2,347 research outputs found
A theory of contracts for web services
<p>Contracts are behavioural descriptions of Web services. We devise a theory of contracts that formalises the compatibility of a client to a service, and the safe replacement of a service with another service. The use of contracts statically ensures the successful completion of every possible interaction between compatible clients and services.</p>
<p>The technical device that underlies the theory is the definition of filters, which are explicit coercions that prevent some possible behaviours of services and, in doing so, they make services compatible with different usage scenarios. We show that filters can be seen as proofs of a sound and complete subcontracting deduction system which simultaneously refines and extends Hennessy's classical axiomatisation of the must testing preorder. The relation is decidable and the decision algorithm is obtained via a cut-elimination process that proves the coherence of subcontracting as a logical system.</p>
<p>Despite the richness of the technical development, the resulting approach is based on simple ideas and basic intuitions. Remarkably, its application is mostly independent of the language used to program the services or the clients. We also outline the possible practical impact of such a work and the perspectives of future research it opens.</p>
BeppoSAX Observations of 1-Jy BL Lacertae Objects - II
We present new BeppoSAX LECS and MECS observations, covering the energy range
0.1 - 10 keV (observer's frame), of four BL Lacertae objects selected from the
1 Jy sample. All sources display a flat (alpha_x ~ 0.7) X-ray spectrum, which
we interpret as inverse Compton emission. One object shows evidence for a
low-energy steepening (Delta alpha_x ~ 0.9) which is likely due to the
synchrotron component merging into the inverse Compton one around ~ 2 keV. A
variable synchrotron tail would explain why the ROSAT spectra of our sources
are typically steeper than the BeppoSAX ones (Delta alpha_x} ~ 0.7). The
broad-band spectral energy distributions fully confirm this picture and model
fits using a synchrotron inverse Compton model allow us to derive the physical
parameters (intrinsic power, magnetic field, etc.) of our sources. By combining
the results of this paper with those previously obtained on other sources we
present a detailed study of the BeppoSAX properties of a well-defined
sub-sample of 14 X-ray bright (f_x (0.1 - 10 keV) > 3 x 10^{-12} erg/cm^2/s)
1-Jy BL Lacs. We find a very tight proportionality between nearly simultaneous
radio and X-ray powers for the 1-Jy sources in which the X-ray band is
dominated by inverse Compton emission, which points to a strong link between
X-ray and radio emission components in these objects.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Postscript
file also available at http://www.stsci.edu/~padovani/xrayspectra_papers.htm
Mosaico de imagens de satélite do Pantanal no ano 2000.
O Pantanal devido a sua extensĂŁo e dificuldade de acesso representa um desafio para o desenvolvimento de atividades de produção e conservação da natureza. Nesse sentido as tecnologias de Sensoriamento Remoto podem contribuir muito para o conhecimento e manejo desse ecossistema. O presente trabalho apresenta o mosaico de imagens Landsat 7 ETM do ano 2000 do Pantanal, onde ao contrĂĄrio dos demais produtos dessa natureza, apresenta uma maior precisĂŁo de posicionamento em função de um extenso trabalho de campo realizado para o georreferenciamento das imagens. Esse trabalho Ă© o resultado da parceria entre a Embrapa Pantanal e a WWF Brasil e estĂĄ disponĂvel tambĂ©m na homepage da Embrapa Pantanal. Esperamos com essa iniciativa estar cumprindo com nosso objetivo de levar Ă comunidade informaçÔes sobre o Pantanal.bitstream/item/81191/1/DOC43.pd
Protonated CO2 in massive star-forming clumps
Interstellar CO2 is an important reservoir of carbon and oxygen, and one of
the major constituents of the icy mantles of dust grains, but it is not
observable directly in the cold gas because has no permanent dipole moment. Its
protonated form, HOCO+, is believed to be a good proxy for gaseous CO2.
