9,296 research outputs found
First LHCb Results from 2009 LHC Run
By the end of 2009, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) provided a short run of
pp collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of . The LHCb
Experiment has taken its first collision data with the aim to finalize the
commissioning of the detector and perform the spatial and time alignments. This
paper presents a collection of preliminary results of the LHCb detector
obtained with the data acquired in this first LHC run. A brief outlook of the
physics expected with the first data in 2010 at 7 TeV centre-of-mass energy is
also presented
A neural network for controlling the configuration of frame structure with elastic members
A neural network for controlling the configuration of frame structure with elastic members is proposed. In the present network, the structure is modeled not by using the relative angles of the members but by using the distances between the joint locations alone. The relationship between the environment and the joints is also defined by their mutual distances. The analog neural network attains the reaching motion of the manipulator as a minimization problem of the energy constructed by the distances between the joints, the target, and the obstacles. The network can generate not only the final but also the transient configurations and the trajectory. This framework with flexibility and parallelism is very suitable for controlling the Space Telerobotic systems with many degrees of freedom
Observational Report on the Classical Nova KT Eridani
A report on the spectroscopic and multi-color photometric observations of
high galactic latitude classical nova KT Eridani (Nova Eridani 2009) is
presented. After 12.2 days from maximum light, broad and prominent emission
lines of Balmer series, He I, He II, N II, N III and O I can be seen on the
spectra. The FWHM of H line yields an expansion velocity of
approximately 3400 km s. After 279.4 days from maximum light, we can see
prominent emission lines of He II and [O III] on the spectrum. Among them, [O
III] (4959, 5007) lines show multiple peaks. From the obtained light curve, KT
Eri is classified to be a very fast nova, with a decline rate by two magnitude
of days and three of days. We tried to estimate
the absolute magnitude () using the Maximum Magnitude versus Rate of
Decline relationship and distance of KT Eri. The calculated is
approximately -9. Accordingly, the distance and galactic height are
approximately 7 kpc and 4 kpc, respectively. Hence, KT Eri is concluded to be
located outside of the galactic disk.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
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