24,254 research outputs found
Diffusion Approximations for Demographic Inference: DaDi
Models of demographic history (population sizes, migration rates, and divergence times) inferred from genetic data complement archeology and serve as null models in genome scans for selection. Most current inference methods are computationally limited to considering simple models or non-recombining data. We introduce a method based on a diffusion approximation to the joint frequency spectrum of genetic variation between populations. Our implementation, DaDi, can model up to three interacting populations and scales well to genome-wide data. We have applied DaDi to human data from Africa, Europe, and East Asia, building the most complex statistically well-characterized model of human migration out of Africa to date
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Dust Around R Coronae Borealis Stars. I. Spitzer/Infrared Spectrograph Observations
Spitzer/infrared spectrograph (IRS) spectra from 5 to 37 mu m for a complete sample of 31 R Coronae Borealis stars (RCBs) are presented. These spectra are combined with optical and near-infrared photometry of each RCB at maximum light to compile a spectral energy distribution (SED). The SEDs are fitted with blackbody flux distributions and estimates are made of the ratio of the infrared flux from circumstellar dust to the flux emitted by the star. Comparisons for 29 of the 31 stars are made with the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) fluxes from three decades earlier: Spitzer and IRAS fluxes at 12 mu m and 25 mu m are essentially equal for all but a minority of the sample. For this minority, the IRAS to Spitzer flux ratio exceeds a factor of three. The outliers are suggested to be stars where formation of a dust cloud or dust puff is a rare event. A single puff ejected prior to the IRAS observations may have been reobserved by Spitzer as a cooler puff at a greater distance from the RCB. RCBs which experience more frequent optical declines have, in general, a circumstellar environment containing puffs subtending a larger solid angle at the star and a quasi-constant infrared flux. Yet, the estimated subtended solid angles and the blackbody temperatures of the dust show a systematic evolution to lower solid angles and cooler temperatures in the interval between IRAS and Spitzer. Dust emission by these RCBs and those in the LMC is similar in terms of total 24 mu m luminosity and [8.0]-[24.0] color index.Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN) AYA-2007-64748NASA GO 50212, 1407Robert A. Welch Foundation of Houston, Texas F-634McDonald Observator
High-Resolution Optical Spectroscopy of DY Cen: Diffuse Interstellar Bands in a Proto-Fullerene Circumstellar Environment?
We search high-resolution and high-quality VLT/UVES optical spectra of the hot R Coronae Borealis star DY Cen for electronic transitions of the C-60 molecule and diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs). We report the non-detection of the strongest C-60 electronic transitions (e. g., those at similar to 3760, 3980, and 4024 angstrom). The absence of C-60 absorption bands may support recent laboratory results, which show that the similar to 7.0, 8.5, 17.4, and 18.8 mu m emission features seen in DY Cen-and other similar objects with polycyclic-aromatic-hydrocarbon-like dominated IR spectra-are attributable to proto-fullerenes or fullerene precursors rather than to C-60. DIBs toward DY Cen are normal for its reddening; the only exception is the DIB at 6284 angstrom (possibly also the 7223 angstrom DIB) which is found to be unusually strong. We also report the detection of a new broad (FWHM similar to 2 angstrom) and unidentified feature centered at similar to 4000 angstrom. We suggest that this new band may be related to the circumstellar proto-fullerenes seen at infrared wavelengths.Director's Discretionary Time (DDT) program 284.D-5048Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness AYA-2011-27754Robert A. Welch Foundation of Houston, Texas F-634McDonald Observator
Ambiguity helps: classification with disagreements in crowdsourced annotations
Imagine we show an image to a person and ask her/him to decide whether the scene in the image is warm or not warm, and whether it is easy or not to spot a squirrel in the image. For exactly the same image, the answers to those questions are likely to differ from person to person. This is because the task is inherently ambiguous. Such an ambiguous, therefore challenging, task is pushing the boundary of computer vision in showing what can and can not be learned from visual data. Crowdsourcing has been invaluable for collecting annotations. This is particularly so for a task that goes beyond a clear-cut dichotomy as multiple human judgments per image are needed to reach a consensus. This paper makes conceptual and technical contributions. On the conceptual side, we define disagreements among annotators as privileged information about the data instance. On the technical side, we propose a framework to incorporate annotation disagreements into the classifiers. The proposed framework is simple, relatively fast, and outperforms classifiers that do not take into account the disagreements, especially if tested on high confidence annotations
A search for diffuse bands in fullerene planetary nebulae: evidence of diffuse circumstellar bands
Large fullerenes and fullerene-based molecules have been proposed as carriers
of diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs). The recent detection of the most common
fullerenes (C60 and C70) around some planetary nebulae (PNe) now enable us to
study the DIBs towards fullerene-rich space environments. We search DIBs in the
optical spectra towards three fullerene-containing PNe (Tc 1, M 1-20, and IC
418). Special attention is given to DIBs which are found to be unusually
intense towards these fullerene sources. In particular, an unusually strong
4428A absorption feature is a common charateristic of fullerene PNe. Similar to
Tc 1, the strongest optical bands of neutral C60 are not detected towards IC
418. Our high-quality (S/N > 300) spectra for PN Tc 1, together with its large
radial velocity, permit us to search for the presence of diffuse bands of
circumstellar origin, which we refer to as diffuse circumstellar bands (DCBs).
We report the first tentative detection of two DCBs at 4428 and 5780 A in the
fullerene-rich circumstellar environment around the PN Tc 1. Laboratory and
theoretical studies of fullerenes in their multifarious manifestations (carbon
onions, fullerene clusters, or even complex species formed by fullerenes and
other molecules like PAHs or metals) may help solve the mystery of some of the
diffuse band carriers.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics (16 pages, 10
figures, and 7 Tables); final version (changes regarding PN M 1-20 and
language corrected
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