9,139 research outputs found
The Limits of Mathematics
This condensed version of chao-dyn/9509010 will be the main hand-out for a
course on algorithmic information theory to be given 22-29 May 1996 at the
Rovaniemi Institute of Technology, Rovaniemi, Finland (see announcement at
http://www.rotol.fi/ ).Comment: LaTeX, 45 page
High-resolution imaging of planet host candidates. A comprehensive comparison of different techniques
The Kepler mission has discovered thousands of planet candidates. Currently,
some of them have already been discarded; more than 200 have been confirmed by
follow-up observations, and several hundreds have been validated. However, most
of them are still awaiting for confirmation. Thus, priorities (in terms of the
probability of the candidate being a real planet) must be established for
subsequent observations. The motivation of this work is to provide a set of
isolated (good) host candidates to be further tested by other techniques. We
identify close companions of the candidates that could have contaminated the
light curve of the planet host. We used the AstraLux North instrument located
at the 2.2 m telescope in the Calar Alto Observatory to obtain
diffraction-limited images of 174 Kepler objects of interest. The lucky-imaging
technique used in this work is compared to other AO and speckle imaging
observations of Kepler planet host candidates. We define a new parameter, the
blended source confidence level (BSC), to assess the probability of an object
to have blended non-detected eclipsing binaries capable of producing the
detected transit. We find that 67.2% of the observed Kepler hosts are isolated
within our detectability limits, and 32.8% have at least one visual companion
at angular separations below 6 arcsec. We find close companions (below 3
arcsec) for the 17.2% of the sample. The planet properties of this sample of
non-isolated hosts are revised. We report one possible S-type binary
(KOI-3158). We also report three possible false positives (KOIs 1230.01,
3649.01, and 3886.01) due to the presence of close companions. The BSC
parameter is calculated for all the isolated targets and compared to both the
value prior to any high-resolution image and, when possible, to observations
from previous high-spatial resolution surveys in the Kepler sample.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A on April 29, 2014; 32 pages, 11
figures, 11 table
Genetic Basis for \u3cem\u3eRhizobium etli\u3c/em\u3e CE3 O-Antigen O-Methylated Residues That Vary According to Growth Conditions
The Rhizobium etli CE3 O antigen is a fixed-length heteropolymer with O methylation being the predominant type of sugar modification. There are two O-methylated residues that occur, on average, once per complete O antigen: a multiply O-methylated terminal fucose and 2-O methylation of a fucose residue within a repeating unit. The amount of the methylated terminal fucose decreases and the amount of 2-O-methylfucose increases when bacteria are grown in the presence of the host plant, Phaseolus vulgaris, or its seed exudates. Insertion mutagenesis was used to identify open reading frames required for the presence of these O-methylated residues. The presence of the methylated terminal fucose required genes wreA, wreB, wreC, wreD, and wreF, whereas 2-O methylation of internal fucoses required the methyltransferase domain of bifunctional gene wreM. Mutants lacking only the methylated terminal fucose, lacking only 2-O methylation, or lacking both the methylated terminal fucose and 2-O methylation exhibited no other lipopolysaccharide structural defects. Thus, neither of these decorations is required for normal O-antigen length, transport, or assembly into the final lipopolysaccharide. This is in contrast to certain enteric bacteria in which the absence of a terminal decoration severely affects O-antigen length and transport. R. etli mutants lacking only the methylated terminal fucose were not altered in symbiosis with host Phaseolus vulgaris, whereas mutants lacking only 2-O-methylfucose exhibited a delay in nodule development during symbiosis. These results support previous conclusions that the methylated terminal fucose is dispensable for symbiosis, whereas 2-O methylation of internal fucoses somehow facilitates early events in symbiosis
Wettability-independent droplet transport by \emph{Bendotaxis}
We demonstrate \textit{bendotaxis}, a novel mechanism for droplet
self-transport at small scales. A combination of bending and capillarity in a
thin channel causes a pressure gradient that, in turn, results in the
spontaneous movement of a liquid droplet. Surprisingly, the direction of this
motion is always the same, regardless of the wettability of the channel. We use
a combination of experiments at a macroscopic scale and a simple mathematical
model to study this motion, focussing in particular on the time scale
associated with the motion. We suggest that \emph{bendotaxis} may be a useful
means of transporting droplets in technological applications, for example in
developing self-cleaning surfaces, and discuss the implications of our results
for such applications.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Supplementary Information available on reques
Joining Forces of Bayesian and Frequentist Methodology: A Study for Inference in the Presence of Non-Identifiability
