5,412 research outputs found
Optical propagation measurements at Emerson Lake, 1968
Optical propagation measurements in inhomogeneous atmosphere at Emerson Lake, California for optical propagation theory validity testin
Robust signal extraction for on-line monitoring data
Data from the automatic monitoring of intensive care patients exhibits trends, outliers, and level changes as well as periods of relative constancy. All this is overlaid with a high level of noise and there are dependencies between the different items measured. Current monitoring systems tend to deliver too many false warnings which reduces their acceptability by medical staff. The challenge is to develop a method which allows a fast and reliable denoising of the data and which can separate artifacts from clinical relevant structural changes in the patients condition (Gather et al., 2002). A simple median filter works well as long as there is no substantial trend in the data but improvements may be possible by approximating the data by a local linear trend. As a first step in this programme the paper examines the relative merits of the L1 regression, the repeated median (Siegel, 1982) and the least median of squares (Hampel, 1975, Rousseeuw, 1984). The question of dependency between different items is a topic for future research
Stellar Dynamics and the implications on the merger evolution in NGC6240
We report near-infrared integral field spectroscopy of the luminous merging
galaxy NGC 6240. Stellar velocities show that the two K-band peaks separated by
1.6arcsec are the central parts of inclined, rotating disk galaxies with equal
mass bulges. The dynamical masses of the nuclei are much larger than the
stellar mass derived from the K-band light, implying that the progenitor
galaxies were galaxies with massive bulges. The K-band light is dominated by
red supergiants formed in the two nuclei in starbursts, triggered ~2x10^7 years
ago, possibly by the most recent perigalactic approach. Strong feedback effects
of a superwind and supernovae are responsible for a short duration burst
(~5x10^6 years) which is already decaying. The two galaxies form a
prograde-retrograde rotating system and from the stellar velocity field it
seems that one of the two interacting galaxies is subject to a prograde
encounter. Between the stellar nuclei is a prominent peak of molecular gas
(H_2, CO). The stellar velocity dispersion peaks there indicating that the gas
has formed a local, self-gravitating concentration decoupled from the stellar
gravitational potential. NGC 6240 has previously been reported to fit the
paradigm of an elliptical galaxy formed through the merger of two galaxies.
This was based on the near-infrared light distribution which follows a
r^1/4-law. Our data cast strong doubt on this conclusion: the system is by far
not relaxed, rotation plays an important role, as does self-gravitating gas,
and the near-infrared light is dominated by young stars.Comment: 34 pages, 11 figures, using AASTEX 5.0rc3.1, paper submitted to the
Astrophysical Journal, revised versio
On the thermodynamics of the SwiftâHohenberg theory
We present the microbalance including the microforces, the first- and second-order microstresses for the SwiftâHohenberg equation concomitantly with their constitutive equations, which are consistent with the free-energy imbalance. We provide an explicit form for the microstress structure for a free-energy functional endowed with second-order spatial derivatives. Additionally, we generalize the SwiftâHohenberg theory via a proper constitutive process. Finally, we present one highly resolved three-dimensional numerical simulation to demonstrate the particular form of the resulting microstresses and their interactions in the evolution of the SwiftâHohenberg equation
Obliquely propagating electromagnetic waves in magnetized kappa plasmas
Velocity distribution functions (VDFs) that exhibit a power-law dependence on
the high-energy tail have been the subject of intense research by the plasma
physics community. Such functions, known as kappa or superthermal
distributions, have been found to provide a better fitting to the VDFs measured
by spacecraft in the solar wind. One of the problems that is being addressed on
this new light is the temperature anisotropy of solar wind protons and
electrons. In the literature, the general treatment for waves excited by
(bi-)Maxwellian plasmas is well-established. However, for kappa distributions,
the wave characteristics have been studied mostly for the limiting cases of
purely parallel or perpendicular propagation, relative to the ambient magnetic
field. Contributions to the general case of obliquely-propagating
electromagnetic waves have been scarcely reported so far. The absence of a
general treatment prevents a complete analysis of the wave-particle interaction
in kappa plasmas, since some instabilities can operate simultaneously both in
the parallel and oblique directions. In a recent work, Gaelzer and Ziebell [J.
