2,137 research outputs found
Detection, Localization and Characterization of Gravitational Wave Bursts in a Pulsar Timing Array
Efforts to detect gravitational waves by timing an array of pulsars have
focused traditionally on stationary gravitational waves: e.g., stochastic or
periodic signals. Gravitational wave bursts --- signals whose duration is much
shorter than the observation period --- will also arise in the pulsar timing
array waveband. Sources that give rise to detectable bursts include the
formation or coalescence of supermassive black holes (SMBHs), the periapsis
passage of compact objects in highly elliptic or unbound orbits about a SMBH,
or cusps on cosmic strings. Here we describe how pulsar timing array data may
be analyzed to detect and characterize these bursts. Our analysis addresses, in
a mutually consistent manner, a hierarchy of three questions: \emph{i}) What
are the odds that a dataset includes the signal from a gravitational wave
burst? \emph{ii}) Assuming the presence of a burst, what is the direction to
its source? and \emph{iii}) Assuming the burst propagation direction, what is
the burst waveform's time dependence in each of its polarization states?
Applying our analysis to synthetic data sets we find that we can \emph{detect}
gravitational waves even when the radiation is too weak to either localize the
source of infer the waveform, and \emph{detect} and \emph{localize} sources
even when the radiation amplitude is too weak to permit the waveform to be
determined. While the context of our discussion is gravitational wave detection
via pulsar timing arrays, the analysis itself is directly applicable to
gravitational wave detection using either ground or space-based detector data.Comment: 43 pages, 13 figures, submitted to ApJ
How Planting Density Affects Number and Yield of Potato Minitubers in a Commercial Glasshouse Production System
Commercial potato minituber production systems aim at high tuber numbers per plant. This study investigated by which mechanisms planting density (25.0, 62.5 and 145.8 plants/m2) of in vitro derived plantlets affected minituber yield and minituber number per plantlet. Lowering planting density resulted in a slower increase in soil cover by the leaves and reduced the accumulated intercepted radiation (AIR). It initially also reduced light use efficiency (LUE) and harvest index, and thus tuber weights per m2. At the commercial harvest 10 weeks after planting (WAP), LUE tended to be higher at lower densities. This compensated for the lower AIR and led to only slightly lower tuber yields. Lowering planting density increased tuber numbers per (planted) plantlet in all grades. It improved plantlet survival and increased stem numbers per plant. However, fewer stolons were produced per stem, whereas stolon numbers per plant were not affected. At lower densities, more tubers were initiated per stolon and the balance between initiation and later resorption of tubers was more favourable. Early interplant competition was thought to reduce the number of tubers initiated at higher densities, whereas later-occurring interplant competition resulted in a large fraction of the initiated tubers being resorbed at intermediate planting densities. At low planting densities, the high number of tubers initiated was also retained. Shortening of the production period could be considered at higher planting densities, because tuber number in the commercial grade > 9 mm did not increase any more after 6 WA
Crecimiento económico y comercio exterior en China
Uno de los más espectaculares efectos del programa reformista de la economía china ha sido, sin lugar a dudas, la política de apertura al exterior. Tras un largo régimen comercial de corte autárquico durante las décadas de los sesenta y setenta, el impulso aperturista de la reforma afectó a la economía muy positivamente a través de la promoción de la actividad comercial, la inversión extranjera y el turismo. Los ingresos en divisas, procedentes de dichas actividades, han permitido elevar el nivel de reservas exteriores del banco central chino hasta 155.000 millones de dólares en la actualidad (China Statistical Yearbook)
Deep XMM-Newton Spectroscopic and Timing Observations of the Isolated Radio Millisecond Pulsar PSR J0030+0451
We present deep XMM-Newton EPIC spectroscopic and timing X-ray observations
of the nearby solitary radio millisecond pulsar, PSR J0030+0451. Its emission
spectrum in the 0.1-10 keV range is found to be remarkably similar to that of
the nearest and best studied millisecond pulsar, PSR J0437-4715, being well
described by a predominantly thermal two-temperature model plus a faint hard
tail evident above ~2 keV. The pulsed emission in the 0.3-2 keV band is
characterized by two broad pulses with pulsed fraction ~60-70%, consistent with
a mostly thermal origin of the X-rays only if the surface polar cap radiation
is from a light-element atmosphere. Modeling of the thermal pulses permits us
to place constraints on the neutron star radius of R>10.7 (95% confidence) and
R>10.4 km (at 99.9% confidence) for M=1.4 M_sun.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures; accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Analysis of Seed Potato Systems in Ethiopia
