9,686 research outputs found
Perturbation theorems for Hele-Shaw flows and their applications
In this work, we give a perturbation theorem for strong polynomial solutions
to the zero surface tension Hele-Shaw equation driven by injection or suction,
so called the Polubarinova-Galin equation. This theorem enables us to explore
properties of solutions with initial functions close to but are not polynomial.
Applications of this theorem are given in the suction or injection case. In the
former case, we show that if the initial domain is close to a disk, most of
fluid will be sucked before the strong solution blows up. In the later case, we
obtain precise large-time rescaling behaviors for large data to Hele-Shaw flows
in terms of invariant Richardson complex moments. This rescaling behavior
result generalizes a recent result regarding large-time rescaling behavior for
small data in terms of moments. As a byproduct of a theorem in this paper, a
short proof of existence and uniqueness of strong solutions to the
Polubarinova-Galin equation is given.Comment: 25 page
An automated atmospheric sampling system operating on 747 airliners
An air sampling system that automatically measures the temporal and spatial distribution of selected particulate and gaseous constituents of the atmosphere has been installed on a number of commercial airliners and is collecting data on commercial air routes covering the world. Measurements of constituents related to aircraft engine emissions and other pollutants are made in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (6 to 12 km) in support of the Global Air Sampling Program (GASP). Aircraft operated by different airlines sample air at latitudes from the Arctic to Australia. This system includes specialized instrumentation for measuring carbon monoxide, ozone, water vapor, and particulates, a special air inlet probe for sampling outside air, a computerized automatic control, and a data acquisition system. Air constituents and related flight data are tape recorded in flight for later computer processing on the ground
Calibration of the CH and CN Variations Among Main Sequence Stars in M71 and in M13
An analysis of the CN and CH band strengths measured in a large sample of M71
and M13 main sequence stars by Cohen (1999a,b) is undertaken using synthetic
spectra to quantify the underlying C and N abundances. In the case of M71 it is
found that the observed CN and CH band strengths are best matched by the
{\it{identical}} C/N/O abundances which fit the bright giants, implying: 1)
little if any mixing is taking place during red giant branch ascent in M71, and
2) a substantial component of the C and N abundance inhomogeneities is in place
before the main sequence turn-off. The unlikelihood of mixing while on the main
sequence requires an explanation for the abundance variations which lies
outside the present stars (primordial inhomogeneities or intra-cluster self
enrichment). For M13 it is shown that the 3883\AA CN bands are too weak to be
measured in the spectra for any reasonable set of expected compositions. A
similar situation exists for CH as well. However, two of the more luminous
program stars do appear to have C abundances considerably greater than those
found among the bright giants thereby suggesting deep mixing has taken place on
the M13 red giant branch.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication by A
Would You Choose to be Happy? Tradeoffs Between Happiness and the Other Dimensions of Life in a Large Population Survey
A large literature documents the correlates and causes of subjective well-being, or happiness. But few studies have investigated whether people choose happiness. Is happiness all that people want from life, or are they willing to sacrifice it for other attributes, such as income and health? Tackling this question has largely been the preserve of philosophers. In this article, we find out just how much happiness matters to ordinary citizens. Our sample consists of nearly 13,000 members of the UK and US general populations. We ask them to choose between, and make judgments over, lives that are high (or low) in different types of happiness and low (or high) in income, physical health, family, career success, or education. We find that people by and large choose the life that is highest in happiness but health is by far the most important other concern, with considerable numbers of people choosing to be healthy rather than happy. We discuss some possible reasons for this preference
The Abandoned Side of the Internet: Hijacking Internet Resources When Domain Names Expire
The vulnerability of the Internet has been demonstrated by prominent IP
prefix hijacking events. Major outages such as the China Telecom incident in
2010 stimulate speculations about malicious intentions behind such anomalies.
