2,378 research outputs found
Toward optimal X-ray flux utilization in breast CT
A realistic computer-simulation of a breast computed tomography (CT) system
and subject is constructed. The model is used to investigate the optimal number
of views for the scan given a fixed total X-ray fluence. The reconstruction
algorithm is based on accurate solution to a constrained, TV-minimization
problem, which has received much interest recently for sparse-view CT data.Comment: accepted to the 11th International Meeting on Fully Three-Dimensional
Image Reconstruction in Radiology and Nuclear Medicine 201
Carbon Dioxide Production in Animal Houses: A literature review
This article deals with carbon dioxide production from farm animals; more specifically, it addresses the possibilities of using the measured carbon dioxide concentration in animal houses as basis for estimation of ventilation flow (as the ventilation flow is a key parameter of aerial emissions from animal houses). The investigations include measurements in respiration chambers and in animal houses, mainly for growing pigs and broilers. Over the last decade a fixed carbon dioxide production of 185 litres per hour per heat production unit, hpu (i.e. 1000 W of the total animal heat production at 20 oC) has often been used. The article shows that the carbon dioxide production per hpu increases with increasing respiration quotient. As the respiration quotient increases with body mass for growing animals, the carbon dioxide production per heat production unit also increases with increased body mass. The carbon dioxide production is e.g. less than 185 litres per hour per hpu for weaners and broilers and higher for growing finishing pigs and cows. The analyses show that the measured carbon dioxide production is higher in full scale animal houses than measured in respiration chambers, due to differences in manure handling. In respiration chambers there is none or very limited carbon dioxide contribution from manure; unlike in animal houses, where a certain carbon dioxide contribution from manure handling may be foreseen. Therefore, it is necessary to make a correction of data from respiration chambers, when used in full scale animal buildings as basis for estimation of ventilation flow. Based on the data reviewed in this study, we recommend adding 10% carbon dioxide production to the laboratory based carbon dioxide production for animal houses with slatted or solid floors, provided that indoor manure cellars are emptied regularly in a four weeks interval. Due to a high and variable carbon dioxide production in deep straw litter houses and houses with indoor storage of manure longer than four weeks, we do not recommend to calculate the ventilation flow based on the carbon dioxide concentration for these houses
Stellar activity as noise in exoplanet detection I. Methods and application to solar-like stars and activity cycles
The detection of exoplanets using any method is prone to confusion due to the
intrinsic variability of the host star. We investigate the effect of cool
starspots on the detectability of the exoplanets around solar-like stars using
the radial velocity method. For investigating this activity-caused "jitter" we
calculate synthetic spectra using radiative transfer, known stellar atomic and
molecular lines, different surface spot configurations, and an added planetary
signal. Here, the methods are described in detail, tested and compared to
previously published studies. The methods are also applied to investigate the
activity jitter in old and young solar-like stars, and over a solar-like
activity cycles. We find that the mean full jitter amplitude obtained from the
spot surfaces mimicking the solar activity varies during the cycle
approximately between 1 m/s and 9 m/s. With a realistic observing frequency a
Neptune mass planet on a one year orbit can be reliably recovered. On the other
hand, the recovery of an Earth mass planet on a similar orbit is not feasible
with high significance. The methods developed in this study have a great
potential for doing statistical studies of planet detectability, and also for
investigating the effect of stellar activity on recovered planetary parameters.Comment: Accepted to MNRA
Searching for magnetic monopoles trapped in accelerator material at the Large Hadron Collider
If produced in high energy particle collisions at the LHC, magnetic monopoles
could stop in material surrounding the interaction points. Obsolete parts of
the beam pipe near the CMS interaction region, which were exposed to the
products of pp and heavy ion collisions, were analysed using a SQUID-based
magnetometer. The purpose of this work is to quantify the performance of the
magnetometer in the context of a monopole search using a small set of samples
of accelerator material ahead of the 2013 shutdown.Comment: 11 page
Deep far infrared ISOPHOT survey in "Selected Area 57", I. Observations and source counts
We present here the results of a deep survey in a 0.4 sq.deg. blank field in
Selected Area 57 conducted with the ISOPHOT instrument aboard ESAs Infrared
Space Observatory (ISO) at both 60 um and 90 um. The resulting sky maps have a
spatial resolution of 15 x 23 sq.arcsec. per pixel which is much higher than
the 90 x 90 sq.arcsec. pixels of the IRAS All Sky Survey. We describe the main
instrumental effects encountered in our data, outline our data reduction and
