1,403 research outputs found
Estimate of the Random Match Frequency of Acquired Characteristics in a Forensic Footwear Database
When analyzing footwear impression evidence, one of the goals of an examiner is to determine if an exemplar shoe could be the source of an impression found at a crime scene. This opinion is based on an assessment of the similarity of class characteristics and randomly acquired characteristics (RACs) between the known and questioned impressions, as well as the rarity of the observed characteristics. The primary aim of this research was to estimate the random match frequency of randomly acquired characteristics (RAC-RMF) within a forensic footwear database to determine the frequency of RACs with geometric similarity occurring in the same relative position on unrelated outsoles, which could potentially increase the chance of an erroneous source association.
RAC-RMF was estimated using high-quality test impressions of the 1,300 shoes in the West Virginia University (WVU) footwear database. Each impression in the database was sequentially held out and compared to the remaining 1,299 impressions to determine if unrelated shoes possessed similar RACs in the same relative locations. With over 80,000 RACs available for analysis, this resulted in nearly four million comparisons, which were performed using a combination of visual comparisons and predictions from a mathematical model based on a percent area overlap similarity score. Nearly 70% of the shoes in the database shared an indistinguishable pair with at least 1 out of 1,299 unrelated shoes, with a maximum RAC-RMF value of 49 out of 1,299 observed, and up to 5 indistinguishable RAC pairs shared between unrelated outsoles.
A similar evaluation was performed on two simulated crime scene impression datasets each containing more than 160 impressions deposited in blood or dust, respectively. A total of 759 RACs were identified in blood impressions created on tile, leading to over 77,000 non-mated RAC comparisons between blood impressions and test impressions from 1,299 unrelated outsoles. RACs in blood impressions were smaller on average than their test impression mates, and therefore exhibited a 66% increase in the number of indistinguishable RAC pairs. Depending on RAC length, relative RAC-RMFs of at least 0.0008 were encountered at a rate between 3.4% and 34%. The dust impression dataset included impressions deposited on paper and tile, with the latter lifted using either gelatin or Mylar film and an electrostatic lifter. A total of 1,513 RACs were identified from all impressions, generating over 154,000 non-mated RAC comparisons. The RACs in dust impressions were often similar in size or larger than their known mates, leading to a 42% decrease in indistinguishable RAC pairs relative to mated test impressions. As a result, relative RAC-RMFs of at least 0.0008 were observed at a rate between 3.1% and 32%, despite twice the number of RACs available compared to the blood impressions. This contrast suggested that a liquid medium may erode RAC size, while a particulate medium maintains or possibly increases RAC size, thus influencing non-mated RAC similarity. However, no more than one shared indistinguishable RAC pair was observed between unrelated outsoles for either dataset, meaning that an average of four and eight distinguishable RACs were present for blood and dust impressions, respectively.
This research provided estimates of RAC-RMF for a large database of high-quality test impressions as well as two datasets of simulated crime scene impressions. Analysis of these datasets demonstrated that RAC geometries do repeat on non-mated outsoles, and the rate at which this occurs within each dataset was quantified. Since theoretical models have traditionally been the basis for estimating RAC-RMF in footwear and the majority of empirical studies have reported RAC-RMFs at or near zero, the contribution of this research to the forensic footwear community is a calibration of this estimate based on empirical data from a larger sample of outsoles
Strong Field Gravity and X-Ray Observations of 4U1820-30
The behavior of quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) at frequencies near 1 kHz
in the x-ray emission from the neutron star x-ray binary 4U1820-30 has been
interpreted as evidence for the existence of the marginally stable orbit, a key
prediction of strong-field general relativity. The signature of the marginally
stable orbit is a saturation in QPO frequency, assumed to track inner disk
radius, versus mass accretion rate. Previous studies of 4U1820-30 have used
x-ray count rate as an indicator of mass accretion rate. However, x-ray count
rate is known to not correlate robustly with mass accretion rate or QPO
frequency in other sources. Here, we examine the QPO frequency dependence on
two other indicators of mass accretion rate: energy flux and x-ray spectral
shape. Using either of these indicators, we find that the QPO frequency
saturates at high mass accretion rates. We interpret this as strong evidence
for the existence of the marginally stable orbit.Comment: accepted to the Astrophysical Journal Letters, 7 page
Chandra Observation of the Dipping Source XB 1254-690
We present the results of a 53 ks long Chandra observation of the dipping
source XB 1254--690. During the observation neither bursts or dips were
observed. From the zero-order image we estimated the precise X-ray coordinates
of the source with a 90% uncertainty of 0.6\arcsec. Since the lightcurve did
not show any significant variability, we extracted the spectrum corresponding
to the whole observation. We confirmed the presence of the \ion{Fe}{xxvi}
K absorption lines with a larger accuracy with respect to the previous
XMM EPIC pn observation. Assuming that the line width were due to a bulk motion
or a turbulence associated to the coronal activity, we estimate that the lines
were produced in a photoionized absorber between the coronal radius and the
outer edge of the accretion disk.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figs, accepted by A&A on 6 December 200
