8,762 research outputs found
Secondary and compound concentrators for parabolic dish solar thermal power systems
A secondary optical element may be added to a parabolic dish solar concentrator to increase the geometric concentration ratio attainable at a given intercept factor. This secondary may be a Fresnel lens or a mirror, such as a compound elliptic concentrator or a hyperbolic trumpet. At a fixed intercept factor, higher overall geometric concentration may be obtainable with a long focal length primary and a suitable secondary matched to it. Use of a secondary to increase the geometric concentration ratio is more likely to e worthwhile if the receiver temperature is high and if errors in the primary are large. Folding the optical path with a secondary may reduce cost by locating the receiver and power conversion equipment closer to the ground and by eliminating the heavy structure needed to support this equipment at the primary focus. Promising folded-path configurations include the Ritchey-Chretien and perhaps some three element geometries. Folding the optical path may be most useful in systems that provide process heat
The 100 and 160 micron maps of the dust reemission from the nucleus and inner-arm regions of NGC 6946
Dust reemission from the Scd galaxy NGC 6946 has been measured at 100 and 160 microns with the 32-channel University of Chicago Far-Infrared Camera. Researchers present fully sampled maps of the nucleus and inner spiral arms at 45 seconds resolution. The far-infrared morphology of the galaxy is a bright peak centered on a diffuse disk, where the peak occurs about 24 seconds NE of the Dressel and Condon optical center. The 100/160 micron color temperature is correlated with the H alpha surface brightness. Assuming the distance from Earth to the galaxy is 10.1 Mpc, researchers determine that Tc is 32 K at the nucleus and at radius 5.4 kpc, where there is a concentration of H II regions. In the intermediate annulus of relatively low H alpha surface brightness, the temperature drops to a local minimum of 25 K at radius 3 kpc. The ratio of reradiated to transmitted stellar luminosity is approx. 3.0 at the nucleus and approx. 0.9 for the disk. The optical depth at 100 micron increases from .0005 at the edges of our map to .0035 at the far infrared radiation (FIR) peak. Combining our observations with a fully sampled map of similar spatial extent in CO(1 greater than 0), researchers determine that the ratio F sub IR/I sub CO at the center of the galaxy is almost twice that for the disk, where the value is more or less constant
Gene set bagging for estimating replicability of gene set analyses
Background: Significance analysis plays a major role in identifying and
ranking genes, transcription factor binding sites, DNA methylation regions, and
other high-throughput features for association with disease. We propose a new
approach, called gene set bagging, for measuring the stability of ranking
procedures using predefined gene sets. Gene set bagging involves resampling the
original high-throughput data, performing gene-set analysis on the resampled
data, and confirming that biological categories replicate. This procedure can
be thought of as bootstrapping gene-set analysis and can be used to determine
which are the most reproducible gene sets. Results: Here we apply this approach
to two common genomics applications: gene expression and DNA methylation. Even
with state-of-the-art statistical ranking procedures, significant categories in
a gene set enrichment analysis may be unstable when subjected to resampling.
Conclusions: We demonstrate that gene lists are not necessarily stable, and
therefore additional steps like gene set bagging can improve biological
inference of gene set analysis.Comment: 3 Figure
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Observations of ozone and related species in the northeast Pacific during the PHOBEA campaigns 1. Ground-based observations at Cheeka Peak
Explicit Non-Abelian Monopoles and Instantons in SU(N) Pure Yang-Mills Theory
It is well known that there are no static non-Abelian monopole solutions in
pure Yang-Mills theory on Minkowski space R^{3,1}. We show that such solutions
exist in SU(N) gauge theory on the spaces R^2\times S^2 and R^1\times S^1\times
S^2 with Minkowski signature (-+++). In the temporal gauge they are solutions
of pure Yang-Mills theory on T^1\times S^2, where T^1 is R^1 or S^1. Namely,
imposing SO(3)-invariance and some reality conditions, we consistently reduce
the Yang-Mills model on the above spaces to a non-Abelian analog of the \phi^4
kink model whose static solutions give SU(N) monopole (-antimonopole)
configurations on the space R^{1,1}\times S^2 via the above-mentioned
correspondence. These solutions can also be considered as instanton
configurations of Yang-Mills theory in 2+1 dimensions. The kink model on
R^1\times S^1 admits also periodic sphaleron-type solutions describing chains
of n kink-antikink pairs spaced around the circle S^1 with arbitrary n>0. They
correspond to chains of n static monopole-antimonopole pairs on the space
R^1\times S^1\times S^2 which can also be interpreted as instanton
configurations in 2+1 dimensional pure Yang-Mills theory at finite temperature
(thermal time circle). We also describe similar solutions in Euclidean SU(N)
gauge theory on S^1\times S^3 interpreted as chains of n
instanton-antiinstanton pairs.Comment: 16 pages; v2: subsection on topological charges added, title
expanded, some coefficients corrected, version to appear in PR
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