1,555 research outputs found
Increasing trap stiffness with position clamping in holographic optical tweezers
We present a holographic optical tweezers system capable of position clamping multiple particles. Moving an optical trap in response to the trapped object's motion is a powerful technique for optical control and force measurement. We have now realised this experimentally using a Boulder Nonlinear Systems Spatial Light Modulator (SLM) with a refresh rate of 203Hz. We obtain a reduction of 44% in the variance of the bead's position, corresponding to an increase in effective trap stiffness of 77%. This reduction relies on the generation of holograms at high speed. We present software capable of calculating holograms in under 1ms using a graphics processor unit. © 2009 Optical Society of America
Multilingual gendered identities: female undergraduate students in London talk about heritage languages
In this paper I explore how a group of female university students, mostly British Asian and in their late teens and early twenties, perform femininities in talk about heritage languages. I argue that analysis of this talk reveals ways in which the participants enact ‘culturally intelligible’ gendered subject positions. This frequently involves negotiating the norms of ‘heteronormativity’, constituting femininity in terms of marriage, motherhood and maintenance of heritage culture and language, and ‘girl power’, constituting femininity in terms of youth, sassiness, glamour and individualism. For these young women, I ask whether higher education can become a site in which they have the opportunities to explore these identifications and examine other ways of imagining the self and what their stories suggest about ‘doing being’ a young British Asian woman in London
Nested Balanced Incomplete Block Designs
If the blocks of a balanced incomplete block design (BIBD) with v treatments and with parameters (v; b1;r;k1) are each partitioned into sub-blocks of size k2, and the b2 =b1k1=k2 sub-blocks themselves constitute a BIBD with parameters (v; b2;r;k2), then the system of blocks, sub-blocks and treatments is, by de4nition, a nested BIBD (NBIBD). Whist tournaments are special types of NBIBD with k1 =2k2= 4. Although NBIBDs were introduced in the statistical literature in 1967 and have subsequently received occasional attention there, they are almost unknown in the combinatorial literature, except in the literature of tournaments, and detailed combinatorial studies of them have been lacking. The present paper therefore reviews and extends mathematical knowledge of NBIBDs. Isomorphism and automorphisms are defined for NBIBDs, and methods of construction are outlined. Some special types of NBIBD are de4ned and illustrated. A first-ever detailed table of NBIBDs with v⩽16, r⩽30 is provided; this table contains many newly discovered NBIBDs. © 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved
BATSE Gamma-Ray Burst Line Search: V. Probability of Detecting a Line in a Burst
The physical importance of the apparent discrepancy between the detections by
pre-BATSE missions of absorption lines in gamma-ray burst spectra and the
absence of a BATSE line detection necessitates a statistical analysis of this
discrepancy. This analysis requires a calculation of the probability that a
line, if present, will be detected in a given burst. However, the connection
between the detectability of a line in a spectrum and in a burst requires a
model for the occurrence of a line within a burst. We have developed the
necessary weighting for the line detection probability for each spectrum
spanning the burst. The resulting calculations require a description of each
spectrum in the BATSE database. With these tools we identify the bursts in
which lines are most likely to be detected. Also, by assuming a small frequency
with which lines occur, we calculate the approximate number of BATSE bursts in
which lines of various types could be detected. Lines similar to the Ginga
detections can be detected in relatively few BATSE bursts; for example, in only
~20 bursts are lines similar to the GB 880205 pair of lines detectable. Ginga
reported lines at ~20 and ~40 keV whereas the low energy cutoff of the BATSE
spectra is typically above 20 keV; hence BATSE's sensitivity to lines is less
than that of Ginga below 40 keV, and greater above. Therefore the probability
that the GB 880205 lines would be detected in a Ginga burst rather than a BATSE
burst is ~0.2. Finally, we adopted a more appropriate test of the significance
of a line feature.Comment: 20 pages, AASTeX 4.0, 5 figures, Ap.J. in pres
Spectral Hardness Decay with Respect to Fluence in BATSE Gamma-Ray Bursts
We have analyzed the evolution of the spectral hardness parameter Epk as a
function of fluence in gamma-ray bursts. We fit 41 pulses within 26 bursts with
the trend reported by Liang & Kargatis (1996) which found that Epk decays
exponentially with respect to photon fluence. We also fit these pulses with a
slight modification of this trend, where Epk decays linearly with energy
fluence. In both cases, we found the set of 41 pulses to be consistent with the
trend. For the latter trend, which we believe to be more physical, the
distribution of the decay constant is roughly log-normal, with a mean of 1.75
+/- 0.07 and a FWHM of 1.0 +/- 0.1. Regarding an earlier reported invariance in
the decay constant among different pulses in a single burst, we found
probabilities of 0.49 to 0.84 (depending on the test used) that such invariance
would occur by coincidence, most likely due to the narrow distribution of decay
constant values among pulses.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figure pages, 2 table pages, submitted to The
Astrophysical Journa
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