47 research outputs found

    White Dwarfs in Globular Clusters: HST Observations of M4

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    Using WFPC2 on the Hubble Space Telescope, we have isolated a sample of 258 white dwarfs (WDs) in the Galactic globular cluster M4. Fields at three radial distances from the cluster center were observed and sizeable WD populations were found in all three. The location of these WDs in the color-magnitude diagram, their mean mass of 0.51(±0.03 \pm 0.03)M⊙_{\odot}, and their luminosity function confirm basic tenets of stellar evolution theory and support the results from current WD cooling theory. The WDs are used to extend the cluster main-sequence mass function upward to stars that have already completed their nuclear evolution. The WD/red dwarf binary frequency in M4 is investigated and found to be at most a few percent of all the main-sequence stars. The most ancient WDs found are about 9 Gyr old, a level which is set solely by the photometric limits of our data. Even though this is less than the age of M4, we discuss how these cooling WDs can eventually be used to check the turnoff ages of globular clusters and hence constrain the age of the Universe.Comment: 46 pages, latex, no figures included, figures available at ftp://ftp.astro.ubc.ca/pub/richer/wdfig.uu size 2.7Mb. To be published in the Astrophysical Journa

    Hubble Space Telescope Observations of White Dwarfs in the Globular Cluster M4

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    With the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) on the Hubble Space Telescope, we have discovered in M4 (NGC 6121, C 1620-264) the first extensive sequence of cooling white dwarfs seen in a globular cluster. Adopting a distance modulus of (m-M)_V = 12.65 and a reddening of E(B-V) = 0.37, we show that the sequence, which extends over 9 < M_U < 13, is comprised of white dwarfs of mass \sim 0.5 M_{\odot}. The total mass loss from the present turnoff to the white dwarf sequence is 0.31 M_{\odot} and the intrinsic dispersion in the mean mass appears to be < 0.05 M_{\odot}. Both the location of the white dwarf cooling sequence in the cluster color-magnitude diagram and the cumulative luminosity function attest to the basic correctness and completeness of the physics in theoretical models for the upper three magnitudes of the observed white dwarf cooling sequence. To test the theory in globular clusters at cooling ages beyond \sim 3 \times 10^8 years will require deeper and more complete data.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journal Letters, 451, September 20, 1995. The text is also available as a postscript file from http://www.astro.ubc.ca/people/richer/m4wd/m4wd.ps with postscript files of the figures available in http://www.astro.ubc.ca/people/richer/m4wd/fig1.ps http://www.astro.ubc.ca/people/richer/m4wd/fig2.ps http://www.astro.ubc.ca/people/richer/m4wd/fig3.p

    Business analytics in industry 4.0: a systematic review

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    Recently, the term “Industry 4.0” has emerged to characterize several Information Technology and Communication (ICT) adoptions in production processes (e.g., Internet-of-Things, implementation of digital production support information technologies). Business Analytics is often used within the Industry 4.0, thus incorporating its data intelligence (e.g., statistical analysis, predictive modelling, optimization) expert system component. In this paper, we perform a Systematic Literature Review (SLR) on the usage of Business Analytics within the Industry 4.0 concept, covering a selection of 169 papers obtained from six major scientific publication sources from 2010 to March 2020. The selected papers were first classified in three major types, namely, Practical Application, Reviews and Framework Proposal. Then, we analysed with more detail the practical application studies which were further divided into three main categories of the Gartner analytical maturity model, Descriptive Analytics, Predictive Analytics and Prescriptive Analytics. In particular, we characterized the distinct analytics studies in terms of the industry application and data context used, impact (in terms of their Technology Readiness Level) and selected data modelling method. Our SLR analysis provides a mapping of how data-based Industry 4.0 expert systems are currently used, disclosing also research gaps and future research opportunities.The work of P. Cortez was supported by FCT - Fundação para a CiĂȘncia e Tecnologia within the R&D Units Project Scope: UIDB/00319/2020. We would like to thank to the three anonymous reviewers for their helpful suggestions

    Ellipsometry and spectroscopy on 1.55 mu m emitting Ge islands in Si for photonic applications

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    Single layer and mutlilayer Ge islands in a Si matrix, grown by solid source molecular beam epitaxy MBE on Si and SOI substrates in a self assembled mode, are investigated by means of optical spectroscopy and spectroscopic ellipsometry in the spectral range of 0.54 4.5 eV. This range widely encloses the characteristic optical transitions of the islands around 1.5 amp; 956;m, that is, 0.82 eV. By introducing and developing an appropriate model, the technique enabled determination of the dielectric constants and the film thicknesses of the structure. Knowledge of these constants is crucial for the potential applications of Ge nanostructures for photonic and optoelectronic devices. Moreover, the technique allowed observation of the transition resonances of the Ge dots and the Ge wetting layer. The two methods are implemented as a joint tool to investigate the behavior and properties of the Si Ge nanostructures in the near infrared spectral rang

    Fast rigid registration in radiation therapy

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    Based on a stochastic mutual information type matching and RPROP as stochastic optimizer, an interactive image-based registration of a CT volume onto two 2D images provided by a megavoltage system is presented. The matching process is based on semi-automatic presegmentation, an approximate 2D-2D matching with precomputed virtual projections (DRRs) followed by an accurate 3D-2D matching step. Our sample-based approach requires only a fraction of computed DRRs for 3D-2D. A simultaneous computation of the DRR rays and their perturbations in 6 dimensions speeds up the rendering process by a factor of 6.8. The complete registration process takes 5.6 ± 2.3 seconds on a 3 GHz Pentium IV PC, being the fastest non-parallel approach for this sort of application the authors are aware of. © 2006 The authors. All rights reserved
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