857 research outputs found
Easy on that trigger dad: a study of long term family photo retrieval
We examine the effects of new technologies for digital photography on people's longer term storage and access to collections of personal photos. We report an empirical study of parents' ability to retrieve photos related to salient family events from more than a year ago. Performance was relatively poor with people failing to find almost 40% of pictures. We analyze participants' organizational and access strategies to identify reasons for this poor performance. Possible reasons for retrieval failure include: storing too many pictures, rudimentary organization, use of multiple storage systems, failure to maintain collections and participants' false beliefs about their ability to access photos. We conclude by exploring the technical and theoretical implications of these findings
It is Hobbes, not Rousseau:an experiment on voting and redistribution
We perform an experiment which provides a laboratory replica of some
important features of the welfare state. In the experiment, all individuals in a group
decide whether to make a costly effort, which produces a random (independent) outcome
for each one of them. The group members then vote on whether to redistribute
the resulting and commonly known total sum of earnings equally amongst themselves.
This game has two equilibria, if played once. In one of them, all players make
effort and there is little redistribution. In the other one, there is no effort and nothingWe thank Iris Bohnet, Tim Cason, David Cooper, John Duffy, Maia Guell, John Van Huyck and Robin Mason for helpful conversations and encouragement. The comments of the Editor and two referees helped improve the paper. We gratefully acknowledge the financial support from Spainâs Ministry of Science and Innovation under grants CONSOLIDER INGENIO 2010 CSD2006-0016 (all authors), ECO2009-10531 (Cabrales), ECO2008-01768 (Nagel) and the Comunidad de Madrid under grant Excelecon (Cabrales), the Generalitat de Catalunya and the CREA program (Nagel), and project SEJ2007-64340 of Spainâs Ministerio de EducaciĂłn y Ciencia (RodrĂguez Mora).Publicad
Determining global parameters of the oscillations of solar-like stars
Helioseismology has enabled us to better understand the solar interior, while
also allowing us to better constrain solar models. But now is a tremendous
epoch for asteroseismology as space missions dedicated to studying stellar
oscillations have been launched within the last years (MOST and CoRoT). CoRoT
has already proved valuable results for many types of stars, while Kepler,
which was launched in March 2009, will provide us with a huge number of seismic
data very soon. This is an opportunity to better constrain stellar models and
to finally understand stellar structure and evolution. The goal of this
research work is to estimate the global parameters of any solar-like
oscillating target in an automatic manner. We want to determine the global
parameters of the acoustic modes (large separation, range of excited pressure
modes, maximum amplitude, and its corresponding frequency), retrieve the
surface rotation period of the star and use these results to estimate the
global parameters of the star (radius and mass).To prepare the analysis of
hundreds of solar-like oscillating stars, we have developed a robust and
automatic pipeline. The pipeline consists of data analysis techniques, such as
Fast Fourier Transform, wavelets, autocorrelation, as well as the application
of minimisation algorithms for stellar-modelling. We apply our pipeline to some
simulated lightcurves from the asteroFLAG team and the Aarhus-asteroFLAG
simulator, and obtain results that are consistent with the input data to the
simulations. Our strategy gives correct results for stars with magnitudes below
11 with only a few 10% of bad determinations among the reliable results. We
then apply the pipeline to the Sun and three CoRoT targets.In particular we
determine the parameters of the Sun, HD49933, HD181906, and HD181420.Comment: 15 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Holography in asymptotically flat space-times and the BMS group
In a previous paper (hep-th/0306142) we have started to explore the
holographic principle in the case of asymptotically flat space-times and
analyzed in particular different aspects of the Bondi-Metzner-Sachs (BMS)
group, namely the asymptotic symmetry group of any asymptotically flat
space-time. We continue this investigation in this paper. Having in mind a
S-matrix approach with future and past null infinity playing the role of
holographic screens on which the BMS group acts, we connect the IR sectors of
the gravitational field with the representation theory of the BMS group. We
analyze the (complicated) mapping between bulk and boundary symmetries pointing
out differences with respect to the AdS/CFT set up. Finally we construct a BMS
phase space and a free hamiltonian for fields transforming w.r.t BMS
representations. The last step is supposed to be an explorative investigation
