3,090 research outputs found
Experience with statically-generated proxies for facilitating Java runtime specialisation
Issues pertaining to mechanisms which can be used to change the behaviour of Java classes at runtime are discussed. The proxy mechanism is compared to, and contrasted with other standard approaches to this problem. Some of the problems the proxy mechanism is subject to are expanded upon. The question of whether statically-developed proxies are a viable alternative to bytecode rewriting was investigated by means of the JavaCloak system, which uses statically-generated proxies to alter the runtime behaviour of externally-developed code. The issues addressed include ensuring the type safety, dealing with the self problem, object encapsulation, and issues of object identity and equality. Some performance figures are provided which demonstrate the load the JavaCloak proxy mechanism places on the system
The cost effectiveness of integrated care for people living with HIV including antiretroviral treatment in a primary health care centre in Bujumbura, Burundi
The incremental cost effectiveness of an integrated care package (i.e., medical care including antiretroviral therapy (ART) and other services such as psychological and social support) for people living with HIV/AIDS was calculated in a not-for-profit primary health care centre in Bujumbura run by Society of Women against AIDS-Burundi (SWAA-Burundi), an African non-governmental organisation (NGO). Results are expressed as cost-effectiveness ratio 2007, constant US per DALY averted. The package of care provided by SWAA-Burundi is therefore a very cost-effective intervention in comparison with other interventions against HIV/AIDS that include ART. It is however, less cost effective than other types of interventions against HIV/AIDS, such as preventive activities
EMBRACE@Nancay: An Ultra Wide Field of View Prototype for the SKA
A revolution in radio receiving technology is underway with the development
of densely packed phased arrays for radio astronomy. This technology can
provide an exceptionally large field of view, while at the same time sampling
the sky with high angular resolution. Such an instrument, with a field of view
of over 100 square degrees, is ideal for performing fast, all-sky, surveys,
such as the "intensity mapping" experiment to measure the signature of Baryonic
Acoustic Oscillations in the HI mass distribution at cosmological redshifts.
The SKA, built with this technology, will be able to do a billion galaxy
survey. I will present a very brief introduction to radio interferometry, as
well as an overview of the Square Kilometre Array project. This will be
followed by a description of the EMBRACE prototype and a discussion of results
and future plans.Comment: to appear in proceedings of the INFIERI Summer School INtelligent
Signal Processing for FrontIEr Research and Industry, Paris 201
Conformally related massless fields in dS, AdS and Minkowski spaces
In this paper we write down the equation for a scalar conformally coupled
field simultaneously for de Sitter (dS), anti-de Sitter (AdS) and Minkowski
spacetime in d-dimensions. The curvature dependence appears in a very simple
way through a conformal factor. As a consequence the process of curvature free
limit, including wave functions limit and two-points functions, turns to be a
straightforward issue. We determine a set of modes, that we call de Sitter
plane waves, which become ordinary plane waves when the curvature vanishes.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
Renormalization for a Class of Dynamical Systems: some Local and Global Properties
We study the period doubling renormalization operator for dynamics which
present two coupled laminar regimes with two weakly expanding fixed points. We
focus our analysis on the potential point of view, meaning we want to solve
where and are
naturally defined. Under certain hypothesis we show the existence of a explicit
``attracting'' fixed point for . We call the
renormalization operator which acts on potentials . The log of the
derivative of the main branch of the Manneville-Pomeau map appears as a special
``attracting'' fixed point for the local doubling period renormalization
operator. We also consider an analogous definition for the one-sided 2-full
shift (and also for the two-sided shift) and we obtain a similar result.
Then, we consider global properties and we prove two rigidity results. Up to
some weak assumptions, we get the uniqueness for the renormalization operator
in the shift. In the last section we show (via a certain continuous fraction
expansion) a natural relation of the two settings: shift acting on the
Bernoulli space and Manneville-Pomeau-like map acting on
an interval
Characterization of a dense aperture array for radio astronomy
EMBRACE@Nancay is a prototype instrument consisting of an array of 4608
densely packed antenna elements creating a fully sampled, unblocked aperture.
This technology is proposed for the Square Kilometre Array and has the
potential of providing an extremely large field of view making it the ideal
survey instrument. We describe the system,calibration procedures, and results
from the prototype.Comment: 17 pages, accepted for publication in A&
Environmental regulation of cloud and star formation in galactic bars
The strong time-dependence of the dynamics of galactic bars yields a complex
and rapidly evolving distribution of dense gas and star forming regions.
Although bars mainly host regions void of any star formation activity, their
extremities can gather the physical conditions for the formation of molecular
complexes and mini-starbursts. Using a sub-parsec resolution hydrodynamical
simulation of a Milky Way-like galaxy, we probe these conditions to explore how
and where bar (hydro-)dynamics favours the formation or destruction of
molecular clouds and stars. The interplay between the kpc-scale dynamics (gas
flows, shear) and the parsec-scale (turbulence) is key to this problem. We find
a strong dichotomy between the leading and trailing sides of the bar, in term
of cloud fragmentation and in the age distribution of the young stars. After
orbiting along the bar edge, these young structures slow down at the
extremities of the bar, where orbital crowding increases the probability of
cloud-cloud collision. We find that such events increase the Mach number of the
cloud, leading to an enhanced star formation efficiency and finally the
formation of massive stellar associations, in a fashion similar to
galaxy-galaxy interactions. We highlight the role of bar dynamics in decoupling
young stars from the clouds in which they form, and discuss the implications on
the injection of feedback into the interstellar medium, in particular in the
context of galaxy formation.Comment: MNRAS accepte
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