220,603 research outputs found
Enhanced off-center stellar tidal disruptions by supermassive black holes in merging galaxies
Off-center stellar tidal disruption flares have been suggested to be a
powerful probe of recoiling supermassive black holes (SMBHs) out of galactic
centers due to anisotropic gravitational wave radiations. However, off-center
tidal flares can also be produced by SMBHs in merging galaxies. In this paper,
we computed the tidal flare rates by dual SMBHs in two merging galaxies before
the SMBHs become self-gravitationally bounded. We employ an analytical model to
calculate the tidal loss-cone feeding rates for both SMBHs, taking into account
two-body relaxation of stars, tidal perturbations by the companion galaxy, and
chaotic stellar orbits in triaxial gravitational potential. We show that for
typical SMBHs with mass 10^7 M_\sun, the loss-cone feeding rates are enhanced
by mergers up to \Gamma ~ 10^{-2} yr^{-1}, about two order of magnitude higher
than those by single SMBHs in isolated galaxies and about four orders of
magnitude higher than those by recoiling SMBHs. The enhancements are mainly due
to tidal perturbations by the companion galaxy. We suggest that off-center
tidal flares are overwhelmed by those from merging galaxies, making the
identification of recoiling SMBHs challenging. Based on the calculated rates,
we estimate the relative contributions of tidal flare events by single, binary,
and dual SMBH systems during cosmic time. Our calculations show that the
off-center tidal disruption flares by un-bound SMBHs in merging galaxies
contribute a fraction comparable to that by single SMBHs in isolated galaxies.
We conclude that off-center tidal disruptions are powerful tracers of the
merging history of galaxies and SMBHs.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures; Typos are corrected to match the published
version in Ap
Some university students are more equal than others: Evidence from England
This paper estimates the efficiency of students in English universities using Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) and a new dataset which is able to capture the behaviour of university students. Taking as the output the classification of a university degree, we use as inputs teaching hours and quality, entry qualifications, and the effort level. We find that university students differ in terms of the efficiency with which they use inputs in producing good degrees. In a second stage, we explore the determinants of the efficiency of university students using a truncated regression model. Higher student efficiency is found to be positively and significantly related to university size, and negatively and significantly related to the proportion of part-time students and the number of academic staff. The quality of a university has no significant impact on the efficiency of its students once endogeneity of university quality is controlled for.
Quark confinement and color transparency in a gauge-invariant formulation of QCD
We examine a nonlocal interaction that results from expressing the QCD
Hamiltonian entirely in terms of gauge-invariant quark and gluon fields. The
interaction couples one quark color-charge density to another, much as electric
charge densities are coupled to each other by the Coulomb interaction in QED.
In QCD, this nonlocal interaction also couples quark color-charge densities to
gluonic color. We show how the leading part of the interaction between quark
color-charge densities vanishes when the participating quarks are in a color
singlet configuration, and that, for singlet configurations, the residual
interaction weakens as the size of a packet of quarks shrinks. Because of this
effect, color-singlet packets of quarks should experience final state
interactions that increase in strength as these packets expand in size. For the
case of an SU(2) model of QCD based on the {\em ansatz} that the
gauge-invariant gauge field is a hedgehog configuration, we show how the
infinite series that represents the nonlocal interaction between quark
color-charge densities can be evaluated nonperturbatively, without expanding it
term-by-term. We discuss the implications of this model for QCD with SU(3)
color and a gauge-invariant gauge field determined by QCD dynamics.Comment: Revtex, 23 pages; contains additional references with brief comments
on sam
A note on modular forms and generalized anomaly cancellation formulas
By studying modular invariance properties of some characteristic forms, we
prove some new anomaly cancellation formulas which generalize the Han-Zhang and
Han-Liu-Zhang anomaly cancellation formula
Privacy-Preserving Outsourcing of Large-Scale Nonlinear Programming to the Cloud
The increasing massive data generated by various sources has given birth to
big data analytics. Solving large-scale nonlinear programming problems (NLPs)
is one important big data analytics task that has applications in many domains
such as transport and logistics. However, NLPs are usually too computationally
expensive for resource-constrained users. Fortunately, cloud computing provides
an alternative and economical service for resource-constrained users to
outsource their computation tasks to the cloud. However, one major concern with
outsourcing NLPs is the leakage of user's private information contained in NLP
formulations and results. Although much work has been done on
privacy-preserving outsourcing of computation tasks, little attention has been
paid to NLPs. In this paper, we for the first time investigate secure
outsourcing of general large-scale NLPs with nonlinear constraints. A secure
and efficient transformation scheme at the user side is proposed to protect
user's private information; at the cloud side, generalized reduced gradient
method is applied to effectively solve the transformed large-scale NLPs. The
proposed protocol is implemented on a cloud computing testbed. Experimental
evaluations demonstrate that significant time can be saved for users and the
proposed mechanism has the potential for practical use.Comment: Ang Li and Wei Du equally contributed to this work. This work was
done when Wei Du was at the University of Arkansas. 2018 EAI International
Conference on Security and Privacy in Communication Networks (SecureComm
Towards Long-endurance Flight: Design and Implementation of a Variable-pitch Gasoline-engine Quadrotor
Majority of today's fixed-pitch, electric-power quadrotors have short flight
endurance ( 1 hour) which greatly limits their applications. This paper
presents a design methodology for the construction of a long-endurance
quadrotor using variable-pitch rotors and a gasoline-engine. The methodology
consists of three aspects. Firstly, the rotor blades and gasoline engine are
selected as a pair, so that sufficient lift can be comfortably provided by the
engine. Secondly, drivetrain and airframe are designed. Major challenges
include airframe vibration minimization and power transmission from one engine
to four rotors while keeping alternate rotors contra-rotating. Lastly, a PD
controller is tuned to facilitate preliminary flight tests. The methodology has
been verified by the construction and successful flight of our gasoline
quadrotor prototype, which is designed to have a flight time of 2 to 3 hours
and a maximum take-off weight of 10 kg.Comment: 6 page
A robust method for measurement of fluctuation parallel wavenumber in laboratory plasmas
Measuring the parallel wavenumber is fundamental for the experimental characterization of electrostatic instabilities. It becomes particularly important in toroidal geometry, where spatial inhomogeneities and curvature can excite both drift instabilities, whose wavenumber parallel to the magnetic field is finite, and interchange instabilities, which typically have vanishing parallel wavenumber. We demonstrate that multipoint measurements can provide a robust method for the discrimination between the two cases
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