3,576 research outputs found
A review of mathematical functions for the analysis of growth in poultry
Poultry industries face various decisions in the production cycle that affect the profitability of an operation. Predictions of growth when the birds are ready for sale are important factors that contribute to the economy of poultry operations. Mathematical functions called âgrowth functionsâ have been used to relate body weight (W) to age or cumulative feed intake. These can also be used as response functions to predict daily energy and protein dietary requirements for maintenance and growth (France et al., 1989). When describing growth versus age in poultry, a fixed point of inflexion can be a limitation with equations such as the Gompertz and logistic. Inflexion points vary depending on age, sex, breed and type of animal, so equations such as the Richards and LĂłpez are generally recommended. For describing retention rate against daily intake, which generally does not exhibit an inflexion point, the monomolecular would appear the function of choice
A survey of young, nearby, and dusty stars to understand the formation of wide-orbit giant planets
Direct imaging has confirmed the existence of substellar companions on wide
orbits. To understand the formation and evolution mechanisms of these
companions, the full population properties must be characterized. We aim at
detecting giant planet and/or brown dwarf companions around young, nearby, and
dusty stars. Our goal is also to provide statistics on the population of giant
planets at wide-orbits and discuss planet formation models. We report a deep
survey of 59 stars, members of young stellar associations. The observations
were conducted with VLT/NaCo at L'-band (3.8 micron). We used angular
differential imaging to reach optimal detection performance. A statistical
analysis of about 60 % of the young and southern A-F stars closer than 65 pc
allows us to derive the fraction of giant planets on wide orbits. We use
gravitational instability models and planet population synthesis models
following the core-accretion scenario to discuss the occurrence of these
companions. We resolve and characterize new visual binaries and do not detect
any new substellar companion. The survey's median detection performance reaches
contrasts of 10 mag at 0.5as and 11.5 mag at 1as. We find the occurrence of
planets to be between 10.8-24.8 % at 68 % confidence level assuming a uniform
distribution of planets in the interval 1-13 Mj and 1-1000 AU. Considering the
predictions of formation models, we set important constraints on the occurrence
of massive planets and brown dwarf companions that would have formed by GI. We
show that this mechanism favors the formation of rather massive clump (Mclump >
30 Mj) at wide (a > 40 AU) orbits which might evolve dynamically and/or
fragment. For the population of close-in giant planets that would have formed
by CA, our survey marginally explore physical separations (<20 AU) and cannot
constrain this population
Explaining two circumnuclear star forming rings in NGC5248
The distribution of gas in the central kiloparsec of a galaxy has a
dynamically rapid evolution. Nonaxisymmetries in the gravitational potential of
the galactic disk, such as a large scale stellar bar or spiral, can lead to
significant radial motion of gaseous material from larger radii to the central
region. The large influx of gas and the subsequent star formation keep the
central region constantly changing. However, the ability of gas to reach the
nucleus proper to fuel an AGN phase is not guaranteed. Gas inflow can be halted
at a circumnuclear star forming ring several hundred parsec away. The nearby
galaxy NGC5248 is especially interesting in this sense since it is said to host
2 circumnuclear star forming rings at 100pc and 370pc from its quiescent
nucleus. Here we present new subarcsecond PdBI+30m CO(2-1) emission line
observations of the central region. For the first time the molecular gas
distribution at the smallest stellar ring is resolved into a gas ring,
consistent with the presence of a quiescent nucleus. However, the molecular gas
shows no ring structure at the larger ring. We combine analyses of the gaseous
and stellar content in the central kiloparsec of this galaxy to understand the
gas distribution and dynamics of this star forming central region. We discuss
the probability of two scenarios leading to the current observations, given our
full understanding of this system, and discuss whether there are really two
circumnuclear star forming rings in this galaxy.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 14pages + long tabl
Discovery of a probable 4-5 Jupiter-mass exoplanet to HD 95086 by direct-imaging
Direct imaging has just started the inventory of the population of gas giant
