369 research outputs found
Compensation of front-end and modulation delays in phase and ranging measurements for time-delay interferometry
In the context of the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA), the laser
subsystems exhibit frequency fluctuations that introduce significant levels of
noise into the measurements, surpassing the gravitational wave signal by
several orders of magnitude. Mitigation is achieved via time-shifting
individual measurements in a data processing step known as time-delay
interferometry (TDI). The suppression performance of TDI relies on accurate
knowledge and consideration of the delays experienced by the interfering
lasers. While considerable efforts have been dedicated to the accurate
determination of inter-spacecraft ranging delays, the sources for onboard
delays have been either neglected or assumed to be known. Contrary to these
assumptions, analog delays of the phasemeter front end and the laser modulator
are not only large but also prone to change with temperature and heterodyne
frequency. This motivates our proposal for a novel method enabling a
calibration of these delays on-ground and in-space, based on minimal functional
additions to the receiver architecture. Specifically, we establish a set of
calibration measurements and elucidate how these measurements are utilized in
data processing, leading to the mitigation of the delays in the TDI Michelson
variables. Following a performance analysis of the calibration measurements,
proposed calibration scheme is assessed through numerical simulations. We find
that in the absence of the calibration scheme, the assumed drifts of the analog
delays increase residual laser noise at high frequencies of the LISA
measurement band. A single, on-ground calibration of the analog delays leads to
an improvement by roughly one order of magnitude, while re-calibration in space
may improve performance by yet another order of magnitude. Towards lower
frequencies, ranging error is always found to be the limiting factor for which
countermeasures are discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Avoiding methane emission rate underestimates when using the divergence method
Methane is a powerful greenhouse gas, and a primary target for mitigating
climate change in the short-term future due to its relatively short atmospheric
lifetime and greater ability to trap heat in Earth's atmosphere compared to
carbon dioxide. Top-down observations of atmospheric methane are possible via
drone and aircraft surveys as well as satellites such as the TROPOspheric
Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI). Recent work has begun to apply the divergence
method to produce regional methane emission rate estimates. Here we show that
when the divergence method is applied to spatially incomplete observations of
methane, it can result in negatively biased time-averaged regional emission
rates. We show that this effect can be counteracted by adopting a procedure in
which daily advective fluxes of methane are time-averaged before the divergence
method is applied. Using such a procedure with TROPOMI methane observations, we
calculate yearly Permian emission rates of 3.1, 2.4 and 2.7 million tonnes per
year for the years 2019 through 2021. We also show that highly-resolved plumes
of methane can have negatively biased estimated emission rates by the
divergence method due to the presence of turbulent diffusion in the plume, but
this is unlikely to affect regional methane emission budgets constructed from
TROPOMI observations of methane. The results from this work are expected to
provide useful guidance for future implementations of the divergence method for
emission rate estimation from satellite data -- be it for methane or other
gaseous species in the atmosphere.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Environmental Research Letter
Cooperative excitation and many-body interactions in a cold Rydberg gas
The dipole blockade of Rydberg excitations is a hallmark of the strong
interactions between atoms in these high-lying quantum states. One of the
consequences of the dipole blockade is the suppression of fluctuations in the
counting statistics of Rydberg excitations, of which some evidence has been
found in previous experiments. Here we present experimental results on the
dynamics and the counting statistics of Rydberg excitations of ultra-cold
Rubidium atoms both on and off resonance, which exhibit sub- and
super-Poissonian counting statistics, respectively. We compare our results with
numerical simulations using a novel theoretical model based on Dicke states of
Rydberg atoms including dipole-dipole interactions, finding good agreement
between experiment and theory.Comment: accepted for publication in PRL; 10 pages, 4 figures (including
Supplemental Material
Can Neutron Star Mergers Alone Explain the r-process Enrichment of the Milky Way?
