20,322 research outputs found
The S2N2 metallicity calibrator and the abundance gradient of M 33
We introduce the log(Ha/[SII]6717+6731) vs. log(Ha/[NII]6583) (S2N2)
diagnostic diagram as metallicity and ionisation parameter indicator for HII
regions in external galaxies. The location of HII regions in the S2N2 diagram
was studied both empirically and theoretically. We found that, for a wide range
of metallicities, the S2N2 diagram gives single valued results in the
metallicity-ionisation parameter plane. We demonstrate that the S2N2 diagram is
a powerful tool to estimate metallicities of high-redshift (z ~ 2) HII
galaxies. Finally, we derive the metallicity for 76 HII regions in M33 from the
S2N2 diagram and calculate an O/H abundance gradient for this galaxy of -0.05
(+-0.01) dex kpc^-1.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures and 2 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Weather Impact on Airport Performance
Weather events have a significant impact on airport performance and cause delayed operations if the airport capacity is constrained. We provide quantification of the individual airport performance with regards to an aggregated weather-performance metric. Specific weather phenomena are categorized by the air traffic management airport performance weather algorithm, which aims to quantify weather conditions at airports based on aviation routine meteorological reports. Our results are computed from a data set of 20.5 million European flights of 2013 and local weather data. A methodology is presented to evaluate the impact of weather events on the airport performance and to select the appropriate threshold for significant weather conditions. To provide an efficient method to capture the impact of weather, we modelled departing and arrival delays with probability distributions, which depend on airport size and meteorological impacts. These derived airport performance scores could be used in comprehensive air traffic network simulations to evaluate the network impact caused by weather induced local performance deterioration
Quantum control on entangled bipartite qubits
Ising interaction between qubits could produce distortion in entangled pairs
generated for engineering purposes (as in quantum computation) in presence of
parasite magnetic fields, destroying or altering the expected behavior of
process in which is projected to be used. Quantum control could be used to
correct that situation in several ways. Sometimes the user should be make some
measurement upon the system to decide which is the best control scheme; other
posibility is try to reconstruct the system using similar procedures without
perturbate it. In the complete pictures both schemes are present. We will work
first with pure systems studying advantages of different procedures. After, we
will extend these operations when time of distortion is uncertain, generating a
mixed state, which needs to be corrected by suposing the most probably time of
distortion.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Pilot3: A crew multi-criteria decision support tool – Estimating performance indicators and uncertainty for tactical trajectory management
During a flight, when a change in the operational conditions arises (e.g., new updated weather forecast, delay at reaching a given waypoint), different alternative trajectories can be computed with dedicated optimisation or prediction systems.
These systems usually produce trajectories with trade-offs between expected fuel usage and delay. The pilot, or the dispatcher, considers these expected values in order to decide how to tactically operate the aircraft. This approach has two main challenges. Firstly, it requires the translation of arrival delay into parameters which are relevant for the airlines, such as on-time performance and cost of delay. Secondly, uncertainties in the system need to be estimated, such as holding time at arrival, or taxi-in time. Both of these estimations (airlines performance indicators and uncertainty) rely on the airline staff expertise. Finally, the crew faces a multi-criteria decision process as different objectives (cost, on-time performance) and constraints need to be considered.
The use of prior to the flight estimations, such as the cost index of the operational flight plan, might not be relevant at the moment of reassessing the flight, as the situation has evolved (for example, the number of passengers who can potentially miss their connections will depend on the status of the fleet of the airline). In other cases, this expected cost of delay could be estimated by the crew or the dispatchers, but generally it is difficult to internalise the dynamics of cost due to IROPS on passengers, or even to estimate the cost of a potential curfew at the end of the day.
Uncertainties such as the expected holding delay, distance flown at the arrival TMA, or taxi-in time, might lead to sub-optimal decisions, such as recovering delay, using extra fuel, which does not translate into economic benefit, as larger holding than anticipated might lead to passengers still missing their connection; or shorter distances flown in the TMA means that speed-ups performed during the cruise were unnecessary.
Pilot3, a Clean Sky 2 Research and Innovation action, sets out to overcome these issues by developing a multi-criteria support decision tool, which combines explicit estimation of key performance indicators and estimation of ATM operational parameters. These estimators will be developed incrementally, from simple heuristics to machine learning models.
Pilot3 prototype comprises five sub-systems:
* An Alternatives Generator, which will compute the different alternatives to be considered by the pilot; fed by two independent sub-systems:
* Performance Indicators Estimator, which provides the Alternatives Generator with information on how to estimate the impact of each solution for the different performance indicators;
* Operational ATM Estimator, which provides the Alternative Generator with information on how to estimate some operational aspects such as tactical route amendments, expected arrival procedure, holding time in terminal airspace, distance flown (or flight time spent) in terminal airspace due to arrival sequencing and merging operations, or taxi-in time;
* Performance Assessment Module, which, considering the expected results for each alternative on the different KPIs, is able to filter and rank the alternatives considering airlines and pilots preferences; and
* Human Machine Interface, which will present these alternatives to the pilot and allow them to interact with the system.
