7,368 research outputs found
Proof of a conjecture by Gazeau et al. using the Gould Hopper polynomials
We prove the "strong conjecture" expressed by Gazeau et al. in
arXiv:1203.3936v1 [math-ph] about the coefficients of the Taylor expansion of
the exponential of a polynomial. This implies the "weak conjecture" as a
special case. The proof relies mainly about properties of the Gould-Hopper
polynomials
A model for the wind direction signature in the stokes smissin sector from the ocean surfaces at microwave frequencies
This paper presents a model of the Stokes emission vector from the ocean surface. The ocean surface is described as an ensemble of facets with Cox and Munk's (1954) Gram-Charlier slope distribution. The study discusses the impact of different up-wind and cross-wind rms slopes, skewness, peakedness, foam cover models and atmospheric effects on the azimuthal variation of the Stokes vector, as well as the limitations of the model. Simulation results compare favorably, both in mean value and azimuthal dependence, with SSM/I data at 53/spl deg/ incidence angle and with JPL's WINDRAD measurements at incidence angles from 30/spl deg/ to 65/spl deg/, and at wind speeds from 2.5 to 11 m/s.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
The valuation of clean spread options: linking electricity, emissions and fuels
The purpose of the paper is to present a new pricing method for clean spread options, and to illustrate its main features on a set of numerical examples produced by a dedicated computer code. The novelty of the approach is embedded in the use of a structural model as opposed to reduced-form models which fail to capture properly the fundamental dependencies between the economic factors entering the production process
Deconfining transition in two-flavor QCD
The order and the nature of the finite-temperature phase transition of QCD
with two flavors of dynamical quarks is investigated. An analysis of the
critical exponent of the specific heat is performed through finite-size and
finite-mass scaling of various susceptibilities. Dual superconductivity of QCD
vacuum is investigated using a disorder parameter, namely the v.e.v. of a
monopole creation operator. Hybrid R simulations were run at lattice spatial
sizes of , , and and temporal size , with
quark masses in the range .Comment: Lattice2003(topology), 3 page
On Eigenvalue spacings for the 1-D Anderson model with singular site distribution
We study eigenvalue spacings and local eigenvalue statistics for 1D lattice
Schrodinger operators with Holder regular potential, obtaining a version of
Minami's inequality and Poisson statistics for the local eigenvalue spacings.
The main additional new input are regular properties of the Furstenberg
measures and the density of states obtained in some of the author's earlier
work.Comment: 13 page
Color confinement and dual superconductivity in unquenched QCD
We report on evidence from lattice simulations that confinement is produced
by dual superconductivity of the vacuum in full QCD as in quenched QCD.
Preliminary information is obtained on the order of the deconfining phase
transition.Comment: 4 pages, to appear in the Proceedings of Quark Matter 02 - The XVI
International Conference on Ultrarelativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collision
Where is the warm H2 ? A search for H2 emission from disks around Herbig Ae/Be stars
Mid-IR emission lines of H2 are useful probes to determine the mass of warm
gas present in the surface layers of disks. Numerous observations of Herbig
Ae/Be stars (HAeBes) have been performed, but only 2 detections of mid-IR H2
toward HD97048 and AB Aur have been reported. We aim at tracing the warm gas in
the disks of 5 HAeBes with gas-rich environments and physical characteristics
close to those of AB Aur and HD97048, to discuss whether the detections toward
these 2 objects are suggestive of peculiar conditions for the gas. We search
for the H2 S(1) emission line at 17.035 \mu\m with VISIR, and complemented by
CH molecule observations with UVES. We gather the H2 measurements from the
literature to put the new results in context and search for a correlation with
some disk properties. None of the 5 VISIR targets shows evidence for H2
emission. From the 3sigma upper limits on the integrated line fluxes we
constrain the amount of optically thin warm gas to be less than 1.4 M_Jup in
the disk surface layers. There are now 20 HAeBes observed with VISIR and TEXES
instruments to search for warm H2, but only two detections (HD97048 and AB Aur)
were made so far. We find that the two stars with detected warm H2 show at the
same time high 30/13 \mu\m flux ratios and large PAH line fluxes at 8.6 and
11.3 \mu\m compared to the bulk of observed HAeBes and have emission CO lines
detected at 4.7 \mu\m. We detect the CH 4300.3A absorption line toward both
HD97048 and AB Aur with UVES. The CH to H2 abundance ratios that this would
imply if it were to arise from the same component as well as the radial
velocity of the CH lines both suggest that CH arises from a surrounding
envelope, while the detected H2 would reside in the disk. The two detections of
the S(1) line in the disks of HD97048 and AB Aur suggest either peculiar
physical conditions or a particular stage of evolution.Comment: accepted for publication in A&A : 10 pages, 6 figure
Adaptation “in the Wild”: Ontology-Based Personalization of Open-Corpus Learning Material
Abstract. Teacher and students can use WWW as a limitless source of learning material for nearly any subject. Yet, such abundance of content comes with the problem of finding the right piece at the right time. Conventional adaptive educational systems cannot support personalized access to open-corpus learning material as they rely on manually constructed content models. This paper presents an approach to this problem that does not require intervention from a human expert. The approach has been implemented in an adaptive system that recommends students supplementary reading material and adaptively annotates it. The results of the evaluation experiment have demonstrated several significant effects of using the system on students ’ learning
Adaptation “in the Wild”: Ontology-Based Personalization of Open-Corpus Learning Material
Teacher and students can use WWW as a limitless source of learning material for nearly any subject. Yet, such abundance of content comes with the problem of finding the right piece at the right time. Conventional adaptive educational systems cannot support personalized access to open-corpus learning material as they rely on manually constructed content models. This paper presents an approach to this problem that does not require intervention from a human expert. The approach has been implemented in an adaptive system that recommends students supplementary reading material and adaptively annotates it. The results of the evaluation experiment have demonstrated several significant effects of using the system on students’ learning.\u
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