18,675 research outputs found

    A test of the power law relationship between gamma-ray burst pulse width ratio and energy expected in fireballs or uniform jets

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    Recently, under the assumption that the Doppler effect of the relativistically expanding fireball surface is important, Qin et al. showed that in most cases the power law relationship between the pulse width and energy of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs)would exist in a certain energy range. We check this prediction with two GRB samples which contain well identified pulses. A power law anti-correlation between the full pulse width and energy and a power law correlation between the pulse width ratio and energy are seen in the light curves of the majority (around 65%) of bursts of the two samples within the energy range of BATSE, suggesting that these bursts are likely to arise from the emission associated with the shocks occurred on a relativistically expanding fireball surface. For the rest of the bursts, the relationships between these quantities were not predicted previously. We propose to consider other spectral evolutionary patterns or other radiation mechanisms such as a varying synchrotron or Comptonized spectrum to check if the observed relationships for these rest bursts can also be accounted for by the Doppler model. In addition, we find that the upper limits of the width ratio for the two samples do not exceed 0.9, in agrement with what predicted previously by the Doppler model. The plateau/power law/plateau and the peaked features predicted and detected previously by Qin et al. are generally observed, with the exceptions being noticed only in a few cases. According to the distinct values of two power law indices of FWHM and ratio and energy, we divide the bursts into three subsets which are located in different areas of the two indices plane. We suspect that different locations of the two indices might correspond to different mechanisms.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, MNRAS accepte

    Contract & Expand: I/O Efficient SCCs Computing

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    As an important branch of big data processing, big graph processing is becoming increasingly popular in recent years. Strongly connected component (SCC) computation is a fundamental graph operation on directed graphs, where an SCC is a maximal subgraph S of a directed graph G in which every pair of nodes is reachable from each other in S. By contracting each SCC into a node, a large general directed graph can be represented by a small directed acyclic graph (DAG). In the literature, there are I/O efficient semi-external algorithms to compute all SCCs of a graph G, by assuming that all nodes of a graph G can fit in the main memory. However, many real graphs are large and even the nodes cannot reside entirely in the main memory. In this paper, we study new I/O efficient external algorithms to find all SCCs for a directed graph G whose nodes cannot fit entirely in the main memory. To overcome the deficiency of the existing external graph contraction based approach that usually cannot stop in finite iterations, and the external DFS based approach that will generate a large number of random I/Os, we explore a new contraction-expansion based approach. In the graph contraction phase, instead of contracting the whole graph as the contraction based approach, we only contract the nodes of a graph, which are much more selective. The contraction phase stops when all nodes of the graph can fit in the main memory, such that the semi-external algorithm can be used in SCC computation. In the graph expansion phase, as the graph is expanded in the reverse order as it is contracted, the SCCs of all nodes in the graph are computed. Both graph contraction phase and graph expansion phase use only I/O efficient sequential scans and external sorts of nodes/edges in the graph. Our algorithm leverages the efficiency of the semi-external SCC computation algorithm and usually stops in a small number of iterations. We further optimize our approach by reducing the size of nodes and edges of the contracted graph in each iteration. We conduct extensive experimental studies using both real and synthetic web-scale graphs to confirm the I/O efficiency of our approaches. © 2014 IEEE

    Active fault-tolerant control for an internet-based networked three-tank system

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    This brief is concerned with the active fault-tolerant control (FTC) problem for an Internet-based networked three-tank system (INTTS) serving as a benchmark system for evaluating networked FTC algorithms. The INTTS has two parts located at Tsinghua University in China and at the University of South Wales in the U.K., respectively, which are connected via the Internet. With the INTTS as an experimental platform, the active FTC problem is investigated for a class of nonlinear networked systems subject to partial actuator failures. Once a specific actuator failure is detected and confirmed by a fault diagnosis unit, the control law is then reconfigured based on the information of the detected fault. Both the stability and the acceptable H∞ disturbance attenuation level are guaranteed for the closed-loop system using the remaining reliable actuators. Extensive experiments are carried out on the active FTC problem of the INTTS with partial actuator failures, and the effectiveness of the proposed scheme is illustrated.The work of X. He was supported in part by the Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) under Grant 61473163 and Grant 61522309 and in part by the Tsinghua University Initiative Scientific Research Program. The work of Z. Wang was supported by NSFC under Grant 61273156. The work of D. H. Zhou was supported in part by NSFC under Grant 61290324 and Grant 61490701 and in part by the Research Fund for the Taishan Scholar Project of Shandong Province of China. Recommended by Associate Editor L. Xie

    The interplay of millets and rice in Neolithic central China: Integrating phytoliths into the archaeobotany of Baligang

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    Baligang is a Neolithic site with a long occupation, from before 6300. BC up to the first millennium BC, although the bulk of excavated finds and archaeobotanical evidence from the site comes from the Yangshao, Qujialing, Shijiahe and Longshan (4300-1800. BC). The cultural group affiliation of the site varies between northern (Yangshao and Longshan) and southern (Qujialing and Shijiahe) cultural connections. The earliest occupation of the site represents a pre-Yangshao society with early cultivation of rice (Oryza). In later periods Baligang has evidence for mixed farming of both rice and millets (Setaria italica and Panicum miliaceum), although rice is the most prominent crop in the phytolith record throughout the occupation. Wetland rice cultivation is indicated throughout the Yangshao, Qujialing, Shijiahe and Late Longshan periods. However, there is a shift towards better watered rice in the Qujialing and Shijiahe phytolith assemblages, indicated by a decline in sedges (Cyperaceae) alongside occurrence of sponge spicules and diatoms. These data suggest deeper flooding of rice fields in order to suppress weeds and increase productivity, indicating that the ecology of rice cultivation changed over time. In the Late Longshan period, when millet became more prominent and the cultural influence shifted northwards, it appears that more sedge-infested and weedy rice fields became the norm, suggesting a decline in rice cultivation intensity, perhaps connected to influences of cultivation practices from the north. In addition, we can infer aspects of the organisation of crop-processing from the phytolith evidence. In the Yangshao period the remains consist of mostly dehusking waste from the final processing, suggesting storage of a more processed crop and therefore larger scale, more communal post-harvest processing. By contrast this declined in the subsequent period with more evidence for primary winnowing waste indicating a shift towards smaller social scales of harvesting and processing, such as smaller household groups replacing a more communal approach. The household-level of processing is most evident in the Late Longshan period

    Tryptophan-induced pathogenesis of breast cancer

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    Background: The pathogenesis of breast cancer remains unclear.Aims: To investigate the pathogenesis of breast cancer through targeted metabolomics of amino acids  components in serum of patients with breast cancer.Methods: Patients with breast cancers were enrolled in our hospital between year January 1st, 2013 and  December 31st, 2014. Targeted analysis of amino acids was performed using ESI-QTOF-MS instrument. In vitro experiment was performed to determine the influence of tryptophan towards interleukin-10 (IL-10)  secretion by CD4>+ T cell.Results: Targeted metabolomics of amino acids showed that the level of tryptophan significantly  (p<0.05) increased in patients with breast cancer. Furthermore, the biological function of tryptophan was determined through determining the influence of tryptophan towards IL-10 secretion using in vitro method. The addition of tryptophan (100 uM) in the cell medium can significantly inhibited the secretion of IL-10 by CD4+ T cells, as indicated by the mRNA level and protein concentration.Conclusion: The inhibition of IL-10 secretion by CD4+ T cells is a potential pathogenesis of breast cancer.Keywords: breast cancer, interleukin-10 (IL-10), pathogenesis, T cel
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