199 research outputs found

    Channel-based antenna synthesis for improved in-vehicle UWB MB-OFDM communications

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    Ultra-wide band (UWB) is an attractive technology for innovative in-vehicle wireless communications requiring high data rates and multiband orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (MB-OFDM) a suitable scheme for the accomplishment due to its high performance, low-power and low-cost characteristics. To contribute toward improved UWB MB-OFDM communications inside vehicles, a channel-based antenna synthesis technique to customise in-vehicle UWB antennas that reduce ‘blind spots’ in the communication channel is proposed and presented. For the realisation, a comprehensive analysis was utilised and comprised an in-car channel evaluation including bit-error-rate (BER) estimations and radiation pattern-and-source syntheses. The channel was measured using a standard antenna to set up the base of the experiments and the distribution of the impulse responses and signal-to-noise ratios in the vehicle's passenger plane shown. The currently available IEEE 802.15.3a channel models were perceived unrealistic for the in-vehicle application and the reason for measuring the channel practically. Using these specific channel measurements, the synthesised pattern is unveiled and consequently the channel-based antenna synthesis technique used to predict the antenna source. The antenna with optimised pattern-and-source showed an improved BER performance compared with the standard antenna in this application; that is, a figure of merit of 37.73% minimised ‘blind spots’

    The extended tails of Palomar 5: A ten degree arc of globular cluster tidal debris

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    Using wide-field photometric data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) we recently showed that the Galactic globular cluster Palomar 5 is in the process of being tidally disrupted. Its tidal tails were initially detected in a 2.5 degree wide band along the celestial equator. A new analysis of SDSS data for a larger field now reveals that the tails of Pal 5 have a much larger spatial extent and can be traced over an arc of 10 deg across the sky, corresponding to a projected length of 4 kpc at the distance of the cluster. The number of former cluster stars found in the tails adds up to about 1.2 times the number of stars in the cluster. The radial profile of stellar surface density in the tails follows approximately a power law r^gamma with -1.5 < gamma < -1.2. The stream of debris from Pal 5 is significantly curved, which demonstrates its acceleration by the Galactic potential. The cluster is presently near the apocenter but has repeatedly undergone disk crossings in the inner part of the Galaxy leading to strong tidal shocks. Our results suggest that the observed debris originates mostly from mass loss within the last 2 Gyrs. The cluster is likely to be destroyed after the next disk crossing, which will happen in about 100 Myr. (abridged)Comment: 44 pages, including 14 figures (Figs.1,3 & 14 with decreased resolution), accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journa

    The Stellar Content and Star Formation History of the late-type spiral galaxy NGC 300 from Hubble Space Telescope observations

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    We present the first WFPC2 V, I photometry for the Sculptor Group galaxy NGC 300 in four fields ranging from the centre to the outer edge. We have made the first measurement of the star formation histories in two disk fields: the oldest stars were born at similar epochs and formation activity increased but at different mean rates. The main disk stellar population is predominantly old, consisting of RGB and AGB stars, based on a synthetic colour magnitude diagram analysis. Z is found to have been more metal poor than 0.006 (or 0.33Zsolar) with no evidence for significant change in the mean Z value over time in both disk fields. In the central region, we find a dearth of bright stars with respect to the two disk fields that cannot be explained by observational effects. Taken at face value, this finding would agree with the Davidge (1998) report of suppressed star formation there during the past 1Gyr with respect to his disk fields at larger radii; but the possibility of significant central extinction affecting our finding remains. We have also determined the first distance modulus estimate based on the tip of the red giant branch method: on the Cepheid distance scale of Ferrarese et al. (2000) we find (m-M)o = 26.56+/-0.07 (+/-0.13) mag; and a similar value from the Cepheid-independent empirical method by Lee et al. (1993), both in good agreement with the Cepheid distance determined by Freedman et al. (2001). A discrepancy between this and the theoretical calibration of the red giant branch tip magnitude method remains. Finally, we report a newly detected young (up to about 10Myr) stellar association of about average size (~140pc) in one of the disk fields.Comment: 47 pages, 12 figures (the quality of Figures 1 and 6 has been degraded), Corrected minor textual errors and two reference omissions to match the version to be published in The Astronomical Journa

    SU(3) symmetry breaking in lower fp-shell nuclei

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    Results of shell-model calculations for lower fp-shell nuclei show that SU(3) symmetry breaking in this region is driven by the single-particle spin-orbit splitting. However, even though states of the yrast band exhibit SU(3) symmetry breaking, the results also show that the yrast band B(E2) values are insensitive to this fragmentation of the SU(3) symmetry; specifically, the quadrupole collectivity as measured by B(E2) transition strengths between low lying members of the yrast band remain high even though SU(3) appears to be broken. Results for 44,46,48Ti^{44,46,48}Ti and 48Cr^{48}Cr using the Kuo-Brown-3 two-body interaction are given to illustrate these observations.Comment: Updated to the published versio

    Cross section measurements of 155,157Gd(n, γ) induced by thermal and epithermal neutrons

