8,296 research outputs found
Attenuation of TeV -rays by the starlight photon field of the host galaxy
The absorption of TeV -ray photons produced in relativistic jets by
surrounding soft photon fields is a long-standing problem of jet physics. In
some cases the most likely emission site close to the central black hole is
ruled out because of the high opacity caused by strong optical and infrared
photon sources, such as the broad line region. Mostly neglected for jet
modeling is the absorption of -rays in the starlight photon field of
the host galaxy. Analyzing the absorption for arbitrary locations and
observation angles of the -ray emission site within the host galaxy we
find that the distance to the galaxy center, the observation angle, and the
distribution of starlight in the galaxy are crucial for the amount of
absorption. We derive the absorption value for a sample of TeV detected
blazars with a redshift . The absorption value of the -ray
emission located in the galaxy center may be as high as with an average
value of . This is important in order to determine the intrinsic blazar
parameters. We see no significant trends in our sample between the degree of
absorption and host properties, such as starlight emissivity, galactic size,
half-light radius, and redshift. While the uncertainty of the spectral
properties of the extragalactic background light exceeds the effect of
absorption by stellar light from the host galaxy in distant objects, the latter
is a dominant effect in nearby sources. It may also be revealed in a
differential comparison of sources with similar redshifts.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in MNRA
Aspects of Speaking-Face Data Corpus Design Methodology
This paper develops a methodology for the design of audiovideo data corpora of the speaking face. Existing corpora are surveyed and the principles of data specification, data description and statistical representation are analysed both from an application-driven and from a scientifically motivated perspective. Furthermore, the possibility of "opportunistic" design of speaking-face data corpora is considered
Sensitive and specific detection of E. coli using biomimetic receptors in combination with a modified heat-transfer method
We report on a novel biomimetic sensor that allows sensitive and specific detection of Escherichia colt (E. coli) bacteria in a broad concentration range from 10(2) up to 10(6) CFU/mL in both buffer fluids and relevant food samples (i.e. apple juice). The receptors are surface-imprinted polyurethane layers deposited on stainless-steel chips. Regarding the transducer principle, the sensor measures the increase in thermal resistance between the chip and the liquid due to the presence of bacteria captured on the receptor surface. The low noise level that enables the low detection limit originates from a planar meander element that serves as both a heater and a temperature sensor. Furthermore, the experiments show that the presence of bacteria in a liquid enhances the thermal conductivity of the liquid itself. Reference tests with a set of other representative species of Enterobacteriaceae, closely related to E. coli, indicate a very low cross-sensitivity with a sensor response at or below the noise level
Pharmacogenetics and personal genomes
While pharmacogenetics - the correlation of genotype and response to medicines - currently has a small but measurable impact on the prescribing practice of clinicians, the advent of the `personal genome' is likely to change this significantly. Advances in high-throughput technologies aimed at characterizing human genetic variation, including chip-based genotyping and next-generation sequencing, are poised to provide a flood of information that will affect both pharmacogenetic discovery and pharmacogenetic application in clinical practice. In order for this flood of information to not overwhelm both researchers and clinicians alike, a variety of new and expanded information management tools will be needed, including electronic medical records, bioinformatic algorithms for analyzing sequence data, information management systems for storing, retrieving and interpreting whole-genome sequence data, and pharmacogenetic decision tools for prescribers
Field assisted sintering of Ta–AlO composite materials and investigation of electrical conductivity
Ta–AlO composite samples with different compositions are prepared using Field Assisted Sintering Technique (FAST). Two different alumina powders are used to investigate the influence of the starting powders particle size on the microstructural features and the resulting electrical conductivity of the prepared composite materials. Percolation threshold of the two material systems is influenced by the metal fraction, as well as the alumina particle size of the starting powder. The percolation threshold for the fine- and the coarse-grained alumina is found to be at 15 vol.-% Ta and 7.5 vol.-% Ta, respectively. Microstructural investigations show significant differences in terms of particle shape of both, Ta and AlO after sintering, most likely being the reason for the different percolation thresholds of the investigated materials. Anisotropy effects resulting from the processing using FAST and the influence on electrical properties are also shown
The Santa Fe Light Cone Simulation Project: I. Confusion and the WHIM in Upcoming Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect Surveys
We present the first results from a new generation of simulated large sky
coverage (~100 square degrees) Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect (SZE) cluster surveys
using the cosmological adaptive mesh refinement N-body/hydro code Enzo. We have
simulated a very large (512^3h^{-3}Mpc^3) volume with unprecedented dynamic
range. We have generated simulated light cones to match the resolution and
sensitivity of current and future SZE instruments. Unlike many previous studies
of this type, our simulation includes unbound gas, where an appreciable
fraction of the baryons in the universe reside.
We have found that cluster line-of-sight overlap may be a significant issue
in upcoming single-dish SZE surveys. Smaller beam surveys (~1 arcmin) have more
than one massive cluster within a beam diameter 5-10% of the time, and a larger
beam experiment like Planck has multiple clusters per beam 60% of the time. We
explore the contribution of unresolved halos and unbound gas to the SZE
signature at the maximum decrement. We find that there is a contribution from
gas outside clusters of ~16% per object on average for upcoming surveys. This
adds both bias and scatter to the deduced value of the integrated SZE, adding
difficulty in accurately calibrating a cluster Y-M relationship.
Finally, we find that in images where objects with M > 5x10^{13} M_{\odot}
have had their SZE signatures removed, roughly a third of the total SZE flux
still remains. This gas exists at least partially in the Warm Hot Intergalactic
Medium (WHIM), and will possibly be detectable with the upcoming generation of
SZE surveys.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures, version accepted to ApJ. Major revisions mad
Field‐Assisted Sintering of Nb–AlO Composite Materials and Investigation of Electrical Conductivity
Field-assisted sintering technique (FAST) is used for the preparation of Nb–AlO composite materials. The electrical conductivity is investigated depending on the particle size of the used starting powders and under varying volume contents of the refractory metal in the starting powder mixture. The percolation threshold is investigated and found to be influenced not only by the metal fraction but also by the particle size of the alumina used for sample preparation. For the fine- and coarse-grained alumina, a percolation threshold of 17.5 and 10 vol% Nb is estimated, respectively. Furthermore, the microstructure is investigated to gain a basic understanding of the dependency between microstructural features and the resulting material properties on the macroscopic scale. Also, the influence of the sintering process and the resulting microstructure–properties relationship is considered. It could be shown that the electrical properties are anisotropic because of anisotropy effects caused by the FAST process
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