3,785 research outputs found
Strategic Factors in Nineteenth Century American Economic History: A Volume to Honor Robert W. Fogel
Eye shape and retinal shape, and their relation to peripheral refraction
Purpose: We provide an account of the relationships between eye shape, retinal shape and peripheral refraction. Recent findings: We discuss how eye and retinal shapes may be described as conicoids, and we describe an axis and section reference system for determining shapes. Explanations are given of how patterns of retinal expansion during the development of myopia may contribute to changing patterns of peripheral refraction, and how pre-existing retinal shape might contribute to the development of myopia. Direct and indirect techniques for determining eye and retinal shape are described, and results are discussed. There is reasonable consistency in the literature of eye length increasing at a greater rate than height and width as the degree of myopia increases, so that eyes may be described as changing from oblate/spherical shapes to prolate shapes. However, one study indicates that the retina itself, while showing the same trend, remains oblate in shape for most eyes (discounting high myopia). Eye shape and retinal shape are not the same and merely describing an eye shape as being prolate or oblate is insufficient without some understanding of the parameters contributing to this; in myopia a prolate eye shape is likely to involve both a steepening retina near the posterior pole combined with a flattening (or a reduction in steepening compared with an emmetrope) away from the pole
Kansas Intensive Groundwater Use Control Areas
22 pages (includes maps).
Contains references
Kansas Intensive Groundwater Use Control Areas
22 pages (includes maps).
Contains references
Starburst or AGN Dominance in Submillimetre-Luminous Candidate AGN?
It is widely believed that ultraluminous infrared (IR) galaxies and active
galactic nuclei (AGN) activity are triggered by galaxy interactions and
merging, with the peak of activity occurring at z~2, where submillimetre
galaxies are thousands of times more numerous than local ULIRGs. In this
evolutionary picture, submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) would host an AGN, which
would eventually grow a black hole (BH) strong enough to blow off all of the
gas and dust leaving an optically luminous QSO. To probe this evolutionary
sequence we have focussed on the 'missing link' sources, which demonstrate both
strong starburst (SB) and AGN signatures, in order to determine if the SB is
the main power source even in SMGs when we have evidence that an AGN is present
from their IRAC colours. The best way to determine if a dominant AGN is present
is to look for their signatures in the mid-infrared with the Spitzer IRS, since
often even deep X-ray observations miss identifying the presence of AGN in
heavily dust-obscured SMGs. We present the results of our audit of the energy
balance between star-formation and AGN within this special sub-population of
SMGs -- where the BH has grown appreciably to begin heating the dust emission.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure. To appear in "Hunting for the Dark: The Hidden
Side of Galaxy Formation", Malta, 19-23 Oct. 2009, eds. V.P. Debattista and
C.C. Popescu, AIP Conf. Ser., in pres
Towards Combinatorial Generalization for Catalysts: A Kohn-Sham Charge-Density Approach
The Kohn-Sham equations underlie many important applications such as the
discovery of new catalysts. Recent machine learning work on catalyst modeling
has focused on prediction of the energy, but has so far not yet demonstrated
significant out-of-distribution generalization. Here we investigate another
approach based on the pointwise learning of the Kohn-Sham charge-density. On a
new dataset of bulk catalysts with charge densities, we show density models can
generalize to new structures with combinations of elements not seen at train
time, a form of combinatorial generalization. We show that over 80% of binary
and ternary test cases achieve faster convergence than standard baselines in
Density Functional Theory, amounting to an average reduction of 13% in the
number of iterations required to reach convergence, which may be of independent
interest. Our results suggest that density learning is a viable alternative,
trading greater inference costs for a step towards combinatorial
generalization, a key property for applications.Comment: Published at NeurIPS 202
Extremal Black Hole/CFT Correspondence in (Gauged) Supergravities
We extend the investigation of the recently proposed Kerr/CFT correspondence
to large classes of rotating black hole solutions in gauged and ungauged
supergravities. The correspondence, proposed originally for four-dimensional
Kerr black holes, asserts that the quantum states in the near-horizon region of
an extremal rotating black hole are holographically dual to a two-dimensional
chiral theory whose Virasoro algebra arises as an asymptotic symmetry of the
near-horizon geometry. In fact in dimension D there are [(D-1)/2] commuting
Virasoro algebras. We consider a general canonical class of near-horizon
geometries in arbitrary dimension D, and show that in any such metric, the
[(D-1)/2] central charges each imply, via the Cardy formula, a microscopic
entropy that agrees with the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy of the associated
extremal black hole. In the remainder of the paper we show for most of the
known rotating black hole solutions of gauged supergravity, and for the
ungauged supergravity solutions with four charges in D=4 and three charges in
D=5, that their extremal near-horizon geometries indeed lie within the
canonical form. This establishes that in all these examples, the microscopic
entropies of the dual CFTs agree with the Bekenstein-Hawking entropies of the
extremal rotating black holes.Comment: 32 pages, references added and minor typos fixe
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