2,754 research outputs found
Improved plasmids for gene targeting at the his-3 locus of Neurospora crassa by electroporation: Correction
Two mistakes in our article on gene replacement by gene targeting at the his-3 locus (Margolin, B.S. et al., 1997, FGN 44:34-36) have come to our attention
Improved plasmids for gene targeting at the his-3 locus of Neurospora crassa by electroporation
We report two new plasmids, pBM60 and pBM61, and procedures to efficiently generate single- copy transformants targeted to the his-3 locus in Neurospora crassa
On Convergence of the Inexact Rayleigh Quotient Iteration with the Lanczos Method Used for Solving Linear Systems
For the Hermitian inexact Rayleigh quotient iteration (RQI), the author has
established new local general convergence results, independent of iterative
solvers for inner linear systems. The theory shows that the method locally
converges quadratically under a new condition, called the uniform positiveness
condition. In this paper we first consider the local convergence of the inexact
RQI with the unpreconditioned Lanczos method for the linear systems. Some
attractive properties are derived for the residuals, whose norms are
's, of the linear systems obtained by the Lanczos method. Based on
them and the new general convergence results, we make a refined analysis and
establish new local convergence results. It is proved that the inexact RQI with
Lanczos converges quadratically provided that with a
constant . The method is guaranteed to converge linearly provided
that is bounded by a small multiple of the reciprocal of the
residual norm of the current approximate eigenpair. The results are
fundamentally different from the existing convergence results that always
require , and they have a strong impact on effective
implementations of the method. We extend the new theory to the inexact RQI with
a tuned preconditioned Lanczos for the linear systems. Based on the new theory,
we can design practical criteria to control to achieve quadratic
convergence and implement the method more effectively than ever before.
Numerical experiments confirm our theory.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:0906.223
The MODEST questions: challenges and future directions in stellar cluster research
We present a review of some of the current major challenges in stellar
cluster research, including young clusters, globular clusters, and galactic
nuclei. Topics considered include: primordial mass segregation and runaway
mergers, expulsion of gas from clusters, the production of stellar exotica seen
in some clusters (eg blue stragglers and extreme horizontal--branch stars),
binary populations within clusters, the black--hole population within stellar
clusters, the final parsec problem, stellar dynamics around a massive black
hole, and stellar collisions. The Modest Questions posed here are the outcome
of discussions which took place at the Modest-6A workshop held in Lund, Sweden,
in December, 2005. Modest-6A was organised as part of the activities of the
Modest Collaboration (see www.manybody.org for further details)Comment: 24 pages, no figures, accepted for publication in New Astronom
Ocean acoustical ray-tracing : Software Ray
A new computer program for accurate calculation of acoustic ray paths through a range-varing ocean sound channel has been
written. It is based on creating a model of the speed of sound in the ocean, consistent with input data, that produces the smoothest
possible wavefronts. This scheme eliminates "false caustics" from the wavefront. It may be useful in calculating an approximate
solution to the full wave equation at megameter ranges.Funding was provided by the Office of Naval Research under contract N00014-86-C-0358 and the
Office of Naval Technology under contract N00014-90-C-0098
Intensity and frequency noise reduction of a Nd:YAG NPRO via pump light stabilisation
We have shown that pump light intensity stabilisation of a single-mode laser diode pumped Nd:YAG non-planar ring oscillator (NPRO) results in significant intensity noise reduction of the NPRO, as well as frequency noise suppression in the same order of magnitude. This effect does not occur in conventional laser diode array pumped NPROs due to mode beating effects originating in the multi-mode pump. As opposed to individual intensity and frequency stabilisation, pump light stabilisation contributes a simplified stabilisation scheme for single-mode laser diode pumped NPROs for high precision applications
Extreme mass ratio inspiral rates: dependence on the massive black hole mass
We study the rate at which stars spiral into a massive black hole (MBH) due
to the emission of gravitational waves (GWs), as a function of the mass M of
the MBH. In the context of our model, it is shown analytically that the rate
approximately depends on the MBH mass as M^{-1/4}. Numerical simulations
confirm this result, and show that for all MBH masses, the event rate is
highest for stellar black holes, followed by white dwarfs, and lowest for
neutron stars. The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) is expected to see
hundreds of these extreme mass ratio inspirals per year. Since the event rate
derived here formally diverges as M->0, the model presented here cannot hold
for MBHs of masses that are too low, and we discuss what the limitations of the
model are.Comment: Accepted to CQG, special LISA issu
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