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Latitude and longitude vertical disparities
The literature on vertical disparity is complicated by the fact that several different definitions of the term âvertical disparityâ are in common use, often without a clear statement about which is intended or a widespread appreciation of the properties of the different definitions. Here, we examine two definitions of retinal vertical disparity: elevation-latitude and elevation-longitude disparities. Near the fixation point, these definitions become equivalent, but in general, they have quite different dependences on object distance and binocular eye posture, which have not previously been spelt out. We present analytical approximations for each type of vertical disparity, valid for more general conditions than previous derivations in the literature: we do not restrict ourselves to objects near the fixation point or near the plane of regard, and we allow for non-zero torsion, cyclovergence, and vertical misalignments of the eyes. We use these expressions to derive estimates of the latitude and longitude vertical disparities expected at each point in the visual field, averaged over all natural viewing. Finally, we present analytical expressions showing how binocular eye positionâgaze direction, convergence, torsion, cyclovergence, and vertical misalignmentâcan be derived from the vertical disparity field and its derivatives at the fovea
Future of the Animal Health Industry
The future of the animal health industry is uncertain. There is a web of unrelenting governmental regulation, leaving little room for optimism in our outlook. No reasonable person is in principle opposed to some governmental regulation, but reasonable people expect reasonable, responsible regulation - not a proliferation of confusing, often contradictory dictates that threaten to paralyze and transform our society
Correlated Spectral and Recurrence Variations of Cygnus X-1
We present results of recurrence analysis of the black hole X-ray binary
Cygnus X-1 using combined observations from the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer
All-sky Monitor and the Japanese Monitor of All-sky X-ray Image aboard the ISS.
From the time-dependent windowed recurrence plot (RP), we compute ten
recurrence quantities that describe the dynamical behavior of the source and
compare them to the spectral state at each point in time. We identify epochs of
state changes corresponding to transitions into highly deterministic or highly
stochastic dynamical regimes and their correlation to specific spectral states.
We compare k-Nearest Neighbors and Random Forest models for various sizes of
the time-dependent RP. The spectral state in Cygnus X-1 can be predicted with
greater than 95 per cent accuracy for both types of models explored across a
range of RP sizes based solely on the recurrence properties. The primary
features from the RP that distinguish between spectral states are the
determinism, Shannon entropy, and average line length, all of which are
systematically higher in the hard state compared to the soft state. Our results
suggest that the hard and soft states of Cygnus X-1 exhibit distinct dynamical
variability and the time domain alone can be used for spectral state
classification.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, 7 tables; Accepted for publication in Monthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Societ
Investigating Non-linear and Stochastic Hard X-ray Variability of Active Galactic Nuclei using Recurrence Analysis
We present results of recurrence analysis of 46 active galactic nuclei (AGN)
using light curves from the 157-month catalog of the Swift Burst Alert
Telescope (BAT) in the 14-150 keV band. We generate recurrence plots and
compute recurrence plot metrics for each object. We use the surrogate data
method to compare all derived recurrence-based quantities to three sets of
stochastic light curves with identical power spectrum, flux distribution, or
both, in order to determine the presence of determinism, non-linearity,
entropy, and non-stationarity. We compare these quantities with known physical
characteristics of each system, such as black hole mass, Eddington ratio, and
bolometric luminosity, radio loudness, obscuration, and spectroscopic type. We
find that almost all AGN in this sample exhibit substantial higher-order modes
of variability than is contained in the power spectrum, with approximately half
exhibiting nonlinear or non-stationary behavior. We find that Type 2 AGN are
more likely to contain deterministic variability than Type 1 AGN while the same
distinction is not found between obscured and unobscured AGN. The complexity of
variability among Type 1 AGN is anticorrelated with Eddington ratio, while no
relationship is found among Type 2 AGN. The connections between the recurrence
properties and AGN class suggest that hard X-ray emission is a probe of
distinct accretion processes among classes of AGN, which supports
interpretations of changing-look AGN and challenges the traditional unification
model that classifies AGN only on viewing angle.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures, 13 table
Experimental and computational studies of jamming
Jamming is a common feature of out of equilibrium systems showing slow
relaxation dynamics. Here we review our efforts in understanding jamming in
granular materials using experiments and computer simulations. We first obtain
an estimation of an effective temperature for a slowly sheared granular
material very close to jamming. The measurement of the effective temperature is
realized in the laboratory by slowly shearing a closely-packed ensemble of
spherical beads confined by an external pressure in a Couette geometry. All the
probe particles, independent of their characteristic features, equilibrate at
the same temperature, given by the packing density of the system. This suggests
that the effective temperature is a state variable for the nearly jammed
system. Then we investigate numerically whether the effective temperature can
be obtained from a flat average over the jammed configuration at a given energy
in the granular packing, as postulated by the thermodynamic approach to grains.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figure
The victorious English language: hegemonic practices in the management academy
This study explores hegemonic linguistic processes, that is, the dominant and unreflective use of the English language in the production of textual knowledge accounts. The authors see the production of management knowledge as situated in central or peripheral locations, which they examine from an English language perspective. Their inquiry is based on an empirical study based on the perspectives of 33 management academics (not English language speakers) in (semi) peripheral locations, who have to generate and disseminate knowledge in and through the English language. Although the hegemony of the center in the knowledge production process has long been acknowledged, the specific contribution of this study is to explore how the English language operates as part of the âideological complexâ that produces and maintains this hegemony, as well as how this hegemony is manifested at the local level of publication practices in peripherally located business and management schools
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