2,153 research outputs found
Zoo-FISH in the European mole (Talpa europaea) detects all ancestral Boreo-Eutherian human homologous chromosome associations
Zoo-FISH with human whole-chromosome paint probes delineated syntenic association of human homologous chromosome segments 3-21, 14-15, 16-19, 4-8, 7-16 and 12-22 (twice) in the European mole (Talpa europaea, Talpidae, Eulipotyphla, Mammalia). These segment associations represent shared ancestral Boreo-Eutherian traits, half of which were previously not described for Eulipotyphla. The karyotype of the European mole acquired a minimum of 19 translocations and six inversions compared to the presumed Boreo-Eutherian ancestor. Copyright (c) 2006 S. Karger AG, Basel
Platform-independent Dynamic Reconfiguration of Distributed Applications
The aim of dynamic reconfiguration is to allow a system to evolve incrementally from one configuration to another at run-time, without restarting it or taking it offline. In recent years, support for transparent dynamic reconfiguration has been added to middleware platforms, shifting the complexity required to enable dynamic reconfiguration to the supporting infrastructure. These approaches to dynamic reconfiguration are mostly platform-specific and depend on particular implementation approaches suitable for particular platforms. In this paper, we propose an approach to dynamic reconfiguration of distributed applications that is suitable for application implemented on top of different platforms. This approach supports a platform-independent view of an application that profits from reconfiguration transparency. In this view, requirements on the ability to reconfigure components are expressed in an abstract manner. These requirements are then satisfied by platform-specific realizations
A new application of emulsions to measure the gravitational force on antihydrogen
We propose to build and operate a detector based on the emulsion film
technology for the measurement of the gravitational acceleration on antimatter,
to be performed by the AEgIS experiment (AD6) at CERN. The goal of AEgIS is to
test the weak equivalence principle with a precision of 1% on the gravitational
acceleration g by measuring the vertical position of the anni- hilation vertex
of antihydrogen atoms after their free fall in a horizontal vacuum pipe. With
the emulsion technology developed at the University of Bern we propose to
improve the performance of AEgIS by exploiting the superior position resolution
of emulsion films over other particle de- tectors. The idea is to use a new
type of emulsion films, especially developed for applications in vacuum, to
yield a spatial resolution of the order of one micron in the measurement of the
sag of the antihydrogen atoms in the gravitational field. This is an order of
magnitude better than what was planned in the original AEgIS proposal.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figure
Observations of [C II] 158 micron Line and Far-infrared Continuum Emission toward the High-latitude Molecular Clouds in Ursa Major
We report the results of a rocket-borne observation of [C II] 158\micron line
and far-infrared continuum emission at 152.5\micron toward the high latitude
molecular clouds in Ursa Major. We also present the results of a follow-up
observation of the millimeter ^{12}CO J=1-0 line over a selected region
observed by the rocket-borne experiment. We have discovered three small CO
cloudlets from the follow-up ^{12}CO observations. We show that these molecular
cloudlets, as well as the MBM clouds(MBM 27/28/29/30), are not gravitationally
bound. Magnetic pressure and turbulent pressure dominate the dynamic balance of
the clouds. After removing the HI-correlated and background contributions, we
find that the [C II] emission peak is displaced from the 152.5\micron and CO
peaks, while the 152.5\micron continuum emission is spatially correlated with
the CO emission. We interpret this behavior by attributing the origin of [C II]
emission to the photodissociation regions around the molecular clouds
illuminated by the local UV radiation field. We also find that the ratio of the
molecular hydrogen column density to velocity-integrated CO intensity is
1.19+-0.29x10^{20} cm^{-2} (K kms^{-1})^{-1} from the FIR continuum and the CO
data. The average [C II] /FIR intensity ratio over the MBM clouds is 0.0071,
which is close to the all sky average of 0.0082 reported by the FIRAS on the
COBE satellite. The average [C II]/CO ratio over the same regions is 420, which
is significantly lower than that of molecular clouds in the Galactic plane.Comment: 15 pages, LaTeX (aaspp4.sty) + 2 tables(apjpt4.sty) + 6 postscript
figures; accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal; Astrophys. J.
