1,035 research outputs found
Dynamics of gas sphere under self-gravity
A new dynamical solution for a gas sphere under self-gravity is presented to
describe a development of a gas sphere from a motion-less state to a state of
expansion with a constant speed and a reflection phenomenon in the dynamics of
the surface of the sphere.Comment: 6 pages, 4figure
Study of the Large-scale Temperature Structure of the Perseus Cluster with Suzaku
We report on a study of the large-scale temperature structure of the Perseus
cluster with Suzaku, using the observational data of four pointings of 30'
offset regions, together with the data from the central region. Thanks to the
Hard X-ray Detector (HXD-PIN: 10 - 60 keV), Suzaku can determine the
temperature of hot galaxy clusters. We performed the spectral analysis, by
considering the temperature structure and the collimator response of the PIN
correctly. As a result, we found that the upper limit of the temperature in the
outer region is 14 keV, and an extremely hot gas, which was reported for
RXJ 1347.5-1145 and A 3667, was not found in the Perseus cluster. This
indicates that the Perseus cluster has not recently experienced a major merger.Comment: 17 pages, 25 figures, accepted for Publications of the Astronomical
Society of Japan, references adde
The Mixed State of Charge-Density-Wave in a Ring-Shaped Single Crystals
Charge-density-wave (CDW) phase transition in a ring-shaped crystals,
recently synthesized by Tanda et al. [Nature, 417, 397 (2002)], is studied
based on a mean-field-approximation of Ginzburg-Landau free energy. It is shown
that in a ring-shaped crystals CDW undergoes frustration due to the curvature
(bending) of the ring (geometrical frustration) and, thus, forms a mixed state
analogous to what a type-II superconductor forms under a magnetic field. We
discuss the nature of the phase transition in the ring-CDW in relation to
recent experiments.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Collapsed speech segment detection and suppression for WaveNet vocoder
In this paper, we propose a technique to alleviate the quality degradation
caused by collapsed speech segments sometimes generated by the WaveNet vocoder.
The effectiveness of the WaveNet vocoder for generating natural speech from
acoustic features has been proved in recent works. However, it sometimes
generates very noisy speech with collapsed speech segments when only a limited
amount of training data is available or significant acoustic mismatches exist
between the training and testing data. Such a limitation on the corpus and
limited ability of the model can easily occur in some speech generation
applications, such as voice conversion and speech enhancement. To address this
problem, we propose a technique to automatically detect collapsed speech
segments. Moreover, to refine the detected segments, we also propose a waveform
generation technique for WaveNet using a linear predictive coding constraint.
Verification and subjective tests are conducted to investigate the
effectiveness of the proposed techniques. The verification results indicate
that the detection technique can detect most collapsed segments. The subjective
evaluations of voice conversion demonstrate that the generation technique
significantly improves the speech quality while maintaining the same speaker
similarity.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures. Proc. Interspeech, 201
"Direct" Gas-phase Metallicities, Stellar Properties, and Local Environments of Emission-line Galaxies at Redshift below 0.90
Using deep narrow-band (NB) imaging and optical spectroscopy from the Keck
telescope and MMT, we identify a sample of 20 emission-line galaxies (ELGs) at
z=0.065-0.90 where the weak auroral emission line, [OIII]4363, is detected at
>3\sigma. These detections allow us to determine the gas-phase metallicity
using the "direct'' method. With electron temperature measurements and dust
attenuation corrections from Balmer decrements, we find that 4 of these
low-mass galaxies are extremely metal-poor with 12+log(O/H) <= 7.65 or
one-tenth solar. Our most metal-deficient galaxy has 12+log(O/H) =
7.24^{+0.45}_{-0.30} (95% confidence), similar to some of the lowest
metallicity galaxies identified in the local universe. We find that our
galaxies are all undergoing significant star formation with average specific
star formation rate (SFR) of (100 Myr)^{-1}, and that they have high central
SFR surface densities (average of 0.5 Msun/yr/kpc^2. In addition, more than
two-thirds of our galaxies have between one and four nearby companions within a
projected radius of 100 kpc, which we find is an excess among star-forming
galaxies at z=0.4-0.85. We also find that the gas-phase metallicities for a
given stellar mass and SFR lie systematically below the local M-Z-(SFR)
relation by \approx0.2 dex (2\sigma\ significance). These results are partly
due to selection effects, since galaxies with strong star formation and low
metallicity are more likely to yield [OIII]4363 detections. Finally, the
observed higher ionization parameter and electron density suggest that they are
lower redshift analogs to typical z>1 galaxies.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal (15 November
2013). 31 pages in emulateapj format with 16 figures and 7 tables. Revised to
address referee's comments, which include discussion on selection effects,
similarities to green pea galaxies, and nebular continuum contribution.
Modifications were made for some electron temperature and metallicity
measurement
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