Pilot3 is led by the University of Westminster with the Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya, Innaxis and PACE Aerospace Engineering and Information Technology as partners. The Topic Manager is Thales AVS France SAS. With support from the Advisory Board, Pilot3 has already identified the key operational performance indicators that crew should consider when tactically adjusting their trajectories (on-time performance and total cost, including fuel, IROPs and others); and a literature review and filtering process on multi-criteria decision making techniques has been conducted to select the most suitable method for the different phases of the optimisation process (trajectory generation, filtering and ranking of alternatives)
An atlas of Calcium triplet spectra of active galaxies
We present a spectroscopic atlas of active galactic nuclei covering the
region around the 8498, 8542, 8662 Calcium triplet (CaT) lines. The sample
comprises 78 objects, divided into 43 Seyfert 2s, 26 Seyfert 1s, 3 Starburst
and 6 normal galaxies. The spectra pertain to the inner ~300 pc in radius, and
thus sample the central kinematics and stellar populations of active galaxies.
The data are used to measure stellar velocity dispersions (sigma_star) both
with cross-correlation and direct fitting methods. These measurements are found
to be in good agreement with each-other and with those in previous studies for
objects in common. The CaT equivalent width is also measured. We find average
values and sample dispersions of W_CaT of 4.6+/-2.0, 7.0 and 7.7+/-1.0
angstrons for Seyfert 1s, Seyfert 2s and normal galaxies, respectively. We
further present an atlas of [SIII]\lambda 9069 emission line profiles for a
subset of 40 galaxies. These data are analyzed in a companion paper which
addresses the connection between stellar and Narrow Line Region kinematics, the
behaviour of the CaT equivalent width as a function of sigma_star, activity
type and stellar population properties.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Synthetic spectra of H Balmer and HeI absorption lines. I: Stellar library
We present a grid of synthetic profiles of stellar H Balmer and HeI lines at
optical wavelengths with a sampling of 0.3 A. The grid spans a range of
effective temperature 4000 K < Teff < 50000 K, and gravity 0.0 < log g < 5.0 at
solar metallicity. For Teff > 25000 K, NLTE stellar atmosphere models are
computed using the code TLUSTY (Hubeny 1988). For cooler stars, Kurucz (1993)
LTE models are used to compute thesynthetic spectra. The grid includes the
profiles of the high-order hydrogen Balmer series and HeI lines for effective
temperatures and gravities that have not been previously synthesized. The
behavior of H8 to H13 and HeI 3819 with effective temperature and gravity is
very similar to that of the lower terms of the series (e.g. Hb) and the other
HeI lines at longer wavelengths; therefore, they are suited for the
determination of the atmospheric parameters of stars. These lines are
potentially important to make predictions for these stellar absorption features
in galaxies with active star formation. Evolutionary synthesis models of these
lines for starburst and post-starburst galaxies are presented in a companion
paper. The full set of the synthetic stellar spectra is available for retrieval
at our website http://www.iaa.es/ae/e2.html and
http://www.stsci.edu/science/starburst/ or on request from the authors at
[email protected]: To be published in ApJS. 28 pages and 12 figure
Quantum probability distribution of arrival times and probability current density
This paper compares the proposal made in previous papers for a quantum
probability distribution of the time of arrival at a certain point with the
corresponding proposal based on the probability current density. Quantitative
differences between the two formulations are examined analytically and
numerically with the aim of establishing conditions under which the proposals
might be tested by experiment. It is found that quantum regime conditions
produce the biggest differences between the formulations which are otherwise
near indistinguishable. These results indicate that in order to discriminate
conclusively among the different alternatives, the corresponding experimental
test should be performed in the quantum regime and with sufficiently high
resolution so as to resolve small quantum efects.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures, LaTeX; Revised version to appear in Phys. Rev. A
(many small changes
Semiquantitative theory of electronic Raman scattering from medium-size quantum dots
A consistent semiquantitative theoretical analysis of electronic Raman
scattering from many-electron quantum dots under resonance excitation
conditions has been performed. The theory is based on
random-phase-approximation-like wave functions, with the Coulomb interactions
treated exactly, and hole valence-band mixing accounted for within the
Kohn-Luttinger Hamiltonian framework. The widths of intermediate and final
states in the scattering process, although treated phenomenologically, play a
significant role in the calculations, particularly for well above band gap
excitation. The calculated polarized and unpolarized Raman spectra reveal a
great complexity of features and details when the incident light energy is
swept from below, through, and above the quantum dot band gap. Incoming and
outgoing resonances dramatically modify the Raman intensities of the single
particle, charge density, and spin density excitations. The theoretical results
are presented in detail and discussed with regard to experimental observations.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev.
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