1,804 research outputs found
Spirals in protoplanetary disks from photon travel time
Spiral structures are a common feature in scattered-light images of
protoplanetary disks, and of great interest as possible tracers of the presence
of planets. However, other mechanisms have been put foward to explain them,
including self-gravity, disk-envelope interactions, and dead zone boundaries.
These mechanisms explain many spirals very well, but are unable to easily
account for very loosely wound spirals and single spiral arms. We study the
effect of light travel time on the shape of a shadow cast by a clump orbiting
close (within au) of the central star, where there can be
significant orbital motion during the light travel time from the clump to the
outer disk and then to the sky plane. This delay in light rays reaching the sky
plane gives rise to a variety of spiral- and arc-shaped shadows, which we
describe with a general fitting formula for a flared, inclined disk.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A Letters. Videos available at
dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/3526708/spiralmovies.zi
Unification requirements of electric vehicle charging infrastructure
By increasingelectric vehicles in numbers and getting the public attention, availability, safety and accessibility of its charging infrastructure are key factorsto users’ satisfaction. Charging infrastructure in electric vehicle industry can have a role as an interface for exchanging information among other components as well. Currently, lack of universality in electric vehicle industry has caused anisolation in networks of electric vehicles. This isolationwill cause difficulty in having an aggregated set of information about electric vehicles and their consumption pattern. The paper reviews current charging infrastructure and the possibility of providing universality based on candidate protocols and technologies. © 2016 Institute of Advanced Engineering and Science
Enterprise architecture development and implementation in public sector: The Malaysian perspective
Enterprise Architecture (EA) is gaining the attention from the public sector as a solution to improve the function of e-Government. However, public sector agencies are having difficulties with its development and implementation due to inflexibility and complexity of the agencies’ business function and information technology structures. The objective of this paper is to identify the challenges faced by the Malaysian public sector agencies that are in development and implementation phase of EA. In order to get the holistic perspective of EA development and implementation scenario in each organisation, a Balanced Scorecard (BSC) approach is applied. A multiple case study research approach is utilized to achieve this study objective. Data were collected through interviews with the agencies EA team, general observation during the EA workshops as well as review of EA related documents. The result shows there are twenty challenges identified which is consistent with other challenges stated in literature except for talent management issue. Thus, this provides a new insight on how the public sector should implement their EA as compared to any other organisation
Interstellar bromine abundance is consistent with cometary ices from Rosetta
Cometary ices are formed during star and planet formation, and their
molecular and elemental makeup can be related to the early solar system via the
study of inter- and protostellar material. The first cometary abundance of the
halogen element bromine (Br) was recently made available by the Rosetta
mission. Its abundance in protostellar gas is thus far unconstrained, however.
We set out to place the first observational constraints on the interstellar
gas-phase abundance of bromine (Br). We further aim to compare the protostellar
Br abundance with that measured by Rosetta in the ices of comet
67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Archival Herschel data of Orion KL, Sgr B2(N), and
NGC 6334I are examined for the presence of HBr and HBr emission or
absorption lines. A chemical network for modelling HBr in protostellar
molecular gas is compiled to aid in the interpretation. HBr and HBr were
not detected towards any of our targets. However, in the Orion KL Hot Core, our
upper limit on HBr/HO is a factor of ten below the ratio measured in
comet 67P. This result is consistent with the chemical network prediction that
HBr is not a dominant gas-phase Br carrier. Cometary HBr is likely
predominantly formed in icy grain mantles which lock up nearly all elemental
Br.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 9 pages, 6 figure
Interstellar bromine abundance is consistent with cometary ices from Rosetta
Cometary ices are formed during star and planet formation, and their
molecular and elemental makeup can be related to the early solar system via the
study of inter- and protostellar material. The first cometary abundance of the
halogen element bromine (Br) was recently made available by the Rosetta
mission. Its abundance in protostellar gas is thus far unconstrained, however.
We set out to place the first observational constraints on the interstellar
gas-phase abundance of bromine (Br). We further aim to compare the protostellar
Br abundance with that measured by Rosetta in the ices of comet
67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Archival Herschel data of Orion KL, Sgr B2(N), and
NGC 6334I are examined for the presence of HBr and HBr emission or
absorption lines. A chemical network for modelling HBr in protostellar
molecular gas is compiled to aid in the interpretation. HBr and HBr were
not detected towards any of our targets. However, in the Orion KL Hot Core, our
upper limit on HBr/HO is a factor of ten below the ratio measured in
comet 67P. This result is consistent with the chemical network prediction that
HBr is not a dominant gas-phase Br carrier. Cometary HBr is likely
predominantly formed in icy grain mantles which lock up nearly all elemental
Br.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 9 pages, 6 figure
An IoT based home automation integrated approach: impact on society in sustainable development perspective
