2,179 research outputs found

    Shannon entropies of atomic structure factors, off-diagonal order and electron correlation

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    Shannon entropies of one- and two-electron atomic structure factors in the position and momentum representations are used to examine the behavior of the off-diagonal elements of density matrices with respect to the uncertainty principle and to analyze the effects of electron correlation on off-diagonal order. We show that electron correlation induces off-diagonal order in position space which is characterized by larger entropic values. Electron correlation in momentum space is characterized by smaller entropic values as information is forced into regions closer to the diagonal. Related off-diagonal correlation functions are also discussed

    Role of fluorine doping on the electron transport layer of F-doped TiO2 (Titanium dioxide) for photovoltaic systems and its environmental impact

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    Photovoltaic (PV) systems are regarded as clean and sustainable energy sources and exhibit minimal pollution during their lifetime. The production of hazardous contaminants contaminating water resources, emissions of air pollutants during the manufacturing process, and the impact of PV installations on land use are important environmental factors to consider. The present study aimed to synthesise the F-doped Titanium dioxide (TiO2) thin films on a glass substrate employing spin coating followed by the sol-gel process ETL application purpose.  Fluorine-doped TiO2 thin films were prepared using the sol-gel spin coating technique. The X-ray diffraction (XRD) results confirmed that the most intense peak was observed at 25.37° corresponding to the crystallographic plane (101) for anatase TiO2. The average transparency of TiO2 was increased by adding the doping level of fluorine and increment in the optical bandgap. The thickness of the thin film was kept at about 300 nm. The resistance of nanocrystalline thin films of different F doped TiO2 was decreased from 1.322×1012 Ω, 9.728×1011 Ω, as the F doping concentration was increased from pristine to 7 at. %. Based on electrical measurements, it was observed that a suitable electron transport layer (ETL) of F-doped TiO2 can be synthesized for photovoltaic applications.  The present study offers a synthesis and analysis of F-doped TiO2 that can be used to improve the sustainability of PV manufacturing processes, improve its economic value, and mitigate its negative impact on the environment.

    CCD photometric and mass function study of 9 young Large Magellanic Cloud star clusters

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    We present CCD photometric and mass function study of 9 young Large Magellanic Cloud star clusters namely NGC 1767, NGC 1994, NGC 2002, NGC 2003, NGC 2006, SL 538, NGC 2011, NGC 2098 and NGC 2136. The BVRI data reaching down to V ~ 21 mag, are collected from 3.5-meter NTT/EFOSC2 in sub-arcsec seeing conditions. For NGC 1767, NGC 1994, NGC 2002, NGC 2003, NGC 2011 and NGC 2136, broad band photometric CCD data are presented for the first time. Seven of the 9 clusters have ages between 16 to 25 Myr while remaining two clusters have ages 32±432\pm4 Myr (NGC 2098) and 90±1090\pm10 Myr (NGC 2136). For 7 younger clusters, the age estimates based on a recent model and the integrated spectra are found to be systematically lower (\sim 10 Myr) from the present estimate. In the mass range of 212\sim 2 - 12 MM_{\odot}, the MF slopes for 8 out of nine clusters were found to be similar with the value of γ\gamma ranging from 1.90±0.16-1.90\pm0.16 to 2.28±0.21-2.28\pm0.21. For NGC 1767 it is flatter with γ=1.23±0.27\gamma = -1.23\pm0.27. Mass segregation effects are observed for NGC 2002, NGC 2006, NGC 2136 and NGC 2098. This is consistent with the findings of Kontizas et al. for NGC 2098. Presence of mass segregation in these clusters could be an imprint of star formation process as their ages are significantly smaller than their dynamical evolution time. Mean MF slope of γ=2.22±0.16\gamma = -2.22\pm0.16 derived for a sample of 25 young (100\le 100 Myr) dynamically unevolved LMC stellar systems provide support for the universality of IMF in the intermediate mass range 212M\sim 2-12 M_{\odot}.Comment: To appear in MNRA

    Effects of non-denumerable fixed points in finite dynamical systems

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    The motion of a spinning football brings forth the possible existence of a whole class of finite dynamical systems where there may be non-denumerably infinite number of fixed points. They defy the very traditional meaning of the fixed point that a point on the fixed point in the phase space should remain there forever, for, a fixed point can evolve as well! Under such considerations one can argue that a free-kicked football should be non-chaotic.Comment: This paper is a replaced version to modify the not-so-true claim, made unknowingly in the earlier version, of being first to propose the peculiar dynamical systems as described in the paper. With respect to the original workers, we present here our original finding

    RJK Observations of the Optical Afterglow of GRB 991216

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    We present near-infrared and optical observations of the afterglow to the Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB) 991216 obtained with the F. L. Whipple Observatory 1.2-m telescope and the University of Hawaii 2.2-m telescope. The observations range from 15 hours to 3.8 days after the burst. The temporal behavior of the data is well described by a single power-law decay with index -1.36 +/-0.04, independent of wavelength. The optical spectral energy distribution, corrected for significant Galactic reddening of E(B-V)=0.626, is well fitted by a single power-law with index -0.58 +/- 0.08. Combining the IR/optical observations with a Chandra X-ray measurement gives a spectral index of -0.8 +/- 0.1 in the synchrotron cooling regime. A comparison between the spectral and temporal power-law indices suggest that a jet is a better match to the observations than a simple spherical shock.Comment: Accepted to the Astrophysical Journal, 12 pages, 4 postscript figure

