704 research outputs found
GRAPE-5: A Special-Purpose Computer for N-body Simulation
We have developed a special-purpose computer for gravitational many-body
simulations, GRAPE-5. GRAPE-5 is the successor of GRAPE-3. Both consist of
eight custom pipeline chips (G5 chip and GRAPE chip). The difference between
GRAPE-5 and GRAPE-3 are: (1) The G5 chip contains two pipelines operating at 80
MHz, while the GRAPE chip had one at 20 MHz. Thus, the calculation speed of the
G5 chip and that of GRAPE-5 board are 8 times faster than that of GRAPE chip
and GRAPE-3 board. (2) The GRAPE-5 board adopted PCI bus as the interface to
the host computer instead of VME of GRAPE-3, resulting in the communication
speed one order of magnitude faster. (3) In addition to the pure 1/r potential,
the G5 chip can calculate forces with arbitrary cutoff functions, so that it
can be applied to Ewald or P^3M methods. (4) The pairwise force calculated on
GRAPE-5 is about 10 times more accurate than that on GRAPE-3. On one GRAPE-5
board, one timestep of 128k-body simulation with direct summation algorithm
takes 14 seconds. With Barnes-Hut tree algorithm (theta = 0.75), one timestep
of 10^6-body simulation can be done in 16 seconds.Comment: 19 pages, 24 Postscript figures, 3 tables, Latex, submitted to
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japa
Recent progress in silica aerogel Cherenkov radiator
In this paper, we present recent progress in the development of hydrophobic
silica aerogel as a Cherenkov radiator. In addition to the conventional method,
the recently developed pin-drying method for producing high-refractive-index
aerogels with high transparency was studied in detail. Optical qualities and
large tile handling for crack-free aerogels were investigated. Sufficient
photons were detected from high-performance aerogels in a beam test.Comment: Proceedings of 2nd International Conference on Technology and
Instrumentation in Particle Physics (TIPP 2011), to be published in Physics
Procedia, 8 pages, 7 figure
The Effects of Glycine on Subjective Daytime Performance in Partially Sleep-Restricted Healthy Volunteers
Approximately 30% of the general population suffers from insomnia. Given that insomnia causes many problems, amelioration of the symptoms is crucial. Recently, we found that a non-essential amino acid, glycine subjectively and objectively improves sleep quality in humans who have difficulty sleeping. We evaluated the effects of glycine on daytime sleepiness, fatigue, and performances in sleep-restricted healthy subjects. Sleep was restricted to 25% less than the usual sleep time for three consecutive nights. Before bedtime, 3 g of glycine or placebo were ingested, sleepiness, and fatigue were evaluated using the visual analog scale (VAS) and a questionnaire, and performance were estimated by personal computer (PC) performance test program on the following day. In subjects given glycine, the VAS data showed a significant reduction in fatigue and a tendency toward reduced sleepiness. These observations were also found via the questionnaire, indicating that glycine improves daytime sleepiness and fatigue induced by acute sleep restriction. PC performance test revealed significant improvement in psychomotor vigilance test. We also measured plasma melatonin and the expression of circadian-modulated genes expression in the rat suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) to evaluate the effects of glycine on circadian rhythms. Glycine did not show significant effects on plasma melatonin concentrations during either the dark or light period. Moreover, the expression levels of clock genes such as Bmal1 and Per2 remained unchanged. However, we observed a glycine-induced increase in the neuropeptides arginine vasopressin and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide in the light period. Although no alterations in the circadian clock itself were observed, our results indicate that glycine modulated SCN function. Thus, glycine modulates certain neuropeptides in the SCN and this phenomenon may indirectly contribute to improving the occasional sleepiness and fatigue induced by sleep restriction
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