2,543 research outputs found
Discovery of VHE and HE emission from the blazar 1ES 0414+009 with H.E.S.S and Fermi-LAT
The high energy peaked BL Lac (HBL) object 1ES 0414+009 (z=0.287) is a
distant very high-energy (VHE, E > 100 GeV) blazars with well-determined
redshift. This source was detected with the High Energy Stereoscopic System
(H.E.S.S.) between October 2005 and September 2009. It was also detected with
the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) in 21 months of data. The combined high
energy (HE) and VHE spectra, once corrected for gamma-gamma absorption on the
extragalactic background light (EBL), indicate a Compton peak located above few
TeV, among the highest in the BL Lac class.Comment: proceeding from the 25th Texas Symposium on Relativistic Astrophysics
(Heidelberg, Germany, 2010
Effect of Altitude and Wounding on Blood Disease Progress of Plantain
Effect of Altitude and Wounding on Blood Disease Progress of Plantain. In the latest decade, the blood disease of banana has spread in almost all provinces in Indonesia and caused wilting of millions banana clusters in several provinces. It is very difficult to control the disease due to the base data about ecology and epidemiology of the pathogen are still poorly understood. This research aimed to evaluate the effect of wounding of inoculation site on blood disease progress of plantain. The experiment was arranged using randomized completely block design It was conducted at three locations with altitude of 100, 1000, and 1600 m above sea levels as replication block. The treatments were wounding, unwounding inoculation site, inoculation, and uninoculation of plantain cv. Kepok Kuning Wounding was applied by stabbing with an injection pin around the corm of 15 stabs/seedling. The seedlings were planted singly in one liter of non sterile soil in plastic bag. Each treatment consisted of 5 seedlings which was replicated 3 times. Inoculation was done by soil drenching of 20 ml bacterial suspension at concentration of 108 cfu/ml two week after planting. The pathogen used for inoculation originated from low land area (about 100 m above sea level). Observation was done weekly for 5 weeks. The variables observed were wilt intensity and area under disease progress (AUDPC). The results showed that blood disease was able to establish at altitude of 1600 m above sea level. The disease progress however was slower that those at 100 and 1000 m above sea level. On wounded seedling, the disease progress was more aggressive than those on unwounded one
Dirac operators and the Very Strange Formula for Lie superalgebras
Using a super-affine version of Kostant's cubic Dirac operator, we prove a
very strange formula for quadratic finite-dimensional Lie superalgebras with a
reductive even subalgebra.Comment: Latex file, 25 pages. A few misprints corrected. To appear in the
forthcoming volume "Advances in Lie Superalgebras", Springer INdAM Serie
Spectral isolation of naturally reductive metrics on simple Lie groups
We show that within the class of left-invariant naturally reductive metrics
on a compact simple Lie group , every
metric is spectrally isolated. We also observe that any collection of
isospectral compact symmetric spaces is finite; this follows from a somewhat
stronger statement involving only a finite part of the spectrum.Comment: 19 pages, new title and abstract, revised introduction, new result
demonstrating that any collection of isospectral compact symmetric spaces
must be finite, to appear Math Z. (published online Dec. 2009
Section on Prospects for Dark Matter Detection of the White Paper on the Status and Future of Ground-Based TeV Gamma-Ray Astronomy
This is a report on the findings of the dark matter science working group for
the white paper on the status and future of TeV gamma-ray astronomy. The white
paper was commissioned by the American Physical Society, and the full white
paper can be found on astro-ph (arXiv:0810.0444). This detailed section
discusses the prospects for dark matter detection with future gamma-ray
experiments, and the complementarity of gamma-ray measurements with other
indirect, direct or accelerator-based searches. We conclude that any
comprehensive search for dark matter should include gamma-ray observations,
both to identify the dark matter particle (through the charac- teristics of the
gamma-ray spectrum) and to measure the distribution of dark matter in galactic
halos.Comment: Report from the Dark Matter Science Working group of the APS
commissioned White paper on ground-based TeV gamma ray astronomy (19 pages, 9
figures
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