In recent years, due to substantial evolution in the field of consumer electronics, the society is striving to optimize efficiency, energy savings, green technology and environmental sustainability in their daily lives at homes. Most of the people are controlling and monitoring home appliances manually and therefore, facing lots of problems in managing natural resources, cost, effort and security which lead towards an un-comfortable and un-reliable life. Numerous 'intelligent' devices such as smartphones, tablets, air-conditioners, etc. have promoted the key concept of the Internet of Things (IoT) based home automation. Entrenched with technology, these devices can be distantly monitored and controlled over the Internet at home and anywhere in the world. Over the past few decades, global warming has become a severe worldwide challenge. However, sustainable development and green technology play an important role in climate change. The primary purpose of this study is to save natural resources, reduce energy consumption, and to understand the impact of home automation on the society in order to achieve the goal of green technology and environmental sustainability. In this paper, IoT based home automation approach integrated with the smart meter, solar, wind, geothermal renewable energy resources and government green awareness program to extensively optimize the need of energy consumption, security, cost, convenience and cleaner environment for the society is proposed. In addition, a survey was conducted among the target audience for the purpose of identifying and evaluating its least impact on the environment and society in a sustainable development perspective. The results of this survey are statistically analyzed using IBM SPSS statistics version 23. The results revealed that there is a significant impact of home automation on the society thereby contributing to its solution
Dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV) inhibitory activity screening of Momordica charantia, Taraxacum officinale and Trigonella foenum-graecumextracts in vitro
Diabetes, a globally popular disease which attracted the attention of many researches worldwide to discover a non-toxic and side effect free remedy for this disease. Inhibition of DPP IV enzymes has been adopted as one of the strategies in recent years in controlling diabetes. DPP IV inhibitor inhibits the dipeptidyl peptidase enzyme which degrades several incretin hormones that are vital in the production of insulin and managing the blood glucose level.Thus, the present study was designed to investigate the DPP IV inhibitory effects of plants having antidiabetic property. In vitro DPP IV inhibition was evaluated by the specific inhibitory activity of Momordica charantia (whole fruit), Taraxacum officinale (whole plant) and Trigonella foenum-graecum (seed) extracts prepared with heat treatment using petroleum ether, acetone, ethanol and water as solvents. Among the tested plants T. officinale and M. charantia acetone extracts exhibited strong DPP IV activity inhibition, with 78.88% and 54.13% respectively. The present study is the first report on screening of DPP IV inhibitory activity of T. officinale, M. charantiaand T. foenum-graecum extracts. This could provide a new insight into DPP IV inhibitors from plants that could be useful for treatment of type 2 diabetes
Depletion of chlorine into HCl ice in a protostellar core
The freezeout of gas-phase species onto cold dust grains can drastically
alter the chemistry and the heating-cooling balance of protostellar material.
In contrast to well-known species such as carbon monoxide (CO), the freezeout
of various carriers of elements with abundances has not yet been
well studied. Our aim here is to study the depletion of chlorine in the
protostellar core, OMC-2 FIR 4. We observed transitions of HCl and H2Cl+
towards OMC-2 FIR 4 using the Herschel Space Observatory and Caltech
Submillimeter Observatory facilities. Our analysis makes use of state of the
art chlorine gas-grain chemical models and newly calculated HCl-H
hyperfine collisional excitation rate coefficients. A narrow emission component
in the HCl lines traces the extended envelope, and a broad one traces a more
compact central region. The gas-phase HCl abundance in FIR 4 is 9e-11, a factor
of only 0.001 that of volatile elemental chlorine. The H2Cl+ lines are detected
in absorption and trace a tenuous foreground cloud, where we find no depletion
of volatile chlorine. Gas-phase HCl is the tip of the chlorine iceberg in
protostellar cores. Using a gas-grain chemical model, we show that the
hydrogenation of atomic chlorine on grain surfaces in the dark cloud stage
sequesters at least 90% of the volatile chlorine into HCl ice, where it remains
in the protostellar stage. About 10% of chlorine is in gaseous atomic form.
Gas-phase HCl is a minor, but diagnostically key reservoir, with an abundance
of <1e-10 in most of the protostellar core. We find the 35Cl/37Cl ratio in
OMC-2 FIR 4 to be 3.2\pm0.1, consistent with the solar system value.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Co-dependence relationship between master data management and data quality: A review
Master Data Management refers to the consolidation, integration and standardization of master data from multiple data sources into a centralized system to support data quality improvement in an organization. Nevertheless, while Master Data Management came into prominence in the information systems field of study, there is a lack of review papers for this topic have been published. Hence, this paper reports the results of a systematic literature review on the Master Data Management research topic. It aims to summarize the research progress of Master Data Management since 2000 to July 2016 and to review the association of Master Data Management and Data Quality. Search strategies with relevant keywords were used to identify literature from seven prestigious academic databases, namely 1) ACM Digital Library; 2) Emerald; 3) IEEE; 4) Science Direct; 5) Scopus; 6) Springer Link; 7) Web of Science, and one industry research database, namely Gartner. Additionally, the study made use of Google Scholar to find more related literature on the MDM research topic. From the review, 777 articles were found during the initial search and 347 relevant articles were filtered out for the analysis of MDM research progress. Then, out of the relevant articles, 49 were selected to discuss the association of MDM and Data Quality. This paper is a first academic systematic literature review on the progress of Master Data Management and its association with Data Quality. The result of the review shows that Master Data Management came into prominence from 2009 in parallel with the Big Data movement. Most researchers describe Master Data Management as a means to resolve data quality issues encountered during the management of multiple data sources. It ensures better data quality in the organization by combining a set of processes, data governance, and technology implementations
A parametric study of textile artificial magnetic conductor with wire dipole at 2.45GHZ and 5.8GHZ
Textile Artificial Magnetic Conductor (AMC) with wire dipole is presented. The AMCs are made of fleece and Shieldit fabrics and were designed to have in-phase reflections at 2.45GHz and 5.8GHz. Thorough parametric studies based on AMC unit cell have been performed to obtain the optimized design. Performance comparison between different types of environments, fabrics and arrays size were also conducted. The proposed AMC and wire dipole are designed, simulated, fabricated and tested. Results of return loss, radiation pattern and gain are presented. Results show that forward directive radiation pattern with improved gain are achieved with the introduction of the AMC at both 2.45GHz and 5.8GHz. The proposed textile AMC is suitable for body centric communication systems
- …