871 research outputs found
Direct Measurement of the X-ray Time-Delay Transfer Function in Active Galactic Nuclei
The origin of the observed time lags, in nearby active galactic nuclei (AGN),
between hard and soft X-ray photons is investigated using new XMM-Newton data
for the narrow-line Seyfert I galaxy Ark 564 and existing data for 1H0707-495
and NGC 4051. These AGN have highly variable X-ray light curves that contain
frequent, high peaks of emission. The averaged light curve of the peaks is
directly measured from the time series, and it is shown that (i) peaks occur at
the same time, within the measurement uncertainties, at all X-ray energies, and
(ii) there exists a substantial tail of excess emission at hard X-ray energies,
which is delayed with respect to the time of the main peak, and is particularly
prominent in Ark 564. Observation (i) rules out that the observed lags are
caused by Comptonization time delays and disfavors a simple model of
propagating fluctuations on the accretion disk. Observation (ii) is consistent
with time lags caused by Compton-scattering reverberation from material a few
thousand light-seconds from the primary X-ray source. The power spectral
density and the frequency-dependent phase lags of the peak light curves are
consistent with those of the full time series. There is evidence for
non-stationarity in the Ark 564 time series in both the Fourier and peaks
analyses. A sharp `negative' lag (variations at hard photon energies lead soft
photon energies) observed in Ark 564 appears to be generated by the shape of
the hard-band transfer function and does not arise from soft-band reflection of
X-rays. These results reinforce the evidence for the existence of X-ray
reverberation in type I AGN, which requires that these AGN are significantly
affected by scattering from circumnuclear material a few tens or hundreds of
gravitational radii in extent.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
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The effect of competition on the control of invading plant pathogens
1. New invading pathogen strains must compete with endemic pathogen strains to emerge and spread. As disease control measures are often non-specific, i.e. they do not distinguish between strains, applying control not only affects the invading pathogen strain but the endemic as well. We hypothesise that the control of the invasive strain could be compromised due to the non-specific nature of the control.
2. A spatially-explicit model, describing the East African cassava mosaic virus-Uganda strain (EACMV-UG) outbreak, is used to evaluate methods of controlling both disease incidence and spread of invading pathogen strains in pathosystems with and without an endemic pathogen strain present.
3. We find that while many newly introduced or intensified control measures (such as resistant cultivars or roguing) decrease the expected incidence, they have the unintended consequence of increasing, or at least not reducing, the speed with which the invasive pathogen spreads geographically. We identify which controls cause this effect and methods in which these controls may be applied to prevent it.
4. We found that the spatial spread of the invading strain is chiefly governed by the incidence at the wave front. Control can therefore be applied, or intensified, once the wave front has passed without increasing the pathogen’s rate of spread.
5. When trade of planting material occurs, it is possible that the planting material is already infected. The only forms of control in this study that reduces the speed of geographic spread, regardless of the presence of an endemic strain, are those that reduce the amount of trade and the distance over which trade takes place.
6. Synthesis and applications. Imposing trade restrictions before the epidemic has reached a given area and increasing other control methods only once the wave front has passed is the most effective way of both slowing down spread and controlling incidence when the presence of an endemic strain is unknow
Superconductivity in an Einstein Solid AxV2Al20 (A = Al and Ga)
A cage compound AxV2Al20 (Al10V), that was called an Einstein solid by Caplin
and coworkers 40 years ago, is revisited to investigate the low-energy, local
vibrations of the A atoms and their influence on the electronic and
superconducting properties of the compound. Polycrystalline samples with A =
Al, Ga, Y, and La are studied through resistivity and heat capacity
measurements. Weak-coupling BCS superconductivity is observed below Tc = 1.49,
1.66, and 0.69 K for Ax = Al0.3, Ga0.2, and Y, respectively, but not above 0.4
K for Ax = La. Low-energy modes are detected only for A = Al and Ga, which are
approximately described by the Einstein model with Einstein temperatures of 24
and 8 K, respectively. A weak but significant coupling between the low-energy
modes, which are almost identical to those called rattling in recent study, and
conduction electrons manifests itself as anomalous enhancement in resistivity
at around low temperatures corresponding to the Einstein temperatures.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Diets high in selenium and isoflavones decrease androgen-regulated gene expression in healthy rat dorsolateral prostate
