5,669 research outputs found

    Is Advertising Necessarily the Death of a Profession

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    The variation of relative magnetic helicity around major flares

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    We have investigated the variation of magnetic helicity over a span of several days around the times of 11 X-class flares which occurred in seven active regions (NOAA 9672, 10030, 10314, 10486, 10564, 10696, and 10720) using the magnetograms taken by the Michelson Doppler Imager (MDI) on board the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO). As a major result we found that each of these major flares was preceded by a significant helicity accumulation over a long period (0.5 to a few days). Another finding is that the helicity accumulates at a nearly constant rate and then becomes nearly constant before the flares. This led us to distinguish the helicity variation into two phases: a phase of monotonically increasing helicity and the following phase of relatively constant helicity. As expected, the amount of helicity accumulated shows a modest correlation with time-integrated soft X-ray flux during flares. However, the average helicity change rate in the first phase shows even stronger correlation with the time-integrated soft X-ray flux. We discuss the physical implications of this result and the possibility that this characteristic helicity variation pattern can be used as an early warning sign for solar eruptions

    A study of energy concentration and drain in incompressible fluids

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    In this paper we examine two opposite scenarios of energy behavior for solutions of the Euler equation. We show that if uu is a regular solution on a time interval [0,T)[0,T) and if uLrLu \in L^rL^\infty for some r2N+1r\geq \frac{2}{N}+1, where NN is the dimension of the fluid, then the energy at the time TT cannot concentrate on a set of Hausdorff dimension samller than N2r1N - \frac{2}{r-1}. The same holds for solutions of the three-dimensional Navier-Stokes equation in the range 5/3<r<7/45/3<r<7/4. Oppositely, if the energy vanishes on a subregion of a fluid domain, it must vanish faster than (T-t)^{1-\d}, for any \d>0. The results are applied to find new exclusions of locally self-similar blow-up in cases not covered previously in the literature.Comment: an update of the previous versio

    Limits on the evolution of galaxies from the statistics of gravitational lenses

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    We use gravitational lenses from the Cosmic Lens All-Sky Survey (CLASS) to constrain the evolution of galaxies since redshift z1z \sim 1 in the current \LCDM cosmology. This constraint is unique as it is based on a mass-selected lens sample of galaxies. Our method of statistical analysis is the same as in Chae (2003). We parametrise the early-type number density evolution in the form of (1+z)νn(1+z)^{\nu_n} and the velocity dispersion as (1+z)νv(1+z)^{\nu_v}. We find that νn=0.110.89+0.82\nu_n=-0.11^{+0.82}_{-0.89} (1σ1\sigma) if we assume νv=0\nu_v =0, implying that the number density of early-type galaxies is within 50% to 164% of the present-day value at redshift z=1z=1. Allowing the velocity dispersion to evolve, we find that νv=0.40.4+0.5\nu_v=-0.4^{+0.5}_{-0.4} (1σ1\sigma), indicating that the velocity dispersion must be within 57% and 107% of the present-day value at z=1z=1. These results are consistent with the early formation and passive evolution of early-type galaxies. More stringent limits from lensing can be obtained from future large lens surveys and by using very high-redshift quasars (z \ga 5) such as those found from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.Comment: 10 pages (preprint format), 2 figures, ApJL in press (December 20th issue

    Epitaxial growth and the magnetic properties of orthorhombic YTiO3 thin films

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    High-quality YTiO3 thin films were grown on LaAlO3 (110) substrates at low oxygen pressures (<10-8 Torr) using pulsed laser deposition. The in-plane asymmetric atomic arrangements at the substrate surface allowed us to grow epitaxial YTiO3 thin films, which have an orthorhombic crystal structure with quite different a- and b-axes lattice constants. The YTiO3 film exhibited a clear ferromagnetic transition at 30 K with a saturation magnetization of about 0.7 uB/Ti. The magnetic easy axis was found to be along the [1-10] direction of the substrate, which differs from the single crystal easy axis direction, i.e., [001].Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure

    Inclusive angular distribution of alpha and Li fragments produced in the Fe-C and Fe-Pb collisions at 1.88 GeV/u

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    The LS (laboratory system) emission angles theta for 2188 and 298 Li fragments, produced inclusively in relativistic Fe-C and Fe-Pb collisions, have been measured in reference to incident Fe-ion beam tracks nearby in nuclear emulsion. An empirical differential frequency formula, dN(cot theta) = exp (a + b cot theta)d(cot theta) is obtained with the constant b approx. = -0.026 at 1.88 GeV/u, which seems to be independent on the kinds of target nucleus as well as on the kinds of projectile fragments

    Predictability of reset switching voltages in unipolar resistance switching

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    In unipolar resistance switching of NiO capacitors, Joule heating in the conducting channels should cause a strong nonlinearity in the low resistance state current-voltage (I-V) curves. Due to the percolating nature of the conducting channels, the reset current IR, can be scaled to the nonlinear coefficient Bo of the I-V curves. This scaling relationship can be used to predict reset voltages, independent of NiO capacitor size; it can also be applied to TiO2 and FeOy capacitors. Using this relation, we developed an error correction scheme to provide a clear window for separating reset and set voltages in memory operations

    The Cosmic Lens All-Sky Survey parent population - I. Sample selection and number counts

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    We present the selection of the Jodrell Bank Flat-spectrum (JBF) radio source sample, which is designed to reduce the uncertainties in the Cosmic Lens All-Sky Survey (CLASS) gravitational lensing statistics arising from the lack of knowledge about the parent population luminosity function. From observations at 4.86 GHz with the Very Large Array, we have selected a sample of 117 flat-spectrum radio sources with flux densities greater than 5 mJy. These sources were selected in a similar manner to the CLASS complete sample and are therefore representative of the parent population at low flux densities. The vast majority (~90 per cent) of the JBF sample are found to be compact on the arcsecond scales probed here and show little evidence of any extended radio jet emission. Using the JBF and CLASS complete samples we find the differential number counts slope of the parent population above and below the CLASS 30 mJy flux density limit to be -2.07+/-0.02 and -1.96+/-0.12, respectively.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Medium Resolution Near-Infrared Spectra of the Host Galaxies of Nearby Quasars

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    We present medium resolution near-infrared host galaxy spectra of low redshift quasars, PG 0844 + 349 (z=0.064), PG 1226 + 023 (z=0.158), and PG 1426+015 (z=0.086). The observations were done by using the Infrared Camera and Spectrograph (IRCS) at the Subaru 8.2 m telescope. The full width at half maximum of the point spread function was about 0.3 arcsec by operations of an adaptive optics system, which can effectively resolve the quasar spectra from the host galaxy spectra. We spent up to several hours per target and developed data reduction methods to reduce the systematic noises of the telluric emissions and absorptions. From the obtained spectra, we identified absorption features of Mg I (1.503 um), Si I (1.589 um) and CO (6-3) (1.619 um), and measured the velocity dispersions of PG 0844 + 349 to be 132+/-110 km s-1 and PG 1426 + 015 to be 264+/-215 km s-1. By using an M_BH-sigma relation of elliptical galaxies, we derived the black hole (BH) mass of PG 0844+349, log(M_BH/M_SUN) = 7.7+/-5.5 and PG 1426+015, log(M_BH/M_SUN) = 9.0+/-7.5. These values are consistent with the BH mass values from broad emission lines with an assumption of a virial factor of 5.5.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure

    Energy Efficient Mobile Cloud Computing Powered by Wireless Energy Transfer

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