547 research outputs found
Bark and Hz scaled F2 Locus equations: Sex differences and individual differences
This study investigated speaker sex differences in F2 Locus equations (F2 LEs) based on linearly (Hz) and tonotopically (Bark) scaled formant measurements. F2 data based on English monosyllabic words produced by thirteen women and eleven men were tonotopically scaled and F2 LEs were derived for both the linear and tonotopically scaled formant values. Although the overall sex difference in the F2 LE slope values for women and men was significant for both sets of F2 measures, the magnitude of this difference decreased for the Bark (.047) compared to the Hz (.063) scale. The individual data revealed a significant correlation between the slope values of the Hz and Bark scale [r = .974; p<.0001] suggesting a lawful relationship between the two metrics. Further probing revealed that the F2 LE data from women were affected more by the Bark conversion than the data from men
Continuous Damage Fiber Bundle Model for Strongly Disordered Materials
We present an extension of the continuous damage fiber bundle model to
describe the gradual degradation of highly heterogeneous materials under an
increasing external load. Breaking of a fiber in the model is preceded by a
sequence of partial failure events occurring at random threshold values. In
order to capture the subsequent propagation and arrest of cracks, furthermore,
the disorder of the number of degradation steps of material constituents, the
failure thresholds of single fibers are sorted into ascending order and their
total number is a Poissonian distributed random variable over the fibers.
Analytical and numerical calculations showed that the failure process of the
system is governed by extreme value statistics, which has a substantial effect
on the macroscopic constitutive behaviour and on the microscopic bursting
activity as well.Comment: 10 pages, 13 figure
Nonperturbative aspects of the quark-photon vertex
The electromagnetic interaction with quarks is investigated through a
relativistic, electromagnetic gauge-invariant treatment. Gluon dressing of the
quark-photon vertex and the quark self-energy functions is described by the
inhomogeneous Bethe-Salpeter equation in the ladder approximation and the
Schwinger-Dyson equation in the rainbow approximation respectively. Results for
the calculation of the quark-photon vertex are presented in both the time-like
and space-like regions of photon momentum squared, however emphasis is placed
on the space-like region relevant to electron scattering. The treatment
presented here simultaneously addresses the role of dynamically generated
vector bound states and the approach to asymptotic behavior. The
resulting description is therefore applicable over the entire range of momentum
transfers available in electron scattering experiments. Input parameters are
limited to the model gluon two-point function, which is chosen to reflect
confinement and asymptotic freedom, and are largely constrained by the obtained
bound-state spectrum.Comment: 8 figures available on request by email, 25 pages, Revtex,
DOE/ER/40561-131-INT94-00-5
The Magellan/IMACS Catalog of Optical Supernova Remnant Candidates in M83
We present a new optical imaging survey of supernova remnants in M83, using
data obtained with the Magellan I 6.5m telescope and IMACS instrument under
conditions of excellent seeing. Using the criterion of strong [S II] emission
relative to Halpha, we confirm all but three of the 71 SNR candidates listed in
our previous survey, and expand the SNR candidate list to 225 objects, more
than tripling the earlier sample. Comparing the optical survey with a new deep
X-ray survey of M83 with Chandra, we find 61 of these SNR candidates to have
X-ray counterparts. We also identify an additional list of 46 [O III] -selected
nebulae for follow-up as potential ejecta-dominated remnants, seven of which
have associated X-ray emission that makes them strong candidates. Some of the
other [O III]-bright objects could also be normal ISM-dominated supernova
remnants with shocks fast enough to doubly ionize oxygen, but with Halpha and
[S II] emission faint enough to have been missed. A few of these objects may
also be H II regions with abnormally high [O III] emission compared with the
majority of M83 H II regions, compact nebulae excited by young Wolf-Rayet
stars, or even background AGN. The supernova remnant Halpha luminosity function
in M83 is shifted a factor of ~ 4.5x higher than for M33 supernova remnants,
indicative of a higher mean ISM density in M83. We describe the search
technique used to identify the supernova remnant candidates and provide basic
information and finder charts for the objects.Comment: 40 pages, 15 figures, accepted for ApJ
Speaker sex effects on temporal and spectro-temporal measures of speech
This study investigated speaker sex differences in the temporal and spectro-temporal parameters of English monosyllabic words spoken by thirteen women and eleven men. Vowel and utterance duration were investigated. A number of formant frequency parameters were also analysed to assess the spectro-temporal dynamic structures of the monosyllabic words as a function of speaker sex. Absolute frequency changes were measured for the first (F1), second (F2), and third (F3) formant frequencies (ΔF1, ΔF2, and ΔF3, respectively). Rates of these absolute formant frequency changes were also measured and calculated to yield measurements for rF1, rF2, and rF3. Normalised frequency changes (normΔF1, normΔF2, and normΔF3), and normalised rates of change (normrF1, normrF2, and normrF3) were also calculated. F2 locus equations were then derived from the F2 measurements taken at the onset and temporal mid points of the vowels. Results indicated that there were significant sex differences in the spectro-temporal parameters associated with F2: ΔF2, normΔF2, rF2, and F2 locus equation slopes; women displayed significantly higher values for ΔF2, normΔF2 and rF2, and significantly shallower F2 locus equation slopes. Collectively, these results suggested lower levels of coarticulation in the speech samples of the women speakers, and corroborate evidence reported in earlier studies
Percolation with excluded small clusters and Coulomb blockade in a granular system
We consider dc-conductivity of a mixture of small conducting and
insulating grains slightly below the percolation threshold, where finite
clusters of conducting grains are characterized by a wide spectrum of sizes.