planets on wide-orbits around young stars in the solar neighborhood. Following
this approach, we carried out a deep imaging survey in the near-infrared using
VLT/NaCo to search for substellar companions. We report here the discovery in
L' (3.8 microns) images of a probable companion orbiting at 56 AU the young
(10-17 Myr), dusty, and early-type (A8) star HD 95086. This discovery is based
on observations with more than a year-time-lapse. Our first epoch clearly
revealed the source at 10 sigma while our second epoch lacked good observing
conditions hence yielding a 3 sigma detection. Various tests were thus made to
rule out possible artifacts. This recovery is consistent with the signal at the
first epoch but requires cleaner confirmation. Nevertheless, our astrometric
precision suggests the companion to be comoving with the star, with a 3 sigma
confidence level. The planetary nature of the source is reinforced by a
non-detection in Ks-band (2.18 microns) images according to its possible
extremely red Ks - L' color. Conversely, background contamination is rejected
with good confidence level. The luminosity yields a predicted mass of about
4-5MJup (at 10-17 Myr) using "hot-start" evolutionary models, making HD 95086 b
the exoplanet with the lowest mass ever imaged around a star.Comment: accepted for publication to APJ
Compliance error compensation in robotic-based milling
The paper deals with the problem of compliance errors compensation in
robotic-based milling. Contrary to previous works that assume that the
forces/torques generated by the manufacturing process are constant, the
interaction between the milling tool and the workpiece is modeled in details.
It takes into account the tool geometry, the number of teeth, the feed rate,
the spindle rotation speed and the properties of the material to be processed.
Due to high level of the disturbing forces/torques, the developed compensation
technique is based on the non-linear stiffness model that allows us to modify
the target trajectory taking into account nonlinearities and to avoid the
chattering effect. Illustrative example is presented that deals with
robotic-based milling of aluminum alloy
SINFONI in the Galactic Center: young stars and IR flares in the central light month
We report 75 milli-arcsec resolution, near-IR imaging spectroscopy within the
central 30 light days of the Galactic Center [...]. To a limiting magnitude of
K~16, 9 of 10 stars in the central 0.4 arcsec, and 13 of 17 stars out to 0.7
arcsec from the central black hole have spectral properties of B0-B9, main
sequence stars. [...] all brighter early type stars have normal rotation
velocities, similar to solar neighborhood stars. We [...] derive improved 3d
stellar orbits for six of these S-stars in the central 0.5 arcsec. Their
orientations in space appear random. Their orbital planes are not co-aligned
with those of the two disks of massive young stars 1-10 arcsec from SgrA*. We
can thus exclude [...] that the S-stars as a group inhabit the inner regions of
these disks. They also cannot have been located/formed in these disks [...].
[...] we conclude that the S-stars were most likely brought into the central
light month by strong individual scattering events. The updated estimate of
distance to the Galactic center from the S2 orbit fit is Ro = 7.62 +/- 0.32
kpc, resulting in a central mass value of 3.61 +/- 0.32 x 10^6 Msun. We
happened to catch two smaller flaring events from SgrA* [...]. The 1.7-2.45 mum
spectral energy distributions of these flares are fit by a featureless, red
power law [...]. The observed spectral slope is in good agreement with
synchrotron models in which the infrared emission comes from [...] radiative
inefficient accretion flow in the central R~10 Rs region.Comment: 50 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables, submitted to ApJ, February 6th, 2005,
abstract abridge
Unfolding-Based Process Discovery
This paper presents a novel technique for process discovery. In contrast to
the current trend, which only considers an event log for discovering a process
model, we assume two additional inputs: an independence relation on the set of
logged activities, and a collection of negative traces. After deriving an
intermediate net unfolding from them, we perform a controlled folding giving
rise to a Petri net which contains both the input log and all
independence-equivalent traces arising from it. Remarkably, the derived Petri
net cannot execute any trace from the negative collection. The entire chain of
transformations is fully automated. A tool has been developed and experimental
results are provided that witness the significance of the contribution of this
paper.Comment: This is the unabridged version of a paper with the same title
appearead at the proceedings of ATVA 201
