74 research outputs found
A combinatorial method for the evaluation of yield of fault-tolerant systems-on-chip
In this paper we develop a combinatorial method for the evaluation of yield of fault-tolerant systems-on-chip. The method assumes that defects are produced according to a model in which defects are lethal and affect given components of the system following a distribution common to all defects. The distribution of the number of defects is arbitrary.
The method is based on the formulation of the yield as 1 minus the probability that a given boolean function with multiple-valued variables has value 1. That probability is computed by analyzing a ROMDD (reduced ordered multiple-valuedecision diagram) representation of the function.
For efficiency reasons, we first build a coded ROBDD (reduced ordered binary decision diagram) representation of the function and then transform that coded ROBDD into the ROMDD required by the method. We present numerical experiments showing that the method is able to cope with quite large systems in moderate CPU times.Postprint (published version
Subaru and Swift observations of V652 Herculis: resolving the photospheric pulsation
High-resolution spectroscopy with the Subaru High Dispersion Spectrograph, and Swift ultraviolet photometry are presented for the pulsating extreme helium star V652 Her. Swift provides the best relative ultraviolet photometry obtained to date, but shows no direct evidence for a shock at ultraviolet or X-ray wavelengths. Subaru has provided high spectral and high temporal resolution spectroscopy over six pulsation cycles (and eight radius minima).
These data have enabled a line-by-line analysis of the entire pulsation cycle and provided a description of the pulsating photosphere as a function of optical depth. They show that the photosphere is compressed radially by a factor of at least 2 at minimum radius, that the phase of radius minimum is a function of optical depth and the pulse speed through the photosphere is between 141 and 239 km s−1 (depending how measured) and at least 10 times the local sound speed. The strong acceleration at minimum radius is demonstrated in individual line profiles; those formed deepest in the photosphere show a jump discontinuity of over 70 kms−1 on a time-scale of 150 s. The pulse speed and line profile jumps imply a shock is present at minimum radius. These empirical results provide input for hydrodynamical modelling of the pulsation and hydrodynamical plus radiative transfer modelling of the dynamical spectra
Automated Observations of the Earthshine
The overall reflectance of sunlight from Earth is a fundamental parameter
for climate studies. We have designed and implemented small aperture, remote
control telescopes in Big Bear Solar Observatory in California and in Tenerife in
the Canary Islands. These telescopes observe the earthshine to obtain a global
mean terrestrial reflectance utilizing a coronagraph-like design for long exposures
of the dark of the Moon and have internal moving parts in the optical train, which
presented some design and control problems
Identifying the rotation rate and the presence of dynamic weather on extrasolar Earth-like planets from photometric observations
With the recent discoveries of hundreds of extrasolar planets, the search for
planets like Earth and life in the universe, is quickly gaining momentum. In
the future, large space observatories could directly detect the light scattered
from rocky planets, but they would not be able to spatially resolve a planet's
surface. Using reflectance models and real cloud data from satellite
observations, here we show that, despite Earth's dynamic weather patterns, the
light scattered by the Earth to a hypothetical distant observer as a function
of time contains sufficient information to accurately measure Earth's rotation
period. This is because ocean currents and continents result in relatively
stable averaged global cloud patterns. The accuracy of these measurements will
vary with the viewing geometry and other observational constraints. If the
rotation period can be measured with accuracy, data spanning several months
could be coherently combined to obtain spectroscopic information about
individual regions of the planetary surface. Moreover, deviations from a
periodic signal can be used to infer the presence of relatively short-live
structures in its atmosphere (i.e., clouds). This could provide a useful
technique for recognizing exoplanets that have active weather systems, changing
on a timescale comparable to their rotation. Such variability is likely to be
related to the atmospheric temperature and pressure being near a phase
transition and could support the possibility of liquid water on the planet's
surface
The transmission spectrum of Earth through lunar eclipse observations
Of the 342 planets discovered so far orbiting other stars, 58 "transit" the
stellar disk, meaning that they can be detected by a periodic decrease in the
starlight flux. The light from the star passes through the atmosphere of the
planet, and in a few cases the basic atmospheric composition of the planet can
be estimated. As we get closer to finding analogues of Earth, an important