The charge transport is controlled by tunneling of carriers between neighboring
conducting clusters via short ``links'' consisting of one insulating grain.
Upon lowering temperature small clusters (up to some -dependent size) become
Coulomb blockaded, and are avoided, if possible, by relevant hopping paths. We
introduce a relevant percolational problem of next-nearest-neighbors (NNN)
conductivity with excluded small clusters and demonstrate (both numerically and
analytically) that decreases as power law of the size of excluded
clusters. As a physical consequence, the conductivity is a power-law function
of temperature in a wide intermediate temperature range. We express the
corresponding index through known critical indices of the percolation theory
and confirm this relation numerically.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Reduced basis catalogs for gravitational wave templates
We introduce a reduced basis approach as a new paradigm for modeling,
representing and searching for gravitational waves. We construct waveform
catalogs for non-spinning compact binary coalescences, and we find that for
accuracies of 99% and 99.999% the method generates a factor of about
fewer templates than standard placement methods. The continuum of gravitational
waves can be represented by a finite and comparatively compact basis. The
method is robust under variations in the noise of detectors, implying that only
a single catalog needs to be generated.Comment: Minor changes in some of the phrasing to match the version as
published in PR
Unequal Mass Binary Black Hole Plunges and Gravitational Recoil
We present results from fully nonlinear simulations of unequal mass binary
black holes plunging from close separations well inside the innermost stable
circular orbit with mass ratios q = M_1/M_2 = {1,0.85,0.78,0.55,0.32}, or
equivalently, with reduced mass parameters . For each case, the initial binary orbital
parameters are chosen from the Cook-Baumgarte equal-mass ISCO configuration. We
show waveforms of the dominant l=2,3 modes and compute estimates of energy and
angular momentum radiated. For the plunges from the close separations
considered, we measure kick velocities from gravitational radiation recoil in
the range 25-82 km/s. Due to the initial close separations our kick velocity
estimates should be understood as a lower bound. The close configurations
considered are also likely to contain significant eccentricities influencing
the recoil velocity.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, to appear in "New Frontiers" special issue of
CQ
An algorithm to calculate the transport exponent in strip geometries
An algorithm for solving the random resistor problem by means of the
transfer-matrix approach is presented. Preconditioning by spanning clusters
extraction both reduces the size of the conductivity matrix and speed up the
calculations.Comment: 17 pages, RevTeX2.1, HLRZ - 97/9
The Samurai Project: verifying the consistency of black-hole-binary waveforms for gravitational-wave detection
We quantify the consistency of numerical-relativity black-hole-binary
waveforms for use in gravitational-wave (GW) searches with current and planned
ground-based detectors. We compare previously published results for the
mode of the gravitational waves from an equal-mass
nonspinning binary, calculated by five numerical codes. We focus on the 1000M
(about six orbits, or 12 GW cycles) before the peak of the GW amplitude and the
subsequent ringdown. We find that the phase and amplitude agree within each
code's uncertainty estimates. The mismatch between the modes
is better than for binary masses above with respect to
the Enhanced LIGO detector noise curve, and for masses above
with respect to Advanced LIGO, Virgo and Advanced Virgo. Between the waveforms
with the best agreement, the mismatch is below . We find that
the waveforms would be indistinguishable in all ground-based detectors (and for
the masses we consider) if detected with a signal-to-noise ratio of less than
, or less than in the best cases.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures. Version accepted by PR
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