© 2023. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Comparing Galactic chemical evolution models to the observed elemental abundances in the Milky Way, we show that neutron star mergers can be a leading r-process site only if at low metallicities such mergers have very short delay times and significant ejecta masses that are facilitated by the masses of the compact objects. Namely, black hole–neutron star mergers, depending on the black hole spins, can play an important role in the early chemical enrichment of the Milky Way. We also show that none of the binary population synthesis models used in this Letter, i.e., COMPAS, StarTrack, Brussels, ComBinE, and BPASS, can currently reproduce the elemental abundance observations. The predictions are problematic not only for neutron star mergers, but also for Type Ia supernovae, which may point to shortcomings in binary evolution models.Peer reviewe
Simulated Annealing for Topological Solitons
The search for solutions of field theories allowing for topological solitons
requires that we find the field configuration with the lowest energy in a given
sector of topological charge. The standard approach is based on the numerical
solution of the static Euler-Lagrange differential equation following from the
field energy. As an alternative, we propose to use a simulated annealing
algorithm to minimize the energy functional directly. We have applied simulated
annealing to several nonlinear classical field theories: the sine-Gordon model
in one dimension, the baby Skyrme model in two dimensions and the nuclear
Skyrme model in three dimensions. We describe in detail the implementation of
the simulated annealing algorithm, present our results and get independent
confirmation of the studies which have used standard minimization techniques.Comment: 31 pages, LaTeX, better quality pics at
http://www.phy.umist.ac.uk/~weidig/Simulated_Annealing/, updated for
publicatio
Multiscale formulation for material failure accounting for cohesive cracks at the macro and micro scales
This contribution presents a two-scale formulation devised to simulate failure in materials with het- erogeneous micro-structure. The mechanical model accounts for the activation of cohesive cracks in the micro-scale domain. The evolution/propagation of cohesive micro-cracks can induce material instability at the macro-scale level. Then, a cohesive crack is activated in the macro-scale model which considers, in a homogenized sense, the constitutive response of the intricate failure mode taking place in the smaller length scale.The two-scale model is based on the concept of Representative Volume Element (RVE). It is designed following an axiomatic variational structure. Two hypotheses are introduced in order to build the foundations of the entire two-scale theory, namely: (i) a mechanism for transferring kinematical information from macro- to-micro scale along with the concept of “Kinematical Admissibility”, relating both primal descriptions, and (ii) a Multiscale Variational Principle of internal virtual power equivalence between the involved scales of analysis. The homogenization formulae for the generalized stresses, as well as the equilibrium equations at the micro-scale, are consequences of the variational statement of the problem.The present multiscale technique is a generalization of a previous model proposed by the authors and could be viewed as an application of a general framework recently proposed by the authors. The main novelty in this article lies on the fact that failure modes in the micro-structure now involve a set of multiple cohesive cracks, connected or disconnected, with arbitrary orientation, conforming a complex tortuous failure path. Tortuosity is a topic of decisive importance in the modelling of material degradation due to crack propagation. Following the present multiscale modelling approach, the tortuosity effect is introduced in order to satisfy the “Kinematical Admissibility” concept, when the macro-scale kinematics is transferred into the micro-scale domain. There- fore, it has a direct consequence in the homogenized mechanical response, in the sense that the proposed scale transition method (including the tortuosity effect) retrieves the correct post-critical response.Coupled (macro-micro) numerical examples are presented showing the potentialities of the model to sim- ulate complex and realistic fracture problems in heterogeneous materials. In order to validate the multiscale technique in a rigorous manner, comparisons with the so-called DNS (Direct Numerical Solution) approach are also presented
Sialadenosis in Patients with Advanced Liver Disease
