815 research outputs found
On the importance of nonlinear modeling in computer performance prediction
Computers are nonlinear dynamical systems that exhibit complex and sometimes
even chaotic behavior. The models used in the computer systems community,
however, are linear. This paper is an exploration of that disconnect: when
linear models are adequate for predicting computer performance and when they
are not. Specifically, we build linear and nonlinear models of the processor
load of an Intel i7-based computer as it executes a range of different
programs. We then use those models to predict the processor loads forward in
time and compare those forecasts to the true continuations of the time seriesComment: Appeared in "Proceedings of the 12th International Symposium on
Intelligent Data Analysis
A Review on the Evolving Roles of MiRNA-Based Technologies in Diagnosing and Treating Heart Failure
MiRNA-regulated processes are pivotal in cardiovascular homeostasis and disease. These short non-coding RNAs have ideal properties that could be utilized as potential biomarkers; moreover, their functions as post-transcriptional regulators of mRNA make them interesting therapeutic targets. In this review, we summarize the current state of miRNA-based biomarkers in a variety of diseases leading to heart failure, as well as provide an outlook on developing miRNA-based therapies in the heart failure field
Spatially resolved XMM-Newton analysis and a model of the nonthermal emission of MSH 15-52
We present an X-ray analysis and a model of the nonthermal emission of the
pulsar wind nebula (PWN) MSH15-52. We analyzed XMM-Newton data to obtain the
spatially resolved spectral parameters around the pulsar PSRB1509-58. A
steepening of the fitted power-law spectra and decrease in the surface
brightness is observed with increasing distance from the pulsar. In the second
part of this paper, we introduce a model for the nonthermal emission, based on
assuming the ideal magnetohydrodynamic limit. This model is used to constrain
the parameters of the termination shock and the bulk velocity of the leptons in
the PWN. Our model is able to reproduce the spatial variation of the X-ray
spectra. The parameter ranges that we found agree well with the parameter
estimates found by other authors with different approaches. In the last part of
this paper, we calculate the inverse Compton emission from our model and
compare it to the emission detected with the H.E.S.S. telescope system. Our
model is able to reproduce the flux level observed with H.E.S.S., but not the
spectral shape of the observed TeV {\gamma}-ray emission.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 9 pages, 15 figure
Spatially resolved X-ray spectroscopy and modeling of the nonthermal emission of the PWN in G0.9+0.1
We performed a spatially resolved spectral X-ray study of the pulsar wind
nebula (PWN) in the supernova remnant G0.9+0.1. Furthermore we modeled its
nonthermal emission in the X-ray and very high energy (VHE, E > 100 GeV)
gamma-ray regime. Using Chandra ACIS-S3 data, we investigated the east-west
dependence of the spectral properties of G0.9+0.1 by calculating hardness
ratios. We analyzed the EPIC-MOS and EPIC-pn data of two on-axis observations
of the XMM-Newton telescope and extracted spectra of four annulus-shaped
regions, centered on the region of brightest emission of the source. A radially
symmetric leptonic model was applied in order to reproduce the observed X-ray
emission of the inner part of the PWN. Using the optimized model parameter
values obtained from the X-ray analysis, we then compared the modeled inverse
Compton (IC) radiation with the published H.E.S.S. gamma-ray data. The spectral
index within the four annuli increases with growing distance to the pulsar,
whereas the surface brightness drops. With the adopted model we are able to
reproduce the characteristics of the X-ray spectra. The model results for the
VHE gamma radiation, however, strongly deviate from the H.E.S.S. data.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Nonlinear dynamics of giant resonances in atomic nuclei
The dynamics of monopole giant resonances in nuclei is analyzed in the
time-dependent relativistic mean-field model. The phase spaces of isoscalar and
isovector collective oscillations are reconstructed from the time-series of
dynamical variables that characterize the proton and neutron density
distributions. The analysis of the resulting recurrence plots and correlation
dimensions indicate regular motion for the isoscalar mode, and chaotic dynamics
for the isovector oscillations. Information-theoretic functionals identify and
quantify the nonlinear dynamics of giant resonances in quantum systems that
have spatial as well as temporal structure.Comment: 24 pages, RevTeX, 15 PS figures, submitted Phys. Rev.
Estimating good discrete partitions from observed data: symbolic false nearest neighbors
A symbolic analysis of observed time series data requires making a discrete
partition of a continuous state space containing observations of the dynamics.
A particular kind of partition, called ``generating'', preserves all dynamical
information of a deterministic map in the symbolic representation, but such
partitions are not obvious beyond one dimension, and existing methods to find
them require significant knowledge of the dynamical evolution operator or the
spectrum of unstable periodic orbits. We introduce a statistic and algorithm to
refine empirical partitions for symbolic state reconstruction. This method
optimizes an essential property of a generating partition: avoiding topological
degeneracies. It requires only the observed time series and is sensible even in
the presence of noise when no truly generating partition is possible. Because
of its resemblance to a geometrical statistic frequently used for
reconstructing valid time-delay embeddings, we call the algorithm ``symbolic
false nearest neighbors''
Signatures of high energy protons in pulsar winds
The resonant cyclotron absorption model is very successful in describing
particle acceleration in plerions. A sensible prediction of this model is the
presence of a substantial amount of relativistic protons in pulsar winds.
Although difficult to detect, these protons may show up through their
interactions either with the photons in the plerion environment or with the
thermal gas in the supernova ejecta. Inelastic proton-proton (p-p) collisions
are expected to be very effective in young objects, resulting in a copious
production of neutral and charged pions. Charged pions produced during the
first few hundred years after the supernova explosion may have time to decay
into muons, whose subsequent decay may provide an additional source of
electrons and positrons in these nebulae, that sums up to the pulsar input.
These secondary leptons evolve just as the pairs in the pulsar wind, and
signatures of their presence could be found, in principle, even in the
synchrotron spectrum of older objects. p-p collisions may remain fairly
efficient even in moderately old objects resulting in the production of TeV
gamma-rays and neutrinos. We apply our calculations to the case of the Crab
Nebula, the best studied plerion insofar, and find that existing data already
allow to infer interesting constraints on the physical properties of the Crab
pulsar wind.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, accepted for pubblication in A&
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