17,996 research outputs found
Patterns of behavior in lodgings exposed to traffic noise
Threshold values for public services interferent on the attenuation to noise nuisance were defined. Daily life at home was described and collected on the use of residences, the effects of noise on health and sleep, and the incidence of running away from home. A correlation was made with the equipment and noise insulation of homes. It is shown that there are behavior patterns in the modification of considerable manner in the way of life for people who live in apartments and in individual houses, above 66 dB during daytime
Numerical radiative transfer with state-of-the-art iterative methods made easy
This article presents an on-line tool (rttools.irap.omp.eu) and its
accompanying software ressources for the numerical solution of basic radiation
transfer out of local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE). State-of-the-art
stationary iterative methods such as Accelerated -Iteration and
Gauss-Seidel schemes, using a short characteristics-based formal solver are
used. We also comment on typical numerical experiments associated to the basic
non-LTE radiation problem. These ressources are intended for the largest use
and benefit, in support to more classical radiation transfer lectures usually
given at the Master level.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for Eur. J. Phys. - see also (and use!)
http://rttools.irap.omp.e
Effect of habituation on the susceptibility of the rat to restraint ulcers
The frequency and gravity of restraint ulcers were found to significantly diminish in rats previously exposed to brief periods of immobilization. The rats' becoming habituated to restraint conditions probably explains this phenomenon
O/Fe in metal-poor main sequence and subgiant stars
A study of the O/Fe ratio in metal-poor main sequence and subgiant stars is
presented using the [OI] 6300A line, the OI 7774A triplet, and a selection of
weak FeII lines observed on high-resolution spectra acquired with the VLT UVES
spectrograph. The [OI] line is detected in the spectra of 18 stars with -0.5 <
[Fe/H] < -2.4, and the triplet is observed for 15 stars with [Fe/H] ranging
from -1.0 to -2.7. The abundance analysis was made first using standard model
atmospheres taking into account non-LTE effects on the triplet: the [OI] line
and the triplet give consistent results with [O/Fe] increasing quasi-linearly
with decreasing [Fe/H] reaching [O/Fe] ~ +0.7 at [Fe/H] = -2.5. When
hydrodynamical model atmospheres representing stellar granulation in dwarf and
subgiant stars replace standard models, the [O/Fe] from the [OI] and FeII lines
is decreased by an amount which increases with decreasing [Fe/H]. The [O/Fe] vs
[Fe/H] relation remains quasi-linear extending to [O/Fe] ~ +0.5 at [Fe/H] =
-2.5, but with a tendency of a plateau with [O/Fe] ~ +0.3 for -2.0 < [Fe/H] <
-1.0, and a hint of cosmic scatter in [O/Fe] at [Fe/H] ~ -1.0. Use of the
hydrodynamical models disturbs the broad agreement between the oxygen
abundances from the [OI], OI, and OH lines, but 3D non-LTE effects may serve to
erase these differences.Comment: ps file, 18 pages (including 10 figures) - Accepted for publication
in A&
Modelling persistence in annual Australia point rainfall
Annual rainfall time series for Sydney from 1859 to 1999 is analysed. Clear evidence of nonstationarity is presented, but substantial evidence for persistence or hidden states is more elusive. A test of the hypothesis that a hidden state Markov model reduces to a mixture distribution is presented. There is strong evidence of a correlation between the annual rainfall and climate indices. Strong evidence of persistence of one of these indices, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), is presented together with a demonstration that this is better modelled by fractional differencing than by a hidden state Markov model. It is shown that conditioning the logarithm of rainfall on PDO, the Southern Oscillation index (SOI), and their interaction provides realistic simulation of rainfall that matches observed statistics. Similar simulation models are presented for Brisbane, Melbourne and Perth.</p> <p style='line-height: 20px;'><b>Keywords: </b>Hydrological persistence,hidden state Markov models, fractional differencing, PDO, SOI, Australian rainfall</p
Solitons from a direct point of view: padeons
AbstractA systematic approach to soliton interaction is presented in terms of a particular class of solitary waves (padeons) which are linear fractions with respect to the nonlinearity parameter ϵ. A straightforward generalization of the padeon to higher order rational fractions (multipadeon) yields a natural ansatz for N-soliton solutions. This ansatz produces multisoliton formulas in terms of an ‘interaction matrix’ A. The structure of the matrix gives some insight into the hidden IST-properties of a familiar set of ‘integrable’ equations (KdV, Boussinesq, MKdV, sine-Gordon, nonlinear Schrödinger). The analysis suggests a ‘padeon’ working definition of the soliton, leading to an explicit set of necessary conditions on the padeon equation
Sub-gap conductance in ferromagnetic-superconducting mesoscopic structures
We study the sub-gap conductance of a ferromagnetic mesoscopic region
attached to a ferromagnetic and a superconducting electrode by means of tunnel
junctions. In the absence of the exchange field, the ratio of the two tunnel junction resistances determines the behaviour of
the sub-gap conductance which possesses a zero-bias peak for and for
a peak at finite voltage. We show that the inclusion of the exchange
field leads to a peak splitting for , while it shifts the zero-bias
anomaly to finite voltages for .Comment: 5 pages revte
Quantum Spin Fluctuations as a Source of Long-Range Proximity Effects in Diffusive Ferromagnet-Superconductor Structures
We show that quantum spin fluctuations in inhomogeneous ferromagnets
drastically affect the Andreev reflection of electrons and holes at a
ferromagnet-superconductor interface. As a result a strong long-range proximity
effect appears, associated with electron-hole spin triplet correlations and
persisting on a lenght scale typical for non-magnetic materials, but
anomalously large for ferromagnets.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Suppression of Giant Magnetoresistance by a superconducting contact
We predict that current perpendicular to the plane (CPP) giant
magnetoresistance (GMR) in a phase-coherent magnetic multilayer is suppressed
when one of the contacts is superconducting. This is a consequence of a
superconductivity-induced magneto-resistive (SMR) effect, whereby the
conductance of the ferromagnetically aligned state is drastically reduced by
superconductivity. To demonstrate this effect, we compute the GMR ratio of
clean (Cu/Co)_nCu and (Cu/Co)_nPb multilayers, described by an ab-initio spd
tight binding Hamiltonian. By analyzing a simpler model with two orbitals per
site, we also show that the suppression survives in the presence of elastic
scattering by impurities.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to PR
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