3,469 research outputs found
Predicted FeII Emission-Line Strengths from Active Galactic Nuclei
We present theoretical FeII emission line strengths for physical conditions
typical of Active Galactic Nuclei with Broad-Line Regions. The FeII line
strengths were computed with a precise treatment of radiative transfer using
extensive and accurate atomic data from the Iron Project. Excitation mechanisms
for the FeII emission included continuum fluorescence, collisional excitation,
self-fluorescence amoung the FeII transitions, and fluorescent excitation by
Lyman-alpha and Lyman-beta. A large FeII atomic model consisting of 827 fine
structure levels (including states to E ~ 15 eV) was used to predict fluxes for
approximately 23,000 FeII transitions, covering most of the UV, optical, and IR
wavelengths of astrophysical interest. Spectral synthesis for wavelengths from
1600 Angstroms to 1.2 microns is presented. Applications of present theoretical
templates to the analysis of observations are described. In particular, we
discuss recent observations of near-IR FeII lines in the 8500 Angstrom -- 1
micron region which are predicted by the Lyman-alpha fluorescence mechanism. We
also compare our UV spectral synthesis with an empirical iron template for the
prototypical, narrow-line Seyfert galaxy I Zw 1. The theoretical FeII template
presented in this work should also applicable to a variety of objects with FeII
spectra formed under similar excitation conditions, such as supernovae and
symbiotic stars.Comment: 33 pages, 15 postscript figure
Temperature-mediated transition from Dyakonov-Tamm surface waves to surface-plasmon-polariton waves
The effect of changing the temperature on the propagation of electromagnetic surface waves (ESWs), guided by the planar interface of a homogeneous isotropic temperature-sensitive material (namely, InSb) and a temperature-insensitive structurally chiral material (SCM) was numerically investigated in the terahertz frequency regime. As the temperature rises, InSb transforms from a dissipative dielectric material to a \blue{dissipative} plasmonic material. Correspondingly, the ESWs transmute from Dyakonov--Tamm surface waves into surface--plasmon--polariton waves. The effects of the temperature change are clearly observed in the phase speeds, propagation distances, angular existence domains, multiplicity, and spatial profiles of energy flow of the ESWs. Remarkably large propagation distances can be achieved; in such instances the energy of an ESW is confined almost entirely within the SCM. For certain propagation directions, simultaneous excitation of two ESWs with (i) the same phase speeds but different propagation distances or (ii) the same propagation distances but different phase speeds are also indicated by our results
High-level feature detection from video in TRECVid: a 5-year retrospective of achievements
Successful and effective content-based access to digital
video requires fast, accurate and scalable methods to determine the video content automatically. A variety of contemporary approaches to this rely on text taken from speech within the video, or on matching one video frame against others using low-level characteristics like
colour, texture, or shapes, or on determining and matching objects appearing within the video. Possibly the most important technique, however, is one which determines the presence or absence of a high-level or semantic feature, within a video clip or shot. By utilizing dozens, hundreds or even thousands of such semantic features we can support many kinds of content-based video navigation. Critically however, this depends on being able to determine whether each feature is or is not present in a video clip.
The last 5 years have seen much progress in the development of techniques to determine the presence of semantic features within video. This progress can be tracked in the annual TRECVid benchmarking activity where dozens of research groups measure the effectiveness of their techniques on common data and using an open, metrics-based approach. In this chapter we summarise the work
done on the TRECVid high-level feature task, showing the
progress made year-on-year. This provides a fairly comprehensive statement on where the state-of-the-art is regarding this important task, not just for one research group or for one approach, but across the spectrum. We then use this past and on-going work as a basis for highlighting the trends that are emerging in this area, and the questions which remain to be addressed before we can
achieve large-scale, fast and reliable high-level feature detection on video
Polarization--universal rejection filtering by ambichiral structures made of indefinite dielectric--magnetic materials
An ambichiral structure comprising sheets of an anisotropic dielectric
material rejects normally incident plane waves of one circular polarization
(CP) state but not of the other CP state, in its fundamental Bragg regime.
However, if the same structure is made of an dielectric--magnetic material with
indefinite permittivity and permeability dyadics, it may function as a
polarization--universal rejection filter because two of the four planewave
components of the electromagnetic field phasors in each sheet are of the
positive--phase--velocity type and two are of the negative--phase--velocity
type.Comment: Cleaned citations in the tex
The Origin of Fe II Emission in AGN
We used a very large set of models of broad emission line (BEL) clouds in AGN
to investigate the formation of the observed Fe II emission lines. We show that
photoionized BEL clouds cannot produce both the observed shape and observed
equivalent width of the 2200-2800A Fe II UV bump unless there is considerable
velocity structure corresponding to a microturbulent velocity parameter v_turb
> 100 km/s for the LOC models used here. This could be either microturbulence
in gas that is confined by some phenomenon such as MHD waves, or a velocity
shear such as in the various models of winds flowing off the surfaces of
accretion disks. The alternative way that we can find to simultaneously match
both the observed shape and equivalent width of the Fe II UV bump is for the Fe
II emission to be the result of collisional excitation in a warm, dense gas.
