30,690 research outputs found
Guidelines for Teaching Object Orientation with Java
How to best teach object orientation to first year students is currently a topic of much debate. One of the tools suggested to aid in this task is BlueJ, an integrated development environment specifically designed for teaching. BlueJ supports a unique style of introduction of OO concepts. In this paper we discuss a set of problems with OO teaching, present some guidelines for better course design and show how BlueJ can be used to make significant improvements to introductory OO courses. We end by esenting a description of a possible project sequence using
this teaching approach
Is Explicit Congestion Notification usable with UDP?
We present initial measurements to determine if ECN is usable with
UDP traffic in the public Internet. This is interesting because ECN
is part of current IETF proposals for congestion control of UDPbased
interactive multimedia, and due to the increasing use of UDP
as a substrate on which new transport protocols can be deployed.
Using measurements from the author’s homes, their workplace,
and cloud servers in each of the nine EC2 regions worldwide, we
test reachability of 2500 servers from the public NTP server pool,
using ECT(0) and not-ECT marked UDP packets. We show that
an average of 98.97% of the NTP servers that are reachable using
not-ECT marked packets are also reachable using ECT(0) marked
UDP packets, and that ~98% of network hops pass ECT(0) marked
packets without clearing the ECT bits. We compare reachability of
the same hosts using ECN with TCP, finding that 82.0% of those
reachable with TCP can successfully negotiate and use ECN. Our
findings suggest that ECN is broadly usable with UDP traffic, and
that support for use of ECN with TCP has increased
On non-normality and classification of amplification mechanisms in stability and resolvent analysis
We seek to quantify non-normality of the most amplified resolvent modes and
predict their features based on the characteristics of the base or mean
velocity profile. A 2-by-2 model linear Navier-Stokes (LNS) operator
illustrates how non-normality from mean shear distributes perturbation energy
in different velocity components of the forcing and response modes. The inverse
of their inner product, which is unity for a purely normal mechanism, is
proposed as a measure to quantify non-normality. In flows where there is
downstream spatial dependence of the base/mean, mean flow advection separates
the spatial support of forcing and response modes which impacts the inner
product. Success of mean stability analysis depends on the normality of
amplification. If the amplification is normal, the resolvent operator written
in its dyadic representation reveals that the adjoint and forward stability
modes are proportional to the forcing and response resolvent modes. If the
amplification is non-normal, then resolvent analysis is required to understand
the origin of observed flow structures. Eigenspectra and pseudospectra are used
to characterize these phenomena. Two test cases are studied: low Reynolds
number cylinder flow and turbulent channel flow. The first deals mainly with
normal mechanisms and quantification of non-normality using the inverse inner
product of the leading forcing and response modes agrees well with the product
of the resolvent norm and distance between the imaginary axis and least stable
eigenvalue. In turbulent channel flow, structures result from both normal and
non-normal mechanisms. Mean shear is exploited most efficiently by stationary
disturbances while bounds on the pseudospectra illustrate how non-normality is
responsible for the most amplified disturbances at spatial wavenumbers and
temporal frequencies corresponding to well-known turbulent structures
Neutral carbon and CO in 76 (U)LIRGs and starburst galaxy centers A method to determine molecular gas properties in luminous galaxies
We present fluxes in both neutral carbon [CI] lines at the centers of 76
galaxies with FIR luminosities between 10^{9} and 10^{12} L(o) obtained with
Herschel-SPIRE and with ground-based facilities, along with the J=7-6, J=4-3,
J=2-1 12CO and J=2-1 13CO line fluxes. We investigate whether these lines can
be used to characterize the molecular ISM of the parent galaxies in simple ways
and how the molecular gas properties define the model results. In most
starburst galaxies, the [CI]/13CO flux ratio is much higher than in Galactic
star-forming regions, and it is correlated to the total FIR luminosity. The
[CI](1-0)/CO(4-3), the [CI](2-1) (2-1)/CO(7-6), and the [CI] (2-1)/(1-0) flux
ratios are also correlated, and trace the excitation of the molecular gas. In
the most luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs), the ISM is fully dominated by
