1,793 research outputs found
Dwarf Novae in the Shortest Orbital Period Regime: II. WZ Sge Stars as the Missing Population near the Period Minimum
WZ Sge-type dwarf novae are characterized by long recurrence times of
outbursts (~10 yr) and short orbital periods (<~ 85 min). A significant part of
WZ Sge stars may remain undiscovered because of low outburst activity.
Recently, the observed orbital period distribution of cataclysmic variables
(CVs) has changed partly because outbursts of new WZ Sge stars have been
discovered routinely. Hence, the estimation of the intrinsic population of WZ
Sge stars is important for the study of the population and evolution of CVs. In
this paper, we present a Bayesian approach to estimate the intrinsic period
distribution of dwarf novae from observed samples. In this Bayesian model, we
assumed a simple relationship between the recurrence time and the orbital
period which is consistent with observations of WZ Sge stars and other dwarf
novae. As a result, the minimum orbital period was estimated to be ~70 min. The
population of WZ Sge stars exhibited a spike-like feature at the shortest
period regime in the orbital period distribution. These features are consistent
with the orbital period distribution previously predicted by population
synthesis studies. We propose that WZ Sge stars and CVs with a low
mass-transfer rate are excellent candidates for the missing population
predicted by the evolution theory of CVs.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
Markov basis and Groebner basis of Segre-Veronese configuration for testing independence in group-wise selections
We consider testing independence in group-wise selections with some
restrictions on combinations of choices. We present models for frequency data
of selections for which it is easy to perform conditional tests by Markov chain
Monte Carlo (MCMC) methods. When the restrictions on the combinations can be
described in terms of a Segre-Veronese configuration, an explicit form of a
Gr\"obner basis consisting of moves of degree two is readily available for
performing a Markov chain. We illustrate our setting with the National Center
Test for university entrance examinations in Japan. We also apply our method to
testing independence hypotheses involving genotypes at more than one locus or
haplotypes of alleles on the same chromosome.Comment: 25 pages, 5 figure
Studying the High-Energy Gamma-Ray Sky with Glast
Building on the success of the Energetic Gamma Ray Experiment Telescope
(EGRET) on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, the Gamma-ray Large Area Space
Telescope (GLAST) will make a major step in the study of such subjects as
blazars, gamma-ray bursts, the search for dark matter, supernova remnants,
pulsars, diffuse radiation, and unidentified high-energy sources. The
instrument will be built on new and mature detector technologies such as
silicon strip detectors, low-power low-noise LSI, and a multilevel data
acquisition system. GLAST is in the research and development phase, and one
full tower (of 25 total) is now being built in collaborating institutes. The
prototype tower will be tested thoroughly at SLAC in the fall of 1999.Comment: 6 pages with 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the COSPAR 98
Symposium E 1.1, postscript file also available at
http://glast.gsfc.nasa.gov/COSPAR
Increased production of viral proteins by a 3'-LTR-deleted infectious clone of human T-cell leukemia virus type 1
We previously reported that a full-length provirus of HTLV-1 was directly constructed from the HTLV-1-transformed cell line MT-2 using overlapping polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and cloned into a plasmid vector (pFL-MT2). 293T cells transfected with pFL-MT2 alone did not produce virus particles because there was no expression of the viral transactivator protein Tax, whereas cells transfected with pFL-MT2 plus a Tax expression vector produced virus-like particles. In the process of constructing the HTLV-1 provirus by overlapping PCR, we also constructed an incomplete molecular clone, in which the 3' long terminal repeat (LTR) was replaced with the endogenous human gene, which resulted in the expression of a tax gene shorter by 43 bp. This incomplete molecular clone alone expressed Tax and produced the viral protein in transfected cells. Various clones were then constructed with different lengths of the 3' LTR and lacking the reverse-direction TATA box. The clones contained over 113 bp of the 3' LTR, with no reverse-direction TATA box, which might express the full-length tax gene, and did not produce the viral antigen. These results suggest that Tax in which the C-terminal portion is deleted is more strongly expressed than the wild-type protein and has transcriptional activity
Power Consumption Model of NDN-Based Multicore Software Router Based on Detailed Protocol Analysis
Named data networking (NDN) has received considerable attention recently, mainly due to its built-in caching, which is expected to enable widespread and transparent operator-controlled caching. One of the important research challenges is to reduce the amount of power consumed by NDN networks as it has been shown that NDN's name prefix matching and caching are power-hungry. As a first step to achieving power-efficient NDN networks, in this paper, we develop a power consumption model of a multicore software NDN router. By applying this model to analyze how caching reduces power, we report that caching can reduce power consumption of an NDN network if the power consumption of routers is in proportion to their load and the computation of caching is as light as that of forwarding
Infrared/optical - X-ray simultaneous observations of X-ray flares in GRB 071112C and GRB 080506
We investigate the origin of short X-ray flares which are occasionally
observed in early stages of afterglows of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). We observed
two events, GRB 071112C and GRB 080506, before the start of X-ray flares in the
optical and near-infrared (NIR) bands with the 1.5-m Kanata telescope. In
conjunction with published X-ray and optical data, we analyzed densely sampled
light curves of the early afterglows and spectral energy distributions (SEDs)
in the NIR-X-ray ranges. We found that the SEDs had a break between the optical
and X-ray bands in the normal decay phases of both GRBs regardless of the model
for the correction of the interstellar extinction in host galaxies of GRBs. In
the X-ray flares, X-ray flux increased by 3 and 15 times in the case of GRB
071112C and 080506, respectively, and the X-ray spectra became harder than
those in the normal decay phases. No significant variation in the optical-NIR
range was detected together with the X-ray flares. These results suggest that
the X-ray flares were associated with either late internal shocks or external
shocks from two-component jets.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, accepted to Astronomy and Astrophysic
Evidence for Strong-coupling S-wave Superconductivity in MgB2 :11B NMR Study
We have investigated a gap structure in a newly-discovered superconductor,
MgB2 through the measurement of 11B nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate,
^{11}(1/T_1). ^{11}(1/T_1) is proportional to the temperature (T) in the normal
state, and decreases exponentially in the superconducting (SC) state, revealing
a tiny coherence peak just below T_c. The T dependence of 1/T_1 in the SC state
can be accounted for by an s-wave SC model with a large gap size of 2\Delta
/k_BT_c \sim 5 which suggests to be in a strong-coupling regime.Comment: 2 pages with 1 figur
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