2,641 research outputs found
Soft clustering analysis of galaxy morphologies: A worked example with SDSS
Context: The huge and still rapidly growing amount of galaxies in modern sky
surveys raises the need of an automated and objective classification method.
Unsupervised learning algorithms are of particular interest, since they
discover classes automatically. Aims: We briefly discuss the pitfalls of
oversimplified classification methods and outline an alternative approach
called "clustering analysis". Methods: We categorise different classification
methods according to their capabilities. Based on this categorisation, we
present a probabilistic classification algorithm that automatically detects the
optimal classes preferred by the data. We explore the reliability of this
algorithm in systematic tests. Using a small sample of bright galaxies from the
SDSS, we demonstrate the performance of this algorithm in practice. We are able
to disentangle the problems of classification and parametrisation of galaxy
morphologies in this case. Results: We give physical arguments that a
probabilistic classification scheme is necessary. The algorithm we present
produces reasonable morphological classes and object-to-class assignments
without any prior assumptions. Conclusions: There are sophisticated automated
classification algorithms that meet all necessary requirements, but a lot of
work is still needed on the interpretation of the results.Comment: 18 pages, 19 figures, 2 tables, submitted to A
Deconvolution with Shapelets
We seek to find a shapelet-based scheme for deconvolving galaxy images from
the PSF which leads to unbiased shear measurements. Based on the analytic
formulation of convolution in shapelet space, we construct a procedure to
recover the unconvolved shapelet coefficients under the assumption that the PSF
is perfectly known. Using specific simulations, we test this approach and
compare it to other published approaches. We show that convolution in shapelet
space leads to a shapelet model of order
with and being the maximum orders of the intrinsic
galaxy and the PSF models, respectively. Deconvolution is hence a
transformation which maps a certain number of convolved coefficients onto a
generally smaller number of deconvolved coefficients. By inferring the latter
number from data, we construct the maximum-likelihood solution for this
transformation and obtain unbiased shear estimates with a remarkable amount of
noise reduction compared to established approaches. This finding is
particularly valid for complicated PSF models and low images, which
renders our approach suitable for typical weak-lensing conditions.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, submitted to A&
The Data Processing Pipeline for the Herschel-HIFI Instrument
The HIFI data processing pipeline was developed to systematically process
diagnostic, calibration and astronomical observations taken with the HIFI
science instrumentas part of the Herschel mission. The HIFI pipeline processed
data from all HIFI observing modes within the Herschel automated processing
environment, as well as, within an interactive environment. A common software
framework was developed to best support the use cases required by the
instrument teams and by the general astronomers. The HIFI pipeline was built on
top of that and was designed with a high degree of modularity. This modular
design provided the necessary flexibility and extensibility to deal with the
complexity of batch-processing eighteen different observing modes, to support
the astronomers in the interactive analysis and to cope with adjustments
necessary to improve the pipeline and the quality of the end-products. This
approach to the software development and data processing effort was arrived at
by coalescing the lessons learned from similar research based projects with the
understanding that a degree of foresight was required given the overall length
of the project. In this article, both the successes and challenges of the HIFI
software development process are presented. To support future similar projects
and retain experience gained lessons learned are extracted.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figure
Preliminary vegetation map of the Espenberg Peninsula, Alaska, based on an Earth Resources Technology Satellite image
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
The moral terrains of ecotourism and the ethics of consumption
In this chapter, we provide a brief overview of Western philosophical ethics as they may peliain to tourism. Our discussion then turns to one of the most popular attempts to address sustainability across the globe: ecotourism. Ecotourism as distinct from tourism writ large is earmarked by appeals to concepts and ethical practices peliaining to sustainability (in all its varied meanings), consumption, preservation, and the politics of colonialism and the dynamics of global development strategies. In order to bring the ethics of consumption into the context of ecotourism, we provide a case account of ecotourism that represents one of the more popular versions, national park tourism, and the exchanges that occur over what we call the \u27moral terrains\u27 of ecotourism. At Uluru-Kata Tju!a National Park ecotourism pertains to market dynamics, colonialism, adjacent and conflicting heritage, challenges to environmental identity, micro-management strategies aimed at cultural reconciliation and political agency, as well as the cthics of entertainment that plagues tourism as a human form of consumption. We conclude with sections addressing the elevation of the ethics of ecotourism to a quandary of global environmental justice and utilize the controversy of the Uluru-climb to exemplify nOlmative demands on today\u27s quest for sustainable tourism