Geophys. Res. 119, 9334 (2014)] obtained expressions for the dielectric tensor
and dispersion relations for the low-frequency, quasi-perpendicular dispersive
Alfv\'en waves resulting from a kappa VDF. In the present work, the formalism
introduced by Ref. 1 is generalized for the general case of electrostatic
and/or electromagnetic waves propagating in a kappa plasma in any frequency
range and for arbitrary angles. An isotropic distribution is considered, but
the methods used here can be easily applied to more general anisotropic
distributions, such as the bi-kappa or product-bi-kappa.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physics of Plasmas; added references for
section
Stimulated Raman spin coherence and spin-flip induced hole burning in charged GaAs quantum dots
High-resolution spectral hole burning (SHB) in coherent nondegenerate
differential transmission spectroscopy discloses spin-trion dynamics in an
ensemble of negatively charged quantum dots. In the Voigt geometry, stimulated
Raman spin coherence gives rise to Stokes and anti-Stokes sidebands on top of
the trion spectral hole. The prominent feature of an extremely narrow spike at
zero detuning arises from spin population pulsation dynamics. These SHB
features confirm coherent electron spin dynamics in charged dots, and the
linewidths reveal spin spectral diffusion processes.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
The optically-powerful quasar E1821+643 is associated with a 300-kpc scale FRI radio structure
We present a deep image of the optically-powerful quasar E1821+643 at 18cm
made with the Very Large Array (VLA). This image reveals radio emission, over
280 kpc in extent, elongated way beyond the quasar's host galaxy. Its radio
structure has decreasing surface brightness with increasing distance from the
bright core, characteristic of FRI sources (Fanaroff & Riley 1974). Its radio
luminosity at 5GHz falls in the classification for `radio-quiet' quasars (it is
only 10^23.9 W/Hz/sr; see e.g. Kellermann et al 1994). Its radio luminosity at
151MHz (which is 10^25.3 W/Hz/sr) is at the transition luminosity observed to
separate FRIs and FRIIs. Hitherto, no optically-powerful quasar had been found
to have a conventional FRI radio structure. For searches at low-frequency this
is unsurprising given current sensitivity and plausible radio spectral indices
for radio-quiet quasars. We demonstrate the inevitability of the extent of any
FRqI radio structures being seriously under-estimated by existing targetted
follow-up observations of other optically-selected quasars, which are typically
short exposures of z > 0.3 objects, and discuss the implications for the
purported radio bimodality in quasars.
The nature of the inner arcsec-scale jet in E1821+643, together with its
large-scale radio structure, suggest that the jet-axis in this quasar is
precessing (cf. Galactic jet sources such as SS433). A possible explanation for
this is that its central engine is a binary whose black holes have yet to
coalesce. The ubiquity of precession in `radio-quiet' quasars, perhaps as a
means of reducing the observable radio luminosity expected in highly-accreting
systems, remains to be established.Comment: Accepted by ApJ Letters; higher quality versions of figures available
at http://www-astro.physics.ox.ac.uk/~km
A Puzzling X-Ray Source Found in the chandra Deep Field South
In this letter we report the detection of an extremely strong X-ray emission
line in the 940ks chandra ACIS-I spectrum of CXO CDFS J033225.3-274219. The
source was identified as a Type1 AGN at redshift of z = 1.617, with 2.0 -- 10.0
keV rest frame X-ray luminosity of ~ 10^44 ergs s^-1. The emission line was
detected at 6.2^{+0.2}_{-0.1} keV, with an equivalent width (EW) of
4.4^{+3.2}_{-1.4} keV, both quantities referring to the observed frame. In the
rest frame, the line is at 16.2^{+0.4}_{-0.3} keV with an EW of
11.5^{+8.3}_{-3.7} keV. An X-ray emission line at similar energy (~ 17 keV,
rest frame) in QSO PKS 2149-306 was discovered before using ASCA data. We
reject the possibility that the line is due to a statistical or instrumental
artifact. The line is most likely due to blueshifted Fe-K emission from an
relativistic outflow, probably an inner X-ray jet, with velocities of the order
of ~ 0.6-0.7c. Other possible explanations are also discussed
Speckle Statistics in Adaptively Corrected Images
(abridged) Imaging observations are generally affected by a fluctuating
background of speckles, a particular problem when detecting faint stellar
companions at small angular separations. Knowing the distribution of the
speckle intensities at a given location in the image plane is important for
understanding the noise limits of companion detection. The speckle noise limit
in a long-exposure image is characterized by the intensity variance and the
speckle lifetime. In this paper we address the former quantity through the
distribution function of speckle intensity. Previous theoretical work has
predicted a form for this distribution function at a single location in the
image plane. We developed a fast readout mode to take short exposures of
stellar images corrected by adaptive optics at the ground-based UCO/Lick
Observatory, with integration times of 5 ms and a time between successive
frames of 14.5 ms ( m). These observations temporally
oversample and spatially Nyquist sample the observed speckle patterns. We show,
for various locations in the image plane, the observed distribution of speckle
intensities is consistent with the predicted form. Additionally, we demonstrate
a method by which and can be mapped over the image plane. As the
quantity is proportional to the PSF of the telescope free of random
atmospheric aberrations, this method can be used for PSF calibration and
reconstruction.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, ApJ accepte
Interactions and Scaling in a Disordered Two-Dimensional Metal
We show that a non-Fermi liquid state of interacting electrons in two
dimensions is stable in the presence of disorder and is a perfect conductor,
provided the interactions are sufficiently strong. Otherwise, the disorder
leads to localization as in the case of non-interacting electrons. This
conclusion is established by examining the replica field theory in the weak
disorder limit, but in the presence of arbitrary electron-electron interaction.
Thus, a disordered two-dimensional metal is a perfect metal, but not a Fermi
liquid.Comment: 4 pages, RevTe
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