Design optimization of ironless multi-stage axial-flux permanent magnet generators for offshore wind turbines
Direct-driven ironless-stator machines have been reported to have low requirements on the strength of the supporting structures. This feature is attractive for offshore wind turbines, where lightweight generators are preferred. However, to produce sufficient torque, ironless generators are normally designed with large diameters, which can be a challenge to the machineâs structural reliability. The ironless multi-stage axial-flux permanent magnet generator (MS-AFPMG) has the advantages of ironless machines but a relatively small diameter. The objective of this article is to present the design optimization and performance investigation of the ironless MS-AFPMG. An existing design strategy, which employs two- and three-dimensional static finite element analyses and genetic algorithm for machine optimization, is improved with the aim of reducing the calculation load and calculation time. This improved design strategy is used to investigate the optimal ironless MS-AFPMG. Some intrinsic features of this kind of machine are revealed
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Mapping far-IR emission from the central kiloparsec of NGCâ1097
Using photometry of NGC 1097 from the Herschel PACS (Photodetector Array Camera and Spectrometer) instrument, we study the resolved properties of thermal dust continuum emission from a circumnuclear starburst ring with a radius ~900 pc. These observations are the first to resolve the structure of a circumnuclear ring at wavelengths that probe the peak (i.e. λ ~ 100 ÎŒm) of the dust spectral energy distribution. The ring dominates the far-infrared (far-IR) emission from the galaxy â the high angular resolution of PACS allows us to isolate the ring\u27s contribution and we find it is responsible for 75, 60 and 55% of the total flux of NGC 1097 at 70, 100 and 160 ÎŒm, respectively. We compare the far-IR structure of the ring to what is seen at other wavelengths and identify a sequence of far-IR bright knots that correspond to those seen in radio and mid-IR images. The mid- and far-IR band ratios in the ring vary by less than ±20% azimuthally, indicating modest variation in the radiation field heating the dust on ~600 pc scales. We explore various explanations for the azimuthal uniformity in the far-IR colors of the ring including a lack of well-defined age gradients in the young stellar cluster population, a dominant contribution to the far-IR emission from dust heated by older (\u3e10 Myr) stars and/or a quick smoothing of local enhancements in dust temperature due to the short orbital period of the ring. Finally, we improve previous limits on the far-IR flux from the inner ~600 pc of NGC 1097 by an order of magnitude, providing a better estimate of the total bolometric emission arising from the active galactic nucleus and its associated central starburst
SST-GATE: A dual mirror telescope for the Cherenkov Telescope Array
The Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) will be the world's first open
observatory for very high energy gamma-rays. Around a hundred telescopes of
different sizes will be used to detect the Cherenkov light that results from
gamma-ray induced air showers in the atmosphere. Amongst them, a large number
of Small Size Telescopes (SST), with a diameter of about 4 m, will assure an
unprecedented coverage of the high energy end of the electromagnetic spectrum
(above ~1TeV to beyond 100 TeV) and will open up a new window on the
non-thermal sky. Several concepts for the SST design are currently being
investigated with the aim of combining a large field of view (~9 degrees) with
a good resolution of the shower images, as well as minimizing costs. These
include a Davies-Cotton configuration with a Geiger-mode avalanche photodiode
(GAPD) based camera, as pioneered by FACT, and a novel and as yet untested
design based on the Schwarzschild-Couder configuration, which uses a secondary
mirror to reduce the plate-scale and to allow for a wide field of view with a
light-weight camera, e.g. using GAPDs or multi-anode photomultipliers. One
objective of the GATE (Gamma-ray Telescope Elements) programme is to build one
of the first Schwarzschild-Couder prototypes and to evaluate its performance.
The construction of the SST-GATE prototype on the campus of the Paris
Observatory in Meudon is under way. We report on the current status of the
project and provide details of the opto-mechanical design of the prototype, the
development of its control software, and simulations of its expected
performance.Comment: In Proceedings of the 33rd International Cosmic Ray Conference
(ICRC2013), Rio de Janeiro (Brazil). All CTA contributions at arXiv:1307.223
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