Sialadenosis (sialosis) has been associated most often with alcoholic liver disease and alcoholic cirrhosis, but a number of nutritional deficiencies, diabetes, and bulimia have also been reported to result in sialadenosis. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of sialadenosis in patients with advanced liver disease. Patients in the study group consisted of 300 candidates for liver transplantation. Types of liver disease in subjects with clinical evidence of sialadenosis were compared with diagnoses in cases who had no manifestations of sialadenosis. The data were analyzed for significant association. Sialadenosis was found in 28 of the 300 subjects (9.3%). Among these 28 cases, 11 (39.3%) had alcoholic cirrhosis. The remaining 17 (60.7%) had eight other types of liver disease. There was no significant association between sialadenosis and alcoholic cirrhosis (P = 0.389). These findings suggest that both alcoholic and non-alcoholic cirrhosis may lead to the development of sialadenosis. Advanced liver disease is accompanied by multiple nutritional deficiencies which may be exacerbated by alcohol. Similar metabolic abnormalities may occur in patients with diabetes or bulimia. Malnutrition has been associated with autonomic neuropathy, the pathogenic mechanism that has been proposed for sialadenosis
Stellar Intensity Interferometry: Prospects for sub-milliarcsecond optical imaging
Using kilometric arrays of air Cherenkov telescopes, intensity interferometry
may increase the spatial resolution in optical astronomy by an order of
magnitude, enabling images of rapidly rotating stars with structures in their
circumstellar disks and winds, or mapping out patterns of nonradial pulsations
across stellar surfaces. Intensity interferometry (pioneered by Hanbury Brown
and Twiss) connects telescopes only electronically, and is practically
insensitive to atmospheric turbulence and optical imperfections, permitting
observations over long baselines and through large airmasses, also at short
optical wavelengths. The required large telescopes with very fast detectors are
becoming available as arrays of air Cherenkov telescopes, distributed over a
few square km. Digital signal handling enables very many baselines to be
synthesized, while stars are tracked with electronic time delays, thus
synthesizing an optical interferometer in software. Simulated observations
indicate limiting magnitudes around m(v)=8, reaching resolutions ~30
microarcsec in the violet. The signal-to-noise ratio favors high-temperature
sources and emission-line structures, and is independent of the optical
passband, be it a single spectral line or the broad spectral continuum.
Intensity interferometry provides the modulus (but not phase) of any spatial
frequency component of the source image; for this reason image reconstruction
requires phase retrieval techniques, feasible if sufficient coverage of the
interferometric (u,v)-plane is available. Experiments are in progress; test
telescopes have been erected, and trials in connecting large Cherenkov
telescopes have been carried out. This paper reviews this interferometric
method in view of the new possibilities offered by arrays of air Cherenkov
telescopes, and outlines observational programs that should become realistic
already in the rather near future.Comment: New Astronomy Reviews, in press; 101 pages, 11 figures, 185
reference
Salivary Proteins Associated with Periodontitis in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
The objective of this study was to investigate the salivary proteins that are associated with periodontitis in patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Volunteers for the study were patients from the Diabetic Unit, University of Malaya Medical Centre, whose periodontal status was determined. The diabetic volunteers were divided into two groups, i.e., patients with periodontitis and those who were periodontally healthy. Saliva samples were collected and treated with 10% TCA/acetone/20 mM DTT to precipitate the proteins, which were then separated using two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Gel images were scanned using the GS-800TM Calibrated Densitometer. The protein spots were analyzed and expressed in percentage volumes. The percentage volume of each protein spot was subjected to Mann-Whitney statistical analysis using SPSS software and false discovery rate correction. When the expression of the salivary proteins was compared between the T2DM patients with periodontitis with those who were periodontally healthy, seven proteins, including polymeric immunoglobulin receptor, plastin-2, actin related protein 3, leukocyte elastase inhibitor, carbonic anhydrases 6, immunoglobulin J and interleukin-1 receptor antagonist, were found to be differentially expressed (p < 0.01304). This implies that the proteins may have the potential to be used as biomarkers for the prediction of T2DM patients who may be prone to periodontitis
A three-scale domain decomposition method for the 3D analysis of debonding in laminates
The prediction of the quasi-static response of industrial laminate structures
requires to use fine descriptions of the material, especially when debonding is
involved. Even when modeled at the mesoscale, the computation of these
structures results in very large numerical problems. In this paper, the exact
mesoscale solution is sought using parallel iterative solvers. The LaTIn-based
mixed domain decomposition method makes it very easy to handle the complex
description of the structure; moreover the provided multiscale features enable
us to deal with numerical difficulties at their natural scale; we present the
various enhancements we developed to ensure the scalability of the method. An
extension of the method designed to handle instabilities is also presented
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