The kinetic energy flux of the upper atmosphere was analyzed using OGO-6 data. Energy transfer between 10 microwatts/sq cm and 0.1 W/sq cm was measured by short-term frequency changes of temperature-sensitive quartz crystals used in the energy transfer probe. The condition of the surfaces was continuously monitored by a quartz crystal microbalance to determine the effect surface contamination had on energy accommodation. Results are given on the computer analysis and laboratory tests performed to optimize the operation of the energy transfer probe. Data are also given on the bombardment of OGO-6 surfaces by high energy particles. The thermoelectrically-cooled quartz crystal microbalance is described in terms of its development and applications
Radiation mechanisms and geometry of Cygnus X-1 in the soft state
We present X-ray/gamma-ray spectra of Cyg X-1 observed during the transition
from the hard to the soft state and in the soft state by ASCA, RXTE and OSSE in
1996 May and June. The spectra consist of a dominant soft component below ~2
keV and a power-law-like continuum extending to at least ~800 keV. We interpret
them as emission from an optically-thick, cold accretion disc and from an
optically-thin, non-thermal corona above the disc. A fraction f ~ 0.6 of total
available power is dissipated in the corona. We model the soft component by
multi-colour blackbody disc emission taking into account the torque-free
inner-boundary condition. If the disc extends down to the minimum stable orbit,
the ASCA/RXTE data yield the most probable black hole mass of about 10 solar
masses and an accretion rate about 0.5 L_E/c^2, locating Cyg X-1 in the soft
state in the upper part of the stable, gas-pressure dominated, accretion-disc
solution branch. The spectrum of the corona is well modelled by repeated
Compton scattering of seed photons from the disc off electrons with a hybrid,
thermal/non-thermal distribution. The electron distribution can be
characterized by a Maxwellian with an equilibrium temperature of kT ~ 30--50
keV and a Thomson optical depth of ~0.3 and a quasi-power-law tail. The
compactness of the corona is between 2 and 7, and a presence of a significant
population of electron-positron pairs is ruled out. We find strong signatures
of Compton reflection from a cold and ionized medium, presumably an accretion
disc, with an apparent reflector solid angle ~0.5--0.7. The reflected continuum
is accompanied by a broad iron K-alpha line.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, 2 landscape tables in a separate file. Accepted
to MNRA
Using a hypothetical scenario to assess public preferences for colorectal surveillance following screening-detected, intermediate-risk adenomas: annual home-based stool test vs. triennial colonoscopy
Background To assess public preferences for colorectal cancer (CRC) surveillance tests for intermediate-risk adenomas, using a hypothetical scenario. Methods Adults aged 45–54 years without CRC were identified from three General Practices in England (two in Cumbria, one in London). A postal survey was carried out during a separate study on preferences for different first-line CRC screening modalities (non- or full-laxative computed tomographic colonography, flexible sigmoidoscopy, or colonoscopy). Individuals were allocated at random to receive a pack containing information on one first-line test, and a paragraph describing CRC surveillance recommendations for people who are diagnosed with intermediate-risk adenomas during screening. All participants received a description of two surveillance options: annual single-sample, home-based stool testing (consistent with Faecal Immunochemical Tests; FIT) or triennial colonoscopy. Invitees were asked to imagine they had been diagnosed with intermediate-risk adenomas, and then complete a questionnaire on their surveillance preferences. Results 22.1 % (686/3,100) questionnaires were returned. 491 (15.8 %) were eligible for analysis. The majority of participants stated a surveillance preference for the stool test over colonoscopy (60.8 % vs 31.0 %; no preference: 8.1 %; no surveillance: 0.2 %). Women were more likely to prefer the stool test than men (66.7 % vs. 53.6 %; p = .011). The primary reason for preferring the stool test was that it would be done more frequently. The main reason to prefer colonoscopy was its superiority at finding polyps. Conclusions A majority of participants stated a preference for a surveillance test resembling FIT over colonoscopy. Future research should test whether this translates to greater adherence in a real surveillance setting
The effectiveness of face detection algorithms in unconstrained crowd scenes
The 2013 Boston Marathon bombing represents a case where automatic facial biometrics tools could have proven invaluable to law enforcement officials, yet the lack of ro-bustness of current tools in unstructured environments lim-ited their utility. In this work, we focus on complications that confound face detection algorithms. We first present a simple multi-pose generalization of the Viola-Jones al-gorithm. Our results on the Face Detection Data set and Benchmark (FDDB) show that it makes a significant im-provement over the state of the art for published algorithms. Conversely, our experiments demonstrate that the improve-ments attained by accommodating multiple poses can be negligible compared to the gains yielded by normalizing scores and using the most appropriate classifier for uncon-trolled data. We conclude with a qualitative evaluation of the proposed algorithm on publicly available images of the Boston Marathon crowds. Although the results of our evalu-ations are encouraging, they confirm that there is still room for improvement in terms of robustness to out-of-plane ro-tation, blur and occlusion. 1
A Calibration of the K600 FPP from 120 to 200 MeV
This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY-931478
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