56,273 research outputs found
Travelling waves in a tissue interaction model for skin pattern formation
Tissue interaction plays a major role in many morphogenetic processes, particularly those associated with skin organ primordia. We examine travelling wave solutions in a tissue interaction model for skin pattern formation which is firmly based on the known biology. From a phase space analysis we conjecture the existence of travelling waves with specific wave speeds. Subsequently, analytical approximations to the wave profiles are derived using perturbation methods. We then show numerically that such travelling wave solutions do exist and that they are in good agreement with our analytical results. Finally, the biological implications of our analysis are discussed
Effective transition rates for epitaxial growth using fast modulation
Thin-film deposition is an industrially important process that is highly dependent on the processing conditions. Most films are grown under constant conditions, but a few studies show that modified properties may be obtained with periodic inputs. However, assessing the effects of modulation experimentally becomes impractical with increasing material complexity. Here we consider periodic conditions in which the period is short relative to the time scales of growth. We analyze a stochastic model of thin-film growth, computing effective transition rates associated with rapid periodic process parameters. Combinations of effective rates may exist that are not attainable under steady conditions, potentially enabling new film properties. An algorithm is presented to construct the periodic input for a desired set of effective transition rates. These ideas are demonstrated in three simple examples using kinetic Monte Carlo simulations of epitaxial growth
Digging supplementary buried channels: investigating the notch architecture within the CCD pixels on ESA's Gaia satellite
The European Space Agency (ESA) Gaia satellite has 106 CCD image sensors
which will suffer from increased charge transfer inefficiency (CTI) as a result
of radiation damage. To aid the mitigation at low signal levels, the CCD design
includes Supplementary Buried Channels (SBCs, otherwise known as `notches')
within each CCD column. We present the largest published sample of Gaia CCD SBC
Full Well Capacity (FWC) laboratory measurements and simulations based on 13
devices. We find that Gaia CCDs manufactured post-2004 have SBCs with FWCs in
the upper half of each CCD that are systematically smaller by two orders of
magnitude (<50 electrons) compared to those manufactured pre-2004 (thousands of
electrons). Gaia's faint star (13 < G < 20 mag) astrometric performance
predictions by Prod'homme et al. and Holl et al. use pre-2004 SBC FWCs as
inputs to their simulations. However, all the CCDs already integrated onto the
satellite for the 2013 launch are post-2004. SBC FWC measurements are not
available for one of our five post-2004 CCDs but the fact it meets Gaia's image
location requirements suggests it has SBC FWCs similar to pre-2004. It is too
late to measure the SBC FWCs onboard the satellite and it is not possible to
theoretically predict them. Gaia's faint star astrometric performance
predictions depend on knowledge of the onboard SBC FWCs but as these are
currently unavailable, it is not known how representative of the whole focal
plane the current predictions are. Therefore, we suggest Gaia's initial
in-orbit calibrations should include measurement of the onboard SBC FWCs. We
present a potential method to do this. Faint star astrometric performance
predictions based on onboard SBC FWCs at the start of the mission would allow
satellite operating conditions or CTI software mitigation to be further
optimised to improve the scientific return of Gaia.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 16 pages, 19 figure
Balancing Cost and Emissions Certainty: An Allowance Reserve for Cap-and-Trade
On efficiency grounds, the economics community has to date tended to emphasize price-based policies to address climate change -- such as taxes or a âsafety-valveâ price ceiling for cap-and-trade -â while environmental advocates have sought a more clear quantitative limit on emissions. This paper presents a simple modification to the idea of a safety valve -- a quantitative limit that we call the allowance reserve. Importantly, this idea may bridge the gap between competing interests and potentially improve efficiency relative to tax or other price-based policies. The last point highlights the deficiencies in several previous studies of price and quantity controls for climate change that do not adequately capture the dynamic opportunities within a cap-and-trade system for allowance banking, borrowing, and intertemporal arbitrage in response to unfolding information.climate change, regulation, uncertainty, welfare, prices, quantities
Influence of environmental factors during seed development and after full-ripeness on pre-harvest sprouting in wheat
Results on environmental and genotypic factors influencing preharvest sprouting of wheat are summarized. Other possible areas where additional research is needed is suggested
The NASA Astrophysics Data System: Data Holdings
Since its inception in 1993, the ADS Abstract Service has become an
indispensable research tool for astronomers and astrophysicists worldwide. In
those seven years, much effort has been directed toward improving both the
quantity and the quality of references in the database. From the original
database of approximately 160,000 astronomy abstracts, our dataset has grown
almost tenfold to approximately 1.5 million references covering astronomy,
astrophysics, planetary sciences, physics, optics, and engineering. We collect
and standardize data from approximately 200 journals and present the resulting
information in a uniform, coherent manner. With the cooperation of journal
publishers worldwide, we have been able to place scans of full journal articles
on-line back to the first volumes of many astronomical journals, and we are
able to link to current version of articles, abstracts, and datasets for
essentially all of the current astronomy literature. The trend toward
electronic publishing in the field, the use of electronic submission of
abstracts for journal articles and conference proceedings, and the increasingly
prominent use of the World Wide Web to disseminate information have enabled the
ADS to build a database unparalleled in other disciplines.
The ADS can be accessed at http://adswww.harvard.eduComment: 24 pages, 1 figure, 6 tables, 3 appendice
Trade credit in the UK construction industry: an empirical analysis of construction contractor financial positioning and performance
Research commissioned by the Department for Business, Innovation & Skills (BIS) to inform analysis for the âIndustrial Strategy for Constructionâ. It explores the availability of trade credit for UK construction firms and how they rely upon it to support their operations. It looks at: - how companies in the construction sector finance their work - how finance structures within the construction sector compare to those of the economy as a whole - how the way construction companies fund themselves differs between main contractors and subcontractors, and by size of firm - whether the structure of construction industry finance significantly altered since the financial and banking crisis It makes recommendations on the implications of these findings for companies in the construction sector
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