    Fifty Years of IMF Variation: The Intermediate-Mass Stars

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    I track the history of star count estimates of the Milky Way field star and open cluster IMFs, concentrating on the neglected mass range from 1 to 15 M{_\odot}. The prevalent belief in a universal IMF appears to be without basis for this mass range. Two recent estimates of the field star IMF using different methods and samples give values of the average logarithmic slope Γ\Gamma between -1.7 and -2.1 in the mass range 1.1 to 4 M{_\odot}. Two older estimates between 2 and 15 M{_\odot} disagree severely; the field IMF in this range is essentially unknown from star counts. Variations in Γ\Gamma among open cluster IMFs in this mass range have not decreased despite numerous detailed studies, even for studies using homogeneous data and reduction procedures and including only clusters with a significant mass range. These cluster variations \textit{might} be due to the combined effects of sampling, systematic errors, stellar evolution uncertainties, dynamical evolution, and unresolved binaries. If so, then the cluster data are consistent with a universal IMF, but are also consistent with sizeable variations. The cluster data do not allow an estimate of an average IMF or Γ\Gamma because the average depends on the choice of weighting procedure and other effects. If the spread in cluster IMFs is in excess of the effects listed above, real IMF variations must occur that do not depend much on physical conditions explored so far. The complexity of the star formation process seen in observations and simulations suggests that large realization-to-realization differences might be expected, in which case an individual cluster IMF would be in part the product of evolutionary contingency in star formation, and the function of interest is the probability distribution of IMF parameters.Comment: 18 pages, including 4 figures: invited talk presented at the conference on "IMF@50: The Stellar Initial Mass Function Fifty Years Later" held at Abbazia di Spineto, Siena, Italy, May 2004; to be published by Kluwer Academic Publishers, edited by E. Corbelli, F. Palla, and H. Zinnecke

    On the Iron content of NGC 1978 in the LMC: a metal rich, chemically homogeneous cluster

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    We present a detailed abundance analysis of giant stars in NGC 1978, a massive, intermediate-age stellar cluster in the Large Magellanic Cloud, characterized by a high ellipticity and suspected to have a metallicity spread. We analyzed 11 giants, all cluster members, by using high resolution spectra acquired with the UVES/FLAMES spectrograph at the ESO-Very Large Telescope. We find an iron content of [Fe/H]=-0.38 dex with very low (0.07 dex) dispersion, and a mean heliocentric radial velocity Vr=293.1 (with an error of 0.9 km/s) and a velocity dispersion (3.1 km/s), thus excluding the presence of a significant metallicity, as well as velocity, spread within the cluster.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication by Apj

    Attribute Based Secure Data Retrieval System for Decentralized Disruption Tolerant Military Networks

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    There are partitions in military environments such as a battlefield or a hostile region.They are likely to suffer from intermittent network connectivity.They having frequent partitions. Disruption-tolerant network DTN technologies are is a true and easy solutions.DTN is a Disruption-tolerant network.It allow devices which are wireless and carried by peoples in a military to interact with each other.These devices access the confidential information or command reliably by exploiting external storage nodes. In these networking environments DTN is very successful technology. When there is no wired connection between a source and a destination device, the information from the source node may need to wait in the intermediate nodes for a large amount of time until the connection would be correctly established.one of the challenching approach is a ABE.that is attribute-based encryption which fulfills the requirements for secure data retrieval in DTNs. The another concept is Cipher text Policy ABE (CP-ABE).it gives a appropriate way of encryption of data. the encryption includes the attribute set that the decryption needs to possess in order to decrypt the cipher text.hence, Many users can be allowed to decrypt different parts of data according to the security policy

    Optical observations of the bright long duration peculiar GRB 021004 afterglow

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    The CCD magnitudes in Johnson B,VB,V and Cousins RR and II photometric passbands are determined for the bright long duration GRB 021004 afterglow from 2002 October 4 to 16 starting \sim 3 hours after the γ\gamma-ray burst. Light curves of the afterglow emission in BB,VV,RR and II passbands are obtained by combining these measurements with other published data. The earliest optical emission appears to originate in a revese shock. Flux decay of the afterglow shows a very uncommon variation relative to other well-observed GRBs. Rapid light variations, especially during early times (Δt<2\Delta t < 2 days) is superposed on an underlying broken power law decay typical of a jetted afterglow. The flux decay constants at early and late times derived from least square fits to the light curve are 0.99±0.050.99\pm0.05 and 2.0±0.22.0\pm0.2 respectively, with a jet break at around 7 day. Comparison with a standard fireball model indicates a total extinction of E(BV)=0.20E(B-V)=0.20 mag in the direction of the burst. Our low-resolution spectra corrected for this extinction provide a spectral slope β=0.6±0.02\beta = 0.6\pm0.02. This value and the flux decay constants agree well with the electron energy index p2.27p\sim 2.27 used in the model. The derived jet opening angle of about 77^{\circ} implies a total emitted gamma-ray energy Eγ=3.5×1050E_{\gamma} = 3.5\times10^{50} erg at a cosmological distance of about 20 Gpc. Multiwavelength observations indicate association of this GRB with a star forming region, supporting the case for collapsar origin of long duration GRBs.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures, BASI, 31, 1

    ‘It’s better than daytime television’: questioning the socio-spatial impacts of massage parlours on residential communities

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    It has been shown that street sex work is problematic for some communities, but there is less evidence of the effects of brothels. Emerging research also suggests that impact discourses outlined by residential communities and in regulatory policies should be critiqued, because they are often based on minority community voices, and limited tangible evidence is used to masquerade wider moral viewpoints about the place of sex work. Using a study of residents living in close proximity to brothels in Blackpool, this paper argues that impact is socially and spatially fluid. Impact needs to be evaluated in a more nuanced manner, which is considerate of the heterogeneity of (even one type of) sex work, and the community in question. Brothels in Blackpool had a variety of roles in the everyday socio-spatial fabric; thus also questioning the common assumption that sex work only impacts negatively on residential communities
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