6,671 research outputs found
A New Algorithm for Exploratory Projection Pursuit
In this paper, we propose a new algorithm for exploratory projection pursuit.
The basis of the algorithm is the insight that previous approaches used fairly
narrow definitions of interestingness / non interestingness. We argue that
allowing these definitions to depend on the problem / data at hand is a more
natural approach in an exploratory technique. This also allows our technique
much greater applicability than the approaches extant in the literature.
Complementing this insight, we propose a class of projection indices based on
the spatial distribution function that can make use of such information.
Finally, with the help of real datasets, we demonstrate how a range of
multivariate exploratory tasks can be addressed with our algorithm. The
examples further demonstrate that the proposed indices are quite capable of
focussing on the interesting structure in the data, even when this structure is
otherwise hard to detect or arises from very subtle patterns.Comment: 29 pages, 8 figure
High redshift Lya emitters: clues on the Milky Way infancy
With the aim of determining if Milky Way (MW) progenitors could be identified
as high redshift Lyman Alpha Emitters (LAEs) we have derived the intrinsic
properties of z ~ 5.7 MW progenitors, which are then used to compute their
observed Lyman-alpha luminosity, L_alpha, and equivalent width, EW. MW
progenitors visible as LAEs are selected according to the canonical
observational criterion, L_alpha > 10^42 erg/s and EW > 20 A. Progenitors of
MW-like galaxies have L_alpha = 10^(39-43.25) erg/s, making some of them
visible as LAEs. In any single MW merger tree realization, typically only 1
(out of ~ 50) progenitor meets the LAE selection criterion, but the probability
to have at least one LAE is very high, P = 68%. The identified LAE stars have
ages, t_* ~ 150-400 Myr at z ~ 5.7 with the exception of five small progenitors
with t_* 10% of
the halo very metal-poor stars [Fe/H] < -2, thus establishing a potentially
fruitful link between high-z galaxies and the Local Universe.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS lette
The birth properties of Galactic millisecond radio pulsars
We model the population characteristics of the sample of millisecond pulsars
within a distance of 1.5kpc.We find that for a braking index n=3, the birth
magnetic field distribution of the neutron stars as they switch on as radio
MSPs can be represented by a Gaussian with mean and
and their birth spin period by a Gaussian with mean
ms and ms. Our study, which takes into consideration
acceleration effects on the observed spin-down rate, shows that most MSPs are
born with periods that are close to the currently observed values and with
average characteristic ages typically larger by a factor 1.5 compared to the
true age. The Galactic birth rate of the MSPs is deduced to be \gsimeq 3.2
\times 10^{-6} yr near the upper end of previous estimates and larger
than the semi-empirical birth rate yr of the LMXBs. The
mean birth spin period deduced by us for the radio MSPs is a factor 2 higher
than the mean spin period observed for the accretion and nuclear powered X-ray
pulsars, although this discrepancy can be resolved if we use a braking index
, the value appropriate to spin down caused by angular momentum losses by
gravitational radiation or magnetic multipolar radiation. We discuss the
arguments for and against the hypothesis that accretion induced collapse may
constitute the main route to the formation of the MSPs, pointing out that on
the AIC scenario the low magnetic fields of the MSPs may simply reflect the
field distribution in isolated magnetic white dwarfs which has recently been
shown to be bi-modal with a dominant component that is likely to peak at fields
below G which would scale to neutron star fields below G.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in the MNRA
Active tuning of photonic device characteristics during operation by ferroelectric domain switching
Ferroelectrics have many unusual properties. Two properties that are often exploited are first, their complex, nonlinear optical response and second, their strong nonlinear coupling between electromagnetic and mechanical fields through the domain patterns or microstructure. The former has led to the use of ferroelectrics in optical devices and the latter is used in ferroelectric sensors and actuators. We show the feasibility of using these properties together in nanoscale photonic devices. The electromechanical coupling allows us to change the domain patterns or microstructure. This in turn changes the optical characteristics. Together, these could provide photonic devices with tunable properties. We present calculations for two model devices. First, in a photonic crystal consisting of a triangular lattice of air holes in barium titanate, we find the change in the band structure when the domains are switched. The change is significant compared to the frequency spread of currently available high-quality light sources and may provide a strategy for optical switching. Second, we show that periodically poled 90° domain patterns, despite their complex geometry, do not cause dispersion or have band gaps. Hence, they may provide an alternative to the antiparallel domains that are usually used in quasiphase matching and allow for tunable higher-harmonic generation
Kinetics of phase transformations in the peridynamic formulation of continuum mechanics
We study the kinetics of phase transformations in solids using the peridynamic formulation of continuum mechanics. The peridynamic theory is a nonlocal formulation that does not involve spatial derivatives, and is a powerful tool to study defects such as cracks and interfaces.
