261 research outputs found
The use of Kolmogorov-Smirnov test in event-by-event analysis
We propose to use the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test to uncover non-statistical
differences between events created in heavy ion collisions within the same
centrality class. The advantage of the method over other approaches which are
currently in use, is that it is sensitive to any difference between the events
and is not restricted to simple moments of the distribution of hadrons. The
particular application examined here is the identification of the fireball
decay due to spinodal fragmentation and/or sudden rise of the bulk viscosity.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures - To appear in the conference proceedings for
Quark Matter 2009, March 30 - April 4, Knoxville, Tennessee v2 one typo
corrected and references update
Effect of the Non-Stationarity of Rainfall Events on the Design of Hydraulic Structures for Runoff Management and Its Applications to a Case Study at Gordo Creek Watershed in Cartagena de Indias, Colombia
[EN] The 24-h maximum rainfall (P24h-max) observations recorded at the synoptic weather station of Rafael Núñez airport (Cartagena de Indias, Colombia) were analyzed, and a linear increasing trend over time was identified. It was also noticed that the occurrence of the rainfall value (over the years of record) for a return period of 10 years under stationary conditions (148.1 mm) increased, which evidences a change in rainfall patterns. In these cases, the typical stationary frequency analysis is unable to capture such a change. So, in order to further evaluate rainfall observations, frequency analyses of P24h-max for stationary and non-stationary conditions were carried out (by using the generalized extreme value distribution). The goodness-of-fit test of Akaike Information Criterion (AIC), with values of 753.3721 and 747.5103 for stationary and non-stationary conditions respectively, showed that the latter best depicts the increasing rainfall pattern. Values of rainfall were later estimated for different return periods (2, 5, 10, 25, 50, and 100 years) to quantify the increase (non-stationary versus stationary condition), which ranged 6% to 12% for return periods from 5 years to 100 years, and 44% for a 2-year return period. The effect of these findings were tested in the Gordo creek watershed by first calculating the resulting direct surface runoff (DSR) for various return periods, and then modeling the hydraulic behavior of the downstream area (composed of a 178.5-m creek¿s reach and an existing box-culvert located at the watershed outlet) that undergoes flooding events every year. The resulting DSR increase oscillated between 8% and 19% for return periods from 5 to 100 years, and 77% for a 2-year return period when the non-stationary and stationary scenarios were compared. The results of this study shed light upon to the precautions that designers should take when selecting a design, based upon rainfall observed, as it may result in an underestimation of both the direct surface runoff and the size of the hydraulic structures for runoff and flood management throughout the city.Gonzalez-Alvarez, A.; Coronado-Hernández, OE.; Fuertes-Miquel, VS.; Ramos, HM. (2018). Effect of the Non-Stationarity of Rainfall Events on the Design of Hydraulic Structures for Runoff Management and Its Applications to a Case Study at Gordo Creek Watershed in Cartagena de Indias, Colombia. Fluids. 3(2):1-19. https://doi.org/10.3390/fluids3020027S1193
Determination of Ceres mass based on the most gravitationally efficient close encounters
Here is presented recalculated value of the mass of Ceres, based on explicit
tracking of its gravitational influence on orbits evolution of 21 selected
asteroids during their mutual close encounters (CE). It was applied a new
modified method (MM) for mass determination, based on the connecting of
pre-encounter observations to the orbit determined from post-encounter ones.
The calculated weighted mean value of Ceres mass, based on modified method, is
while standard procedure (SM) provided
result of . We found that correlation between
individual estimated masses based on modified and standard method is 0.78,
which confirms reliability of using modified method.Comment: MNRAS:Accepted 2011 September 28. Received 2011 September 28; in
original form 2011 January 2
Change of Scaling and Appearance of Scale-Free Size Distribution in Aggregation Kinetics by Additive Rules
The idealized general model of aggregate growth is considered on the basis of
the simple additive rules that correspond to one-step aggregation process. The
two idealized cases were analytically investigated and simulated by Monte Carlo
method in the Desktop Grid distributed computing environment to analyze
"pile-up" and "wall" cluster distributions in different aggregation scenarios.