dense and moderately warm gas clouds that appear to have low [C]/[CO] and
[13CO]/[12CO] abundances. In less luminous galaxies, emission from gas clouds
at lower densities becomes progressively more important, and a multiple-phase
analysis is required to determine consistent physical characteristics. Neither
the CO nor the [CI] velocity-integrated line fluxes are good predictors of H2
column densities in individual galaxies, and X(CI) conversion factors are not
superior to X(CO) factors. The methods and diagnostic diagrams outlined in this
paper also provide a new and relatively straightforward means of deriving the
physical characteristics of molecular gas in high-redshift galaxies up to z=5,
which are otherwise hard to determine
Morita Equivalence of Noncommutative Supertori
In this paper we study the extension of Morita equivalence of noncommutative
tori to the supersymmetric case. The structure of the symmetry group yielding
Morita equivalence appears to be intact but its parameter field becomes
supersymmetrized having both body and soul parts. Our result is mainly in the
two dimensional case in which noncommutative supertori have been constructed
recently: The group , where denotes Grassmann even
number whose body part belongs to , yields Morita equivalent
noncommutative supertori in two dimensions.Comment: LaTeX 18 pages, the version appeared in JM
The excitation of near-infrared H2 emission in NGC 253
Because of its large angular size and proximity to the Milky Way, NGC 253, an
archetypal starburst galaxy, provides an excellent laboratory to study the
intricacies of this intense episode of star formation. We aim to characterize
the excitation mechanisms driving the emission in NGC 253. Specifically we aim
to distinguish between shock excitation and UV excitation as the dominant
driving mechanism, using Br\gamma, H_2 and [FeII] as diagnostic emission line
tracers. Using SINFONI observations, we create linemaps of Br\gamma,
[FeII]_{1.64}, and all detected H_2 transitions. By using symmetry arguments of
the gas and stellar gas velocity field, we find a kinematic center in agreement
with previous determinations. The ratio of the 2-1 S(1) to 1-0 S(1) H_2
transitions can be used as a diagnostic to discriminate between shock and
fluorescent excitation. Using the 1-0 S(1)/2-1 S(1) line ratio as well as
several other H_2 line ratios and the morphological comparison between H_2 and
Br\gamma and [FeII], we find that excitation from UV photons is the dominant
excitation mechanisms throughout NGC 253. We employ a diagnostic energy level
diagram to quantitatively differentiate between mechanisms. We compare the
observed energy level diagrams to PDR and shock models and find that in most
regions and over the galaxy as a whole, fluorescent excitation is the dominant
mechanism exciting the H_2 gas. We also place an upper limit of the percentage
of shock excited H_2 at 29%. We find that UV radiation is the dominant
excitation mechanism for the H_2 emission. The H_2 emission does not correlate
well with Br\gamma but closely traces the PAH emission, showing that not only
is H_2 fluorescently excited, but it is predominately excited by slightly lower
mass stars than O stars which excite Br\gamma, such as B stars
Finite energy shifts in SU(n) supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory on T^3xR at weak coupling
We consider a semi-classical treatment, in the regime of weak gauge coupling,
of supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory in a space-time of the form T^3xR with
SU(n)/Z_n gauge group and a non-trivial gauge bundle. More specifically, we
consider the theories obtained as power series expansions around a certain
class of normalizable vacua of the classical theory, corresponding to isolated
points in the moduli space of flat connections, and the perturbative
corrections to the free energy eigenstates and eigenvalues in the weakly
interacting theory. The perturbation theory construction of the interacting
Hilbert space is complicated by the divergence of the norm of the interacting
states. Consequently, the free and interacting Hilbert furnish unitarily
inequivalent representation of the algebra of creation and annihilation
operators of the quantum theory. We discuss a consistent redefinition of the
Hilbert space norm to obtain the interacting Hilbert space and the properties
of the interacting representation. In particular, we consider the lowest
non-vanishing corrections to the free energy spectrum and discuss the crucial
importance of supersymmetry for these corrections to be finite.Comment: 31 pages, 1 figure, v4 Minor changes, references correcte
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