in press (Vol. 490, December 1, 1997 issue
A Search for Near-Infrared Emission From the Halo of NGC 5907 at Radii of 10 kpc to 30 kpc
We present a search for near-infrared (3.5-5 micron) emission from baryonic
dark matter in the form of low-mass stars and/or brown dwarfs in the halo of
the nearby edge-on spiral galaxy NGC 5907. The observations were made using a
256 by 256 InSb array with a pixel scale of 17" at the focus of a
liquid-helium-cooled telescope carried above the Earth's atmosphere by a
sounding rocket. In contrast to previous experiments which have detected a halo
around NGC 5907 in the V, R, I, J and K bands at galactic radii 6kpc < r <
10kpc, our search finds no evidence for emission from a halo at 10kpc < r <
30kpc. Assuming a halo mass density scaling as r^(-2), which is consistent with
the flat rotation curves that are observed out to radii of 32kpc, the lower
limit of the mass-to-light ratio at 3.5-5 microns for the halo of NGC 5907 is
250 (2 sigma) in solar units. This is comparable to the lower limit we have
found previously for NGC 4565 (Uemizu et al. 1998). Based on recent models, our
non-detection implies that hydrogen- burning stars contribute < 15% of the mass
of the dark halo of NGC 5907. Our results are consistent with the previous
detection of extended emission at r < 10kpc if the latter is caused by a
stellar population that has been ejected from the disk because of tidal
interactions. We conclude that the dark halo of NGC 5907, which is evident from
rotation curves that extend far beyond 10kpc, is not comprised of hydrogen
burning stars.Comment: 12 pages, LateX, plus 6 ps figures. Accepted by ApJ. minor changes,
added references, corrected typo
Development of an intense positron source using a crystal--amorphous hybrid target for linear colliders
In a conventional positron source driven by a few GeV electron beam, a high
amount of heat is loaded into a positron converter target to generate intense
positrons required by linear colliders, and which would eventually damage the
converter target. A hybrid target, composed of a single crystal target as a
radiator of intense gamma--rays, and an amorphous converter target placed
downstream of the crystal, was proposed as a scheme which could overcome the
problem.This paper describes the development of an intense positron source with
the hybrid target. A series of experiments on positron generation with the
hybrid target has been carried out with a 8--GeV electron beam at the KEKB
linac. We observed that positron yield from the hybrid target increased when
the incident electron beam was aligned to the crystal axis and exceeded the one
from the conventional target with the converter target of the same thickness,
when its thickness is less than about 2 radiation length. The measurements in
the temperature rise of the amorphous converter target was successfully carried
out by use of thermocouples. These results lead to establishment to the
evaluation of the hybrid target as an intense positron source.Comment: 17pages, 10figure
Far-infrared imaging of post-AGB stars and (proto)-planetary nebulae with the AKARI Far-Infrared Surveyor
By tracing the distribution of cool dust in the extended envelopes of
post-AGB stars and (proto)-planetary nebulae ((P)PNe) we aim to recover, or
constrain, the mass loss history experienced by these stars in their recent
past. The Far-Infrared Surveyor (FIS) instrument on board the AKARI satellite
was used to obtain far-infrared maps for a selected sample of post-AGB stars
and (P)PNe. We derived flux densities (aperture photometry) for 13 post-AGB
stars and (P)PNe at four far-infrared wavelengths (60, 90, 140, and 160 um).
Radial (azimuthally averaged) profiles are used to investigate the presence of
extended emission from cool dust. No (detached) extended emission is detected
for any target in our sample at levels significant with respect to background
and cirrus emission. Only IRAS 21046+4739 reveals tentative excess emission
between 30 and 130". Estimates of the total dust and gas mass from the obtained
maps indicate that the envelope masses of these stars should be large in order
to be detected with the AKARI FIS. Imaging with higher sensitivity and higher
spatial resolution is needed to detect and resolve, if present, any cool
compact or extended emission associated with these evolved stars.Comment: accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal (16 pages, 3
figures and 4 tables
Ice: a strongly correlated proton system
We discuss the problem of proton motion in Hydrogen bond materials with
special focus on ice. We show that phenomenological models proposed in the past
for the study of ice can be recast in terms of microscopic models in close
relationship to the ones used to study the physics of Mott-Hubbard insulators.
We discuss the physics of the paramagnetic phase of ice at 1/4 filling (neutral
ice) and its mapping to a transverse field Ising model and also to a gauge
theory in two and three dimensions. We show that H3O+ and HO- ions can be
either in a confined or deconfined phase. We obtain the phase diagram of the
problem as a function of temperature T and proton hopping energy t and find
that there are two phases: an ordered insulating phase which results from an
order-by-disorder mechanism induced by quantum fluctuations, and a disordered
incoherent metallic phase (or plasma). We also discuss the problem of
decoherence in the proton motion introduced by the lattice vibrations (phonons)
and its effect on the phase diagram. Finally, we suggest that the transition
from ice-Ih to ice-XI observed experimentally in doped ice is the
confining-deconfining transition of our phase diagram.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
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