2,176 research outputs found

    Experimental approaches for 100 TeV gamma-ray astronomy

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    The high energy end of gamma-ray source spectra might provide important clues regarding the nature of the processes involved in gamma-ray emission. Several galactic sources with hard emission spectra extending up to more than 30TeV have already been reported. Measurements around 100TeV and above should be an important goal for the next generation of high energy gamma-ray astronomy experiments. Here we present several techniques providing the required exposure (100 km^2.h). We focus our study on three Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Technique (IACT) based approaches: low elevation observations, large field of view telescopes, and large telescope arrays. We comment on the advantages and disadvantages of each approach and report simulation based estimates of their energy ranges and sensitivities.Comment: 3 pages 1 figure. Proceedings of TeV particle astrophysics 2, Madison, August 2006. http://www.icecube.wisc.edu/TeV/presentations/colin_poster.pd

    New Experiments for Spontaneous Vortex Formation in Josephson Tunnel Junctions

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    It has been argued by Zurek and Kibble that the likelihood of producing defects in a continuous phase transition depends in a characteristic way on the quench rate. In this paper we discuss an improved experiment for measuring the Zurek-Kibble scaling exponent σ\sigma for the production of fluxons in annular symmetric Josephson Tunnel Junctions. We find σ≃0.5\sigma \simeq 0.5. Further, we report accurate measurements of the junction gap voltage temperature dependence which allow for precise monitoring of the fast temperature variations during the quench.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Finite voltage shot noise in normal-metal - superconductor junctions

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    We express the low-frequency shot noise in a disordered normal-metal - superconductor (NS) junction at finite (subgap) voltage in terms of the normal scattering amplitudes and the Andreev reflection amplitude. In the multichannel limit, the conductance exhibits resonances which are accompanied by an enhancement of the (differential) shot noise. In the study of multichannel single and double barrier junctions we discuss the noise properties of coherent transport at low versus high voltage with respect to the Andreev level spacing.Comment: 6 pages, Latex, 2 eps-figures, to be published in PRB, Appendix on Bogoliubov equation

    A sol-gel method for growing superconducting MgB2 films

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    In this paper we report a new sol-gel method for the fabrication of MgB2 films. Polycrystalline MgB2 films were prepared by spin-coating a precursor solution of Mg(BH_4)_2 diethyl ether on (001)Al2O3 substrates followed with annealing in Mg vapor. In comparison with the MgB2 films grown by other techniques, our films show medium qualities including a superconducting transition temperature of Tc ~ 37 K, a critical current density of Jc(5 K, 0 T) ~ 5 {\times} 10^6 A cm^{-2}, and a critical field of H_{c2}(0) ~ 19 T. Such a sol-gel technique shows potential in the commercial fabrication of practically used MgB2 films as well as MgB2 wires and tapes.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure

    Murchison Widefield Array and XMM-Newton observations of the Galactic supernova remnant G5.9+3.1

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    In this paper we discuss the radio continuum and X-ray properties of the so-far poorly studied Galactic supernova remnant (SNR) G5.9+3.1. We present the radio spectral energy distribution (SED) of the Galactic SNR G5.9+3.1 obtained with the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA). Combining these new observations with the surveys at other radio continuum frequencies, we discuss the integrated radio continuum spectrum of this particular remnant. We have also analyzed an archival XMM-Newton observation, which represents the first detection of X-ray emission from this remnant. The SNR SED is very well explained by a simple power-law relation. The synchrotron radio spectral index of G5.9+3.1, is estimated to be 0.42±\pm0.03 and the integrated flux density at 1GHz to be around 2.7Jy. Furthermore, we propose that the identified point radio source, located centrally inside the SNR shell, is most probably a compact remnant of the supernova explosion. The shell-like X-ray morphology of G5.9+3.1 as revealed by XMM-Newton broadly matches the spatial distribution of the radio emission, where the radio-bright eastern and western rims are also readily detected in the X-ray while the radio-weak northern and southern rims are weak or absent in the X-ray. Extracted MOS1+MOS2+PN spectra from the whole SNR as well as the north, east, and west rims of the SNR are fit successfully with an optically thin thermal plasma model in collisional ionization equilibrium with a column density N_H~0.80x102210^{22} cm−2^{-2} and fitted temperatures spanning the range kT~0.14-0.23keV for all of the regions. The derived electron number densities n_e for the whole SNR and the rims are also roughly comparable (ranging from ~0.20f−1/20.20f^{-1/2} cm−3^{-3} to ~0.40f−1/20.40f^{-1/2} cm−3^{-3}, where f is the volume filling factor). We also estimate the swept-up mass of the X-ray emitting plasma associated with G5.9+3.1 to be ~46f−1/2M⊙46f^{-1/2}M_{\odot}.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&

