19,639 research outputs found
Complex networks in brain electrical activity
We analyze the complex networks associated with brain electrical activity.
Multichannel EEG measurements are first processed to obtain 3D voxel
activations using the tomographic algorithm LORETA. Then, the correlation of
the current intensity activation between voxel pairs is computed to produce a
voxel cross-correlation coefficient matrix. Using several correlation
thresholds, the cross-correlation matrix is then transformed into a network
connectivity matrix and analyzed. To study a specific example, we selected data
from an earlier experiment focusing on the MMN brain wave. The resulting
analysis highlights significant differences between the spatial activations
associated with Standard and Deviant tones, with interesting physiological
implications. When compared to random data networks, physiological networks are
more connected, with longer links and shorter path lengths. Furthermore, as
compared to the Deviant case, Standard data networks are more connected, with
longer links and shorter path lengths--i.e., with a stronger ``small worlds''
character. The comparison between both networks shows that areas known to be
activated in the MMN wave are connected. In particular, the analysis supports
the idea that supra-temporal and inferior frontal data work together in the
processing of the differences between sounds by highlighting an increased
connectivity in the response to a novel sound.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures. Starlab preprint. This version is an attempt to
include better figures (no content change
Measuring Active-Sterile Neutrino Oscillations with a Stopped Pion Neutrino Source
The question of the existence of light sterile neutrinos is of great interest
in many areas of particle physics, astrophysics, and cosmology. Furthermore,
should the MiniBooNE experiment at Fermilab confirm the LSND oscillation
signal, then new measurements are required to identify the mechanism
responsible for these oscillations. Possibilities include sterile neutrinos, CP
or CPT violation, variable mass neutrinos, Lorentz violation, and extra
dimensions. In this paper, we consider an experiment at a stopped pion neutrino
source to determine if active-sterile neutrino oscillations with delta-m
greater than 0.1 eV2 can account for the signal. By exploiting stopped pi+
decay to produce a monoenergetic nu_mu source, and measuring the rate of the
neutral current reaction nu_x + 12C -> nu_x +12C* as a function of distance
from the source, we show that a convincing test for active-sterile neutrino
oscillations can be performed.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
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Ubiquitous Internet in an integrated satellite-terrestrial environment: The SUITED solution
yesThe current Internet architecture appears to
not be particularly suited to addressing the
emerging needs of new classes of users who wish
to gain access to multimedia services made available
by ISPs, regardless of their location, while
in motion and with a guaranteed level of quality.
One of the main objectives of so-called nextgeneration
systems is to overcome the limitations
of todayÂżs available Internet by adopting an
approach based on the integration of different
mobile and fixed networks. The SUITED project
moves in this direction since it aims at contributing
to the design and deployment of the global
mobile broadband system (GMBS), a unique
satellite/terrestrial infrastructure ensuring
nomadic users access to Internet services with a
negotiated QoS. A description of the main features
of the GMBS architecture, characterized
by the integration of a multisegment access network
with a federated ISP network is given in
this article. The GMBS multimode terminal is
schematically described, and an overview of the
so-called QoS-aware mobility management
scheme, devised for such a heterogeneous scenario,is provided
Analytic continuation of the Hurwitz Zeta Function with physical application
A new formula relating the analytic continuation of the Hurwitz zeta function
to the Euler gamma function and a polylogarithmic function is presented. In
particular, the values of the first derivative of the real part of the analytic
continuation of the Hurwitz zeta function for even negative integers and the
imaginary one for odd negative integers are explicitly given. The result can be
of interest both on mathematical and physical side, because we are able to
apply our new formulas in the context of the Spectral Zeta Function
regularization, computing the exact pair production rate per space-time unit of
massive Dirac particles interacting with a purely electric background field.Comment: Replaced version, minor changes. 9 pages, to be published in J. Math.
