2,070 research outputs found

    Venera-11 and Venera 12: Preliminary estimates for the wind speed and turbulence in the atmosphere of Venus

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    The methods and results of measurements for wind speed and atmospheric turbulence in the clouds of Venus are described, and compared with earlier results. The distribution of wind speed obtained from the data of Venera 12 is in good conformity with the data of the preceding Venera and Pioneer probes, indicating the existence of a constant and powerful zonal movement of the troposphere

    Discrimination between two mechanisms of surface-scattering in a single-mode waveguide

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    Transport properties of a single-mode waveguide with rough boundary are studied by discrimination between two mechanisms of surface scattering, the amplitude and square-gradient ones. Although these mechanisms are generically mixed, we show that for some profiles they can separately operate within non-overlapping intervals of wave numbers of scattering waves. This effect may be important in realistic situations due to inevitable long-range correlations in scattering profiles.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    The 35S U5 snRNP is generated from the activated spliceosome during In vitro splicing

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    Primary gene transcripts of eukaryotes contain introns, which are removed during processing by splicing machinery. Biochemical studies In vitro have identified a specific pathway in which introns are recognised and spliced out. This occurs by progressive formation of spliceosomal complexes designated as E, A, B, and C. The composition and structure of these spliceosomal conformations have been characterised in many detail. In contrast, transitions between the complexes and the intermediates of these reactions are currently less clear. We have previously isolated a novel 35S U5 snRNP from HeLa nuclear extracts. The protein composition of this particle differed from the canonical 20S U5 snRNPs but was remarkably similar to the activated B* spliceosomes. Based on this observation we have proposed a hypothesis that 35S U5 snRNPs represent a dissociation product of the spliceosome after both transesterification reactions are completed. Here we provide experimental evidence that 35S U5 snRNPs are generated from the activated B* spliceosomes during In vitro splicing

    Sparse {Fourier Transform} by Traversing {Cooley-Tukey FFT} Computation Graphs

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    Computing the dominant Fourier coefficients of a vector is a common task in many fields, such as signal processing, learning theory, and computational complexity. In the Sparse Fast Fourier Transform (Sparse FFT) problem, one is given oracle access to a dd-dimensional vector xx of size NN, and is asked to compute the best kk-term approximation of its Discrete Fourier Transform, quickly and using few samples of the input vector xx. While the sample complexity of this problem is quite well understood, all previous approaches either suffer from an exponential dependence of runtime on the dimension dd or can only tolerate a trivial amount of noise. This is in sharp contrast with the classical FFT algorithm of Cooley and Tukey, which is stable and completely insensitive to the dimension of the input vector: its runtime is O(NlogN)O(N\log N) in any dimension dd. In this work, we introduce a new high-dimensional Sparse FFT toolkit and use it to obtain new algorithms, both on the exact, as well as in the case of bounded 2\ell_2 noise. This toolkit includes i) a new strategy for exploring a pruned FFT computation tree that reduces the cost of filtering, ii) new structural properties of adaptive aliasing filters recently introduced by Kapralov, Velingker and Zandieh'SODA'19, and iii) a novel lazy estimation argument, suited to reducing the cost of estimation in FFT tree-traversal approaches. Our robust algorithm can be viewed as a highly optimized sparse, stable extension of the Cooley-Tukey FFT algorithm. Finally, we explain the barriers we have faced by proving a conditional quadratic lower bound on the running time of the well-studied non-equispaced Fourier transform problem. This resolves a natural and frequently asked question in computational Fourier transforms. Lastly, we provide a preliminary experimental evaluation comparing the runtime of our algorithm to FFTW and SFFT 2.0

    Wind regime peculiarities in the lower thermosphere in the winter of 1983/84

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    Temporal variations of prevailing winds at 90 to 100 km obtained from measurements carried out in winter 1983 to 1984 at three sites in the USSR and two sites in East Germany are reported. These variations are compared with those of the thermal stratospheric regime. Measurements were carried out using the drifts D2 method (meteor wind radar) and the D1 method (ionospheric drifts). Temporal variations of zonal and meridional prevailing wind components for all the sites are given. Also presented are zonal wind data obtained using the partial reflection wind radar. Wind velocity values were obtained by averaging data recorded at between 105 and 91 km altitude. Wind velocity data averaged in such a way can be related to about the same height interval to which the data obtained by the meteor radar and ionospheric methods at other sites, i.e., the mean height of the meteor zone (about 95 km). The results presented show that there are significant fluctuations about the seasonal course of both zonal and meridional prevailing winds
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