Spectral analysis of LMC X-2 with XMM/Newton: unveiling the emission process in the extragalactic Z-source
We present the results of the analysis of an archival observation of LMC X-2
performed with XMM/Newton. The spectra taken by high-precision instruments have
never been analyzed before. We find an X-ray position for the source that is
inconsistent with the one obtained by ROSAT, but in agreement with the Einstein
position and that of the optical counterpart. The correlated spectral and
timing behaviour of the source suggests that the source is probably in the
normal branch of its X-ray color-color diagram. The spectrum of the source can
be fitted with a blackbody with a temperature 1.5 keV plus a disk blackbody at
0.8 keV. Photoelectric absorption from neutral matter has an equivalent
hydrogen column of 4 x 10^{20} cm^{-2}. An emission line, which we identify as
the O VIII Lyman alpha line, is detected, while no feature due to iron is
detected in the spectrum. We argue that the emission of this source can be
straightforwardly interpreted as a sum of the emission from a boundary layer
between the NS and the disc and a blackbody component coming from the disc
itself. Other canonical models that are used to fit Z-sources do not give a
satisfactory fit to the data. The detection of the O VIII emission line (and
the lack of detection of lines in the iron region) can be due to the fact that
the source lies in the Large Magellanic Cloud.Comment: Accepted for publication by Astronomy & Astrophysic
Hubble flow variance and the cosmic rest frame
We characterize the radial and angular variance of the Hubble flow in the
COMPOSITE sample of 4534 galaxies, on scales in which much of the flow is in
the nonlinear regime. With no cosmological assumptions other than the existence
of a suitably averaged linear Hubble law, we find with decisive Bayesian
evidence (ln B >> 5) that the Hubble constant averaged in independent spherical
radial shells is closer to its asymptotic value when referred to the rest frame
of the Local Group, rather than the standard rest frame of the Cosmic Microwave
Background. An exception occurs for radial shells in the range 40/h-60/h Mpc.
Angular averages reveal a dipole structure in the Hubble flow, whose amplitude
changes markedly over the range 32/h-62/h Mpc. Whereas the LG frame dipole is
initially constant and then decreases significantly, the CMB frame dipole
initially decreases but then increases. The map of angular Hubble flow
variation in the LG rest frame is found to coincide with that of the residual
CMB temperature dipole, with correlation coefficient -0.92. These results are
difficult to reconcile with the standard kinematic interpretation of the motion
of the Local Group in response to the clustering dipole, but are consistent
with a foreground non-kinematic anisotropy in the distance-redshift relation of
0.5% on scales up to 65/h Mpc. Effectively, the differential expansion of space
produced by nearby nonlinear structures of local voids and denser walls and
filaments cannot be reduced to a local boost. This hypothesis suggests a
reinterpretation of bulk flows, which may potentially impact on calibration of
supernovae distances, anomalies associated with large angles in the CMB
anisotropy spectrum, and the dark flow inferred from the kinematic
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect. It is consistent with recent studies that find
evidence for a non-kinematic dipole in the distribution of distant radio
sources.Comment: 37 pages, 9 tables, 13 figures; v2 adds extensive new analysis
(including additional subsections, tables, figures); v3 adds a Monte Carlo
analysis (with additional table, figure) which further tightens the
statistical robustness of the dipole results; v4 adds further clarifications,
small corrections, references and discussion of Planck satellite results; v5
typos fixed, matches published versio
Canonical Timing and Spectral Behavior of LMC X-3 in the Low/Hard State
We present results from three observations with the Rossi X-ray Timing
Explorer (RXTE) of LMC X-3, obtained while the source was in an extended
'low/hard' state. The data reveal a hard X-ray spectrum which is well fit by a
pure power law with photon index Gamma=1.69+/-0.02, with a source luminosity at
50 kpc of 5-16x10^{36}erg/s (2--10 keV). Strong broad-band (0.01-100 Hz) time
variability is also observed, with fractional rms amplitude 40+/-4%, plus a
quasi-periodic oscillation (QPO) peak at 0.46+/-0.02 Hz with rms amplitude
\~14%. This is the first reported observation in which the full canonical
low/hard state behavior (pure hard power law spectrum combined with strong
broad-band noise and QPO) for LMC X-3 is seen. We reanalyze several archival
RXTE observations of LMC X-3 and derive consistent spectral and timing
parameters, and determine the overall luminosity variation between high/soft
and low/hard states. The timing and spectral properties of LMC X-3 during the
recurrent low/hard states are quantitatively similar to that typically seen in
the Galactic black hole candidates.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for ApJ Letter
Status of the FLUTE RF System Upgrade
FLUTE (Ferninfrarot Linac- Und Test-Experiment) is a compact versatile linac-based accelerator test facility at KIT. Its main goal is to serve as a platform for a variety of accelerator studies and to generate strong ultra-short THz pulses for photon science. It will also serve as an injector for a Very Large Acceptance compact Storage Ring (VLA-cSR), which will be realized at KIT in the framework of the compact STorage Ring for Accelerator Research and Technology (cSTART) project. To achieve acceleration of electrons in the RF photoinjector and LINAC (from FLUTE) with high stability, it is necessary to provide stable RF power. For this goal, an upgrade of the existing RF system design has been proposed and is currently being implemented. This contribution will report on the updated RF system design and the commissioning status of the new RF system components
Ocean warming and species range shifts affect rates of ecosystem functioning by altering consumer-resource interactions.