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>High dietary intake of selenium or soybean isoflavones reduces prostate cancer risk. These components each affect androgen-regulated gene expression. The objective of this work was to determine the combined effects of selenium and isoflavones on androgen-regulated gene expression in rat prostate.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Male Noble rats were exposed from conception until 200 days of age to diets containing an adequate (0.33-0.45 mg/kg diet) or high (3.33-3.45 mg/kg) concentration of selenium as Se-methylselenocysteine and a low (10 mg/kg) or high (600 mg/kg) level of isoflavones in a 2 × 2 factorial design. Gene expression in the dorsolateral prostate was determined for the androgen receptor, for androgen-regulated genes, and for Akr1c9, whose product catalyzes the reduction of dihydrotestosterone to 5alpha-androstane-3alpha, 17beta-diol. Activity of hepatic glutathione peroxidise 1 and of prostatic 5alpha reductase were also assayed.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>There were no differences due to diet in activity of liver glutathione peroxidase activity. Total activity of 5alpha reductase in prostate was significantly lower (<it>p </it>= 0.007) in rats fed high selenium/high isoflavones than in rats consuming adequate selenium/low isoflavones. High selenium intake reduced expression of the androgen receptor, Dhcr24 (24-dehydrocholesterol reductase), and Abcc4 (ATP-binding cassette sub-family C member 4). High isoflavone intake decreased expression of Facl3 (fatty acid CoA ligase 3), Gucy1a3 (guanylate cyclase alpha 3), and Akr1c9. For Abcc4 the combination of high selenium/high isoflavones had a greater inhibitory effect than either treatment alone. The effects of selenium on gene expression were always in the direction of chemoprevention</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>These results suggest that combined intake of high selenium and high isoflavones may achieve a greater chemopreventive effect than either compound supplemented individually.</p
C-tests revisited: back and forth with complexity
The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-21365-1_28We explore the aggregation of tasks by weighting them using a difficulty
function that depends on the complexity of the (acceptable) policy for the task (instead
of a universal distribution over tasks or an adaptive test). The resulting aggregations
and decompositions are (now retrospectively) seen as the natural (and trivial) interactive
generalisation of the C-tests.This work has been partially supported by the EU (FEDER) and the Spanish MINECO under grants TIN 2010-21062-C02-02, PCIN-2013-037 and TIN 2013-45732-C4-1-P, and by Generalitat Valenciana PROMETEOII 2015/013.Hernández Orallo, J. (2015). C-tests revisited: back and forth with complexity. En Artificial General Intelligence 8th International Conference, AGI 2015, AGI 2015, Berlin, Germany, July 22-25, 2015, Proceedings. Springer International Publishing. 272-282. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-21365-1_28S272282Bellemare, M.G., Naddaf, Y., Veness, J., Bowling, M.: The arcade learning environment: An evaluation platform for general agents. Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research 47, 253–279 (2013)Hernández-Orallo, J.: Beyond the Turing Test. J. Logic, Language & Information 9(4), 447–466 (2000)Hernández-Orallo, J.: Computational measures of information gain and reinforcement in inference processes. AI Communications 13(1), 49–50 (2000)Hernández-Orallo, J.: On the computational measurement of intelligence factors. In: Meystel, A. (ed.) Performance metrics for intelligent systems workshop, pp. 1–8. National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg (2000)Hernández-Orallo, J.: AI evaluation: past, present and future (2014). arXiv preprint arXiv:1408.6908Hernández-Orallo, J.: On environment difficulty and discriminating power. Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems, 1–53 (2014). http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10458-014-9257-1Hernández-Orallo, J., Dowe, D.L.: Measuring universal intelligence: Towards an anytime intelligence test. Artificial Intelligence 174(18), 1508–1539 (2010)Hernández-Orallo, J., Dowe, D.L., Hernández-Lloreda, M.V.: Universal psychometrics: Measuring cognitive abilities in the machine kingdom. Cognitive Systems Research 27, 50–74 (2014)Hernández-Orallo, J., Minaya-Collado, N.: A formal definition of intelligence based on an intensional variant of Kolmogorov complexity. In: Proc. Intl. Symposium of Engineering of Intelligent Systems (EIS 1998), pp. 146–163. ICSC Press (1998)Hibbard, B.: Bias and no free lunch in formal measures of intelligence. Journal of Artificial General Intelligence 1(1), 54–61 (2009)Legg, S., Hutter, M.: Universal intelligence: A definition of machine intelligence. Minds and Machines 17(4), 391–444 (2007)Li, M., Vitányi, P.: An introduction to Kolmogorov complexity and its applications, 3 edn. Springer-Verlag (2008)Schaul, T.: An extensible description language for video games. IEEE Transactions on Computational Intelligence and AI in Games PP(99), 1–1 (2014)Solomonoff, R.J.: A formal theory of inductive inference. Part I. Information and control 7(1), 1–22 (1964
Signatures of a magnetic-field-induced Lifshitz transition in the ultra-quantum limit of the topological semimetal ZrTe5
The quantum limit (QL) of an electron liquid, realised at strong magnetic fields, has long been proposed to host a wealth of strongly correlated states of matter. Electronic states in the QL are, for example, quasi-one dimensional (1D), which implies perfectly nested Fermi surfaces prone to instabilities. Whereas the QL typically requires unreachably strong magnetic fields, the topological semimetal ZrTe5 has been shown to reach the QL at fields of only a few Tesla. Here, we characterize the QL of ZrTe5 at fields up to 64 T by a combination of electrical-transport and ultrasound measurements. We find that the Zeeman effect in ZrTe5 enables an efficient tuning of the 1D Landau band structure with magnetic field. This results in a Lifshitz transition to a 1D Weyl regime in which perfect charge neutrality can be achieved. Since no instability-driven phase transitions destabilise the 1D electron liquid for the investigated field strengths and temperatures, our analysis establishes ZrTe5 as a thoroughly understood platform for potentially inducing more exotic interaction-driven phases at lower temperatures
Circular Polarization Induced by Scintillation in a Magnetized Medium
A new theory is presented for the development of circular polarization as
radio waves propagate through the turbulent, birefringent interstellar medium.