Increasingly complex applications involve large datasets in combination with
non-linear and high dimensional mathematical models. In this context,
statistical inference is a challenging issue that calls for pragmatic
approaches that take advantage of both Bayesian and frequentist methods. The
elegance of Bayesian methodology is founded in the propagation of information
content provided by experimental data and prior assumptions to the posterior
probability distribution of model predictions. However, for complex
applications experimental data and prior assumptions potentially constrain the
posterior probability distribution insufficiently. In these situations Bayesian
Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling can be infeasible. From a frequentist point
of view insufficient experimental data and prior assumptions can be interpreted
as non-identifiability. The profile likelihood approach offers to detect and to
resolve non-identifiability by experimental design iteratively. Therefore, it
allows one to better constrain the posterior probability distribution until
Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling can be used securely. Using an application
from cell biology we compare both methods and show that a successive
application of both methods facilitates a realistic assessment of uncertainty
in model predictions.Comment: Article to appear in Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc.
The lice (Insecta : phthiraptera) of short-tailed shearwaters, ardenna tenuirostris, in Bass Strait, Tasmania
There is a paucity of research into the louse fauna of Shorttailed Shearwaters, Ardenna tenuirostris (Temminck, 1835), despite this species being one of the world's most studied seabirds (Bradley et al. 1991 and references therein). Research has been undertaken on these shearwaters at their breeding grounds in Bass Strait, Tasmania, since 1947 (Bradley et al. 1991). As Short-tailed Shearwaters are long-lived, with an estimated average longevity of 38 years (Skira et al. 1985), they may offer a long-term host potential to host-dependent ectoparasites (i.e., lice) (Crompton 1997). Also, with approximately 23 million shearwaters breeding in burrows in dense rookeries on the islands and headlands of southern Australia, from southern New South Wales to Tasmania and from Victoria to Western Australia (Marchant & Higgins 1990), there may be the potential for increased transmission of ectoparasites between individual birds. Increased infestation rates by lice have been shown in colonial living birds. For instance, Rozsa et al. (1996) found an increase in louse infestation on Colonial Rooks, Corvus frugilegus Linnaeus, 1758, as compared to the territorial Hooded Crow, Corvus corone cornix Linnaeus, 1758. Short-tailed Shearwaters undertake an annual transequatorial migration to the Bering Sea for the austral winter (Serventy 1967), and so may act as vectors for the transmission of parasites across hemispheres (Lopez et al. 2005, Price et al. 2003). There are three publications that list the lice of Shorttailed Shearwaters. Green & Munday (1971) were the first to document the ectoparasites of Tasmanian fauna, albeit from personal communications- no published literature was cited. Twenty years later, Green & Palma (1991) listed the lice of Tasmania's vertebrates. They essentially used Green & Munday's (1971) list of lice on shearwaters and added Austromenopon paululum, listed as Austromenopon sp. in Green & Munday (1971). Price et al. (2003), in their checklist of the chewing lice (Phthiraptera) of the world, also listed the lice of Short -tailed Shearwaters. Included in this list were two louse species, Naubates harrisoni (Bedford, 1930) and Ancistrona vagelli (Fabricus, 1787), not mentioned in Green & Munday (1971). As part of the long-term research into Bass Strait's Short-tailed Shearwaters, this study aimed to confirm their current louse fauna, detailing the specific location, and collection method, to fill a gap in the primary literature
Conditions for the Optimality of Exponential Smoothing Forecast Procedures
Exponential smoothing procedures, in particular those recommended by Brown are used extensively in many areas of economics, business and engineering. It is shown in this paper that: (i) Brown's forecasting procedures are optimal in terms of achieving minimum mean square error forecasts only if the underlying stochastic process is included in a limited subclass of ARIMA (p,d,q) processes. Hence, it is shown what assumptions are made when using these procedures. (ii) The implication of point (i) is that the users of Brown's procedures tacitly assume that the stochastic processes which occur in the real world are from the particular restricted subclass of ARIMA (p,d,q) processes. No reason can be found why these particular models should occur more frequently than others. (iii) It is further shown that even if a stochastic process which would lead to Brown's model occurred, the actual methods used for making the forecasts are clumsy and much simpler procedures can be employed
Eclipsing binaries and fast rotators in the Kepler sample. Characterization via radial velocity analysis from Calar Alto
The Kepler mission has provided high-accurate photometric data in a long time
span for more than two hundred thousands stars, looking for planetary transits.
