871 research outputs found

    W271 Improving Switchgrass Yields for Bioenergy Production

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    Improving Switchgrass Yields for Bioenergy Production

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    Version 3.

    An anisotropic distribution of spin vectors in asteroid families

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    Current amount of ~500 asteroid models derived from the disk-integrated photometry by the lightcurve inversion method allows us to study not only the spin-vector properties of the whole population of MBAs, but also of several individual collisional families. We create a data set of 152 asteroids that were identified by the HCM method as members of ten collisional families, among them are 31 newly derived unique models and 24 new models with well-constrained pole-ecliptic latitudes of the spin axes. The remaining models are adopted from the DAMIT database or the literature. We revise the preliminary family membership identification by the HCM method according to several additional criteria - taxonomic type, color, albedo, maximum Yarkovsky semi-major axis drift and the consistency with the size-frequency distribution of each family, and consequently we remove interlopers. We then present the spin-vector distributions for eight asteroidal families. We use a combined orbital- and spin-evolution model to explain the observed spin-vector properties of objects among collisional families. In general, we observe for studied families similar trends in the (a_p, \beta) space: (i) larger asteroids are situated in the proximity of the center of the family; (ii) asteroids with \beta>0{\deg} are usually found to the right from the family center; (iii) on the other hand, asteroids with \beta<0{\deg} to the left from the center; (iv) majority of asteroids have large pole-ecliptic latitudes (|\beta|\gtrsim 30{\deg}); and finally (v) some families have a statistically significant excess of asteroids with \beta>0{\deg} or \beta<0{\deg}. Our numerical simulation of the long-term evolution of a collisional family is capable of reproducing well the observed spin-vector properties. Using this simulation, we also independently constrain the age of families Flora (1.0\pm0.5 Gyr) and Koronis (2.5-4 Gyr).Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A (September 16, 2013

    Relation between dust and radio luminosity in optically selected early type galaxies

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    We have surveyed an optical/IR selected sample of nearby E/S0 galaxies with and without nuclear dust structures with the VLA at 3.6 cm to a sensitivity of 100 μ\muJy. We can construct a Radio Luminosity Function (RLF) of these galaxies to ~10^19 W/Hz and find that ~50% of these galaxies have AGNs at this level. The space density of these AGNs equals that of starburst galaxies at this luminosity. Several dust-free galaxies have low luminosity radio cores, and their RLF is not significantly less than that of the dusty galaxies.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&

    The impact of skull bone intensity on the quality of compressed CT neuro images

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    International audienceThe increasing use of technologies such as CT and MRI, along with a continuing improvement in their resolution, has contributed to the explosive growth of digital image data being generated. Medical communities around the world have recognized the need for efficient storage, transmission and display of medical images. For example, the Canadian Association of Radiologists (CAR) has recommended compression ratios for various modalities and anatomical regions to be employed by lossy JPEG and JPEG2000 compression in order to preserve diagnostic quality. Here we investigate the effects of the sharp skull edges present in CT neuro images on JPEG and JPEG2000 lossy compression. We conjecture that this atypical effect is caused by the sharp edges between the skull bone and the background regions as well as between the skull bone and the interior regions. These strong edges create large wavelet coefficients that consume an unnecessarily large number of bits in JPEG2000 compression because of its bitplane coding scheme, and thus result in reduced quality at the interior region, which contains most diagnostic information in the image. To validate the conjecture, we investigate a segmentation based compression algorithm based on simple thresholding and morphological operators. As expected, quality is improved in terms of PSNR as well as the structural similarity (SSIM) image quality measure, and its multiscale (MS-SSIM) and informationweighted (IW-SSIM) versions. This study not only supports our conjecture, but also provides a solution to improve the performance of JPEG and JPEG2000 compression for specific types of CT images

    The inner kiloparsec of the jet in 3C264

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    We present new multi-frequency EVN, MERLIN and VLA observations of the radio source 3C264, sensitive to linear scales ranging from the parsec to several kiloparsecs. The observations confirm the existence of regions with different properties in the first kiloparsec of the jet. The most remarkable feature is the transition between a well collimated narrow jet at distances from the core below 80 pc, to a conical-shaped wide jet, with an opening angle of 20 degrees. Another change of properties, consisting of an apparent deflection of the jet ridge line and a diminution of the surface brightness, occurs at a distance of 300 pc from the core, coincident with the radius of a ring observed at optical wavelengths. Our observations add new pieces of information on the spectrum of the radio-optical jet of 3C264, with results consistent with a synchrotron emission mechanism and a spectrum break frequency in the infrared. Brightness profiles taken perpendicularly to the jet of 3C264 are consistent with a spine brightened jet at distances below 100 pc from the core, and an edge-brightened jet beyond, which can be interpreted as evidence of a transverse jet velocity structure. Our observations do not allow us to distinguish between the presence of a face--on dust and gas disk at the center of the host galaxy of 3C264, or rather an evacuated bubble. However, the properties of the jet structure, the changes in the polarization angle, and the plausible jet orientation can be naturally brought into agreement in the bubble scenario.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, accepted in A&
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