The fourth order moments of the wavefield are calculated and it is shown that
unpolarized incident radiation develops a nonzero variance in circular
polarization. A magnetized turbulent medium causes the Stokes parameters to
scintillate in a non-identical manner. A specific model for this effect is
developed for the case of density fluctuations in a uniform magnetic field.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figure, Phys. Rev. E, accepte
Estimation of the OSNR penalty due to in-band crosstalk on the performance of virtual carrier-assisted metropolitan OFDM systems
The impact of the in-band crosstalk on the performance of virtual carrier (VC)-assisted direct detection (DD) multi-band orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (MB-OFDM) systems was numerically assessed via Monte-Carlo simulations, by means of a single interferer and 4-ary, 16-ary and 64-ary quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) formats in the OFDM subcarriers. It was also investigated the influences of the virtual carrier-to-band power ratio (VBPR) and the virtual carrier-to-band gap (VBG) on the DD in-band crosstalk tolerance of the OFDM receiver. It was shown the modulation format order decrease enhances the tolerance to in-band crosstalk. When the VBG is the same for both interferer and selected signal, the interferer VBPR increase is seen to lead to lower optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR) penalties due to in-band crosstalk. Considering that the VCs frequencies of the selected and interferer OFDM signals are equal, the increase of the interferer VBG also gives rise to lower OSNR penalties. When the interferer and selected signals bands central frequencies are the same, the change of interferer VBG can attain 11 dB less tolerance to in-band crosstalk of the VC-assisted DD OFDM system. We also evaluate the error vector magnitude (EVM) accuracy of the in-band crosstalk tolerance of the DD OFDM receiver and our results show that the EVM estimations are inaccurate.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
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Debris flow initiation in proglacial gullies on Mount Rainier, Washington
Effects of climate change, retreating glaciers, and changing storm patterns on debris flow hazards concern
managers in the Cascade Range (USA) and mountainous areas worldwide. During an intense rainstorm in
November 2006, seven debris flows initiated from proglacial gullies of separate basins on the flanks of Mount
Rainier. Gully heads at glacier termini and widespread failure of gully walls imply that overland flow was transformed
into debris flow along gullies. We characterized gully change and morphology, and assessed spatial
distributions of debris flows to infer the processes and conditions for debris flow initiation. Slopes at gully
heads were greater than ~0.35 m m⁻¹ (19°) and exhibited a significant negative relationship with drainage
area. A break in slope–drainage area trends among debris flow gullies also occurs at ~0.35 m m⁻¹, representing
a possible transition to fluvial sediment transport and erosion. An interpreted hybrid model of debris flow initiation
involves bed failure near gully heads followed by sediment recruitment from gully walls along gully
lengths. Estimates of sediment volume loss from gully walls demonstrate the importance of sediment inputs
along gullies for increasing debris flow volumes. Basin comparisons revealed significantly steeper drainage
networks and higher elevations in debris flow-producing than non-debris flow-producing proglacial areas. The
high slopes and elevations of debris flow-producing proglacial areas reflect positive slope–elevation trends for
the Mount Rainier volcano. Glacier extent therefore controls the slope distribution in proglacial areas, and thus
potential for debris flow generation. As a result, debris flow activity may increase as glacier termini retreat
onto slopes inclined at angles above debris flow initiation thresholds.Keywords: Hazards, Cascade volcanoes, Debris flow, Glacier retreat, Climate change, In-gully debris flow initiatio
Entre défiance et amitié... Des relations politiques, diplomatiques et militaires tourmentées entre le roi de France et le prince-évêque de Liège au bas Moyen Âge (XIIIe-XVe siècles)
audience: researcher, professional, studen
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