3,953 research outputs found
A systematic review of associations between environmental exposures and development of asthma in children aged up to 9 years
Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Surface Acoustic Wave Driven Microchannel Flow
We demonstrate that the propagation of surface acoustic waves, arising from the excitation of the acoustic field on a piezoelectric crystal (lithium niobate) substrate, along the sidewalls of microchannels (50 ÎŒm or 280 ÎŒm wide and 200 ÎŒm deep) fabricated in the substrate, can give rise to throughflow with velocities of the order 10 mm/s. This streaming flow in the direction along which the surface acoustic wave propagates is a result of the leakage of acoustic radiation from the substrate walls into the fluid. Good agreement is obtained between these preliminary experimental results with those from numerical simulations of the classical acoustic streaming model. In any case, these results show the potential of surface acoustic wave micropumps to be an effective fluid-driving mechanism for microfluidic devices
Spectroscopy of Seven Cataclysmic Variables with Periods Above Five Hours
We present spectroscopy of seven cataclysmic variable stars with orbital
periods P(orb) greater than 5 hours, all but one of which are known to be dwarf
novae. Using radial velocity measurements we improve on previous orbital period
determinations, or derive periods for the first time. The stars and their
periods are
TT Crt, 0.2683522(5) d;
EZ Del, 0.2234(5) d;
LL Lyr, 0.249069(4) d;
UY Pup, 0.479269(7) d;
RY Ser, 0.3009(4) d;
CH UMa, 0.3431843(6) d; and
SDSS J081321+452809, 0.2890(4) d.
For each of the systems we detect the spectrum of the secondary star,
estimate its spectral type, and derive a distance based on the surface
brightness and Roche lobe constraints. In five systems we also measure the
radial velocity curve of the secondary star, estimate orbital inclinations, and
where possible estimate distances based on the MV(max) vs.P(orb) relation found
by Warner. In concordance with previous studies, we find that all the secondary
stars have, to varying degrees, cooler spectral types than would be expected if
they were on the main sequence at the measured orbital period.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figures, accepted for Publications of the Astronomical
Society of the Pacifi
Correlation of the Quasi-Periodic Oscillation Frequencies of White Dwarf, Neutron Star, and Black Hole Binaries
Using data obtained in 1994 June/July with the Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer
deep survey photometer and in 2001 January with the Chandra X-ray Observatory
Low Energy Transmission Grating Spectrograph, we investigate the
extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) and soft X-ray oscillations of the dwarf nova SS Cyg
in outburst. We find quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) at nu_0 ~ 0.012 Hz and
nu_1 ~ 0.13 Hz in the EUV flux and at nu_0 ~ 0.0090 Hz, nu_1 ~ 0.11 Hz, and
possibly nu_2 ~ nu_0 + nu_1 ~ 0.12 Hz in the soft X-ray flux. These data,
combined with the optical data of Woudt & Warner for VW Hyi, extend the
Psaltis, Belloni, & van der Klis nu_high-nu_low correlation for neutron star
and black hole low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) nearly two orders of magnitude
in frequency, with nu_low ~ 0.08 nu_high. This correlation identifies the
high-frequency quasi-coherent oscillations (so-called ``dwarf nova
oscillations'') of cataclysmic variables (CVs) with the kilohertz QPOs of
LMXBs, and the low-frequency QPOs of CVs with the horizontal branch
oscillations (or the broad noise component identified as such) of LMXBs.