Optimal Microlensing Observations
One of the major limitations of microlensing observations toward the Large
Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is the low rate of event detection. What can be done to
improve this rate? Is it better to invest telescope time in more frequent
observations of the inner high surface-brightness fields, or in covering new,
less populated outer fields? How would a factor 2 improvement in CCD
sensitivity affect the detection efficiency? Would a series of major (factor
2--4) upgrades in telescope aperture, seeing, sky brightness, camera size, and
detector efficiency increase the event rate by a huge factor, or only
marginally? I develop a simplified framework to address these questions. With
observational resources fixed at the level of the MACHO and EROS experiments,
the biggest improvement (factor ~2) would come by reducing the time spent on
the inner ~25 deg^2 and applying it to the outer ~100 deg^2. By combining this
change with the characteristics of a good medium-size telescope (2.5 m mirror,
1" point spread function, thinned CCD chips, 1 deg^2 camera, and dark sky), it
should be possible to increase the detection of LMC events to more than 100 per
year (assuming current estimates of the optical depth apply to the entire LMC).Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 13 pages plus 3 figure
Coarse Projective kMC Integration: Forward/Reverse Initial and Boundary Value Problems
In "equation-free" multiscale computation a dynamic model is given at a fine,
microscopic level; yet we believe that its coarse-grained, macroscopic dynamics
can be described by closed equations involving only coarse variables. These
variables are typically various low-order moments of the distributions evolved
through the microscopic model. We consider the problem of integrating these
unavailable equations by acting directly on kinetic Monte Carlo microscopic
simulators, thus circumventing their derivation in closed form. In particular,
we use projective multi-step integration to solve the coarse initial value
problem forward in time as well as backward in time (under certain conditions).
Macroscopic trajectories are thus traced back to unstable, source-type, and
even sometimes saddle-like stationary points, even though the microscopic
simulator only evolves forward in time. We also demonstrate the use of such
projective integrators in a shooting boundary value problem formulation for the
computation of "coarse limit cycles" of the macroscopic behavior, and the
approximation of their stability through estimates of the leading "coarse
Floquet multipliers".Comment: Submitted to Journal of Computational Physic
One-step determination of total iron using deferiprone or kojic acid as colorimetric reagents
The role of iron, one of the most common metals in the environment, is fundamental in many biological and geochemical processes, which determine its availability in the two main oxidation states Fe2+ and Fe3+. Its relevance in the environment, industrial applications, and human physiology, as well as in many other fields has constantly encouraged the development of analytical techniques for its accurate determination. Spectrophotometric methods are those most frequently applied for iron determination in real samples, with specific reagents for the two existing oxidation state right now. In the present work, two low-cost, non-toxic, colorimetric reagents are proposed: deferiprone and kojic acid. These compounds present peculiar features, in particular the formation of 1:3 complexes with Fe3+ of extremely high stability and absorptivity in a wide operative pH range. In this study, we show that both reagents can be used to measure the total iron content. Actually, the extremely low redox potential characterizing the FeL3 complexes permits to determine the total concentration of iron independently from the starting oxidation state, and assures the complete oxidation in presence of oxygen of any amount of Fe2+ to Fe3+ complexes. These features constitute a novelty in the analytical determination of total iron not requiring any pretreatment of the sample, contrary to the methods in use, devoted either to Fe3+ or to Fe2+, necessitating awkward and error generating oxidative or reductive processes. The analytical performance of the proposed spectrophotometric method has been evaluated for the full compliance with the Lambert-Beer law, the operative range of iron concentration, the influence of pH, and the interfering effects of other metal ions. Finally, it has been validated in terms of LoD, LoQ, linearity, precision, and trueness, and has been tested on total iron determination in natural water certified material and in two biological reference materials, human urine and serum
Low absorption InP/InGaAs-MQW phase shifters for optical switching
InP/InGaAs-MQW phase shifters with low absorption loss and low electroabsorption loss have been realized. Phase shift efficiency for TE-polarized light at lambda =1.55 mu m was 6.8 degrees V/sup -1/ mm/sup -1/ with negligible absorption loss and at lambda =1.51 mu m the efficiency was 8.9 degrees V/sup -1/ mm/sup -1/ with 5 dB/cm absorption los
AGAPE, an experiment to detect MACHO's in the direction of the Andromeda galaxy
The status of the Agape experiment to detect Machos in the direction of the
andromeda galaxy is presented.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure in a separate compressed, tarred, uuencoded uufile.
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