Several aspects of aggregation kinetics (change of scaling, change of size
distribution type, and appearance of scale-free size distribution) driven by
"zero cluster size" boundary condition were determined by analysis of evolving
cumulative distribution functions. The "pile-up" case with a \textit{minimum}
active surface (singularity) could imitate piling up aggregations of
dislocations, and the case with a \textit{maximum} active surface could imitate
arrangements of dislocations in walls. The change of scaling law (for pile-ups
and walls) and availability of scale-free distributions (for walls) were
analytically shown and confirmed by scaling, fitting, moment, and bootstrapping
analyses of simulated probability density and cumulative distribution
functions. The initial "singular" \textit{symmetric} distribution of pile-ups
evolves by the "infinite" diffusive scaling law and later it is replaced by the
other "semi-infinite" diffusive scaling law with \textit{asymmetric}
distribution of pile-ups. In contrast, the initial "singular"
\textit{symmetric} distributions of walls initially evolve by the diffusive
scaling law and later it is replaced by the other ballistic (linear) scaling
law with \textit{scale-free} exponential distributions without distinctive
peaks. The conclusion was made as to possible applications of such approach for
scaling, fitting, moment, and bootstrapping analyses of distributions in
simulated and experimental data.Comment: 37 pages, 16 figures, 1 table; accepted preprint version after
comments of reviewers, Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications
(2014
Color-Inclination Relation of the Classical Kuiper Belt Objects
We re-examine the correlation between the colors and the inclinations of the
Classical Kuiper Belt Objects (CKBOs) with an enlarged sample of optical
measurements. The correlation is strong (rho=-0.7) and highly significant (>8
sigma) in the range 0-34 deg. Nonetheless, the optical colors are independent
of inclination below ~12 deg, showing no evidence for a break at the reported
boundary between the so-called dynamically "hot" and "cold" populations near ~5
deg. The commonly accepted parity between the dynamically cold CKBOs and the
red CKBOs is observationally unsubstantiated, since the group of red CKBOs
extends to higher inclinations. Our data suggest, however, the existence of a
different color break. We find that the functional form of the
color-inclination relation is most satisfactorily described by a non-linear and
stepwise behavior with a color break at ~12 deg. Objects with inclinations >12
deg show bluish colors which are either weakly correlated with inclination or
are simply homogeneously blue, whereas objects with inclinations <12 deg are
homogeneously red.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in The
Astronomical Journal (2008 August 21
Identifying Near Earth Object Families
The study of asteroid families has provided tremendous insight into the
forces that sculpted the main belt and continue to drive the collisional and
dynamical evolution of asteroids. The identification of asteroid families
within the NEO population could provide a similar boon to studies of their
formation and interiors. In this study we examine the purported identification
of NEO families by Drummond (2000) and conclude that it is unlikely that they
are anything more than random fluctuations in the distribution of NEO
osculating orbital elements. We arrive at this conclusion after examining the
expected formation rate of NEO families, the identification of NEO groups in
synthetic populations that contain no genetically related NEOs, the orbital
evolution of the largest association identified by Drummond (2000), and the
decoherence of synthetic NEO families intended to reproduce the observed
members of the same association. These studies allowed us to identify a new
criterion that can be used to select real NEO families for further study in
future analyses, based on the ratio of the number of pairs and the size of
strings to the number of objects in an identified association.Comment: Accepted for publication in Icarus. 19 pages including 11 figure
Neptune Trojans and Plutinos: colors, sizes, dynamics, and their possible collisions
Neptune Trojans and Plutinos are two subpopulations of trans-Neptunian
objects located in the 1:1 and the 3:2 mean motion resonances with Neptune,
respectively, and therefore protected from close encounters with the planet.
However, the orbits of these two kinds of objects may cross very often,
allowing a higher collisional rate between them than with other kinds of
trans-Neptunian objects, and a consequent size distribution modification of the
two subpopulations.
Observational colors and absolute magnitudes of Neptune Trojans and Plutinos
show that i) there are no intrinsically bright (large) Plutinos at small
inclinations, ii) there is an apparent excess of blue and intrinsically faint
(small) Plutinos, and iii) Neptune Trojans possess the same blue colors as
Plutinos within the same (estimated) size range do.
For the present subpopulations we analyzed the most favorable conditions for
close encounters/collisions and address any link there could be between those
encounters and the sizes and/or colors of Plutinos and Neptune Trojans. We also
performed a simultaneous numerical simulation of the outer Solar System over 1
Gyr for all these bodies in order to estimate their collisional rate.
We conclude that orbital overlap between Neptune Trojans and Plutinos is
favored for Plutinos with large libration amplitudes, high eccentricities, and
small inclinations. Additionally, with the assumption that the collisions can
be disruptive creating smaller objects not necessarily with similar colors, the
present high concentration of small Plutinos with small inclinations can thus
be a consequence of a collisional interaction with Neptune Trojans and such
hypothesis should be further analyzed.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in A&
Extreme value statistics from the Real Space Renormalization Group: Brownian Motion, Bessel Processes and Continuous Time Random Walks
We use the Real Space Renormalization Group (RSRG) method to study extreme
value statistics for a variety of Brownian motions, free or constrained such as
the Brownian bridge, excursion, meander and reflected bridge, recovering some
standard results, and extending others. We apply the same method to compute the
distribution of extrema of Bessel processes. We briefly show how the continuous
time random walk (CTRW) corresponds to a non standard fixed point of the RSRG
transformation.Comment: 24 pages, 5 figure
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