Phy
Keck Adaptive Optics Imaging of Nearby Young Stars: Detection of Close Multiple Systems
Using adaptive optics on the Keck II 10-meter telescope on Mauna Kea, we have
surveyed 24 of the nearest young stars known in search of close companions. Our
sample includes members of the MBM 12 and TW Hydrae young associations and the
classical T Tauri binary UY Aurigae in the Taurus star-forming region. We
present relative photometry and accurate astrometry for 10 close multiple
systems. The multiplicity frequency in the TW Hydrae and MBM 12 groups are high
in comparison to other young regions, though the significance of this result is
low because of the small number statistics. We resolve S 18 into a triple
system including a tight 63 mas (projected separation of 17 AU at a distance of
275 pc) binary for the first time, with a hierarchical configuration
reminiscent of VW Chamaeleontis and T Tauri. Another tight binary in our sample
-- TWA 5Aab (54 mas or 3 AU at 55 pc) -- offers the prospect of dynamical mass
measurement using astrometric observations within a few years, and thus could
be important for testing pre-main sequence evolutionary models. Our
observations confirm with 9-sigma confidence that the brown dwarf TWA 5B is
bound to TWA 5A. We find that the flux ratio of UY Aur has changed
dramatically, by more than a magnitude in the H-band, possibly as a result of
variable extinction. With a smaller flux ratio, the system may once again
become detectable as an optical binary, as it was at the time of its discovery
in 1944. Taken together, our results demonstrate that adaptive optics on large
telescopes is a powerful tool for detecting tight companions, and thus
exploring the frequency and configurations of close multiple systems.Comment: accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journa
New sub-millimeter limits on dust in the 55 Cancri planetary system
We present new, high-sensitivity sub-millimeter observations towards 55
Cancri, a nearby G8 star with one, or possibly two, known planetary
companion(s). Our 850 m map, obtained with the SCUBA instrument on the
James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, shows three peaks of emission at the 2.5 mJy
level in the vicinity of the star's position. However, the observed peaks are
25\arcsec--40\arcsec away from the star and a deep -band optical image
reveals faint point sources that coincide with two of the sub-millimeter peaks.
Thus, we do not find evidence for dust emission spatially associated with 55
Cancri. The excess 60 m emission detected with ISO may originate from one
or more of the 850 m peaks that we attribute to background sources. Our
new results, together with the HST/NICMOS coronographic images in the
near-infrared, place stringent limits on the amount of dust in this planetary
system, and argue against the existence of a detectable circumstellar dust disk
around 55 Cnc.Comment: 11 pages, 2 PostScript figures, to appear in The Astrophysical
Journal Letter
Chandra and ASCA X-ray Observations of the Radio Supernova SN1979C IN NGC 4321
We report on the X-ray observation of the radio selected supernova SN1979C
carried out with ASCA in 1997 December and serendipitously available from a
Chandra Guaranteed Time Observation in 1999 November. The supernova, of type SN
II-Linear (SN IIL), was first observed in the optical and occurred in the
weakly barred, almost face on spiral galaxy NGC 4321 (M100). The galaxy, a
member of the Virgo S cluster, is at a distance of 17.1 Mpc, and contains at
least three other supernovae discovered in this century. The useful exposure
time was ~25 ks for the Solid-State Imaging Spectrometer (SIS), ~28 ks for the
Gas Scintillation Imaging Spectrometer (GIS), and ~2.5 ks for Chandra's
Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS). No point source was detected at the
radio position of SN1979C in a 3' diameter half power response circle in the
ASCA data. The background and galaxy subtracted SN signal had a 3sigma upper
limit to the flux of 6.3x10^-14 ergs/s/cm^-2 in the full ASCA SIS band
(0.4-10.0 keV) and a 3sigma upper limit of <3-4x10^-14 erg/s/cm^2 in the 2-10
keV band. In the Chandra data, a source at the position of SN1979C is
marginally detected at energies below 2 keV at a flux consistent with the ROSAT
HRI detection in 1995. At energies above 2 keV, no source is detected with an
upper limit of ~3x10^-14 erg/s/cm^-2. These measurements give the first ever
x-ray flux limit of a Type IIL SN above 2 keV which is an important diagnostic
of the outgoing shock wave ploughing through the circumstellar medium.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, accepted A
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