1,640 research outputs found
Van Allen Probes, THEMIS, GOES, and Cluster Observations of EMIC waves, ULF pulsations, and an electron flux dropout
We examined an electron flux dropout during the 12-14 November 2012 geomagnetic storm using observations from seven spacecraft: the two Van Allen Probes, Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms (THEMIS)-A (P5), Cluster 2, and Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites (GOES) 13, 14, and 15. The electron fluxes for energies greater than 2.0 MeV observed by GOES 13, 14, and 15 at geosynchronous orbit and by the Van Allen Probes remained at or near instrumental background levels for more than 24 h from 12 to 14 November. For energies of 0.8 MeV, the GOES satellites observed two shorter intervals of reduced electron fluxes. The first interval of reduced 0.8 MeV electron fluxes on 12-13 November was associated with an interplanetary shock and a sudden impulse. Cluster, THEMIS, and GOES observed intense He+ electromagnetic ion cyclotron (EMIC) waves from just inside geosynchronous orbit out to the magnetopause across the dayside to the dusk flank. The second interval of reduced 0.8 MeV electron fluxes on 13-14 November was associated with a solar sector boundary crossing and development of a geomagnetic storm with Dst<100 nT. At the start of the recovery phase, both the 0.8 and 2.0 MeV electron fluxes finally returned to near prestorm values, possibly in response to strong ultralow frequency (ULF) waves observed by the Van Allen Probes near dawn. A combination of adiabatic effects, losses to the magnetopause, scattering by EMIC waves, and acceleration by ULF waves can explain the observed electron behavior
Recursion Relations for One-Loop Gravity Amplitudes
We study the application of recursion relations to the calculation of finite
one-loop gravity amplitudes. It is shown explicitly that the known four, five,
and six graviton one-loop amplitudes for which the external legs have identical
outgoing helicities, and the four graviton amplitude with helicities (-,+,+,+)
can be derived from simple recursion relations. The latter amplitude is derived
by introducing a one-loop three-point vertex of gravitons of positive helicity,
which is the counterpart in gravity of the one-loop three-plus vertex in
Yang-Mills. We show that new issues arise for the five point amplitude with
helicities (-,+,+,+,+), where the application of known methods does not appear
to work, and we discuss possible resolutions.Comment: 28 pages, LaTeX, 12 figures. v2:typos and references correcte
The impact of text presentation on translator performance
Widely used computer-aided translation (CAT) tools divide documents into segments, such as sentences, and arrange them side-by-side in a spreadsheet-like view. We present the first controlled evaluation of these design choices on translator performance, measuring speed and accuracy in three experimental text-processing tasks. We find significant evidence that sentence-by-sentence presentation enables faster text reproduction and within-sentence error identification compared to unsegmented text, and that a top-and-bottom arrangement of source and target sentences enables faster text reproduction compared to a side-by-side arrangement. For revision, on the other hand, we find that presenting unsegmented text results in the highest accuracy and time efficiency. Our findings have direct implications for best practices in designing CAT tools
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ERP correlates of tactile spatial attention differ under intra- and intermodal conditions
To investigate whether the mechanisms underlying endogenous tactile spatial attention differ under pure tactile compared to mixed modality conditions event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were recorded to bilateral tactile and visual cues and tactile imperative stimuli. In the cue-stimulus interval the anterior directing attention negativity (ADAN) was present contralateral to the side of the attentional shift. Importantly, under pure tactile conditions this component persisted until imperative stimulus onset, while it diminished under intermodal conditions. Furthermore, post-tactile stimulus onset attentional modulations were present for the P100 component and later latencies under intermodal conditions. In contrast, under pure tactile conditions attentional modulations only emerged for the N140 component and later latencies. It is suggested that mechanisms underlying attentional orienting and selection are not entirely supramodal but depend in part on the modalities involved
Phrasal: A Toolkit for New Directions in Statistical Machine Translation
We present a new version of Phrasal, an open-source toolkit for statistical phrase-based machine translation. This revision includes features that support emerging re-search trends such as (a) tuning with large feature sets, (b) tuning on large datasets like the bitext, and (c) web-based interactive ma-chine translation. A direct comparison with Moses shows favorable results in terms of decoding speed and tuning time.
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