Assuming that the same mechanisms produce the QPOs in white dwarf, neutron
star, and black hole binaries, we find that the data exclude the relativistic
precession model and the magnetospheric and sonic-point beat-frequency models
(as well as any model requiring the presence or absence of a stellar surface or
magnetic field); more promising are models that interpret QPOs as
manifestations of disk accretion onto any low-magnetic field compact object.Comment: 15 pages including 4 encapsulated postscript figures; LaTeX format,
uses aastex.cls; accepted on 2002 July 23 for publication in The
Astrophysical Journa
Parallax and Distance Estimates for Fourteen Cataclysmic Variable Stars
I used the 2.4 m Hiltner telescope at MDM Observatory in an attempt to
measure trigonometric parallaxes for 14 cataclysmic variable stars. Techniques
are described in detail. In the best cases the parallax uncertainties are below
1 mas, and significant parallaxes are found for most of the program stars. A
Bayesian method which combines the parallaxes together with proper motions and
absolute magnitude constraints is developed and used to derive distance
estimates and confidence intervals. The most precise distance derived here is
for WZ Sge, for which I find 43.3 (+1.6, -1.5) pc. Six Luyten Half-Second stars
with previous precise parallax measurements were re-measured to test the
techniques, and good agreement is found.Comment: 33 pages, 3 figures. Astronomical Journal, accepte
A Single-Element Tuning Fork Piezoelectric Linear Actuator
This paper describes the design of a piezoelectric tuning-fork, dual-mode motor. The motor uses a single multilayer piezoelectric element in combination with tuning fork and shearing motion to form an actuator using a single drive signal. Finite-element analysis was used in the design of the motor, and the process is described along with the selection of the device\u27s materials and its performance. Swaging was used to mount the multilayer piezoelectric element within the stator. Prototypes of the 25-mm long bidirectional actuator achieved a maximum linear no-load speed of 16.5 cm/s, a maximum linear force of 1.86 N, and maximum efficiency of 18.9%
On multicomponent effects in stellar winds of stars at extremely low metallicity
We calculate multicomponent line-driven wind models of stars at extremely low metallicity suitable for massive first generation stars. For most of the models we find that the multicomponent wind nature is not important for either wind dynamics or for wind temperature stratification. However, for stars with the lowest metallicities we find that multicomponent effects influence the wind structure. These effects range from pure heating to possible fallback of the nonabsorbing wind component. We present a simple formula for the calculation of metallicity for which the multicomponent effects become important. We show that the importance of the multicomponent nature of winds of low metallicity stars is characterised not only by the low density of driving ions, but also by lower mass-loss rate
U Geminorum: a test case for orbital parameters determination
High-resolution spectroscopy of U Gem was obtained during quiescence. We did
not find a hot spot or gas stream around the outer boundaries of the accretion
disk. Instead, we detected a strong narrow emission near the location of the
secondary star. We measured the radial velocity curve from the wings of the
double-peaked H emission line, and obtained a semi-amplitude value that
is in excellent agreement with the obtained from observations in the
ultraviolet spectral region by Sion et al. (1998). We present also a new method
to obtain K_2, which enhances the detection of absorption or emission features
arising in the late-type companion. Our results are compared with published
values derived from the near-infrared NaI line doublet. From a comparison of
the TiO band with those of late type M stars, we find that a best fit is
obtained for a M6V star, contributing 5 percent of the total light at that
spectral region. Assuming that the radial velocity semi-amplitudes reflect
accurately the motion of the binary components, then from our results: K_em =
107+/-2 km/s; K_abs = 310+/-5 km/s, and using the inclination angle given by
Zhang & Robinson(1987); i = 69.7+/-0.7, the system parameters become: M_WD =
1.20+/-0.05 M_sun,; M_RD = 0.42+/-0.04 M_sun; and a = 1.55+/- 0.02 R_sun. Based
on the separation of the double emission peaks, we calculate an outer disk
radius of R_out/a ~0.61, close to the distance of the inner Lagrangian point
L_1/a~0.63. Therefore we suggest that, at the time of observations, the
accretion disk was filling the Roche-Lobe of the primary, and that the matter
leaving the L_1 point was colliding with the disc directly, producing the hot
spot at this location.Comment: 36 pages, 14 figures, ccepted for publication in A
The Effectiveness of Using Diversity to Select Multiple Classifier Systems with Varying Classification Thresholds
In classification applications, the goal of fusion techniques is to exploit complementary approaches and merge the information provided by these methods to provide a solution superior than any single method. Associated with choosing a methodology to fuse pattern recognition algorithms is the choice of algorithm or algorithms to fuse. Historically, classifier ensemble accuracy has been used to select which pattern recognition algorithms are included in a multiple classifier system. More recently, research has focused on creating and evaluating diversity metrics to more effectively select ensemble members. Using a wide range of classification data sets, methodologies, and fusion techniques, current diversity research is extended by expanding classifier domains before employing fusion methodologies. The expansion is made possible with a unique classification score algorithm developed for this purpose. Correlation and linear regression techniques reveal that the relationship between diversity metrics and accuracy is tenuous and optimal ensemble selection should be based on ensemble accuracy. The strengths and weaknesses of popular diversity metrics are examined in the context of the information they provide with respect to changing classification thresholds and accuracies
Advanced information processing system: The Army fault tolerant architecture conceptual study. Volume 1: Army fault tolerant architecture overview
Digital computing systems needed for Army programs such as the Computer-Aided Low Altitude Helicopter Flight Program and the Armored Systems Modernization (ASM) vehicles may be characterized by high computational throughput and input/output bandwidth, hard real-time response, high reliability and availability, and maintainability, testability, and producibility requirements. In addition, such a system should be affordable to produce, procure, maintain, and upgrade. To address these needs, the Army Fault Tolerant Architecture (AFTA) is being designed and constructed under a three-year program comprised of a conceptual study, detailed design and fabrication, and demonstration and validation phases. Described here are the results of the conceptual study phase of the AFTA development. Given here is an introduction to the AFTA program, its objectives, and key elements of its technical approach. A format is designed for representing mission requirements in a manner suitable for first order AFTA sizing and analysis, followed by a discussion of the current state of mission requirements acquisition for the targeted Army missions. An overview is given of AFTA's architectural theory of operation
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