6,256 research outputs found
Modelling substorm chorus events in terms of dispersive azimuthal drift
The Substorm Chorus Event (SCE) is a radio phenomenon observed on the ground after the onset of the substorm expansion phase. It consists of a band of VLF chorus with rising upper and lower cutoff frequencies. These emissions are thought to result from Doppler-shifted cyclotron resonance between whistler mode waves and energetic electrons which drift into a ground station's field of view from an injection site around midnight. The increasing frequency of the emission envelope has been attributed to the combined effects of energy dispersion due to gradient and curvature drifts, and the modification of resonance conditions and variation of the half-gyrofrequency cutoff resulting from the radial component of the <i><b>E</b></i>x<i><b>B</b></i> drift. </p><p style="line-height: 20px;"> A model is presented which accounts for the observed features of the SCE in terms of the growth rate of whistler mode waves due to anisotropy in the electron distribution. This model provides an explanation for the increasing frequency of the SCE lower cutoff, as well as reproducing the general frequency-time signature of the event. In addition, the results place some restrictions on the injected particle source distribution which might lead to a SCE.<Br><Br> <b>Key words. </b>Space plasma physics (Wave-particle interaction) – Magnetospheric physics (Plasma waves and instabilities; Storms and substorms
Bistable molecular conductors with a field-switchable dipole group
A class of bistable "stator-rotor" molecules is proposed, where a stationary
bridge (stator) connects the two electrodes and facilitates electron transport
between them. The rotor part, which has a large dipole moment, is attached to
an atom of the stator via a single sigma bond. Hydrogen bonds formed between
the rotor and stator make the symmetric orientation of the dipole unstable. The
rotor has two potential minima with equal energy for rotation about the sigma
bond. The dipole orientation, which determines the conduction state of the
molecule, can be switched by an external electric field that changes the
relative energy of the two potential minima. Both orientation of the rotor
correspond to asymmetric current-voltage characteristics that are the reverse
of each other, so they are distinguishable electrically. Such bistable
stator-rotor molecules could potentially be used as parts of molecular
electronic devices.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Folding of a donor–acceptor polyrotaxane by using noncovalent bonding interactions
Mechanically interlocked compounds, such as bistable catenanes and bistable rotaxanes, have been used to bring about actuation in nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS) and molecular electronic devices (MEDs). The elaboration of the structural features of such rotaxanes into macromolecular materials might allow the utilization of molecular motion to impact their bulk properties. We report here the synthesis and characterization of polymers that contain π electron-donating 1,5-dioxynaphthalene (DNP) units encircled by cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT4+), a π electron-accepting tetracationic cyclophane, synthesized by using the copper(I)-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC). The polyrotaxanes adopt a well defined “folded” secondary structure by virtue of the judicious design of two DNP-containing monomers with different binding affinities for CBPQT4+. This efficient approach to the preparation of polyrotaxanes, taken alongside the initial investigations of their chemical properties, sets the stage for the preparation of a previously undescribed class of macromolecular architectures
The first WASP public data release
The WASP (wide angle search for planets) project is an exoplanet transit survey that has been automatically taking wide field images since 2004. Two instruments, one in La Palma and the other in South Africa, continually monitor the night sky, building up light curves of millions of unique objects. These light curves are used to search for the characteristics of exoplanetary transits. This first public data release (DR1) of the WASP archive makes available all the light curve data and images from 2004 up to 2008 in both the Northern and Southern hemispheres. A web interface () to the data allows easy access over the Internet. The data set contains 3 631 972 raw images and 17 970 937 light curves. In total the light curves have 119 930 299 362 data points available between them
Mapping the Evolution of Optically-Generated Rotational Wavepackets in a Room Temperature Ensemble of D
A coherent superposition of rotational states in D has been excited by
nonresonant ultrafast (12 femtosecond) intense (2 10
Wcm) 800 nm laser pulses leading to impulsive dynamic alignment.