We apply the peridynamic formulation to the motion of phase boundaries in one dimension. We show that unlike the classical continuum theory, the peridynamic formulation does not require any extraneous constitutive laws such as the kinetic relation (the relation between the velocity of the interface and the thermodynamic driving force acting across it) or the nucleation criterion (the criterion that determines whether a new phase arises from a single phase). Instead this information is obtained from inside the theory simply by specifying the inter-particle interaction. We derive a nucleation criterion by examining nucleation as a dynamic instability. We find the induced kinetic relation by analyzing the solutions of impact and release problems, and also directly by viewing phase boundaries as traveling waves.
We also study the interaction of a phase boundary with an elastic non-transforming inclusion in two dimensions. We find that phase boundaries remain essentially planar with little bowing. Further, we find a new mechanism whereby acoustic waves ahead of the phase boundary nucleate new phase boundaries at the edges of the inclusion while the original phase boundary slows down or stops. Transformation proceeds as the freshly nucleated phase boundaries propagate leaving behind some untransformed martensite around the inclusion
Characterization and Characteristics of mechanochemically synthesized amorphous fast ionic conductor 50 SISOMO (50AgI-25Ag2O-25MoO3)
Mechanochemically synthesized amorphous 50SISOMO [50AgI-25Ag_2O-25MoO_3] fast
ionic conductor shows high ionic conductivity of ~ 6x10^-3 {\Omega}^-1 cm-1 at
room temperature. The highest ionic conductivity is achieved for 36 h milled
sample, which is more than three orders of magnitude higher than that of
crystalline AgI at room temperature. The samples are thermally stable at least
up to ~70 {\deg}C. Thermoelectric power studies on 50 SISOMO amorphous fast
ionic conductors (a-SIC) have been carried out in the temperature range
300-330K. Thermoelectric power (S) is found to vary linearly with the inverse
of the absolute temperature, and can be expressed by the equation -S = [(0.19
\times 10^3/T) + 0.25] mV/K. The heat of transport (q*) of Ag+ ion i.e. 0.19 eV
is nearly equal to the activation energy (E) i.e. 0.20 eV of Ag+ ion migration
calculated from the conductivity plots indicating that the material has an
average structure. This is also in consonance with earlier theories on heats of
transport of ions in ionic solids.Comment: Presented in the "National Symposium on Advances in Material Science"
held at Gorakhpur, India during 17-19 March 200
Ancient giants: on the farthest galaxy at z=8.6
The observational frontiers for the detection of high-redshift galaxies have
recently been pushed to unimaginable distances with the record-holding Lyman
Alpha Emitter (LAE) UDFy-38135539 discovered at redshift z=8.6. However, the
physical nature and the implications of this discovery have yet to be assessed.
By selecting galaxies with observed luminosities similar to UDFy-38135539 in
state-of-the-art cosmological simulations tuned to reproduce the large scale
properties of LAEs, we bracket the physical nature of UDFy-38135539: it has a
star formation rate ~ 2.7-3.7 solar masses/yr, it contains ~ 10^{8.3-8.7} solar
mass of stars 50-80 Myr old, with stellar metallicity ~ 0.03-0.12 of the solar
value. For any of the simulated galaxies to be visible as a LAE in the observed
range, the intergalactic neutral hydrogen fraction at z=8.6 must be <= 0.2 and
extra ionizing radiation from sources clustered around UDFy-38135539 is
necessary. Finally, we predict that there is a 70% (15%) probability of
detecting at least 1 such source from JWST (HST/WFC3) observations in a
physical radius ~ 0.4 Mpc around UDFy-38135539.Comment: Accepted to MNRAS letter
- …