5,569 research outputs found
The Evolution of the Far-UV Luminosity Function and Star Formation Rate Density of the Chandra Deep Field South from z=0.2-1.2 with Swift/UVOT
We use deep Swift UV/Optical Telescope (UVOT) near-ultraviolet (1600A to
4000A) imaging of the Chandra Deep Field South to measure the rest-frame far-UV
(FUV; 1500A) luminosity function (LF) in four redshift bins between z=0.2 and
1.2. Our sample includes 730 galaxies with u < 24.1 mag. We use two methods to
construct and fit the LFs: the traditional V_max method with bootstrap errors
and a maximum likelihood estimator. We observe luminosity evolution such that
M* fades by ~2 magnitudes from z~1 to z~0.3 implying that star formation
activity was substantially higher at z~1 than today. We integrate our LFs to
determine the FUV luminosity densities and star formation rate densities from
z=0.2 to 1.2. We find evolution consistent with an increase proportional to
(1+z)^1.9 out to z~1. Our luminosity densities and star formation rates are
consistent with those found in the literature, but are, on average, a factor of
~2 higher than previous FUV measurements. In addition, we combine our UVOT data
with the MUSYC survey to model the galaxies' ultraviolet-to-infrared spectral
energy distributions and estimate the rest-frame FUV attenuation. We find that
accounting for the attenuation increases the star formation rate densities by
~1 dex across all four redshift bins.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, 6 tables; accepted for publication in Ap
Mesoscopic phase statistics of diffuse ultrasound in dynamic matter
Temporal fluctuations in the phase of waves transmitted through a dynamic,
strongly scattering, mesoscopic sample are investigated using ultrasonic waves,
and compared with theoretical predictions based on circular Gaussian
statistics. The fundamental role of phase in Diffusing Acoustic Wave
Spectroscopy is revealed, and phase statistics are also shown to provide a
sensitive and accurate way to probe scatterer motions at both short and long
time scales.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
Local Ranking Problem on the BrowseGraph
The "Local Ranking Problem" (LRP) is related to the computation of a
centrality-like rank on a local graph, where the scores of the nodes could
significantly differ from the ones computed on the global graph. Previous work
has studied LRP on the hyperlink graph but never on the BrowseGraph, namely a
graph where nodes are webpages and edges are browsing transitions. Recently,
this graph has received more and more attention in many different tasks such as
ranking, prediction and recommendation. However, a web-server has only the
browsing traffic performed on its pages (local BrowseGraph) and, as a
consequence, the local computation can lead to estimation errors, which hinders
the increasing number of applications in the state of the art. Also, although
the divergence between the local and global ranks has been measured, the
possibility of estimating such divergence using only local knowledge has been
mainly overlooked. These aspects are of great interest for online service
providers who want to: (i) gauge their ability to correctly assess the
importance of their resources only based on their local knowledge, and (ii)
take into account real user browsing fluxes that better capture the actual user
interest than the static hyperlink network. We study the LRP problem on a
BrowseGraph from a large news provider, considering as subgraphs the
aggregations of browsing traces of users coming from different domains. We show
that the distance between rankings can be accurately predicted based only on
structural information of the local graph, being able to achieve an average
rank correlation as high as 0.8
"I've made this my lifestyle now": a prospective qualitative study of motivation for lifestyle change among people with newly diagnosed type two diabetes mellitus
This is the final published version. Available from BMC via the DOI in this record.The datasets generated and/or analysed during the current study are not
publicly available due to the level of personal information that is contained
in the qualitative transcripts.Background: Diagnosis with Type 2 Diabetes is an opportunity for individuals to change their physical activity and
dietary behaviours. Diabetes treatment guidelines recommend theory-based, patient-centred care and advocate the
provision of support for patient motivation but the motivational experiences of people newly diagnosed with
diabetes have not been well studied. Framed in self-determination theory, this study aimed to qualitatively explore
how this patient group articulate and experience different types of motivation when attempting lifestyle change.
Methods: A secondary analysis of semi-structured interview data collected with 30 (n female = 18, n male = 12)
adults who had been newly diagnosed with type two diabetes and were participants in the Early ACTID trial was
undertaken. Deductive directed content analysis was performed using NVivo V10 and researcher triangulation to
identify and describe patient experiences and narratives that reflected the motivation types outlined in selfdetermination theory and if/how these changed over time.
