816 research outputs found
Wavelets and Quantum Algebras
Wavelets, known to be useful in non-linear multi-scale processes and in
multi-resolution analysis, are shown to have a q-deformed algebraic structure.
The translation and dilation operators of the theory associate with any scaling
equation a non-linear, two parameter algebra. This structure can be mapped onto
the quantum group in one limit, and approaches a Fourier series
generating algebra, in another limit. A duality between any scaling function
and its corresponding non-linear algebra is obtained. Examples for the Haar and
B-wavelets are worked out in detail.Comment: 27 pages Latex, 3 figure p
Differences in receptivity to gastrointestinal infections with nematodes in dairy ewes: Influence of age and of the level of milk production
Resistance to anthelmintics in populations of gastrointestinal nematodes is a major concern in small ruminants. One solution
to limit the spread of anthelmintic resistance is to apply treatments selectively by targeting the most susceptible animals within
a flock. In dairy goats, previous studies have shown that, within a flock, goats in first lactation and those with high level of milk
production were highly receptive to nematode infections. These results provided the rationale for targeted treatments. In dairy
ewes, such epidemiological information on possible factors modulating the susceptibility to parasitism were still lacking. The
objective of the current study was therefore to examine differences in the level of parasite infection and in the pathophysiological
consequences in dairy ewes, depending on the age or on the level of milk production. In three farms, parasite egg excretion, and the
serum concentrations of pepsinogen and inorganic phosphate were compared on one hand between primiparous and multiparous
ewes; on the other hand, between ewes with the highest and the lowest level of milk production, within a cohort of 3â5-year
old animals. Overall, the results did not indicate significant differences for both either the parasitological or pathophysiological
measurements depending on the level of milk production. In contrast, significant differences were found according to age,
indicating higher levels of infections in the primiparous ewes than in the multiparous ones and suggesting that this category of
animals represents a particular parasitic risk within a flock
Fast Numerical simulations of 2D turbulence using a dynamic model for Subgrid Motions
We present numerical simulation of 2D turbulent flow using a new model for
the subgrid scales which are computed using a dynamic equation linking the
subgrid scales with the resolved velocity. This equation is not postulated, but
derived from the constitutive equations under the assumption that the
non-linear interactions of subgrid scales between themselves are equivalent to
a turbulent viscosity.The performances of our model are compared with Direct
Numerical Simulations of decaying and forced turbulence. For a same resolution,
numerical simulations using our model allow for a significant reduction of the
computational time (of the order of 100 in the case we consider), and allow the
achievement of significantly larger Reynolds number than the direct method.Comment: 35 pages, 9 figure
Structures in the RM sky
Coherent structures in the distribution of the Faraday rotation measure of
extragalactic radio sources are isolated using wavelet transformation
technique. Signatures of the magnetic fields in the local (Orion) spiral arm,
the Sagittarius and Carina arms, the synchrotron Loop I and, possibly, the
Perseus arm have been revealed using the RM catalogues of Simard-Normandin et
al. (1981, 551 source)and Broten et al. (1988, 663 sources). Unlike earlier
analyses of the RM sky, our approach has allowed us to assess the stability of
the results with respect to modifications of the data sample.
We estimate the mean magnetic field strength in the Orion arm as 1.4\pm0.3
mkGauss and find clear indication of a magnetic field reversal at a distance of
0.6-1 kpc towards the Galactic centre. Our analysis has revealed for the first
time the extension of the reversal in the Carina arm. The direction of magnetic
field in the Perseus arm is reversed with respect to that in the Orion arm. The
average pitch angle of magnetic field in the nearby spiral arms is 15^\circ,
and the mean field strength in the Sagittarius-Carina and Perseus arms is
1.7\pm0.3 mkGauss and 1.4\pm1.2 mkGauss, respectively. The line-of-sight
magnetic field in Loop I is estimated as 0.9\pm0.3 mkGauss. We find firm
evidence of a dominant even symmetry of the local mean field with respect to
the galactic equator.Comment: 16 pages (LaTEX), 11 figures (eps), accepted for publication in MNRAS
(uses mn.sty
First radius measurements of very low mass stars with the VLTI
e present 4 very low mass stars radii measured with the VLTI using the 2.2
microns VINCI test instrument. The observations were carried out during the
commissioning of the 104-meter-baseline with two 8-meter-telescopes. We measure
angular diameters of 0.7-1.5 mas with accuracies of 0.04-0.11 mas, and for
spectral type ranging from M0V to M5.5V. We determine an empirical mass-radius
relation for M dwarfs based on all available radius measurements. The observed
relation agrees well with theoretical models at the present accuracy level,
with possible discrepancy around 0.5-0.8 Msolar that needs to be confirmed. In
the near future, dozens of M dwarfs radii will be measured with 0.1-1%
accuracy, with the VLTI, thanks to the improvements expected from the near
infrared instrument AMBER. This will bring strong observational constraints on
both atmosphere and interior physics.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics Letters, 4
pages, 3 figure
Cumulants as non-Gaussian qualifiers
We discuss the requirements of good statistics for quantifying
non-Gaussianity in the Cosmic Microwave Background. The importance of
rotational invariance and statistical independence is stressed, but we show
that these are sometimes incompatible. It is shown that the first of these
requirements prefers a real space (or wavelet) formulation, whereas the latter
favours quantities defined in Fourier space. Bearing this in mind we decide to
be eclectic and define two new sets of statistics to quantify the level of
non-Gaussianity. Both sets make use of the concept of cumulants of a
