2,564 research outputs found
Characterisation of real GPRS traffic with analytical tools
With GPRS and UMTS networks lunched, wireless multimedia services are commercially becoming the most attractive applications next to voice. Because of the nature of bursty, packet-switched schemes and multiple data rates, the traditional Erlang approach and Poisson models for characterising voice-centric services traffic are not suitable for studying wireless multimedia services traffic. Therefore, research on the characterisation of wireless multimedia services traffic is very challenging. The typical reference for the study of wireless multimedia services traffic is wired Internet services traffic. However, because of the differences in network protocol, bandwidth, and QoS requirements between wired and wireless services, their traffic characterisations may not be similar. Wired network Internet traffic shows self-similarity, long-range dependence and its file sizes exhibit heavy-tailedness. This paper reports the use of existing tools to analyse real GPRS traffic data to establish whether wireless multimedia services traffic have similar properties as wired Internet services traffic
A NLO analysis on fragility of dihadron tomography in high energy collisions
The dihadron spectra in high energy collisions are studied within the
NLO pQCD parton model with jet quenching taken into account. The high
dihadron spectra are found to be contributed not only by jet pairs close and
tangential to the surface of the dense matter but also by punching-through jets
survived at the center while the single hadron high spectra are only
dominated by surface emission. Consequently, the suppression factor of such
high- hadron pairs is found to be more sensitive to the initial gluon
density than the single hadron suppression factor.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, proceedings for the 19th international Conference
on ultra-relativistic nucleus-nucleus collisions (QM2006), Shanghai, China,
November 14-20, 200
Environment and Energy Injection Effects in GRB Afterglows
In a recent paper (Dai & Lu 1999), we have proposed a simple model in which
the steepening in the light curve of the R-band afterglow of the gamma-ray
burst (GRB) 990123 is caused by the adiabatic shock which has evolved from an
ultrarelativistic phase to a nonrelativistic phase in a dense medium. We find
that such a model is quite consistent with observations if the medium density
is about . Here we discuss this model in more
details. In particular, we investigate the effects of synchrotron self
absorption and energy injection. A shock in a dense medium becomes
nonrelativistic rapidly after a short relativistic phase. The afterglow from
the shock at the nonrelativistic stage decays more rapidly than at the
relativistic stage. Since some models for GRB energy sources predict that a
strongly magnetic millisecond pulsar may be born during the formation of GRB,
we discuss the effect of such a pulsar on the evolution of the nonrelativistic
shock through magnetic dipole radiation. We find that after the energy which
the shock obtains from the pulsar is much more than the initial energy of the
shock, the afterglow decay will flatten significantly. When the pulsar energy
input effect disappears, the decay will steepen again. These features are in
excellent agreement with the afterglows of GRB 980519, GRB 990510 and GRB
980326. Furthermore, our model fits very well all the observational data of GRB
980519 including the last two detections.Comment: 21 pages, LaTeX, accepted for publication in ApJ, one paragraph adde
Metallic behaviour of carrier-polarized C molecular layers: Experiment and Theory
Although C is a molecular crystal with a bandgap E of ~2.5 eV, we
show that E is strongly affected by injected charge. In sharp contrast to
the Coulomb blockade typical of quantum dots, E is {\it reduced} by the
Coulomb effects. The conductance of a thin C layer sandwiched between
metal (Al, Ag, Au, Mg and Pt) contacts is investigated. Excellent Ohmic
conductance is observed for Al electrodes protected with ultra-thin LiF layers.
First-principles calculations, Hubbard models etc., show that the energy gap of
C is dramatically reduced when electrons hop from C to
C.Comment: 4 PRL style pages, 2 figures. email: [email protected]
The Effects of Foam Rolling vs Dynamic Stretching on Anaerobic Performance
Please refer to the pdf version of the abstract located adjacent to the title
Self-supervised Contrastive Video-Speech Representation Learning for Ultrasound
In medical imaging, manual annotations can be expensive to acquire and
sometimes infeasible to access, making conventional deep learning-based models
difficult to scale. As a result, it would be beneficial if useful
representations could be derived from raw data without the need for manual
annotations. In this paper, we propose to address the problem of
self-supervised representation learning with multi-modal ultrasound
video-speech raw data. For this case, we assume that there is a high
correlation between the ultrasound video and the corresponding narrative speech
audio of the sonographer. In order to learn meaningful representations, the
model needs to identify such correlation and at the same time understand the
underlying anatomical features. We designed a framework to model the
correspondence between video and audio without any kind of human annotations.
Within this framework, we introduce cross-modal contrastive learning and an
affinity-aware self-paced learning scheme to enhance correlation modelling.
Experimental evaluations on multi-modal fetal ultrasound video and audio show
that the proposed approach is able to learn strong representations and
transfers well to downstream tasks of standard plane detection and eye-gaze
prediction.Comment: MICCAI 2020 (early acceptance
A Next-to-Leading-Order Study of Dihadron Production
The production of pairs of hadrons in hadronic collisions is studied using a
next-to-leading-order Monte Carlo program based on the phase space slicing
technique. Up-to-date fragmentation functions based on fits to LEP data are
employed, together with several versions of current parton distribution
functions. Good agreement is found with data for the dihadron mass
distribution. A comparison is also made with data for the dihadron angular
distribution. The scale dependence of the predictions and the dependence on the
choices made for the fragmentation and parton distribution functions are also
presented. The good agreement between theory and experiment is contrasted to
the case for single production where significant deviations between
theory and experiment have been observed.Comment: 22 pages, 15 figures; 3 references added, one figure modified for
clarit
A Possible Explanation of the Radio Afterglow of GRB980519: The Dense Medium Effect
GRB{980519} is characterized by its rapidly declining optical and X-ray
afterglows. Explanations of this behavior include models invoking a dense
medium environment which makes the shock wave evolve quickly into the
sub-relativistic phase, a jet-like outflow, and a wind-shaped circumburst
medium environment. Recently, Frail {et al}. (1999a) found that the latter two
cases are consistent with the radio afterglow of this burst. Here, by
considering the trans-relativistic shock hydrodynamics, we show that the dense
medium model can also account for the radio light curve quite well. The
potential virtue of the dense medium model for GRB{980519} is that it implies a
smaller angular size of the afterglow, which is essential for interpreting the
strong modulation of the radio light curve. Optical extinction due to the dense
medium is not important if the prompt optical-UV flash accompanying the
-ray emission can destroy dust by sublimation out to an appreciable
distance. Comparisons with some other radio afterglows are also discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, a few minor changes made and references up dated,
MNRAS, in pres
Women, anger, and aggression an interpretative phenomenological analysis
This study reports a qualitative phenomenological investigation of anger and anger-related aggression in the context of the lives of individual women. Semistructured interviews with five women are analyzed using interpretative phenomenological analysis. This inductive approach aims to capture the richness and complexity of the lived experience of emotional life. In particular, it draws attention to the context-dependent and relational dimension of angry feelings and aggressive behavior. Three analytic themes are presented here: the subjective experience of anger, which includes the perceptual confusion and bodily change felt by the women when angry, crying, and the presence of multiple emotions; the forms and contexts of aggression, paying particular attention to the range of aggressive strategies used; and anger as moral judgment, in particular perceptions of injustice and unfairness. The authors conclude by examining the analytic observations in light of phenomenological thinking
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