4,860 research outputs found
Diophantine approximation on Veech surfaces
We show that Y. Cheung's general -continued fractions can be adapted to
give approximation by saddle connection vectors for any compact translation
surface. That is, we show the finiteness of his Minkowski constant for any
compact translation surface. Furthermore, we show that for a Veech surface in
standard form, each component of any saddle connection vector dominates its
conjugates. The saddle connection continued fractions then allow one to
recognize certain transcendental directions by their developments
Mapping the Conditions for Hydrodynamic Instability on Steady State Accretion Models of Protoplanetary Disks
Hydrodynamical instabilities in disks around young stars depend on the
thermodynamic stratification of the disk and on the local rate of thermal
relaxation. Here, we map the spatial extent of unstable regions for the
Vertical Shear Instability (VSI), the Convective OverStability (COS), and the
amplification of vortices via the Subcritical Baroclinic Instability (SBI). We
use steady state accretion disk models, including stellar irradiation,
accretion heating and radiative transfer. We determine the local radial and
vertical stratification and thermal relaxation rate in the disk, in dependence
of the stellar mass, disk mass and mass accretion rate. We find that passive
regions of disks - i.e. the midplane temperature dominated by irradiation - are
COS unstable about one pressure scale height above the midplane and VSI
unstable at radii . Vortex amplification via SBI should
operate in most parts of active and passive disks. For active parts of disks
(midplane temperature determined by accretion power) COS can become active down
to the midplane. Same is true for the VSI because of the vertically adiabatic
stratification of an internally heated disk. If hydro instabilities or other
non-ideal MHD processes are able to create -stresses () and
released accretion energy leads to internal heating of the disk, hydrodynamical
instabilities are likely to operate in significant parts of the planet forming
zones in disks around young stars, driving gas accretion and flow structure
formation. Thus hydro-instabilities are viable candidates to explain the rings
and vortices observed with ALMA and VLT.Comment: 24 pages, 13 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
The FireBird Mission â A Scientific Mission for Earth Observation and Hot SpotDetection
More than 10 years ago the first specialized small satellite for hot spot recognition and fire observation was designed, built and operated by several DLR departments. This BIRD (Bi-spectral Infra Red Detection) satellite demonstrated the capability of fire monitoring from space by using a dedicated small satellite and sensor system. On the other hand it has shown that DLR is capable to manage nearly a complete space mission âin houseâ. The comparison of typical BIRD data with the well-known MODIS fire products led to the label âfire zoomâ for BIRD data. It is due to the high geometric and radiometric resolution of BIRD fire products. Typically small fires with a diameter of 4m could be detected. The precise estimation of fire parameters was successfully shown without problems like false alarms. The success of BIRD opened the doors for next steps. The scientific DLR Earth observation mission âFireBirdâ will continue the fire monitoring topic by using two small satellites (TET-1, launched June 2012, BIROS launch planed 2014). The paper shall present this mission. It will finally be focused on possible interfaces for a desired worldwide international scientific cooperation within this running space mission
High-resolution simulations of planetesimal formation in turbulent protoplanetary discs
We present high-resolution computer simulations of dust dynamics and
planetesimal formation in turbulence generated by the magnetorotational
instability. We show that the turbulent viscosity associated with
magnetorotational turbulence in a non-stratified shearing box increases when
going from 256^3 to 512^3 grid points in the presence of a weak imposed
magnetic field, yielding a turbulent viscosity of at high
resolution. Particles representing approximately meter-sized boulders
concentrate in large-scale high-pressure regions in the simulation box. The
appearance of zonal flows and particle concentration in pressure bumps is
relatively similar at moderate (256^3) and high (512^3) resolution. In the
moderate-resolution simulation we activate particle self-gravity at a time when
there is little particle concentration, in contrast with previous simulations
where particle self-gravity was activated during a concentration event. We
observe that bound clumps form over the next ten orbits, with initial birth
masses of a few times the dwarf planet Ceres. At high resolution we activate
self-gravity during a particle concentration event, leading to a burst of
planetesimal formation, with clump masses ranging from a significant fraction
of to several times the mass of Ceres. We present a new domain decomposition
algorithm for particle-mesh schemes. Particles are spread evenly among the
processors and the local gas velocity field and assigned drag forces are
exchanged between a domain-decomposed mesh and discrete blocks of particles. We
obtain good load balancing on up to 4096 cores even in simulations where
particles sediment to the mid-plane and concentrate in pressure bumps.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics, with some
changes in response to referee repor
Enforcing Secure Object Initialization in Java
Sun and the CERT recommend for secure Java development to not allow partially
initialized objects to be accessed. The CERT considers the severity of the
risks taken by not following this recommendation as high. The solution
currently used to enforce object initialization is to implement a coding
pattern proposed by Sun, which is not formally checked. We propose a modular
type system to formally specify the initialization policy of libraries or
programs and a type checker to statically check at load time that all loaded
classes respect the policy. This allows to prove the absence of bugs which have
allowed some famous privilege escalations in Java. Our experimental results
show that our safe default policy allows to prove 91% of classes of java.lang,
java.security and javax.security safe without any annotation and by adding 57
simple annotations we proved all classes but four safe. The type system and its
soundness theorem have been formalized and machine checked using Coq
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