4,439 research outputs found
Surface properties of the clean and Au/Pd covered FeO(111): a DFT and DFT+ study
The spin-density functional theory (DFT) and DFT+ with Hubbard term
accounting for on-site Coulomb interactions were applied to investigate
structure, stability, and electronic properties of different terminations of
the FeO(111) surface. All terminations of the ferrimagnetic
FeO(111) surface exhibit very large (up to 90%) relaxations of the
first four interlayer distances, decreasing with the oxide layer depth. Our
calculations predict the iron terminated surface to be most stable in a wide
range of the accessible values of the oxygen chemical potential. The adsorption
of Au and Pd on two stable Fe- and O-terminated surfaces is studied. Our
results show that Pd binds stronger than Au both to the Fe- and O-terminated
surface. DFT+ gives stronger bonding than DFT. The bonding of both
adsorbates to the O-terminated magnetite surface is by 1.5-2.5 eV stronger than
to the Fe-terminated surface
Structure Constant of the Yang-Lee Edge Singularity
This paper studies the Yang-Lee singularity of the 2-dimensional Ising model
on the cylinder via transfer matrix and finite-size scaling techniques. These
techniques enable a measurement of the 2-point and 3-point correlations and a
comparison of a measurement of a corresponding universal amplitude with a
prediction for the amplitude from the (A4,A1) minimal conformal field theory.Comment: 1 figur
Inexpensive fusion methods for enhancing feature detection
Recent successful approaches to high-level feature detection in image and video data have treated the problem as a pattern classification task. These typically leverage the techniques learned from statistical machine learning, coupled with ensemble architectures that create multiple feature detection models. Once created, co-occurrence between learned features can be captured to further boost performance. At multiple stages throughout these frameworks, various pieces of evidence can be fused together in order to boost performance. These approaches whilst very successful are computationally expensive, and depending on the task, require the use of significant computational resources. In this paper we propose two fusion methods that aim to combine the output of an initial basic statistical machine learning approach with a lower-quality information source, in order to gain diversity in the classified results whilst requiring only modest computing resources. Our approaches, validated experimentally on TRECVid data, are designed to be complementary to existing frameworks and can be regarded as possible replacements for the more computationally expensive combination strategies used elsewhere
Deep redshift topological lensing: strategies for the T^3 candidate
The 3-torus (T^3) FLRW model better fits the nearly zero large-scale
auto-correlation of the WMAP CMB sky maps than the infinite flat model. The T^3
model's WMAP parameters imply approximately equal-redshift topological lensing
at z \sim 6. We investigate observational strategies for rejecting the T^3
solution or providing candidate topologically lensed galaxy pairs. T^3
holonomies are applied to (i) existing z \sim 6 observations and (ii) simulated
observations, creating multiply connected catalogues. Corresponding simply
connected catalogues are generated. Each catalogue is analysed using a
successive filter method and collecting matched quadruples. Quadruple
statistics between the multiply and simply connected catalogues are compared.
The expected rejection of the hypothesis, or detection of candidate
topologically lensed galaxies, is possible at a significance of 5% for a pair
of T^3 axis-centred northern and southern surveys if photometric redshift
accuracy is \sigma(\zphot) < 0.01 for a pair of nearly complete 100 deg^2
surveys with a total of > 500 galaxies over 4.3 < z < 6.6, or for a pair of 196
deg^2 surveys with > 400 galaxies and \sigma(\zphot) < 0.02 over 4<z<7.
Dropping the maximum time interval in a pair from \Delta t =1 Gyr/h to \Delta t
=0.1 Gyr/h yields a requirement of \sigma(\zphot) < 0.005 or \sigma(\zphot) <
0.01, respectively. Millions of z \sim 6 galaxies will be observed over fields
of these sizes during the coming decades, implying much stronger constraints.
The question is not if the hypothesis will be rejected or confirmed, it is
when.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, 5 tables, MNRAS, accepte
TRECVid 2006 experiments at Dublin City University
In this paper we describe our retrieval system and experiments performed for the automatic search task in TRECVid 2006. We submitted the following six automatic runs:
• F A 1 DCU-Base 6: Baseline run using only ASR/MT text features.
• F A 2 DCU-TextVisual 2: Run using text and visual features.
• F A 2 DCU-TextVisMotion 5: Run using text, visual, and motion features.
• F B 2 DCU-Visual-LSCOM 3: Text and visual features combined with concept detectors.
• F B 2 DCU-LSCOM-Filters 4: Text, visual, and motion features with concept detectors.
• F B 2 DCU-LSCOM-2 1: Text, visual, motion, and concept detectors with negative concepts.
The experiments were designed both to study the addition of motion features and separately constructed models for semantic concepts, to runs using only textual and visual features, as well as to establish a baseline for the manually-assisted search runs performed within the collaborative K-Space project and described in the corresponding TRECVid 2006 notebook paper. The results of
the experiments indicate that the performance of automatic search can be improved with suitable concept models. This, however, is very topic-dependent and the questions of when to include such models and which concept models should be included, remain unanswered. Secondly, using motion features did not lead to performance improvement in our experiments. Finally, it was observed that our text features, despite displaying a rather poor performance overall, may still be useful even for generic search topics
Spectral Signatures of Gravitationally Confined Thermonuclear Supernova Explosions
We consider some of the spectral and polarimetric signatures of the
gravitational confined detonation scenario for Type Ia supernova explosions. In
this model, material produced by an off-center deflagration (which itself fails
to produce the explosion) forms a metal-rich atmosphere above the white dwarf
surface. Using hydrodynamical simulations, we show that this atmosphere is
compressed and accelerated during the subsequent interaction with the supernova
ejecta. This leads ultimately to the formation of a high-velocity pancake of
metal-rich material that is geometrically detached from the bulk of the ejecta.
When observed at the epochs near maximum light, this absorbing pancake produces
a highly blueshifted and polarized calcium IR triplet absorption feature
similar to that observed in several Type~Ia supernovae. We discuss the
orientation effects present in our model and contrast them to those expected in
other supernova explosion models. We propose that a large sample of
spectropolarimetric observations can be used to critically evaluate the
different theoretical scenarios.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. To appear in ApJ Letters. For higher resolution
images and movies see http://panisse.lbl.gov/~dnkasen/gcd.htm
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