Recent warming trends have driven widespread changes in the performance and distribution of species in many regions, with consequent shifts in assemblage structure and
ecosystem functioning. However, as responses to warming vary across species and regions, novel communities are emerging, particularly where warm-affinity range-expanding species
have rapidly colonized communities still dominated by cold-affinity species. Such community reconfiguration may alter core ecosystem processes, such as productivity or nutrient cycling, yet it remains unclear whether novel communities function similarly to those they have replaced, and how continued warming will alter functioning in the near future. Using simplified kelp forest communities as a model system, we compared rates of respiration, consumption and secondary productivity between current cold-affinity and future warm-affinity kelp assemblages under both present-day temperatures and near-future warming in a series of
mesocosm experiments. Overall, respiration rates of gastropods and amphipods increased with warming but did not differ between cold and warm affinity kelp assemblages. Consumption rates of three consumers (urchin, gastropod and amphipod) differed between kelp assemblages but only amphipod consumption rates increased with warming. A diet derived from warmaffinity kelp assemblages led to a decrease in growth and biomass of urchins, whereas the response of other consumers was variable depending on temperature treatment. These results suggest that climate-driven changes in assemblage structure of primary producers will alter per
capita rates of ecosystem functioning, and that specific responses may vary in complex and unpredictable ways, with some mediated by warming more than others. Understanding how
differences in life history and functional traits of dominant species will affect ecological interactions and, in turn, important ecosystem processes is crucial to understanding the wider implications of climate-driven community reconfiguration
Discovery of X-ray absorption features from the dipping low-mass X-ray binary XB 1916-053 with XMM-Newton
We report the discovery of narrow Fe XXV and Fe XXVI K alpha X-ray absorption
lines at 6.65 and 6.95 keV in the persistent emission of the dipping low-mass
X-ray binary (LMXB) XB 1916-053 during an XMM-Newton observation performed in
September 2002. In addition, there is marginal evidence for absorption features
at 1.48 keV, 2.67 kev, 7.82 keV and 8.29 keV consistent with Mg XII, S XVI, Ni
XXVII K alpha and Fe XXVI K beta transitions, respectively. Such absorption
lines from highly ionized ions are now observed in a number of high inclination
(ie. close to edge-on) LMXBs, such as XB 1916-053, where the inclination is
estimated to be between 60-80 degrees. This, together with the lack of any
orbital phase dependence of the features (except during dips), suggests that
the highly ionized plasma responsible for the absorption lines is located in a
cylindrical geometry around the compact object. Using the ratio of Fe XXV and
Fe XXVI column densities, we estimate the photo-ionization parameter of the
absorbing material to be 10^{3.92} erg cm s^{-1}. Only the Fe XXV line is
observed during dipping intervals and the upper-limits to the Fe XXVI column
density are consistent with a decrease in the amount of ionization during
dipping intervals. This implies the presence of cooler material in the line of
sight during dipping. We also report the discovery of a 0.98 keV absorption
edge in the persistent emission spectrum. The edge energy decreases to 0.87 keV
during deep dipping intervals. The detected feature may result from edges of
moderately ionized Ne and/or Fe with the average ionization level decreasing
from persistent emission to deep dipping. This is again consistent with the
presence of cooler material in the line of sight during dipping.Comment: 13 pages, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
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