However, it has been detected in only a few star-forming regions so far, so
that its interstellar chemistry is not well understood. We present new
detections of HOCO+ lines in 11 high-mass star-forming clumps. Our observations
increase by more than three times the number of detections in star-forming
regions so far. We have derived beam-averaged abundances relative to H2 in
between 0.3 and 3.8 x 10^{-11}. We have compared these values with the
abundances of H13CO+, a possible gas-phase precursor of HOCO+, and CH3OH, a
product of surface chemistry. We have found a positive correlation with H13CO+,
while with CH3OH there is no correlation. We suggest that the gas-phase
formation route starting from HCO+ plays an important role in the formation of
HOCO+, perhaps more relevant than protonation of CO2 (upon evaporation of this
latter from icy dust mantles).Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRA
VLA Observations of a New Population of Blazars
We present the first deep VLA radio images of flat-spectrum radio quasars
(FSRQ) with multiwavelength emission properties similar to those of BL Lacs
with synchrotron X-rays. Our observations of twenty-five of these sources show
that their radio morphologies are similar to those of other radio quasars.
However, their range of extended powers is more similar to that of BL Lacertae
objects (BL Lacs) and extends down to the low values typical of FR I radio
galaxies. Five out of our nine lobe-dominated sources have extended radio
powers in the range typical of both FR I and FR II radio galaxies, but their
extended radio structure is clearly FR II-like. Therefore, we have not yet
found a large population of radio quasars hosted by FR Is. Two thirds of our
sources have a core-dominated radio morpholgy and thus X-rays likely dominated
by the jet. We find that their ratios of radio core to total X-ray luminosity
are low and in the regime indicative of synchrotron X-rays. This result shows
that also blazars with strong emission lines can produce jets of high-energy
synchrotron emission and undermines at least in part the ``blazar sequence''
scenario which advocates that particle Compton cooling by an external radiation
field governs the frequency of the synchrotron emission peak.Comment: 26 pages, 33 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Radio Luminosities and Classificatory Criteria of BL Lacertae Objects
Using the sample of radio selected BL Lacertae objects (RBLs) and X-ray
selected BL Lacertae objects (XBLs) presented by Sambruna et al. (1996), we
calculated the luminosities of radio, optical and X-ray of each source and made
the statistical analysis among the luminosities at different wave-bands,
broad-band spectral indices from radio to X-ray () and peak
frequencies (). Our results are as follows: (i) there is a positive
correlation between radio luminosity and and a
negative correlation between and . High-energy peak BL Lacs
(HBLs) and low-energy peak BL Lacs (LBLs) can be distinguished very well, the
dividing lines are probably those of (erg/sec) and
(or )0.75 for - plot and
those of (erg/sec) and for the
- plot; (ii) there is a weak positive correlation between
optical luminosity and and a negatively weak
correlation between and ; (iii) there is no correlation
between X-ray luminosity and or between and
. From our analysis, we find that synchrotron radiation is the main
X-ray radiation mechanism for HBLs while inverse Compton scattering for LBLs.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to A&
How many radio-loud quasars can be detected by the Gamma-Ray Large Area Space Telescope?
In the unification scheme, radio quasars and FR II radio galaxies come from
the same parent population, but viewed at different angles. Based on the
Comptonization models for the gamma-ray emission from active galactic nuclei
(AGNs), we estimate the number of radio quasars and FR II radio galaxies to be
detected by the Gamma-Ray Large Area Space Telescope (GLAST) using the
luminosity function (LF) of their parent population derived from the
flat-spectrum radio quasar (FSRQ) LF. We find that ~1200 radio quasars will be
detected by GLAST, if the soft seed photons for Comptonization come from the
regions outside the jets. We also consider the synchrotron self-Comptonization
(SSC) model, and find it unlikely to be responsible for gamma-ray emission from
radio quasars. We find that no FR II radio galaxies will be detected by GLAST.
Our results show that most radio AGNs to be detected by GLAST will be FSRQs
(~99 % for the external Comptonization model, EC model), while the remainder
(~1 %) will be steep-spectrum radio quasars (SSRQs). This implies that FSRQs
will still be good candidates for identifying gamma-ray AGNs even for the GLAST
sources. The contribution of all radio quasars and FR II radio galaxies to the
extragalactic gamma-ray background (EGRB) is calculated, which accounts for ~30
% of the EGRB.Comment: 4 pages, accepted by ApJ Letter
Resolving Non-Determinism in Choreographies
Resolving non-deterministic choices of choreographies is a crucial task. We introduce a novel notion of realisability for choreographies âcalled whole-spectrum implementationâ that rules out deterministic implementations of roles that, no matter which context they are placed in, will never follow one of the branches of a non-deterministic choice. We show that, under some conditions, it is decidable whether an implementation is whole-spectrum. As a case study, we analyse the POP protocol under the lens of whole-spectrum implementation
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