14,812 research outputs found
Superconducting pipes and levitating magnets
Motivated by a beautiful demonstration of the Faraday's and Lenz's law in
which a small neodymium magnet falls slowly through a conducting
non-ferromagnetic tube, we consider the dynamics of a magnet falling through a
superconducting pipe. Unlike the case of normal conducting pipes, in which the
magnet quickly reaches the terminal velocity, inside a superconducting tube the
magnet falls freely. On the other hand, to enter the pipe the magnet must
overcome a large electromagnetic energy barrier. For sufficiently strong
magnets, the barrier is so large that the magnet will not be able to penetrate
it and will be suspended over the front edge. We calculate the work that must
done to force the magnet to enter a superconducting tube. The calculations show
that superconducting pipes are very efficient at screening magnetic fields. For
example, the magnetic field of a dipole at the center of a short pipe of radius
and length decays, in the axial direction, with a
characteristic length . The efficient screening of the
magnetic field might be useful for shielding highly sensitive superconducting
quantum interference devices, SQUIDs. Finally, the motion of the magnet through
a superconducting pipe is compared and contrasted to the flow of ions through a
trans-membrane channel
Fertility Levels, Trends and Differentials in Kenya: How Does the Own-children Method Add to Our Knowledge of the Transition?
The own-children method of fertility estimation tracks temporal changes in fertility patterns. We revisit the Kenyan fertility transition by applying the method to 1979, 1989 and 1999 censuses, and 1989, 1993, 1998 and 2003 Demographic and Health Surveys data. The method's ability to provide yearly fertility rates for periods preceding each data source adds enormous knowledge to fertility patterns. For Kenya, these trends go back through the 1960s. First, the method sheds additional light on the onset of the transition. Second, the trends highlight major differences in the onset and pace of fertility decline among regions and key sub-groups. Third, the rates for overlapping periods provide both internal and external validity checks that heighten confidence in the overall results. Last, it provides a rare opportunity to evaluate birth history fertility rates. Taken together, these estimates provide more detail than ever before regarding fertility patterns in Kenya
Stereo Computation for a Single Mixture Image
This paper proposes an original problem of \emph{stereo computation from a
single mixture image}-- a challenging problem that had not been researched
before. The goal is to separate (\ie, unmix) a single mixture image into two
constitute image layers, such that the two layers form a left-right stereo
image pair, from which a valid disparity map can be recovered. This is a
severely illposed problem, from one input image one effectively aims to recover
three (\ie, left image, right image and a disparity map). In this work we give
a novel deep-learning based solution, by jointly solving the two subtasks of
image layer separation as well as stereo matching. Training our deep net is a
simple task, as it does not need to have disparity maps. Extensive experiments
demonstrate the efficacy of our method.Comment: Accepted by European Conference on Computer Vision (ECCV) 201
A survey of spinning test particle orbits in Kerr spacetime
We investigate the dynamics of the Papapetrou equations in Kerr spacetime.
These equations provide a model for the motion of a relativistic spinning test
particle orbiting a rotating (Kerr) black hole. We perform a thorough parameter
space search for signs of chaotic dynamics by calculating the Lyapunov
exponents for a large variety of initial conditions. We find that the
Papapetrou equations admit many chaotic solutions, with the strongest chaos
occurring in the case of eccentric orbits with pericenters close to the limit
of stability against plunge into a maximally spinning Kerr black hole. Despite
the presence of these chaotic solutions, we show that physically realistic
solutions to the Papapetrou equations are not chaotic; in all cases, the
chaotic solutions either do not correspond to realistic astrophysical systems,
or involve a breakdown of the test-particle approximation leading to the
Papapetrou equations (or both). As a result, the gravitational radiation from
bodies spiraling into much more massive black holes (as detectable, for
example, by LISA, the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna) should not exhibit
any signs of chaos.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. D. Follow-up to gr-qc/0210042. Figures are
low-resolution in order to satisfy archive size constraints; a
high-resolution version is available at http://www.michaelhartl.com/papers
Dissecting interferon-induced transcriptional programs in human peripheral blood cells