Surprisingly, almost all discussions in the current literature assume that
hijacking incidents are enabled by the lack of security mechanisms in the
inter-domain routing protocol BGP. In this paper, we discuss an attacker model
that accounts for the hijacking of network ownership information stored in
Regional Internet Registry (RIR) databases. We show that such threats emerge
from abandoned Internet resources (e.g., IP address blocks, AS numbers). When
DNS names expire, attackers gain the opportunity to take resource ownership by
re-registering domain names that are referenced by corresponding RIR database
objects. We argue that this kind of attack is more attractive than conventional
hijacking, since the attacker can act in full anonymity on behalf of a victim.
Despite corresponding incidents have been observed in the past, current
detection techniques are not qualified to deal with these attacks. We show that
they are feasible with very little effort, and analyze the risk potential of
abandoned Internet resources for the European service region: our findings
reveal that currently 73 /24 IP prefixes and 7 ASes are vulnerable to be
stealthily abused. We discuss countermeasures and outline research directions
towards preventive solutions.Comment: Final version for TMA 201
Experimental constraint on the meson form factors in the time--like region
The annihilation reaction is considered.
The constraint on time-like -meson form factors from the measurement done
by the BaBar collaboration at GeV is analyzed.Comment: 10 pages 3 figure
A pure S-wave covariant model for the nucleon
Using the manifestly covariant spectator theory, and modeling the nucleon as
a system of three constituent quarks with their own electromagnetic structure,
we show that all four nucleon electromagnetic form factors can be very well
described by a manifestly covariant nucleon wave function with zero orbital
angular momentum. Since the concept of wave function depends on the formalism,
the conclusions of light-cone theory requiring nonzero angular momentum
components are not inconsistent with our results. We also show that our model
gives a qualitatively correct description of deep inelastic scattering,
unifying the phenomenology at high and low momentum transfer. Finally we review
two different definitions of nuclear shape and show that the nucleon is
spherical in this model, regardless of how shape is defined.Comment: 20 pages and 10 figures; greatly expanded version with new fits and
discussion of DIS; similar to published versio
An automated system for global atmospheric sampling using B-747 airliners
The global air sampling program utilizes commercial aircrafts in scheduled service to measure atmospheric constituents. A fully automated system designed for the 747 aircraft is described. Airline operational constraints and data and control subsystems are treated. The overall program management, system monitoring, and data retrieval from four aircraft in global service is described
Gaia FGK Benchmark Stars: Effective temperatures and surface gravities
Large Galactic stellar surveys and new generations of stellar atmosphere
models and spectral line formation computations need to be subjected to careful
calibration and validation and to benchmark tests. We focus on cool stars and
aim at establishing a sample of 34 Gaia FGK Benchmark Stars with a range of
different metallicities. The goal was to determine the effective temperature
and the surface gravity independently from spectroscopy and atmospheric models
as far as possible. Fundamental determinations of Teff and logg were obtained
in a systematic way from a compilation of angular diameter measurements and
bolometric fluxes, and from a homogeneous mass determination based on stellar
evolution models. The derived parameters were compared to recent spectroscopic
and photometric determinations and to gravity estimates based on seismic data.
Most of the adopted diameter measurements have formal uncertainties around 1%,
which translate into uncertainties in effective temperature of 0.5%. The
measurements of bolometric flux seem to be accurate to 5% or better, which
contributes about 1% or less to the uncertainties in effective temperature. The
comparisons of parameter determinations with the literature show in general
good agreements with a few exceptions, most notably for the coolest stars and
for metal-poor stars. The sample consists of 29 FGK-type stars and 5 M giants.
Among the FGK stars, 21 have reliable parameters suitable for testing,
validation, or calibration purposes. For four stars, future adjustments of the
fundamental Teff are required, and for five stars the logg determination needs
to be improved. Future extensions of the sample of Gaia FGK Benchmark Stars are
required to fill gaps in parameter space, and we include a list of suggested
candidates.Comment: Accepted by A&A; 34 pages (printer format), 14 tables, 13 figures;
language correcte
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