    Teleportation, Braid Group and Temperley--Lieb Algebra

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    We explore algebraic and topological structures underlying the quantum teleportation phenomena by applying the braid group and Temperley--Lieb algebra. We realize the braid teleportation configuration, teleportation swapping and virtual braid representation in the standard description of the teleportation. We devise diagrammatic rules for quantum circuits involving maximally entangled states and apply them to three sorts of descriptions of the teleportation: the transfer operator, quantum measurements and characteristic equations, and further propose the Temperley--Lieb algebra under local unitary transformations to be a mathematical structure underlying the teleportation. We compare our diagrammatical approach with two known recipes to the quantum information flow: the teleportation topology and strongly compact closed category, in order to explain our diagrammatic rules to be a natural diagrammatic language for the teleportation.Comment: 33 pages, 19 figures, latex. The present article is a short version of the preprint, quant-ph/0601050, which includes details of calculation, more topics such as topological diagrammatical operations and entanglement swapping, and calls the Temperley--Lieb category for the collection of all the Temperley--Lieb algebra with physical operations like local unitary transformation

    ROCker Models for Reliable Detection and Typing of Short-Read Sequences Carrying beta-Lactamase Genes

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    Identification of genes encoding beta-lactamases (BLs) from short-read sequences remains challenging due to the high frequency of shared amino acid functional domains and motifs in proteins encoded by BL genes and related non-BL gene sequences. Divergent BL homologs can be frequently missed during similarity searches, which has important practical consequences for monitoring antibiotic resistance. To address this limitation, we built ROCker models that targeted broad classes (e.g., class A, B, C, and D) and individual families (e.g., TEM) of BLs and challenged them with mock 150-bp- and 250-bp-read data sets of known composition. ROCker identifies most-discriminant bit score thresholds in sliding windows along the sequence of the target protein sequence and hence can account for nondiscriminative domains shared by unrelated proteins. BL ROCker models showed a 0% false-positive rate (FPR), a 0% to 4% false-negative rate (FNR), and an up-to-50-fold-higher F1 score [2 x precision x recall/(precision + recall)] compared to alternative methods, such as similarity searches using BLASTx with various e-value thresholds and BL hidden Markov models, or tools like DeepARG, ShortBRED, and AMRFinder. The ROCker models and the underlying protein sequence reference data sets and phylogenetic trees for read placement are freely available through http://enve-omics.ce.gatech.edu/data/rocker-bla. Application of these BL ROCker models to metagenomics, metatranscriptomics, and high-throughput PCR gene amplicon data should facilitate the reliable detection and quantification of BL variants encoded by environmental or clinical isolates and microbiomes and more accurate assessment of the associated public health risk, compared to the current practice. IMPORTANCE Resistance genes encoding beta-lactamases (BLs) confer resistance to the widely prescribed antibiotic class beta-lactams. Therefore, it is important to assess the prevalence of BL genes in clinical or environmental samples for monitoring the spreading of these genes into pathogens and estimating public health risk. However, detecting BLs in short-read sequence data is technically challenging. Our ROCker model-based bioinformatics approach showcases the reliable detection and typing of BLs in complex data sets and thus contributes toward solving an important problem in antibiotic resistance surveillance. The ROCker models developed substantially expand the toolbox for monitoring antibiotic resistance in clinical or environmental settings

    Understanding the Results of Multiple Linear Regression: Beyond Standardized Regression Coefficients

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    Multiple linear regression (MLR) remains a mainstay analysis in organizational research, yet intercorrelations between predictors (multicollinearity) undermine the interpretation of MLR weights in terms of predictor contributions to the criterion. Alternative indices include validity coefficients, structure coefficients, product measures, relative weights, all-possible-subsets regression, dominance weights, and commonality coefficients. This article reviews these indices, and uniquely, it offers freely available software that (a) computes and compares all of these indices with one another, (b) computes associated bootstrapped confidence intervals, and (c) does so for any number of predictors so long as the correlation matrix is positive definite. Other available software is limited in all of these respects. We invite researchers to use this software to increase their insights when applying MLR to a data set. Avenues for future research and application are discussed

    Measuring children’s aggression with teachers’ predictions of peer-nominations.

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    Peer nominations have been used very successfully to assess aggressive dispositions in children but are costly to administer in situations in which a subject population is scattered among many classrooms. In the present study, the authors evaluated an alternative measure, the Teacher Prediction of Peer-Nominated Aggression. This measure proved to be highly reliable and valid—a better predictor of peer nominations of aggression than teacher checklist ratings of aggression. The teachers' predictions of peer-nominated aggression also displayed the same pattern of interrelations and gender differences as actual peer nominations of aggression. Finally, the teachers' predictions of aggression were more accurate than their predictions of other behaviors.This research has been supported by grants from the National Institute of Mental Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/83416/1/1994.Huesmann_etal.MeasuringChildren'sAggwithTeachers'Predictionsof Peer-nom.PsychAssess.pd

    Inherent thermometry in a hybrid superconducting tunnel junction

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    We discuss inherent thermometry in a Superconductor - Normal metal - Superconductor tunnel junction. In this configuration, the energy selectivity of single-particle tunneling can provide a significant electron cooling, depending on the bias voltage. The usual approach for measuring the electron temperature consists in using an additional pair of superconducting tunnel junctions as probes. In this paper, we discuss our experiment performed on a different design with no such thermometer. The quasi-equilibrium in the central metallic island is discussed in terms of a kinetic equation including injection and relaxation terms. We determine the electron temperature by comparing the micro-cooler experimental current-voltage characteristic with isothermal theoretical predictions. The limits of validity of this approach, due to the junctions asymmetry, the Andreev reflection or the presence of sub-gap states are discussed
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