2,724 research outputs found
Letter to Future UNF Community
Letter written by President Adam W. Herbert to be opened on the University of North Florida\u27s 50th Anniversary. Envelope included
Convocation Remarks
President Adam W. Herbert\u27s fall convocation remarks. Blue UNF folder included
Meet with Peace of Mind
Protocols for meetings at the Adam W. Herbert University Cente
BRITE-Constellation: Data processing and photometry
The BRITE mission is a pioneering space project aimed at the long-term
photometric monitoring of the brightest stars in the sky by means of a
constellation of nano-satellites. Its main advantage is high photometric
accuracy and time coverage inaccessible from the ground. The main aim of this
paper is the presentation of procedures used to obtain high-precision
photometry from a series of images acquired by the BRITE satellites in two
modes of observing, stare and chopping. We developed two pipelines
corresponding to the two modes of observing. The assessment of the performance
of both pipelines is presented. It is based on two comparisons, which use data
from six runs of the UniBRITE satellite: (i) comparison of photometry obtained
by both pipelines on the same data, which were partly affected by charge
transfer inefficiency (CTI), (ii) comparison of real scatter with theoretical
expectations. It is shown that for CTI-affected observations, the chopping
pipeline provides much better photometry than the other pipeline. For other
observations, the results are comparable only for data obtained shortly after
switching to chopping mode. Starting from about 2.5 years in orbit, the
chopping mode of observing provides significantly better photometry for
UniBRITE data than the stare mode. This paper shows that high-precision space
photometry with low-cost nano-satellites is achievable. The proposed meth- ods,
used to obtain photometry from images affected by high impulsive noise, can be
applied to data from other space missions or even to data acquired from
ground-based observations
BRITE-Constellation reveals evidence for pulsations in the enigmatic binary Carinae
Car is a massive, eccentric binary with a rich observational history.
We obtained the first high-cadence, high-precision light curves with the
BRITE-Constellation nanosatellites over 6 months in 2016 and 6 months in 2017.
The light curve is contaminated by several sources including the Homunculus
nebula and neighboring stars, including the eclipsing binary
CPD592628. However, we found two coherent oscillations in the light
curve. These may represent pulsations that are not yet understood but we
postulate that they are related to tidally excited oscillations of Car's
primary star, and would be similar to those detected in lower-mass eccentric
binaries. In particular, one frequency was previously detected by van Genderen
et al. and Sterken et al. through the time period of 1974 to 1995 through
timing measurements of photometric maxima. Thus, this frequency seems to have
been detected for nearly four decades, indicating that it has been stable in
frequency over this time span. These pulsations could help provide the first
direct constraints on the fundamental parameters of the primary star if
confirmed and refined with future observations.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted to MNRA
The continuous performance test (rCPT) for mice: a novel operant touchscreen test of attentional function.
RATIONALE: Continuous performance tests (CPTs) are widely used to assess attentional processes in a variety of disorders including Alzheimer's disease and schizophrenia. Common human CPTs require discrimination of sequentially presented, visually patterned 'target' and 'non-target' stimuli at a single location. OBJECTIVES: The aims of this study were to evaluate the performance of three popular mouse strains on a novel rodent touchscreen test (rCPT) designed to be analogous to common human CPT variants and to investigate the effects of donepezil, a cholinesterase inhibitor and putative cognitive enhancer. METHODS: C57BL/6J, DBA/2J and CD1 mice (n = 15-16/strain) were trained to baseline performance using four rCPT training stages. Then, probe tests assessed the effects of parameter changes on task performance: stimulus size, duration, contrast, probability, inter-trial interval or inclusion of flanker distractors. rCPT performance was also evaluated following acute administration of donepezil (0-3 mg/kg, i.p.). RESULTS: C57BL/6J and DBA/2J mice showed similar acquisition rates and final baseline performance following rCPT training. On probe tests, rCPT performance of both strains was sensitive to alteration of visual and/or attentional demands (stimulus size, duration, contrast, rate, flanker distraction). Relative to C57BL/6J, DBA/2J mice exhibited (1) decreasing sensitivity (d') across the 45-min session, (2) reduced performance on probes where the appearance of stimuli or adjacent areas were changed (size, contrast, flanking distractors) and (3) larger dose- and stimulus duration-dependent changes in performance following donepezil administration. In contrast, CD1 mice failed to acquire rCPT (stage 3) and pairwise visual discrimination tasks. CONCLUSIONS: rCPT is a potentially useful translational tool for assessing attention in mice and for detecting the effects of nootropic drugs.Funding for this research was provided by Professor Mark Johnson, Imperial College London. CHK received funding from the Korean Health Technology R&D Project, Ministry of Health & Welfare, Republic of Korea (HI11C1183). MHE, SRON, TWR, LMS, TJB and ACM received funding from the Innovative Medicine Initiative Joint Undertaking under grant agreement no 115008 of which resources are composed of EFPIA in-kind contribution and financial contribution from the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013). LMS and TJB were funded by Medical Research Council/Wellcome Trust grant 089703/Z/09/Z.This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00213-015-4081-
REMPI Spectroscopy of HfF
The spectrum of electronic states at 30000--33000 cm in hafnium
fluoride has been studied using (1+1) resonance-enhanced multi-photon
ionization (REMPI) and (1+1) REMPI. Six and ten
vibronic bands have been characterized. We report the molecular constants for
these bands and estimate the electronic energies of the excited states using a
correction derived from the observed isotope shifts. When either of two closely
spaced electronic states is used as an intermediate state to access
autoionizing Rydberg levels, qualitatively distinct autoionization spectra are
observed. The intermediate state-specificity of the autoionization spectra
bodes well for the possibility of using a selected state as an
intermediate state to create ionic HfF in various selected quantum states,
an important requirement for our electron electric dipole moment (eEDM) search
in HfF.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 1 tabl
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