3,209 research outputs found
Time of primordial Be-7 conversion into Li-7, energy release and doublet of narrow cosmological neutrino lines
One of the important light elements created during the big bang
nucleosynthesis is Be-7 which then decays to Li-7 by electron capture when
recombination becomes effective but well before the Saha equilibrium
recombination is reached. This means that Be-7 should wait until its
recombination epoch even though the half-life of the hydrogenic beryllium atom
is only 106.4 days. We calculate when the conversion from primordial Be-7 to
Li-7 occurs taking into account the population of the hyperfine structure
sublevels and solving the kinetic equations for recombination, photoionization
and conversion rate. We also calculate the energies and the spectrum of narrow
neutrino doublet lines resulting from Be-7 decay.Comment: Minor typos correcte
Novel Integration of Conductive-ink Circuitry with a Paper-based Microfluidic Battery as an All-printed Sensing Platform
The addition of powered components for active assays into paper-based analytical devices opens new opportunities for medical and environmental analysis in resource-limited applications. Current battery designs within such devices have yet to adopt a ubiquitous circuitry material, necessitating investigation into printed circuitry for scalable platforms. In this study, a microfluidic battery was mated with silver-nanoparticle conductive ink to prototype an all-printed sensing platform. A multi-layer, two-cell device was fabricated, generating 200 μA of direct electrical current at 2.5 V sustained for 16 minutes with a power loss of less than 0.1% through the printed circuitry. Printed circuitry traces exhibited resistivity of 75 to 211 10-5 Ω m. Resistance of the printed traces increased upwards of 200% depending on fold angle and directionality. X-ray diffraction confirmed the presence of face-centered cubic silver after sintering printed traces for 30 minutes at 150°C in air. A conductivity threshold was mapped and an ink concentration of 0.636 μL mm-3 was identified as the lower limit for optimal electrical performance
Fast and precise way to calculate the posterior for the local non-Gaussianity parameter from cosmic microwave background observations
We present an approximate calculation of the full Bayesian posterior
probability distribution for the local non-Gaussianity parameter
from observations of cosmic microwave background anisotropies
within the framework of information field theory. The approximation that we
introduce allows us to dispense with numerically expensive sampling techniques.
We use a novel posterior validation method (DIP test) in cosmology to test the
precision of our method. It transfers inaccuracies of the calculated posterior
into deviations from a uniform distribution for a specially constructed test
quantity. For this procedure we study toy cases that use one- and
two-dimensional flat skies, as well as the full spherical sky. We find that we
are able to calculate the posterior precisely under a flat-sky approximation,
albeit not in the spherical case. We argue that this is most likely due to an
insufficient precision of the used numerical implementation of the spherical
harmonic transform, which might affect other non-Gaussianity estimators as
well. Furthermore, we present how a nonlinear reconstruction of the primordial
gravitational potential on the full spherical sky can be obtained in principle.
Using the flat-sky approximation, we find deviations for the posterior of
from a Gaussian shape that become more significant for larger
values of the underlying true . We also perform a comparison to
the well-known estimator of Komatsu et al. [Astrophys. J. 634, 14 (2005)] and
finally derive the posterior for the local non-Gaussianity parameter
as an example of how to extend the introduced formalism to
higher orders of non-Gaussianity
Measuring Financial Development in the Middle East and North Africa: A New Database
This paper develops a methodology to construct detailed indices of financial sector development across countries and uses it to create a new panel database of finan-cial sector development in Middle East and North Africa (MENA) countries. It combines existing quantitative data with information from comprehensive surveys undertaken in 2000-01 and 2002-03. The data show that some MENA countries have relatively well-developed banking sectors and regulatory and supervisory regimes. However, across the region, the nonbank financial sectors and sup-porting institutions are in need of reform. The MENA region ranks far behind industrialized countries and East Asia in financial sector development. Copyright 2006, International Monetary Fund
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