Among the detected candidates, the planetary nature of around 15% has been
established or validated by different techniques. But additional data is needed
to characterize the rest of the candidates and reject other possible
configurations. We started a follow-up program to validate, confirm, and
characterize some of the planet candidates. In this paper we present the radial
velocity analysis (RV) of those presenting large variations, compatible with
being eclipsing binaries. We also study those showing large rotational
velocities, which prevents us from obtaining the necessary precision to detect
planetary-like objects. We present new RV results for 13 Kepler objects of
interest (KOIs) obtained with the CAFE spectrograph at the Calar Alto
Observatory, and analyze their high-spatial resolution images and the Kepler
light curves of some interesting cases. We have found five spectroscopic and
eclipsing binaries. Among them, the case of KOI-3853 is of particular interest.
This system is a new example of the so-called heartbeat stars, showing dynamic
tidal distortions in the Kepler light curve. We have also detected duration and
depth variations of the eclipse. We suggest possible scenarios to explain such
effect, including the presence of a third substellar body possibly detected in
our RV analysis. We also provide upper mass limits to the transiting companions
of other six KOIs with large rotational velocities. This property prevents the
RV method to obtain the necessary precision to detect planetary-like masses.
Finally, we analyze the large RV variations of other two KOIs, incompatible
with the presence of planetary-mass objects. These objects are likely to be
stellar binaries but a longer timespan is still needed.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 18 pages, 9 figures, 17 tables. This
version fixes an error affecting the values of tables A.1-A.13. The text
remains unaltere
Kepler-539: a young extrasolar system with two giant planets on wide orbits and in gravitational interaction
We confirm the planetary nature of Kepler-539b (aka Kepler object of interest
K00372.01), a giant transiting exoplanet orbiting a solar-analogue G2 V star.
The mass of Kepler-539b was accurately derived thanks to a series of precise
radial velocity measurements obtained with the CAFE spectrograph mounted on the
CAHA 2.2m telescope. A simultaneous fit of the radial-velocity data and Kepler
photometry revealed that Kepler-539b is a dense Jupiter-like planet with a mass
of Mp = 0.97 Mjup and a radius of Rp = 0.747 Rjup, making a complete circular
revolution around its parent star in 125.6 days. The semi-major axis of the
orbit is roughly 0.5 au, implying that the planet is at roughly 0.45 au from
the habitable zone. By analysing the mid-transit times of the 12 transit events
of Kepler-539b recorded by the Kepler spacecraft, we found a clear modulated
transit time variation (TTV), which is attributable to the presence of a planet
c in a wider orbit. The few timings available do not allow us to precisely
estimate the properties of Kepler-539c and our analysis suggests that it has a
mass between 1.2 and 3.6 Mjup, revolving on a very eccentric orbit (0.4<e<0.6)
with a period larger than 1000 days. The high eccentricity of planet c is the
probable cause of the TTV modulation of planet b. The analysis of the CAFE
spectra revealed a relatively high photospheric lithium content, A(Li)=2.48
dex, which, together with both a gyrochronological and isochronal analysis,
suggests that the parent star is relatively young.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
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