of the boundary data living on the degenerate null manifold at infinity.Comment: 31 pages, several changes in section 3 and 7 and references update
Renormalization of the Hamiltonian and a geometric interpretation of asymptotic freedom
Using a novel approach to renormalization in the Hamiltonian formalism, we
study the connection between asymptotic freedom and the renormalization group
flow of the configuration space metric. It is argued that in asymptotically
free theories the effective distance between configuration decreases as high
momentum modes are integrated out.Comment: 22 pages, LaTeX, no figures; final version accepted in Phys.Rev.D;
added reference and appendix with comment on solution of eq. (9) in the tex
Long-Term Changes in Lower Tropospheric Baseline Ozone Concentrations:
Two recent papers have quantified long-term ozone (O3) changes observed at northernmidlatitude sites that are believed to represent baseline (here understood as representative of continental to hemispheric scales) conditions. Three chemistry-climate models (NCAR CAM-chem, GFDL-CM3, and GISS-E2-R) have calculated retrospective tropospheric O3 concentrations as part of the Atmospheric Chemistry and Climate Model Intercomparison Project and Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 model intercomparisons. We present an approach for quantitative comparisons of model results with measurements for seasonally averaged O3 concentrations. There is considerable qualitative agreement between the measurements and the models, but there are also substantial and consistent quantitative disagreements. Most notably, models (1) overestimate absolute O3 mixing ratios, on average by approximately 5 to 17 ppbv in the year 2000, (2) capture only approximately 50% of O3 changes observed over the past five to six decades, and little of observed seasonal differences, and (3) capture approximately 25 to 45% of the rate of change of the long-term changes. These disagreements are significant enough to indicate that only limited confidence can be placed on estimates of present-day radiative forcing of tropospheric O3 derived from modeled historic concentration changes and on predicted future O3 concentrations. Evidently our understanding of tropospheric O3, or the incorporation of chemistry and transport processes into current chemical climate models, is incomplete. Modeled O3 trends approximately parallel estimated trends in anthropogenic emissions of NO(sub x), an important O3 precursor, while measured O3 changes increase more rapidly than these emission estimates
Vortices on Higher Genus Surfaces
We consider the topological interactions of vortices on general surfaces. If
the genus of the surface is greater than zero, the handles can carry magnetic
flux. The classical state of the vortices and the handles can be described by a
mapping from the fundamental group to the unbroken gauge group. The allowed
configurations must satisfy a relation induced by the fundamental group. Upon
quantization, the handles can carry ``Cheshire charge.'' The motion of the
vortices can be described by the braid group of the surface. How the motion of
the vortices affects the state is analyzed in detail.Comment: 28 pages with 10 figures; uses phyzzx and psfig; Caltech preprint
CALT-68-187
Amplitudes and lifetimes of solar-like oscillations observed by CoRoT* Red-giant versus main-sequence stars
Context. The advent of space-borne missions such as CoRoT or Kepler providing
photometric data has brought new possibilities for asteroseismology across the
H-R diagram. Solar-like oscillations are now observed in many stars, including
red giants and main- sequence stars. Aims. Based on several hundred identified
pulsating red giants, we aim to characterize their oscillation amplitudes and
widths. These observables are compared with those of main-sequence stars in
order to test trends and scaling laws for these parameters for both
main-sequence stars and red giants. Methods. An automated fitting procedure is
used to analyze several hundred Fourier spectra. For each star, a modeled
spectrum is fitted to the observed oscillation spectrum, and mode parameters
are derived. Results. Amplitudes and widths of red-giant solar-like
oscillations are estimated for several hundred modes of oscillation. Amplitudes
are relatively high (several hundred ppm) and widths relatively small (very few
tenths of a {\mu}Hz). Conclusions. Widths measured in main-sequence stars show
a different variation with the effective temperature than red giants. A single
scaling law is derived for mode amplitudes of both red giants and main-sequence
stars versus their luminosity to mass ratio. However, our results suggest that
two regimes may also be compatible with the observations.Comment: Accepted in A&A on 2011 February 8th, now includes corrections
(results now more precise on \Gamma and A_max in Section 4.3 and 4.4, fig. 7
corrected consequently
PREDICTORS OF HYPERTENSION
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/74570/1/j.1749-6632.1978.tb25565.x.pd
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