consideration toward the characterization of exoplanetary atmospheres is what
the transmission spectrum of our planet looks like. Here we report the optical
and near-infrared transmission spectrum of the Earth, obtained during a lunar
eclipse. Some biologically relevant atmospheric features that are weak in the
reflected spectrum (such as ozone, molecular oxygen, water, carbon dioxide and
methane) are much stronger in the transmission spectrum, and indeed stronger
than predicted by modelling. We also find the fingerprints of the Earth's
ionosphere and of the major atmospheric constituent, diatomic nitrogen (N2),
which are missing in the reflected spectrum.Comment: Published in Nature, 11 July 2009. This file also contains the
on-line materia
Linear polarization of rapidly rotating ultracool dwarfs
Abstract. We present imaging linear polarimetry data of a sample of 18 late-M, L-, and early-T type dwarfs taken with the Z-and J-band filters and the LIRIS instrument of the 4.2-m William Herschel Telescope. All of our targets have projected rotational velocities ≥ 30 km s −1 and oblate ultracool atmospheres (T eff < 2700 K), which may harbor clouds of condensate particles. Our polarimetric measurements have typical error bars of ±0.13%, i.e., linear polarization degrees larger than 0.4% can be detected with a confidence of ≥ 3σ. Seven dwarfs appear to be polarized in the J-band with indices of P = 0.4-0.7%, suggesting the presence of atmospheric dusty structures. There is a hint that the dwarfs with the largest rotations (v sin i ≥ 60 km s −1 ) show higher incidence of detected J-band linear polarization than the dwarfs with smaller projected rotational velocities. We also detect linear polarization variability indicative of "weather"
The EBLM project. II. A very hot, low-mass M dwarf in an eccentric and long period eclipsing binary system from SuperWASP
In this paper, we derive the fundamental properties of
1SWASPJ011351.29+314909.7 (J0113+31), a metal-poor (-0.40 +/- 0.04 dex),
eclipsing binary in an eccentric orbit (~0.3) with an orbital period of ~14.277
d. Eclipsing M dwarfs orbiting solar-type stars (EBLMs), like J0113+31, have
been identified from WASP light curves and follow-up spectroscopy in the course
of the transiting planet search. We present the first binary of the EBLM sample
to be fully analysed, and thus, define here the methodology. The primary
component with a mass of 0.945 +/- 0.045 Msun has a large radius (1.378 +/-
0.058 Rsun) indicating that the system is quite old, ~9.5 Gyr. The M-dwarf
secondary mass of 0.186 +/- 0.010 Msun and radius of 0.209 +/- 0.011 Rsun are
fully consistent with stellar evolutionary models. However, from the
near-infrared secondary eclipse light curve, the M dwarf is found to have an
effective temperature of 3922 +/- 42 K, which is ~600 K hotter than predicted
by theoretical models. We discuss different scenarios to explain this
temperature discrepancy. The case of J0113+31 for which we can measure mass,
radius, temperature and metallicity, highlights the importance of deriving
mass, radius and temperature as a function of metallicity for M dwarfs to
better understand the lowest mass stars. The EBLM Project will define the
relationship between mass, radius, temperature and metallicity for M dwarfs
providing important empirical constraints at the bottom of the main sequence.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
The K2-ESPRINT Project. I. Discovery of the Disintegrating Rocky Planet K2-22b with a Cometary Head and Leading Tail
We present the discovery of a transiting exoplanet candidate in the K2
Field-1 with an orbital period of 9.1457 hr: K2-22b. The highly variable
transit depths, ranging from 0\% to 1.3\%, are suggestive of a planet
that is disintegrating via the emission of dusty effluents. We characterize the
host star as an M-dwarf with K. We have obtained
ground-based transit measurements with several 1-m class telescopes and with
the GTC. These observations (1) improve the transit ephemeris; (2) confirm the
variable nature of the transit depths; (3) indicate variations in the transit
shapes; and (4) demonstrate clearly that at least on one occasion the transit
depths were significantly wavelength dependent. The latter three effects tend
to indicate extinction of starlight by dust rather than by any combination of
solid bodies. The K2 observations yield a folded light curve with lower time
resolution but with substantially better statistical precision compared with
the ground-based observations. We detect a significant "bump" just after the
transit egress, and a less significant bump just prior to transit ingress. We
interpret these bumps in the context of a planet that is not only likely
streaming a dust tail behind it, but also has a more prominent leading dust
trail that precedes it. This effect is modeled in terms of dust grains that can
escape to beyond the planet's Hill sphere and effectively undergo `Roche lobe
overflow,' even though the planet's surface is likely underfilling its Roche
lobe by a factor of 2.Comment: 22 pages, 16 figures. Final version accepted to Ap
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