5,010 research outputs found
Theoretical value of the recommended expanded European Standard Set of STR loci for the identification of human remains
We have undertaken a series of simulations to assess the effectiveness of commercially available sets of STR loci, including the loci recommended for inclusion in the expanded European Standard Set, for the purpose of human identification. A total of 9200 genotype simulations were performed using DNA · VIEW. The software was used to calculate likelihood ratios (LRs) for 23 groups of relatives, and to determine the probability of identification given scenarios that ranged between 10 and 250,000 victims. The additional loci included in the recommended expanded European Standard Set, when used in conjunction with the Identifiler® kit, significantly improved the typical LRs for tested scenarios and the likely success of providing correct identifications
Structural, magnetic, and transport properties of CoFeSi Heusler films
We report the deposition of thin CoFeSi films by RF magnetron sputtering.
Epitaxial (100)-oriented and L2 ordered growth is observed for films grown
on MgO(100) substrates. (110)-oriented films on AlO(110) show several
epitaxial domains in the film plane. Investigation of the magnetic properties
reveals a saturation magnetization of 5.0 at low temperatures. The
temperature dependence of the resistivity exhibits a crossover
from a T^3.5 law at T<50K to a T^1.65 behaviour at elevated temperatures.
shows a small anisotropic magnetoresistive effect. A weak
dependence of the normal Hall effect on the external magnetic field indicates
the compensation of electron and hole like contributions at the Fermi surface.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures to be published in J. Phys. D: Appl. Phy
Comment on "Fano Resonance for Anderson Impurity Systems"
In a recent Letter, Luo et al. (Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 256602 (2004)) analyze
the Fano line shapes obtained from scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) of
transition metal impurities on a simple metal surface, in particular of the
Ti/Au(111) and Ti/Ag(100) systems. As the key point of their analysis, they
claim that there is not only a Fano interference effect between the impurity
d-orbital and the conduction electron continuum, as derived in Ujsaghy et al.
(Phys. Rev. Lett. 85, 2557 (2000)), but that the Kondo resonance in the
d-electron spectral density has by itself a second Fano line shape, leading to
the experimentally observed spectra. In the present note we point out that this
analysis is conceptually incorrect. Therefore, the quantitative agreement of
the fitted theoretical spectra with the experimental results is meaningless.Comment: 1 page, no figures. Accepted for publication in PRL; revised version
uploaded on November 18th, 200
Electron beam driven alkali metal atom source for loading a magneto-optical trap in a cryogenic environment
We present a versatile and compact electron beam driven source for alkali
metal atoms, which can be implemented in cryostats. With a heat load of less
than 10mW, the heat dissipation normalized to the atoms loaded into the
magneto-optical Trap (MOT), is about a factor 1000 smaller than for a typical
alkali metal dispenser. The measured linear scaling of the MOT loading rate
with electron current observed in the experiments, indicates that electron
stimulated desorption is the corresponding mechanism to release the atoms.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
The Extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey: Variability Selection and Quasar Luminosity Function
The SDSS-IV/eBOSS has an extensive quasar program that combines several
selection methods. Among these, the photometric variability technique provides
highly uniform samples, unaffected by the redshift bias of traditional
optical-color selections, when quasars cross the stellar locus
or when host galaxy light affects quasar colors at . Here, we present
the variability selection of quasars in eBOSS, focusing on a specific program
that led to a sample of 13,876 quasars to over a 94.5
deg region in Stripe 82, an areal density 1.5 times higher than over the
rest of the eBOSS footprint. We use these variability-selected data to provide
a new measurement of the quasar luminosity function (QLF) in the redshift range
. Our sample is denser, reaches deeper than those used in previous
studies of the QLF, and is among the largest ones. At the faint end, our QLF
extends to at low redshift and to
at . We fit the QLF using two independent double-power-law models with
ten free parameters each. The first model is a pure luminosity-function
evolution (PLE) with bright-end and faint-end slopes allowed to be different on
either side of . The other is a simple PLE at , combined with a
model that comprises both luminosity and density evolution (LEDE) at .
Both models are constrained to be continuous at . They present a
flattening of the bright-end slope at large redshift. The LEDE model indicates
a reduction of the break density with increasing redshift, but the evolution of
the break magnitude depends on the parameterization. The models are in
excellent accord, predicting quasar counts that agree within 0.3\% (resp.,
1.1\%) to (resp., ). The models are also in good agreement over
the entire redshift range with models from previous studies.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Iterated Binomial Sums and their Associated Iterated Integrals
We consider finite iterated generalized harmonic sums weighted by the
binomial in numerators and denominators. A large class of these
functions emerges in the calculation of massive Feynman diagrams with local
operator insertions starting at 3-loop order in the coupling constant and
extends the classes of the nested harmonic, generalized harmonic and cyclotomic
sums. The binomially weighted sums are associated by the Mellin transform to
iterated integrals over square-root valued alphabets. The values of the sums
for and the iterated integrals at lead to new
constants, extending the set of special numbers given by the multiple zeta
values, the cyclotomic zeta values and special constants which emerge in the
limit of generalized harmonic sums. We develop
algorithms to obtain the Mellin representations of these sums in a systematic
way. They are of importance for the derivation of the asymptotic expansion of
these sums and their analytic continuation to . The
associated convolution relations are derived for real parameters and can
therefore be used in a wider context, as e.g. for multi-scale processes. We
also derive algorithms to transform iterated integrals over root-valued
alphabets into binomial sums. Using generating functions we study a few aspects
of infinite (inverse) binomial sums.Comment: 62 pages Latex, 1 style fil
Incoherent Eta Photoproduction from the Deuteron near Threshold
Very recent data for the reaction gamma+d ->eta np, namely total cross
sections, angular and momentum spectra, are analyzed within a model that
includes contributions from the impulse approximation and next order
corrections due to the np and eta-N interactions in the final state. Comparison
between the calculations and the new data indicate sizable contributions from
the np and eta-N final state interactions. Some systematic discrepancies
between the calculations and the data are also found
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