752 research outputs found
Detector Time Offset and Off-line Calibration in EAS Experiments
In Extensive Air Shower (EAS) experiments, the primary direction is
reconstructed by the space-time pattern of secondary particles. Thus the
equalization of the transit time of signals coming from different parts of the
detector is crucial in order to get the best angular resolution and pointing
accuracy allowed by the detector. In this paper an off-line calibration method
is proposed and studied by means of proper simulations. It allows to calibrate
the array repeatedly just using the collected data without disturbing the
standard acquisition. The calibration method is based on the definition of a
Characteristic Plane introduced to analyze the effects of the time systematic
offsets, such as the quasi-sinusoidal modulation on azimuth angle distribution.
This calibration procedure works also when a pre-modulation on the primary
azimuthal distribution is present.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Astroparticle Physic
Partitioning of phenanthrene by root cell walls and cell wall fractions of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)
Plant cells have been reported to play an important role in the uptake of organic contaminants. This study was undertaken to provide an insight into the role of the root cell walls and their subfractions on sorption of phenanthrene to roots of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). Root cell walls were isolated and further sequentially fractioned by removing pectin, hemicellulose one, and hemicellulose two. They were characterized by elemental analysis, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, and solid-state (13)C NMR. Root cell walls had a greater proportion of aromatic carbon and exhibited a lower polarity than the bulk roots. There was a stepwise increase in aromatic carbon content and a decrease in polarity following the sequential fractionation. The sorption affinity of phenanthrene increased gradually following the sequential extraction of root cells. A significant positive correlation between the sorption affinity K(OC) values and the aromatic carbon contents (r(2) = 0.896, p < 0.01) and a negative correlation between the sorption affinity K(OC) values and polarity ((O + N)/C) of root cell fractions (r(2) = 0.920, p < 0.01) were obtained. Improved modeling was achieved for phenanthrene sorption by involving the contribution of root cell walls as a source of root carbohydrates instead of using root lipids alone, which further confirms the significant contribution of root cell walls to phenanthrene sorption on wheat roots. The results provide evidence for the importance of the root cell walls in the partitioning of phenanthrene by plant roots
Properties and Performance of Two Wide Field of View Cherenkov/Fluorescence Telescope Array Prototypes
A wide field of view Cherenkov/fluorescence telescope array is one of the
main components of the Large High Altitude Air Shower Observatory project. To
serve as Cherenkov and fluorescence detectors, a flexible and mobile design is
adopted for easy reconfiguring of the telescope array. Two prototype telescopes
have been constructed and successfully run at the site of the ARGO-YBJ
experiment in Tibet. The features and performance of the telescopes are
presented
A variational approach to strongly damped wave equations
We discuss a Hilbert space method that allows to prove analytical
well-posedness of a class of linear strongly damped wave equations. The main
technical tool is a perturbation lemma for sesquilinear forms, which seems to
be new. In most common linear cases we can furthermore apply a recent result
due to Crouzeix--Haase, thus extending several known results and obtaining
optimal analyticity angle.Comment: This is an extended version of an article appeared in
\emph{Functional Analysis and Evolution Equations -- The G\"unter Lumer
Volume}, edited by H. Amann et al., Birkh\"auser, Basel, 2008. In the latest
submission to arXiv only some typos have been fixe
Biometrics beyond the visible spectrum: Imaging technologies and applications
The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-04391-8_20Proceedings of Joint COST 2101 and 2102 International Conference, BioID_MultiComm 2009, Madrid (Spain)Human body images acquired at visible spectrum have inherent restrictions that hinder the performance of person recognition systems built using that kind of information (e.g. scene artefacts under varying illumination conditions). One promising approach for dealing with those limitations is using images acquired beyond the visible spectrum. This paper reviews some of the existing human body imaging technologies working beyond the visible spectrum (X-ray, Infrared, Millimeter and Submillimeter Wave imaging technologies). The benefits and drawbacks of each technology and their biometric applications are presented.This work has been supported by Terasense (CSD2008-00068) Consolider project of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology
The signals of FGFs on the neurogenesis of embryonic stem cells
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Neural induction is a complex process and the detailed mechanism of FGF-induced neurogenesis remains unclear.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>By using a serum-free neural induction method, we showed that FGF1 dose-dependently promoted the induction of Sox1/N-cadherin/nestin triple positive cells, which represent primitive neuroblasts, from mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We demonstrated that FGF1, FGF2, and FGF4, but not FGF8b, enhanced this neurogenesis. Especially, FGF-enhanced neurogenesis is not mediated through the rescue of the apoptosis or the enhancement of the proliferation of Sox1<sup>+ </sup>cells. We further indicated that the inactivation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase-1 (JNK-1) and extracellular signal-related kinase-2 (ERK-2), but not p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), inhibited the neural formation through the inhibition of ES differentiation, but not through the formation of endomesodermal cells.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>These lines of evidence delineated the roles of FGF downstream signals in the early neural differentiation of ES cells.</p
Predictive biometrics: A review and analysis of predicting personal characteristics from biometric data
Interest in the exploitation of soft biometrics information has continued to develop over the last decade or so. In comparison with traditional biometrics, which focuses principally on person identification, the idea of soft biometrics processing is to study the utilisation of more general information regarding a system user, which is not necessarily unique. There are increasing indications that this type of data will have great value in providing complementary information for user authentication. However, the authors have also seen a growing interest in broadening the predictive capabilities of biometric data, encompassing both easily definable characteristics such as subject age and, most recently, `higher level' characteristics such as emotional or mental states. This study will present a selective review of the predictive capabilities, in the widest sense, of biometric data processing, providing an analysis of the key issues still adequately to be addressed if this concept of predictive biometrics is to be fully exploited in the future
High electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution activity of an anomalous ruthenium catalyst
Hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) is a critical process due to its fundamental role in electrocatalysis. Practically, the development of high-performance electrocatalysts for HER in alkaline media is of great importance for the conversion of renewable energy to hydrogen fuel via photoelectrochemical water splitting. However, both mechanistic exploration and materials development for HER under alkaline conditions are very limited. Precious Pt metal, which still serves as the state-of-the-art catalyst for HER, is unable to guarantee a sustainable hydrogen supply. Here we report an anomalously structured Ru catalyst that shows 2.5 times higher hydrogen generation rate than Pt and is among the most active HER electrocatalysts yet reported in alkaline solutions. The identification of new face-centered cubic crystallographic structure of Ru nanoparticles was investigated by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy imaging, and its formation mechanism was revealed by spectroscopic characterization and theoretical analysis. For the first time, it is found that the Ru nanocatalyst showed a pronounced effect of the crystal structure on the electrocatalytic activity tested under different conditions. The combination of electrochemical reaction rate measurements and density functional theory computation shows that the high activity of anomalous Ru catalyst in alkaline solution originates from its suitable adsorption energies to some key reaction intermediates and reaction kinetics in the HER process.Yao Zheng, Yan Jiao, Yihan Zhu, Lu Hua Li, Yu Han, Ying Chen, Mietek Jaroniec and Shi-Zhang Qia
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