387 research outputs found
Errors in Measurement of Microwave Interferograms Using Antenna Matrix
New antenna matrices for both scalar and vector measurement of microwave interferograms for the frequency 2.45 GHz were developed and used for an analysis of sources of measurement errors. Influence of mutual coupling between individual antennas in an antenna matrix on a measurement of microwave interferograms, particularly on a measurement of interferogram minimum values, was studied. Simulations and measurements of interferograms, proposal of a new calibration procedure and correction method are presented. Influence of differences in radiation patterns of individual antennas of an antenna matrix on a measurement of microwave interferograms was studied as well
Application of biomimetics in x-ray optics
© 2017 COPYRIGHT SPIE. Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only. The principles of biomimetics were successfully applied in X ray optics in the past and recently, e.g. in Lobster-Eye optical systems. However, the recent growing knowledge of sea vision, especially of peculiar mirror eyes of scallops, crustaceans, and deep sea fishes, makes it possible to consider other such applications. One of the most important discoveries is finding of mirror eyes in deep sea fish Dolichopteryx longipes based on large large numbers of very small mirror plates organized in specific positions. This arrangement may even include principles of active optics. We report on ongoing study with focus on understanding of very specific mirror eyes of sea animals and how they may help us to design and develop special optics for scientific applications. We study the ways these mirror eyes work, what are the advantages of these peculiar eye arrangements, and whether these optics can be used in advanced devices, e. g. X-ray optics. We will briefly present and discuss the preliminary results
Biomimetics and astronomical X-ray optics
Some sea and water animals have strange mirror eyes which have (or might have) potential application in science and technology in general and in X-ray astrophysics in particular. While the principles of mirror eyes of decapods (lobsters, crayfishes) are already applied in space and ground-based imaging experiments, the mirror eyes of specific fishes are still very little investigated
Complete solution of a constrained tropical optimization problem with application to location analysis
We present a multidimensional optimization problem that is formulated and
solved in the tropical mathematics setting. The problem consists of minimizing
a nonlinear objective function defined on vectors over an idempotent semifield
by means of a conjugate transposition operator, subject to constraints in the
form of linear vector inequalities. A complete direct solution to the problem
under fairly general assumptions is given in a compact vector form suitable for
both further analysis and practical implementation. We apply the result to
solve a multidimensional minimax single facility location problem with
Chebyshev distance and with inequality constraints imposed on the feasible
location area.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figure
High and low states of the system AM Herculis
Context: We investigate the distribution of optically high and low states of
the system AM Herculis (AM Her).
Aims: We determine the state duty cycles, and their relationships with the
mass transfer process and binary orbital evolution of the system.
Methods: We make use of the photographic plate archive of the Harvard College
Observatory between 1890 and 1953 and visual observations collected by the
American Association of Variable Star Observers between 1978 and 2005. We
determine the statistical probability of the two states, their distribution and
recurrence behaviors.
Results: We find that the fractional high state duty cycle of the system AM
Her is 63%. The data show no preference of timescales on which high or low
states occur. However, there appears to be a pattern of long and short duty
cycle alternation, suggesting that the state transitions retain memories. We
assess models for the high/low states for polars (AM Her type systems). We
propose that the white-dwarf magnetic field plays a key role in regulating the
mass transfer rate and hence the high/low brightness states, due to variations
in the magnetic-field configuration in the system.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Constraining the period of the ringed secondary companion to the young star J1407 with photographic plates
Context. The 16 Myr old star 1SWASP J140747.93-394542.6 (V1400 Cen) underwent
a series of complex eclipses in May 2007, interpreted as the transit of a giant
Hill sphere filling debris ring system around a secondary companion, J1407b. No
other eclipses have since been detected, although other measurements have
constrained but not uniquely determined the orbital period of J1407b. Finding
another eclipse towards J1407 will help determine the orbital period of the
system, the geometry of the proposed ring system and enable planning of further
observations to characterize the material within these putative rings. Aims. We
carry out a search for other eclipses in photometric data of J1407 with the aim
of constraining the orbital period of J1407b. Methods. We present photometry
from archival photographic plates from the Harvard DASCH survey, and Bamberg
and Sonneberg Observatories, in order to place additional constraints on the
orbital period of J1407b by searching for other dimming and eclipse events.
Using a visual inspection of all 387 plates and a period-folding algorithm we
performed a search for other eclipses in these data sets. Results. We find no
other deep eclipses in the data spanning from 1890 to 1990, nor in recent
time-series photometry from 2012-2018. Conclusions. We rule out a large
fraction of putative orbital periods for J1407b from 5 to 20 years. These
limits are still marginally consistent with a large Hill sphere filling ring
system surrounding a brown dwarf companion in a bound elliptical orbit about
J1407. Issues with the stability of any rings combined with the lack of
detection of another eclipse, suggests that J1407b may not be bound to J1407.Comment: 8 pages, 3 tables, 4 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. LaTeX
files of the paper, scripts for the figures, and a minimal working FPA can be
found under https://github.com/robinmentel/Constraining-Period
Observation of GRB 030131 with the INTEGRAL satellite
A long Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB) was detected with the instruments on board the
INTEGRAL satellite on January 31 2003. Although most of the GRB, which lasted
150 seconds, occurred during a satellite slew, the automatic software of
the INTEGRAL Burst Alert System was able to detect it in near-real time. Here
we report the results obtained with the IBIS instrument, which detected GRB
030131 in the 15 keV - 200 keV energy range, and ESO/VLT observations of its
optical transient. The burst displays a complex time profile with numerous
peaks. The peak spectrum can be described by a single power law with photon
index 1.7 and has a flux of 2 photons cm s in
the 20-200 keV energy band. The high sensitivity of IBIS has made it possible
for the first time to perform detailed time-resolved spectroscopy of a GRB with
a fluence of 7 erg cm (20-200 keV).Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 5 pages, 4 figures, late
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