Field-free evolution of this rotational wavepacket has been mapped to high
temporal resolution by a time-delayed pulse, initiating rapid double
ionization, which is highly sensitive to the angle of orientation of the
molecular axis with respect to the polarization direction, . The
detailed fractional revivals of the neutral D wavepacket as a function of
and evolution time have been observed and modelled theoretically.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. A. Full
reference to follow.
Incubation recess behaviors influence nest survival of Wild Turkeys
In ground nesting upland birds, reproductive activities contribute to elevated predation risk, so females presumably use multiple strategies to ensure nest success. Identification of drivers reducing predation risk has primarily focused on evaluating vegetative conditions at nest sites, but behavioral decisions manifested through movements during incubation may be additional drivers of nest survival. However, our understanding of how movements during incubation impact nest survival is limited for most ground nesting birds. Using GPS data collected from female Eastern Wild Turkeys (n = 206), we evaluated nest survival as it relates to movement behaviors during incubation, including recess frequency, distance traveled during recesses, and habitat selection during recess movements. We identified 9,361 movements off nests and 6,529 recess events based on approximately 62,065 hr of incubation data, and estimated mean nest attentiveness of 84.0%. The numbers of recesses taken daily were variable across females (range: 1-7). Nest survival modeling indicated that increased cumulative distance moved during recesses each day was the primary driver of positive daily nest survival. Our results suggest behavioral decisions are influencing trade-offs between nest survival and adult female survival during incubation to reduce predation risk, specifically through adjustments to distances traveled during recesses
Doppler tomography of transiting exoplanets: A prograde, low-inclined orbit for the hot Jupiter CoRoT-11b
We report the detection of the Doppler shadow of the transiting hot Jupiter
CoRoT-11b. Our analysis is based on line-profile tomography of time-series,
Keck/HIRES high-resolution spectra acquired during the transit of the planet.
We measured a sky-projected, spin-orbit angle of 0.1 +/- 2.6 degrees, which is
consistent with a very low-inclined orbit with respect to the stellar rotation
axis. We refined the physical parameters of the system using a Markov chain
Monte Carlo simultaneous fitting of the available photometric and spectroscopic
data. An analysis of the tidal evolution of the system shows how the currently
measured obliquity and its uncertainty translate into an initial absolute value
of less than about 10 degrees on the zero-age main sequence, for an expected
average modified tidal quality factor of the star Q'* > 4 x 10^6. This is
indicative of an inward migration scenario that would not have perturbed the
primordial low obliquity of CoRoT-11b. Taking into account the effective
temperature and mass of the planet host star (Teff=6440 K, M*=1.23 MSun), the
system can be considered a new telling exception to the recently proposed
trend, according to which relatively hot and massive stars (Teff>6250 K, M*>1.2
MSun) seem to be preferentially orbited by hot Jupiters with high obliquity.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in A&A Letter
Effects of better selection of crops and pastures on farm income in Missouri
Publication authorized April 6, 1938."University of Missouri, Agricultural Experiment Station, in cooperation with Bureau of Agricultural Economics, United States Department of Agriculture"Digitized 2007 AES.Includes bibliographical references
GPU Concurrency: Weak Behaviours and Programming Assumptions
Concurrency is pervasive and perplexing, particularly on graphics processing units (GPUs). Current specifications of languages and hardware are inconclusive; thus programmers often rely on folklore assumptions when writing software.
To remedy this state of affairs, we conducted a large empirical study of the concurrent behaviour of deployed GPUs. Armed with litmus tests (i.e. short concurrent programs), we questioned the assumptions in programming guides and vendor documentation about the guarantees provided by hardware. We developed a tool to generate thousands of litmus tests and run them under stressful workloads. We observed a litany of previously elusive weak behaviours, and exposed folklore beliefs about GPU programming---often supported by official tutorials---as false.
As a way forward, we propose a model of Nvidia GPU hardware, which correctly models every behaviour witnessed in our experiments. The model is a variant of SPARC Relaxed Memory Order (RMO), structured following the GPU concurrency hierarchy
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