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    © SIF, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2019Neutron capture cross section measurements on 155Gd and 157Gd were performed using the time-of-flight technique at the n_TOF facility at CERN on isotopically enriched samples. The measurements were carried out in the n_TOF experimental area EAR1, at 185 m from the neutron source, with an array of 4 C6D6 liquid scintillation detectors. At a neutron kinetic energy of 0.0253 eV, capture cross sections of 62.2(2.2) and 239.8(8.4) kilobarn have been derived for 155Gd and 157Gd, respectively, with up to 6% deviation relative to values presently reported in nuclear data libraries, but consistent with those values within 1.6 standard deviations. A resonance shape analysis has been performed in the resolved resonance region up to 181 eV and 307 eV, respectively for 155Gd and 157Gd, where on average, resonance parameters have been found in good agreement with evaluations. Above these energies and up to 1 keV, the observed resonance-like structure of the cross section has been analysed and characterised. From a statistical analysis of the observed neutron resonances we deduced: neutron strength function of 2. 01 (28) × 10 - 4 and 2. 17 (41) × 10 - 4; average total radiative width of 106.8(14) meV and 101.1(20) meV and s-wave resonance spacing 1.6(2) eV and 4.8(5) eV for n + 155Gd and n + 157Gd systems, respectively.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio

    Multi-Scale Simulations Provide Supporting Evidence for the Hypothesis of Intramolecular Protein Translocation in GroEL/GroES Complexes

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    The biological function of chaperone complexes is to assist the folding of non-native proteins. The widely studied GroEL chaperonin is a double-barreled complex that can trap non-native proteins in one of its two barrels. The ATP-driven binding of a GroES cap then results in a major structural change of the chamber where the substrate is trapped and initiates a refolding attempt. The two barrels operate anti-synchronously. The central region between the two barrels contains a high concentration of disordered protein chains, the role of which was thus far unclear. In this work we report a combination of atomistic and coarse-grained simulations that probe the structure and dynamics of the equatorial region of the GroEL/GroES chaperonin complex. Surprisingly, our simulations show that the equatorial region provides a translocation channel that will block the passage of folded proteins but allows the passage of secondary units with the diameter of an alpha-helix. We compute the free-energy barrier that has to be overcome during translocation and find that it can easily be crossed under the influence of thermal fluctuations. Hence, strongly non-native proteins can be squeezed like toothpaste from one barrel to the next where they will refold. Proteins that are already fairly close to the native state will not translocate but can refold in the chamber where they were trapped. Several experimental results are compatible with this scenario, and in the case of the experiments of Martin and Hartl, intra chaperonin translocation could explain why under physiological crowding conditions the chaperonin does not release the substrate protein

    An unusually low density ultra-short period super-Earth and three mini-Neptunes around the old star TOI-561

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    Based on HARPS-N radial velocities (RVs) and TESS photometry, we present a full characterisation of the planetary system orbiting the late G dwarf TOI-561. After the identification of three transiting candidates by TESS, we discovered two additional external planets from RV analysis. RVs cannot confirm the outer TESS transiting candidate, which would also make the system dynamically unstable. We demonstrate that the two transits initially associated with this candidate are instead due to single transits of the two planets discovered using RVs. The four planets orbiting TOI-561 include an ultra-short period (USP) super-Earth (TOI-561 b) with period Pb=0.45P_{\rm b} = 0.45 d, mass Mb=1.59±0.36M_{\rm b} =1.59 \pm 0.36 M⊕_\oplus and radius Rb=1.42±0.07R_{\rm b}=1.42 \pm 0.07 R⊕_\oplus, and three mini-Neptunes: TOI-561 c, with Pc=10.78P_{\rm c} = 10.78 d, Mc=5.40±0.98M_{\rm c} = 5.40 \pm 0.98 M⊕_\oplus, Rc=2.88±0.09R_{\rm c}= 2.88 \pm 0.09 R⊕_\oplus; TOI-561 d, with Pd=25.6P_{\rm d} = 25.6 d, Md=11.9±1.3M_{\rm d} = 11.9 \pm 1.3 M⊕_\oplus, Rd=2.53±0.13R_{\rm d} = 2.53 \pm 0.13 R⊕_\oplus; and TOI-561 e, with Pe=77.2P_{\rm e} = 77.2 d, Me=16.0±2.3M_{\rm e} = 16.0 \pm 2.3 M⊕_\oplus, Re=2.67±0.11R_{\rm e} = 2.67 \pm 0.11 R⊕_\oplus. Having a density of 3.0±0.83.0 \pm 0.8 g cm−3^{-3}, TOI-561 b is the lowest density USP planet known to date. Our N-body simulations confirm the stability of the system and predict a strong, anti-correlated, long-term transit time variation signal between planets d and e. The unusual density of the inner super-Earth and the dynamical interactions between the outer planets make TOI-561 an interesting follow-up target

    Bringing Molecules Back into Molecular Evolution

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    Much molecular-evolution research is concerned with sequence analysis. Yet these sequences represent real, three-dimensional molecules with complex structure and function. Here I highlight a growing trend in the field to incorporate molecular structure and function into computational molecular-evolution work. I consider three focus areas: reconstruction and analysis of past evolutionary events, such as phylogenetic inference or methods to infer selection pressures; development of toy models and simulations to identify fundamental principles of molecular evolution; and atom-level, highly realistic computational modeling of molecular structure and function aimed at making predictions about possible future evolutionary events
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