Results: The findings revealed the diversity in motivation quality both between and within individuals over
time and that patients with newly-diagnosed diabetes have multifaceted often competing motivations for
lifestyle behaviour change. Applying self-determination theory, we identified that many participants reported
relatively dominant controlled motivation to comply with lifestyle recommendations, avoid their non-compliance
being “found out” or supress guilt following lapses in behaviour change attempts. Such narratives were accompanied
by experiences of frustrating slow behaviour change progress. More autonomous motivation was expressed as
something often achieved over time and reflected goals to improve health, quality of life or family time.
Motivational internalisation was evident and some participants had integrated their behaviour change to a
new way of life which they found resilient to common barriers.
Conclusions: Motivation for lifestyle change following diagnosis with type two diabetes is complex and can
be relatively low in self-determination. To achieve the patient empowerment aspirations of current national
health care plans, intervention developers, and clinicians would do well to consider the quality not just quantity of their
patients’ motivation.National Institute for Health Research (NIHR
GRB 130427A Afterglow: A Test for GRB Models
Gamma-ray Burst 130427A had the largest fluence for almost 30 years. With an isotropic energy output of 8.5×1053 erg and redshift of 0.34, it combined a very high energy release with a relative proximity to Earth in an unprecedented fashion. Sensitive X-ray facilities such as {\it XMM-Newton} and {\it Chandra} detected the afterglow of this event for a record-breaking baseline of 90 Ms. We show the X-ray light curve of GRB 130427A of this event over such an interval. The light curve shows an unbroken power law decay with a slope of α=1.31 over more than three decades in time. In this presentation, we investigate the consequences of this result for the scenarios proposed to interpret GRB 130427A and the implications in the context of the forward shock model (jet opening angle, energetics, surrounding medium). We also remark the chance of extending GRB afterglow observations for several hundreds of Ms with {\it Athena}
Early reionization by decaying particles in the light of three year WMAP data
We study the reionization histories where ionizing UV photons are emitted
from decaying particles, in addition to usual contributions from stars and
quasars, taking account of the fact that the universe is not fully ionized
until z = 6 as observed by Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Likelihood analysis of the
three-year data from the WMAP (Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe) severely
constrains the decaying particle scenario.In particular, the decaying particle
with relatively short lifetime is not favored by the polarization data.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figure
Detecting Change in the Urban Road Environment Along a Route Based on Traffic Sign and Crossroad Data
Occurrences of traffic signs that belong to certain sign categories and occurrences of crossroads of various topologies are utilized in detecting change in the urban road environment that moves past an ego-car. Three urban environment types, namely downtown, residential and industrial/commercial areas, are considered in the study and changes between these are to be detected. In the preparatory phase, the ego-car is used for traffic sign and crossroads data collection. In the application phase, the ego-car hosts an advanced driver assistance system (ADAS) that captures and analyzes images of the road environment and computes the required input data to the proposed road environment detection (RoED) subsystem. A statistical inference method relying on the minimum description length (MDL) principle was applied to the change detection problem at hand. The above occurrences along a route are seen as a realization of an inhomogeneous marked Poisson process. Page-Hinkley change detectors tuned to empirical data were set to work to detect change in the urban road environment. The process and the quality of the change detection are demonstrated via examples from three urban settlements in Hungary.
Document type: Part of book or chapter of boo
Generation of Intrinsic Vibrational Gap Modes in Three-Dimensional Ionic Crystals
The existence of anharmonic localization of lattice vibrations in a perfect
3-D diatomic ionic crystal is established for the rigid-ion model by molecular
dynamics simulations. For a realistic set of NaI potential parameters, an
intrinsic localized gap mode vibrating in the [111] direction is observed for
fcc and zinc blende lattices. An axial elastic distortion is an integral
feature of this mode which forms more readily for the zinc blende than for the
fcc structure. Molecular dynamics simulations verify that in each structure
this localized mode may be stable for at least 200 cycles.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, RevTeX, using epsf.sty. To be published in Phys.
Rev. B. Also available at http://www.msc.cornell.edu/~kiselev
Complex Instantons and Charged Rotating Black Hole Pair Creation
We consider the general process of pair-creation of charged rotating black
holes. We find that instantons which describe this process are necessarily
complex due to regularity requirements. However their associated probabilities
are real, and fully consistent with the interpretation that the entropy of a
charged rotating black hole is the logarithm of the number of its quantum
states.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, Latex, text shortened with only minor changes in
content, accepted for Phys Rev Letter
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