1,365 research outputs found
Application of dirichlet process and support vector machine techniques for mapping alteration zones associated with porphyry copper deposit using aster remote sensing imagery
The application of machine learning (ML) algorithms for processing remote sensing data is momentous, particularly for mapping hydrothermal alteration zones associated with porphyry copper deposits. The unsupervised Dirichlet Process (DP) and the supervised Support Vector Machine (SVM) techniques can be executed for mapping hydrothermal alteration zones associated with porphyry copper deposits. The main objective of this investigation is to practice an algorithm that can accurately model the best training data as input for supervised methods such as SVM. For this purpose, the Zefreh porphyry copper deposit located in the Urumieh-Dokhtar Magmatic Arc (UDMA) of central Iran was selected and used as training data. Initially, using ASTER data, different alteration zones of the Zefreh porphyry copper deposit were detected by Band Ratio, Relative Band Depth (RBD), Linear Spectral Unmixing (LSU), Spectral Feature Fitting (SFF), and Orthogonal Subspace Projection (OSP) techniques. Then, using the DP method, the exact extent of each alteration was determined. Finally, the detected alterations were used as training data to identify similar alteration zones in full scene of ASTER using SVM and Spectral Angle Mapper (SAM) methods. Several high potential zones were identified in the study area. Field surveys and laboratory analysis were used to validate the image processing results. This investigation demonstrates that the application of the SVM algorithm for mapping hydrothermal alteration zones associated with porphyry copper deposits is broadly applicable to ASTER data and can be used for prospectivity mapping in many metallogenic provinces around the world
Study of transmission and reflection from a disordered lasing medium
A numerical study of the statistics of transmission () and reflection
() of quasi-particles from a one-dimensional disordered lasing or amplifying
medium is presented. The amplification is introduced via a uniform imaginary
part in the site energies in the disordered segment of the single-band tight
binding model. It is shown that is a non-self-averaging quantity. The
cross-over length scale above which the amplification suppresses the
transmittance is studied as a function of amplification strength. A new
cross-over length scale is introduced in the regime of strong disorder and weak
amplification. The stationary distribution of the backscattered reflection
coefficient is shown to differ qualitatively from the earlier analytical
results obtained within the random phase approximation.Comment: 5 pages RevTex (twocolumn format), 5 EPS figures, considerably
modifie
Reflection coefficient and localization length of waves in one-dimensional random media
We develop a novel and powerful method of exactly calculating various
transport characteristics of waves in one-dimensional random media with (or
without) coherent absorption or amplification. Using the method, we compute the
probability densities of the reflectance and of the phase of the reflection
coefficient, together with the localization length, of electromagnetic waves in
sufficiently long random dielectric media. We find substantial differences
between our exact results and the previous results obtained using the random
phase approximation (RPA). The probabilty density of the phase of the
reflection coefficient is highly nonuniform when either disorder or absorption
(or amplification) is strong. The probability density of the reflectance when
the absorption or amplification parameter is large is also quite different from
the RPA result. We prove that the probability densities in the amplifying case
are related to those in the absorbing case with the same magnitude of the
imaginary part of the dielectric permeability by exact dual relationships. From
the analysis of the average reflectance that shows a nonmonotonic dependence on
the absorption or amplification parameter, we obtain a useful criterion for the
applicability of the RPA. In the parameter regime where the RPA is invalid, we
find the exact localization length is substantially larger than the RPA
localization length.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figure
Localization of Light: Dual Symmetry between Absorption and Amplification
We study the propagation of radiation through a disordered waveguide with a
complex dielectric constant , and show that dual systems, which
differ only in the sign of the imaginary part of , have the same
localization length. Paradoxically, absorption and stimulated emission of
radiation suppress the transmittance of the waveguide in the same way.Comment: Added a reference to the paper by Z.Q. Zhang, Phys.Rev.B. 52, 7960
(1995
Multiple dynamical time-scales in networks with hierarchically nested modular organization
Many natural and engineered complex networks have intricate mesoscopic
organization, e.g., the clustering of the constituent nodes into several
communities or modules. Often, such modularity is manifested at several
different hierarchical levels, where the clusters defined at one level appear
as elementary entities at the next higher level. Using a simple model of a
hierarchical modular network, we show that such a topological structure gives
rise to characteristic time-scale separation between dynamics occurring at
different levels of the hierarchy. This generalizes our earlier result for
simple modular networks, where fast intra-modular and slow inter-modular
processes were clearly distinguished. Investigating the process of
synchronization of oscillators in a hierarchical modular network, we show the
existence of as many distinct time-scales as there are hierarchical levels in
the system. This suggests a possible functional role of such mesoscopic
organization principle in natural systems, viz., in the dynamical separation of
events occurring at different spatial scales.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Transmission through a many-channel random waveguide with absorption
We compute the statistical distribution of the transmittance of a random
waveguide with absorption in the limit of many propagating channels. We
consider the average and fluctuations of the conductance T = tr t^{\dagger} t,
where t is the transmission matrix, the density of transmission eigenvalues
\tau (the eigenvalues of t^{\dagger} t), and the distribution of the plane-wave
transmittances T_a and T_{ab}. For weak absorption (length L smaller than the
exponential absorption length \xi_a), we compute moments of the distributions,
while for strong absorption (L >> \xi_a), we can find the complete
distributions. Our findings explain recent experiments on the transmittance of
random waveguides by Stoytchev and Genack [Phys. Rev. Lett. 79, 309 (1997)].Comment: 13 pages, RevTeX; 9 figures include
BCAA catabolism in brown fat controls energy homeostasis through SLC25A44.
