13,249 research outputs found

    Assessment of the potential of MERIS near-infrared water vapour products to correct ASAR interferometric measurements

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    Atmospheric water vapour is a major limitation for high precision Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) applications due to its significant impact on microwave signals. We propose a statistical criterion to test whether an independent water vapour product can reduce water vapour effects on InSAR interferograms, and assess the potential of the Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS) near-infrared water vapour products for correcting Advanced SAR (ASAR) data. Spatio-temporal comparisons show c. 1.1mm agreement between MERIS and GPS/radiosonde water vapour products in terms of standard deviations. One major limitation with the use of MERIS water vapour products is the frequency of cloud free conditions. Our analysis indicates that in spite of the low global cloud free conditions (~25%), the frequency can be much higher for certain areas such as Eastern Tibet (~38%) and Southern California (~48%). This suggests that MERIS water vapour products show potential for correcting ASAR interferometric measurements in certain regions

    The Derived Equivalent Circuit Model for Magnetized Anisotropic Graphene

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    A comprehensive approach for drug safety assessment

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    Abstract A comprehensive, multidisciplinary approach is proposed here for the development of a drug with an acceptable safety profile. Key parameters to be considered for drug safety evaluation based on this comprehensive approach include the following: (1) Pharmacology: Possible toxicity due to drug-target interactions, including interactions with unintended molecular targets, or with molecular targets in unintended organs. (2) Chemistry: Chemical scaffolding and side-chains with safety concerns. (3) Toxicology: Toxicity in animals in vivo, and in relevant animal and human cells in culture. (4) Drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics: Safety concerns due to toxification or detoxification, organ distribution, clearance and pharmacokinetic drug-drug interactions. (5) Risk factors: Physiological, environmental and genetic factors that may enhance a patient's susceptibility. It is proposed that this integrated, multidisciplinary approach to safety evaluation may enhance the accuracy of the prediction of drug safety and thereby the efficiency of drug development

    Drinfeld Twists and Symmetric Bethe Vectors of Supersymmetric Fermion Models

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    We construct the Drinfeld twists (factorizing FF-matrices) of the gl(m∣n)gl(m|n)-invariant fermion model. Completely symmetric representation of the pseudo-particle creation operators of the model are obtained in the basis provided by the FF-matrix (the FF-basis). We resolve the hierarchy of the nested Bethe vectors in the FF-basis for the gl(m∣n)gl(m|n) supersymmetric model.Comment: Latex File, 24 pages, no figure, some misprints are correcte

    GALEX, Optical and IR Light Curves of MQ Dra: UV Excesses at Low Accretion Rates

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    Ultraviolet light curves constructed from NUV and FUV detectors on GALEX reveal large amplitude variations during the orbital period of the Low Accretion Rate Polar MQ Dra (SDSSJ1553+55). This unexpected variation from a UV source is similar to that seen and discussed in the Polar EF Eri during its low state of accretion, even though the accretion rate in MQ Dra is an order of magnitude lower than even the low state of EF Eri. The similarity in phasing of the UV and optical light curves in MQ Dra imply a similar location for the source of light. We explore the possibilities of hot spots and cyclotron emission with simple models fit to the UV, optical and IR light curves of MQ Dra. To match the GALEX light curves with a single temperature circular hot spot requires different sizes of spots for the NUV and FUV, while a cyclotron model that can produce the optical harmonics with a magnetic field near 60 MG requires multipoles with fields > 200 MG to match the UV fluxes.Comment: accepted for ApJ; 15 pages, 7 tables, 8 fig

    Network Topology of an Experimental Futures Exchange

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    Many systems of different nature exhibit scale free behaviors. Economic systems with power law distribution in the wealth is one of the examples. To better understand the working behind the complexity, we undertook an empirical study measuring the interactions between market participants. A Web server was setup to administer the exchange of futures contracts whose liquidation prices were coupled to event outcomes. After free registration, participants started trading to compete for the money prizes upon maturity of the futures contracts at the end of the experiment. The evolving `cash' flow network was reconstructed from the transactions between players. We show that the network topology is hierarchical, disassortative and scale-free with a power law exponent of 1.02+-0.09 in the degree distribution. The small-world property emerged early in the experiment while the number of participants was still small. We also show power law distributions of the net incomes and inter-transaction time intervals. Big winners and losers are associated with high degree, high betweenness centrality, low clustering coefficient and low degree-correlation. We identify communities in the network as groups of the like-minded. The distribution of the community sizes is shown to be power-law distributed with an exponent of 1.19+-0.16.Comment: 6 pages, 12 figure
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