Interferons are key modulators of the immune system, and are central to the control of many diseases. The response of immune cells to stimuli in complex populations is the product of direct and indirect effects, and of homotypic and heterotypic cell interactions. Dissecting the global transcriptional profiles of immune cell populations may provide insights into this regulatory interplay. The host transcriptional response may also be useful in discriminating between disease states, and in understanding pathophysiology. The transcriptional programs of cell populations in health therefore provide a paradigm for deconvoluting disease-associated gene expression profiles.We used human cDNA microarrays to (1) compare the gene expression programs in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) elicited by 6 major mediators of the immune response: interferons alpha, beta, omega and gamma, IL12 and TNFalpha; and (2) characterize the transcriptional responses of purified immune cell populations (CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, B cells, NK cells and monocytes) to IFNgamma stimulation. We defined a highly stereotyped response to type I interferons, while responses to IFNgamma and IL12 were largely restricted to a subset of type I interferon-inducible genes. TNFalpha stimulation resulted in a distinct pattern of gene expression. Cell type-specific transcriptional programs were identified, highlighting the pronounced response of monocytes to IFNgamma, and emergent properties associated with IFN-mediated activation of mixed cell populations. This information provides a detailed view of cellular activation by immune mediators, and contributes an interpretive framework for the definition of host immune responses in a variety of disease settings
Three charged particles in the continuum. Astrophysical examples
We suggest a new adiabatic approach for description of three charged
particles in the continuum. This approach is based on the Coulomb-Fourier
transformation (CFT) of three body Hamiltonian, which allows to develop a
scheme, alternative to Born-Oppenheimer one.
The approach appears as an expansion of the kernels of corresponding integral
transformations in terms of small mass-ratio parameter. To be specific, the
results are presented for the system in the continuum. The wave function
of a such system is compared with that one which is used for estimation of the
rate for triple reaction which take place as a step of
-cycle in the center of the Sun. The problem of microscopic screening for
this particular reaction is discussed
Microbiology and atmospheric processes: the role of biological particles in cloud physics
As part of a series of papers on the sources, distribution and potential impact of biological particles in the atmosphere, this paper introduces and summarizes the potential role of biological particles in atmospheric clouds. Biological particles like bacteria or pollen may be active as both cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) and heterogeneous ice nuclei (IN) and thereby can contribute to the initial cloud formation stages and the development of precipitation through giant CCN and IN processes. The paper gives an introduction to aerosol-cloud processes involving CCN and IN in general and provides a short summary of previous laboratory, field and modelling work which investigated the CCN and IN activity of bacterial cells and pollen. Recent measurements of atmospheric ice nuclei with a continuous flow diffusion chamber (CFDC) and of the heterogeneous ice nucleation efficiency of bacterial cells are also briefly discussed. As a main result of this overview paper we conclude that a proper assessment of the impact of biological particles on tropospheric clouds needs new laboratory, field and modelling work on the abundance of biological particles in the atmosphere and their CCN and heterogeneous IN properties
Regularized Neural User Model for Goal-Oriented Spoken Dialogue Systems
User simulation is widely used to generate artificial dialogues in order to train statistical spoken dialogue systems and perform evaluations. This paper presents a neural network approach for user modeling that exploits an encoder-decoder bidirectional architecture with a regularization layer for each dialogue act. In order to minimize the impact of data sparsity, the dialogue act space is compressed according to the user goal. Experiments on the Dialogue State Tracking Challenge 2 (DSTC2) dataset provide significant results at dialogue act and slot level predictions, outperforming previous neural user modeling approaches in terms of F1 score.Spanish Minister of Science under grants TIN2014-54288-C4-4-R and TIN2017-85854-C4-3-R and by the EU H2020 EMPATHIC project grant number 769872
Complex bounds for multimodal maps: bounded combinatorics
We proved the so called complex bounds for multimodal, infinitely
renormalizable analytic maps with bounded combinatorics: deep renormalizations
have polynomial-like extensions with definite modulus. The complex bounds is
the first step to extend the renormalization theory of unimodal maps to
multimodal maps.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figure
Measuring the saturation scale in nuclei
The saturation momentum seeing in the nuclear infinite momentum frame is
directly related to transverse momentum broadening of partons propagating
through the medium in the nuclear rest frame. Calculation of broadening within
the color dipole approach including the effects of saturation in the nucleus,
gives rise to an equation which describes well data on broadening in Drell-Yan
reaction and heavy quarkonium production.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, based on the talk presented by B.K. at the INT
workshop "Physics at a High Energy Electron Ion Collider", Seattle, October
200
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