distribution. However, one set is defined in real space, with reference to the
wavelet transform, whereas the other is defined in Fourier space. We derive a
series of properties concerning these statistics for a Gaussian random field
and show how one can relate these quantities to the higher order moments of
temperature maps. Although our frameworks lead to an infinite hierarchy of
quantities we show how cosmic variance and experimental constraints give a
natural truncation of this hierarchy. We then focus on the real space
statistics and analyse the non-Gaussian signal generated by points sources
obscured by large scale Gaussian fluctuations. We conclude by discussing the
practical implementations of these techniques
Data reduction methods for single-mode optical interferometry - Application to the VLTI two-telescopes beam combiner VINCI
The interferometric data processing methods that we describe in this paper
use a number of innovative techniques. In particular, the implementation of the
wavelet transform allows us to obtain a good immunity of the fringe processing
to false detections and large amplitude perturbations by the atmospheric piston
effect, through a careful, automated selection of the interferograms. To
demonstrate the data reduction procedure, we describe the processing and
calibration of a sample of stellar data from the VINCI beam combiner. Starting
from the raw data, we derive the angular diameter of the dwarf star Alpha Cen
A. Although these methods have been developed specifically for VINCI, they are
easily applicable to other single-mode beam combiners, and to spectrally
dispersed fringes.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics, 17 pages, 19
figure
Characterizing Multi-Scale Self-Similar Behavior and Non-Statistical Properties of Financial Time Series
We make use of wavelet transform to study the multi-scale, self similar
behavior and deviations thereof, in the stock prices of large companies,
belonging to different economic sectors. The stock market returns exhibit
multi-fractal characteristics, with some of the companies showing deviations at
small and large scales. The fact that, the wavelets belonging to the
Daubechies' (Db) basis enables one to isolate local polynomial trends of
different degrees, plays the key role in isolating fluctuations at different
scales. One of the primary motivations of this work is to study the emergence
of the behavior \cite{hes5} of the fluctuations starting with high
frequency fluctuations. We make use of Db4 and Db6 basis sets to respectively
isolate local linear and quadratic trends at different scales in order to study
the statistical characteristics of these financial time series. The
fluctuations reveal fat tail non-Gaussian behavior, unstable periodic
modulations, at finer scales, from which the characteristic power law
behavior emerges at sufficiently large scales. We further identify stable
periodic behavior through the continuous Morlet wavelet.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, bibliography updated, conclusion added, minor
changes in the manuscrip
Straightening of Thermal Fluctuations in Semi-Flexible Polymers by Applied Tension
We investigate the propagation of a suddenly applied tension along a
thermally excited semi-flexible polymer using analytical approximations,
scaling arguments and numerical simulation. This problem is inherently
non-linear. We find sub-diffusive propagation with a dynamical exponent of 1/4.
By generalizing the internal elasticity, we show that tense strings exhibit
qualitatively different tension profiles and propagation with an exponent of
1/2.Comment: Latex file; with three postscript figures; .ps available at
http://dept.physics.upenn.edu/~nelson/pull.p
Individual quality assessment of autografting by probability estimation for clinical endpoints: a prospective validation study from the European group for blood and marrow transplantation.
The aim of supportive autografting is to reduce the side effects from stem cell transplantation and avoid procedure-related health disadvantages for patients at the lowest possible cost and resource expenditure. Economic evaluation of health care is becoming increasingly important. We report clinical and laboratory data collected from 397 consecutive adult patients (173 non-Hodgkin lymphoma, 30 Hodgkin lymphoma, 160 multiple myeloma, 7 autoimmune diseases, and 28 acute leukemia) who underwent their first autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (PBSCT). We considered primary endpoints evaluating health economic efficacy (eg, antibiotic administration, transfusion of blood components, and time in hospital), secondary endpoints evaluating toxicity (in accordance with Common Toxicity Criteria), and tertiary endpoints evaluating safety (ie, the risk of regimen-related death or disease progression within the first year after PBSCT). A time-dependent grading of efficacy is proposed with day 21 for multiple myeloma and day 25 for the other disease categories (depending on the length of the conditioning regimen) as the acceptable maximum time in hospital, which together with antibiotics, antifungal, or transfusion therapy delineates four groups: favorable (â€7 days on antibiotics and no transfusions; â€21 [25] days in hospital), intermediate (from 7 to 10 days on antibiotics and 7 days on antibiotics, >3 but 30/34 days in hospital after transplantation), and very unfavorable (>10 days on antibiotics, >6 transfusions; >30 to 34 days in hospital). The multivariate analysis showed that (1) PBSC harvests of â„4 Ă 106/kg CD34 + cells in 1 apheresis procedure were associated with a favorable outcome in all patient categories except acute myelogenous leukemia and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (P = .001), (2) â„5 Ă 106/kg CD34 + cells infused predicted better transplantation outcome in all patient categories (P 500 mL) (P = .002), and (5) patients with a central venous catheter during both collection and infusion of PBSC had a more favorable outcome post-PBSCT than peripheral access (P = .007). The type of mobilization regimen did not affect the outcome of auto-PBSCT. The present study identified predictive variables, which may be useful in future individual pretransplantation probability evaluations with the goal to improve supportive care
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