analysis scheme and present astrometry and photometry of the detected point
sources. With a formal signal to noise ratio of 6.75 we have source detection
limits of 90 mJy at 60 um and 50 mJy at 90 um. To these limits we find
cumulated number densities of 5+-3.5 per sq.deg. at 60 um and 14.8+-5.0 per
sq.deg.at 90 um. These number densities of sources are found to be lower than
previously reported results from ISO but the data do not allow us to
discriminate between no-evolution scenarios and various evolutionary models.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures, accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysic
Report of CE on Semantic DS
The Semantic DS allows describing the world depicted by the AV content and interpreting that world, i.e., the “about” of the AV content or depicted narrative reality, which sometimes is imaginary. This document reports on the core experiment on the Semantic DS [6]. The CE originally started at the Maui meeting in December 1999 [3]. Progress reports of the CE were provided at the Geneva meeting [1] and at the Beijing meeting [2]. In Beijing, some components of the Semantic DS were promoted to the XM: Semantic DS, Object DS, PersonObject DS, Event DS, State DS, MediaOccurrence DS, SemanticTime DS, SemanticLocation DS, UsageLabel D, and some semantic relations. The main tasks of this core experiment have been the following: 1) To refine the specification of the Semantic DS by solving identified issues; 2) To define the Conceptual DSs; 3) To recommend the standardization of more semantic relations; 4) To investigate the use of membership functions to describe the strength of relations; 5) To generate simple and complex semantic descriptions of multimedia material; 6) To implement a retrieval and browsing application/s that uses the generated descriptions and that shows the functionality of the UsageLabel D, the Conceptual DSs, the State DS, and membership functions for relations, especially; 7) To recommend changes and additions to the Semantic DS based on the results of the experiment. The retrieval application that the CE has accomplished two objectives: (1) to show the utility of the components of the Semantic DS in a retrieval scenario, and (2) to be the software for the MPEG-7 XM platform
A distinct role for recombination repair factors in an early cellular response to transcription-replication conflicts
Transcription–replication (T–R) conflicts are profound threats to genome integrity. However, whilst much is known about the existence of T–R conflicts, our understanding of the genetic and temporal nature of how cells respond to them is poorly established. Here, we address this by characterizing the early cellular response to transient T–R conflicts (TRe). This response specifically requires the DNA recombination repair proteins BLM and BRCA2 as well as a non-canonical monoubiquitylation-independent function of FANCD2. A hallmark of the TRe response is the rapid co-localization of these three DNA repair factors at sites of T–R collisions. We find that the TRe response relies on basal activity of the ATR kinase, yet it does not lead to hyperactivation of this key checkpoint protein. Furthermore, specific abrogation of the TRe response leads to DNA damage in mitosis, and promotes chromosome instability and cell death. Collectively our findings identify a new role for these well-established tumor suppressor proteins at an early stage of the cellular response to conflicts between DNA transcription and replication
Time-series Spectroscopy of Pulsating sdB stars III: Line Indices of PG1605+072
We present the detection and analysis of line index variations in the
pulsating sdB star PG 1605+072. We have found a strong dependence of line index
amplitude on Balmer line order, with high-order Balmer line amplitudes up to 10
times larger than H-beta. Using a simple model, we have found that the line
index may not only be dependent on temperature, as is usually assumed for
oscillating stars, but also on surface gravity. This information will provide
another set of observables that can be used for mode identification of sdBs.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, to appear in MNRAS. A high resolution version of
Figure 3 can be found at
http://www.sternwarte.uni-erlangen.de/~ai25/MC852-fig3.ep
Semantics of Multimedia in MPEG-7
In this paper, we present the tools standardized by MPEG-7 for describing the semantics of multimedia. In particular, we focus on the abstraction model, entities, attributes and relations of MPEG-7 semantic descriptions. MPEG-7 tools can describe the semantics of specific instances of multimedia such as one image or one video segment but can also generalize these descriptions either to multiple instances of multimedia or to a set of semantic descriptions. The key components of MPEG-7 semantic descriptions are semantic entities such as objects and events, attributes of these entities such as labels and properties, and, finally, relations of these entities such as an object being the patient of an event. The descriptive power and usability of these tools has been demonstrated in numerous experiments and applications, these make them key candidates to enable intelligent applications that deal with multimedia at human levels
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