Such gas would emit very few lines other than Fe II. However, since the
collisionally excited gas would constitute yet another component in an already
complicated picture of the BELR, we prefer the model involving turbulence. In
either model, the strength of Fe II emission relative to the emission lines of
other ions such as Mg II depends as much on other parameters (either v_turb or
the surface area of the collisionally excited gas) as it does on the iron
abundance. Therefore, the measurement of the iron abundance from the FeII
emission in quasars becomes a more difficult problem.Comment: 23 pages. Accepted by Ap
Geometric optics and instability for semi-classical Schrodinger equations
We prove some instability phenomena for semi-classical (linear or) nonlinear
Schrodinger equations. For some perturbations of the data, we show that for
very small times, we can neglect the Laplacian, and the mechanism is the same
as for the corresponding ordinary differential equation. Our approach allows
smaller perturbations of the data, where the instability occurs for times such
that the problem cannot be reduced to the study of an o.d.e.Comment: 22 pages. Corollary 1.7 adde
Diffusion in pores and its dependence on boundary conditions
We study the influence of the boundary conditions at the solid liquid
interface on diffusion in a confined fluid. Using an hydrodynamic approach, we
compute numerical estimates for the diffusion of a particle confined between
two planes. Partial slip is shown to significantly influence the diffusion
coefficient near a wall. Analytical expressions are derived in the low and high
confinement limits, and are in good agreement with numerical results. These
calculations indicate that diffusion of tagged particles could be used as a
sensitive probe of the solid-liquid boundary conditions.Comment: soumis \`a J.Phys. Cond. Matt. special issue on "Diffusion in
Liquids, Polymers, Biophysics and Chemical Dynamics
Linear superposition in nonlinear wave dynamics
We study nonlinear dispersive wave systems described by hyperbolic PDE's in
R^{d} and difference equations on the lattice Z^{d}. The systems involve two
small parameters: one is the ratio of the slow and the fast time scales, and
another one is the ratio of the small and the large space scales. We show that
a wide class of such systems, including nonlinear Schrodinger and Maxwell
equations, Fermi-Pasta-Ulam model and many other not completely integrable
systems, satisfy a superposition principle. The principle essentially states
that if a nonlinear evolution of a wave starts initially as a sum of generic
wavepackets (defined as almost monochromatic waves), then this wave with a high
accuracy remains a sum of separate wavepacket waves undergoing independent
nonlinear evolution. The time intervals for which the evolution is considered
are long enough to observe fully developed nonlinear phenomena for involved
wavepackets. In particular, our approach provides a simple justification for
numerically observed effect of almost non-interaction of solitons passing
through each other without any recourse to the complete integrability. Our
analysis does not rely on any ansatz or common asymptotic expansions with
respect to the two small parameters but it uses rather explicit and
constructive representation for solutions as functions of the initial data in
the form of functional analytic series.Comment: New introduction written, style changed, references added and typos
correcte
Improvements for imaging ceramics sintering in situ in ESEM
International audienceSintering of green samples of alumina produced by ice-templating was followed in situ in an environmental scanning electron microscope (ESEM) up to temperatures as high as 1375 degrees C. These alumina samples with well-defined architectures are of great interest in the field of materials science due to their high specific strength (especially in compression), low density and adaptable porosity. For the present study, they also have the advantage to exhibit an important topography, inducing interesting contrast when imaged in an ESEM. Improvements of the imaging conditions in the ESEM were essential to really follow the sintering process involving formation of necks between grains or shift of the centre of grains. This paper describes the improvements made and the results observed on the sintering process of alumina green samples processed by ice-templating
Hybrid-Entanglement in Continuous Variable Systems
Entanglement is one of the most fascinating features arising from
quantum-mechanics and of great importance for quantum information science. Of
particular interest are so-called hybrid-entangled states which have the
intriguing property that they contain entanglement between different degrees of
freedom (DOFs). However, most of the current continuous variable systems only
exploit one DOF and therefore do not involve such highly complex states. We
break this barrier and demonstrate that one can exploit squeezed cylindrically
polarized optical modes to generate continuous variable states exhibiting
entanglement between the spatial and polarization DOF. We show an experimental
realization of these novel kind of states by quantum squeezing an azimuthally
polarized mode with the help of a specially tailored photonic crystal fiber
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