37,166 research outputs found
Formation and tidal evolution of hot super-Earths in multiple planetary systems
Hot super-Earths are exoplanets with masses < 10 Earth masses and orbital
periods < 20 days. Around 8 hot super-Earths have been discovered in the
neighborhood of solar system. In this lecture, we review the mechanisms for the
formation of hot super-Earths, dynamical effects that play important roles in
sculpting the architecture of the multiple planetary systems. Two example
systems (HD 40307 and GJ 436) are presented to show the formation and evolution
of hot super-Earths or Neptunes.Comment: 12 pages, 4 color figures, Lecture in 'Extrasolar planets in
Multi-Body systems: Theory and Observation',Torun (Poland), August 25-29,
2008, to appear in European Astronomical Society Publication Serie
Migration and Final Location of Hot Super Earths in the Presence of Gas Giants
Based on the conventional sequential-accretion paradigm, we have proposed
that, during the migration of first-born gas giants outside the orbits of
planetary embryos, super Earth planets will form inside the 2:1 resonance
location by sweeping of mean motion resonances (Zhou et al. 2005). In this
paper, we study the subsequent evolution of a super Earth (m_1) under the
effects of tidal dissipation and perturbation from a first-born gas giant (m_2)
in an outside orbit. Secular perturbation and mean motion resonances
(especially 2:1 and 5:2 resonances) between m_1 and m_2 excite the eccentricity
of m_1, which causes the migration of m_1 and results in a hot super Earth. The
calculated final location of the hot super Earth is independent of the tidal
energy dissipation factor Q'. The study of migration history of a Hot Super
Earth is useful to reveal its Q' value and to predict its final location in the
presence of one or more hot gas giants. When this investigation is applied to
the GJ876 system, it correctly reproduces the observed location of GJ876d
around 0.02AU.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Gendered aspects of perceived and internalized HIV-related stigma in China.
Although studies have demonstrated that females experience more HIV-related stigma than males do, questions remain regarding the different dimensions of the stigma (i.e., perceived versus internalized) in China. The present study investigated gender differences in perceived and internalized HIV-related stigma, taking into account the potential influence of education. The study was conducted between October 2011 and March 2013. A total of 522 people living with HIV (PLH) were recruited from Anhui Province, China. The PLH participated in a survey using the Computer Assisted Personal Interview (CAPI) method. The gender differences in perceived and internalized HIV-related stigma were calculated with and without stratifying by education level. Female participants had significantly less education than the male participants. No significant difference was observed between females and males with respect to perceived stigma. However, females reported significantly higher internalized stigma than males did (p < .001). When socio-demographic characteristics were controlled, the gender difference in internalized stigma remained significant among educated participants (p = .038). The findings suggested that gender differences in HIV-related stigma were primarily found for internalized stigma. Heightened intervention efforts are encouraged to reduce internalized HIV-related stigma, particularly among female PLH in China and other regions with similar gender dynamics
The silicate model and carbon rich model of CoRoT-7b, Kepler-9d and Kepler-10b
Possible bulk compositions of the super-Earth exoplanets, CoRoT-7b,
Kepler-9d, and Kepler-10b are investigated by applying a commonly used silicate
and a non-standard carbon model. Their internal structures are deduced using
the suitable equation of state of the materials. The degeneracy problems of
their compositions can be partly overcome, based on the fact that all three
planets are extremely close to their host stars. By analyzing the numerical
results, we conclude: 1) The iron core of CoRoT-7b is not more than 27% of its
total mass within 1 mass-radius error bars, so an Earth-like
composition is less likely, but its carbon rich model can be compatible with an
Earth-like core/mantle mass fraction; 2) Kepler-10b is more likely with a
Mercury-like composition, its old age implies that its high iron content may be
a result of strong solar wind or giant impact; 3) the transiting-only
super-Earth Kepler-9d is also discussed. Combining its possible composition
with the formation theory, we can place some constraints on its mass and bulk
composition.Comment: 20 pages, 8figures, accepted for publication in RAA. arXiv admin
note: text overlap with arXiv:0707.289
HAQ: Hardware-Aware Automated Quantization with Mixed Precision
Model quantization is a widely used technique to compress and accelerate deep
neural network (DNN) inference. Emergent DNN hardware accelerators begin to
support mixed precision (1-8 bits) to further improve the computation
efficiency, which raises a great challenge to find the optimal bitwidth for
each layer: it requires domain experts to explore the vast design space trading
off among accuracy, latency, energy, and model size, which is both
time-consuming and sub-optimal. Conventional quantization algorithm ignores the
different hardware architectures and quantizes all the layers in a uniform way.
In this paper, we introduce the Hardware-Aware Automated Quantization (HAQ)
framework which leverages the reinforcement learning to automatically determine
the quantization policy, and we take the hardware accelerator's feedback in the
design loop. Rather than relying on proxy signals such as FLOPs and model size,
we employ a hardware simulator to generate direct feedback signals (latency and
energy) to the RL agent. Compared with conventional methods, our framework is
fully automated and can specialize the quantization policy for different neural
network architectures and hardware architectures. Our framework effectively
reduced the latency by 1.4-1.95x and the energy consumption by 1.9x with
negligible loss of accuracy compared with the fixed bitwidth (8 bits)
quantization. Our framework reveals that the optimal policies on different
hardware architectures (i.e., edge and cloud architectures) under different
resource constraints (i.e., latency, energy and model size) are drastically
different. We interpreted the implication of different quantization policies,
which offer insights for both neural network architecture design and hardware
architecture design.Comment: CVPR 2019. The first three authors contributed equally to this work.
Project page: https://hanlab.mit.edu/projects/haq
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