This study aimed to analyze the seed potato systems in Ethiopia, identify constraints and prioritize improvement options, combining desk research, rapid appraisal and formal surveys, expert elicitation, field observations and local knowledge. In Ethiopia, informal, alternative and formal seed systems co-exist. The informal system, with low quality seed, is dominant. The formal system is too small to contribute significantly to improve that situation. The informal seed system should prioritize improving seed quality by increasing awareness and skills of farmers, improving seed tuber quality of early generations and market access. The alternative and formal seed systems should prioritize improving the production capacity of quality seed by availing new varieties, designing quality control methods and improving farmer’s awareness. To improve overall seed potato supply in Ethiopia, experts postulated co-existence and linkage of the three seed systems and development of self-regulation and selfcertification in the informal, alternative and formal cooperative seed potato systems. Resumen Este estudio tuvo el propósito de analizar los sistemas de producción de papa en Etiopia, identificar limitantes, y priorizar opciones de mejorar, mediante la combinación de investigación de escritorio, apreciaciones rápidas y estudios formales, encuestas a expertos, observaciones de campo y conocimiento local. En Etiopia co-existen sistemas de semilla informal, alternativo y formal. Domina el sistema informal, con baja calidad de semilla. El sistema formal es muy pequeño como para contribuir significativamente al mejoramiento de esa situación. El sistema informal de semilla debería tener como prioridad el mejoramiento en la calidad de la semilla mediante el aumento en la atención y habilidades de los productores, mejorando la calidad de la semilla-tubérculo de las generaciones tempranas y el acceso al mercado. Los sistemas alternativo y formal de semilla deberían priorizar el mejoramiento en la capacidad de producción de semilla de calidad, mediante la validación de nuevas variedades, el diseño de métodos de control de calidad, y mejorando la atención del productor. Para mejorar el suministro general de semilla de papa en Etiopia, los expertos postularon la co-existencia y asociación de los tres sistemas de semillas y el desarrollo de autorregulación y autocertificación en los sistemas cooperativos de semilla de papa informal, alternativo y formal. Keywords Potato . Seed quality . Seed tuber . Seed system . Quality improvement . Expert elicitation . Solanum tuberosum Introductio
X-Rays from the Nearby Solitary Millisecond Pulsar PSR J0030+0451 - the Final ROSAT Observations
We report on X-ray observations of the solitary 4.8 ms pulsar PSR J0030+0451.
The pulsar was one of the last targets observed in DEC-98 by the ROSAT PSPC.
X-ray pulses are detected on a level and make the source the
millisecond pulsar detected in the X-ray domain. The pulsed fraction
is found to be . The X-ray pulse profile is characterized by two
narrow peaks which match the gross pulse profile observed at 1.4 GHz. Assuming
a Crab-like spectrum the X-ray flux is in the range
erg s cm ( keV), implying an X-ray efficiency of
.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
The role of guilt in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Background: A growing body of evidence supports the notion that the emotional profile of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) may be more diverse than traditional accounts presume. PTSD’s image as an anxiety-based disorder is undergoing change as the significance of other emotions in its development becomes more evident. Experimental research is needed in order to expand the understanding of underlying processes driving the development of PTSD. Objective: Experimentally test the influence of stressor-related guilt on the occurrence of PTSD symptomatology. Method: A non-clinical student sample faced an analogue trauma, a stressor in the form of a computer crash and related loss of data. We either personally blamed participants for causing the incident (blame group) or told them that it was a technical failure and therefore not their fault (no-blame group). Levels of guilt before and after the incident as well as number and associated distress of incident-related intrusions were assessed using a one-day diary and compared between groups. Results: The guilt manipulation was successful: feelings of guilt significantly increased in the blame group but not in the no-blame group. Furthermore, the blame group showed a significantly higher number of intrusions and associated distress compared to the no-blame group at one-day follow-up. Conclusions: These laboratory findings indicate that feelings of guilt may lead to increased PTSD symptomatology, supporting the view that guilt experienced in reaction to a traumatic event may be part of a causal mechanism driving the development of PTSD
Projection image-to-image translation in hybrid X-ray/MR imaging
The potential benefit of hybrid X-ray and MR imaging in the interventional
environment is large due to the combination of fast imaging with high contrast
variety. However, a vast amount of existing image enhancement methods requires
the image information of both modalities to be present in the same domain. To
unlock this potential, we present a solution to image-to-image translation from
MR projections to corresponding X-ray projection images. The approach is based
on a state-of-the-art image generator network that is modified to fit the
specific application. Furthermore, we propose the inclusion of a gradient map
in the loss function to allow the network to emphasize high-frequency details
in image generation. Our approach is capable of creating X-ray projection
images with natural appearance. Additionally, our extensions show clear
improvement compared to the baseline method.Comment: In proceedings of SPIE Medical Imaging 201
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