Branched-chain amino acid (BCAA; valine, leucine and isoleucine) supplementation is often beneficial to energy expenditure; however, increased circulating levels of BCAA are linked to obesity and diabetes. The mechanisms of this paradox remain unclear. Here we report that, on cold exposure, brown adipose tissue (BAT) actively utilizes BCAA in the mitochondria for thermogenesis and promotes systemic BCAA clearance in mice and humans. In turn, a BAT-specific defect in BCAA catabolism attenuates systemic BCAA clearance, BAT fuel oxidation and thermogenesis, leading to diet-induced obesity and glucose intolerance. Mechanistically, active BCAA catabolism in BAT is mediated by SLC25A44, which transports BCAAs into mitochondria. Our results suggest that BAT serves as a key metabolic filter that controls BCAA clearance via SLC25A44, thereby contributing to the improvement of metabolic health
Helicobacter species are associated with possible increase in risk of biliary lithiasis and benign biliary diseases
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Hepato-biliary tract lithiasis is common and present either as pain or as asymptomatic on abdominal ultrasonography for other causes. Although the DNA of <it>Helicobacter </it>species are identified in the gallbladder bile, tissue or stones analyzed from these cases, still a causal relationship could not be established due to different results from different geographical parts.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A detailed search of pubmed and pubmedcentral was carried out with key words <it>Helicobacter </it>and gallbladder, gallstones, hepaticolithiasis, cholelithiasis and choledocholithiasis, benign biliary diseases, liver diseases. The data was entered in a data base and meta analysis was carried out. The analysis was carried out using odds ratio and a fixed effect model, 95% confidence intervals for odds ratio was calculated. Chi square test for heterogeneity was employed. The overall effect was calculated using Z test.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A total of 12 articles were identified. One study used IgG for diagnosis while others used the PCR for Ure A gene, 16 S RNA or Cag A genes. A couple of studies used culture or histopathology besides the PCR. The cumulative results show a higher association of <it>Helicobacter </it>with chronic liver diseases (30.48%), and stone diseases (42.96%)(OR 1.77 95% CI 1.2–2.58; Z = 2.94, p = 0.003), the effect of each could not be identified as it was difficult to isolate the effect of helicobacter due to mixing of cases in each study.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The results of present meta analysis shows that there is a slight higher risk of cholelithiasis and benign liver disease (OR 1.77), however due to inherent inability to isolate the effect of stone disease from that of other benign lesions it is not possible to say for sure that <it>Helicobacter </it>has a casual relationship with benign biliary disease or stone disease or both.</p
Erratum to: Synthesis and Magnetic Properties of Nearly Monodisperse CoFe2O4 Nanoparticles Through a Simple Hydrothermal Condition
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Nearly monodisperse cobalt ferrite (CoFe<sub>2</sub>O<sub>4</sub>) nanoparticles without any size-selection process have been prepared through an alluring method in an oleylamine/ethanol/water system. Well-defined nanospheres with an average size of 5.5 nm have been synthesized using metal chloride as the law materials and oleic amine as the capping agent, through a general liquid–solid-solution (LSS) process. Magnetic measurement indicates that the particles exhibit a very high coercivity at 10 K and perform superparamagnetism at room temperature which is further illuminated by ZFC/FC curves. These superparamagnetic cobalt ferrite nanomaterials are considered to have potential application in the fields of biomedicine. The synthesis method is possible to be a general approach for the preparation of other pure binary and ternary compounds.</p
Selective Growth of Vertical-aligned ZnO Nanorod Arrays on Si Substrate by Catalyst-free Thermal Evaporation
By thermal evaporation of pure ZnO powders, high-density vertical-aligned ZnO nanorod arrays with diameter ranged in 80–250 nm were successfully synthesized on Si substrates covered with ZnO seed layers. It was revealed that the morphology, orientation, crystal, and optical quality of the ZnO nanorod arrays highly depend on the crystal quality of ZnO seed layers, which was confirmed by the characterizations of field-emission scanning electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, and photoluminescence measurements. For ZnO seed layer with wurtzite structure, the ZnO nanorods grew exactly normal to the substrate with perfect wurtzite structure, strong near-band-edge emission, and neglectable deep-level emission. The nanorods synthesized on the polycrystalline ZnO seed layer presented random orientation, wide diameter, and weak deep-level emission. This article provides a C-free and Au-free method for large-scale synthesis of vertical-aligned ZnO nanorod arrays by controlling the crystal quality of the seed layer
- …