31,813 research outputs found
Power spectra of the interplanetary magnetic field near the earth
Power spectra of the interplanetary magnetic field measured by near-earth satellites upstream from the earth's bow shock are free from terrestrial contamination provided the field at the satellite does not intersect the bow shock. Considerable spectral enhancement for the range of frequencies 0.01 to 1.00 Hz, due to turbulence caused by the shock, may occur if the field observed at the satellite intersects the shock. This turbulence occurs frequently in both the morning and afternoon quadrants. In the frequency band from 0.07 to 1 Hz, this noise decreases in amplitude with radial distance from the shock with an attenuation length of 4 R sub E
PROMIS series. Volume 8: Midlatitude ground magnetograms
This is the eighth in a series of volumes pertaining to the Polar Region Outer Magnetosphere International Study (PROMIS). This volume contains 24 hour stack plots of 1-minute average, H and D component, ground magnetograms for the period March 10 through June 16, 1986. Nine midlatitude ground stations were selected from the UCLA magnetogram data base that was constructed from all available digitized magnetogram stations. The primary purpose of this publication is to allow users to define universal times and onset longitudes of magnetospheric substorms
“Free Will and Affirmation: Assessing Honderich’s Third Way”
In the third and final part of his A Theory of Determinism (TD) Ted Honderich addresses the fundamental question concerning “the consequences of determinism.” The critical question he aims to answer is what follows if determinism is true? This question is, of course, intimately bound up with the problem of free will and, in particular, with the question of whether or not the truth of determinism is compatible or incompatible with the sort of freedom required for moral responsibility. It is Honderich’s aim to provide a solution to “the problem of the consequences of determinism” and a key element of this is his articulation and defence of an alternative response to the implications of determinism that collapses the familiar Compatibilist/Incompatibilist dichotomy. Honderich offers us a third way – the response of “Affirmation” (HFY 125-6). Although his account of Affirmation has application and relevance to issues and features beyond freedom and responsibility, my primary concern in this essay will be to examine Honderich’s theory of “Affirmation” as it concerns the free will problem
Preliminary Results from Recent Measurements of the Antiprotonic Helium Hyperfine Structure
We report on preliminary results from a systematic study of the hyperfine
(HF) structure of antiprotonic helium. This precise measurement which was
commenced in 2006, has now been completed. Our initial analysis shows no
apparent density or power dependence and therefore the results can be averaged.
The statistical error of the observable M1 transitions is a factor of 60
smaller than that of three body quantum electrodynamic (QED) calculations,
while their difference has been resolved to a precision comparable to theory (a
factor of 10 better than our first measurement). This difference is sensitive
to the antiproton magnetic moment and agreement between theory and experiment
would lead to an increased precision of this parameter, thus providing a test
of CPT invariance.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
A Mathematical Model for Estimating Biological Damage Caused by Radiation
We propose a mathematical model for estimating biological damage caused by
low-dose irradiation. We understand that the Linear Non Threshold (LNT)
hypothesis is realized only in the case of no recovery effects. In order to
treat the realistic living objects, our model takes into account various types
of recovery as well as proliferation mechanism, which may change the resultant
damage, especially for the case of lower dose rate irradiation. It turns out
that the lower the radiation dose rate, the safer the irradiated system of
living object (which is called symbolically "tissue" hereafter) can have
chances to survive, which can reproduce the so-called dose and dose-rate
effectiveness factor (DDREF).Comment: 22 pages, 6 Figs, accepted in Journal of the Physical Society of
Japa
Optimistic Agents are Asymptotically Optimal
We use optimism to introduce generic asymptotically optimal reinforcement
learning agents. They achieve, with an arbitrary finite or compact class of
environments, asymptotically optimal behavior. Furthermore, in the finite
deterministic case we provide finite error bounds.Comment: 13 LaTeX page
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