5,699 research outputs found
Assembly and Disassembly Planning by using Fuzzy Logic & Genetic Algorithms
The authors propose the implementation of hybrid Fuzzy Logic-Genetic
Algorithm (FL-GA) methodology to plan the automatic assembly and disassembly
sequence of products. The GA-Fuzzy Logic approach is implemented onto two
levels. The first level of hybridization consists of the development of a Fuzzy
controller for the parameters of an assembly or disassembly planner based on
GAs. This controller acts on mutation probability and crossover rate in order
to adapt their values dynamically while the algorithm runs. The second level
consists of the identification of theoptimal assembly or disassembly sequence
by a Fuzzy function, in order to obtain a closer control of the technological
knowledge of the assembly/disassembly process. Two case studies were analyzed
in order to test the efficiency of the Fuzzy-GA methodologies
Media devices in pre-school children: the recommendations of the Italian pediatric society
BACKGROUND: Young children are too often exposed to mobile devices (MD) and most of them had their own device. The adverse effects of a early and prolonged exposure to digital technology on pre-school children has been described by several studies. Aim of the study is to analyze the consequences of MD exposure in pre-school children. METHODS: We analyzed the documented effects of media exposure on children's mental and physical health. RESULTS: According to recent studies, MD may interfere with learning, children development, well being, sleep, sight, listening, caregiver-child relationship. DISCUSSION: Pediatricians should be aware of both the beneficial and side effects of MD and give advice to the families, according to children's age. CONCLUSION: In according to literature, the Italian Pediatric Society suggest that the media device exposure in childhood should be modulated by supervisors
The Solar Twin Planet Search II. A Jupiter twin around a solar twin
Through our HARPS radial velocity survey for planets around solar twin stars,
we have identified a promising Jupiter twin candidate around the star HIP11915.
We characterize this Keplerian signal and investigate its potential origins in
stellar activity. Our analysis indicates that HIP11915 hosts a Jupiter-mass
planet with a 3800-day orbital period and low eccentricity. Although we cannot
definitively rule out an activity cycle interpretation, we find that a planet
interpretation is more likely based on a joint analysis of RV and activity
index data. The challenges of long-period radial velocity signals addressed in
this paper are critical for the ongoing discovery of Jupiter-like exoplanets.
If planetary in nature, the signal investigated here represents a very close
analog to the solar system in terms of both Sun-like host star and Jupiter-like
planet.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures; A&A accepted; typos corrected in this versio
Optically switched magnetism in photovoltaic perovskite CHNH(Mn:Pb)I
The demand for ever-increasing density of information storage and speed of
manipulation boosts an intense search for new magnetic materials and novel ways
of controlling the magnetic bit. Here, we report the synthesis of a
ferromagnetic photovoltaic CHNH(Mn:Pb)I material in which the
photo-excited electrons rapidly melt the local magnetic order through the
Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida interactions without heating up the spin system.
Our finding offers an alternative, very simple and efficient way of optical
spin control, and opens an avenue for applications in low power, light
controlling magnetic devices
An HST Imaging Survey of Low-Mass Stars in the Chamaeleon I Star Forming region
We present new HST/WFPC2 observations of 20 fields centered around T Tauri
stars in the Chamaeleon I star forming region. Images have been obtained in the
F631N ([OI]6300A), F656N (Ha) and F673N ([SII]6716A+6731A) narrow-band filters,
plus the Johnson V-band equivalent F547M filter. We detect 31 T Tauri stars
falling within our fields. We discuss the optical morphology of 10 sources
showing evidence of either binarity, circumstellar material, or mass loss. We
supplement our photometry with a compilation of optical, infrared and
sub-millimeter data from the literature, together with new sub-mm data for
three objects, to build the Spectral Energy Distributions (SED) of 19 single
sources. Using an SED model fitting tool, we self-consistently estimate a
number of stellar and disk parameters, while mass accretion rates are directly
derived from our Ha photometry. We find that bolometric luminosities derived
from dereddened optical data tend to be underestimated in systems with high
alpha(2-24} IR spectral index, suggesting that disks seen nearly edge-on may
occasionally be interpreted as low luminosity (and therefore more evolved)
sources. On the other hand, the same alpha(2-24) spectral index, a tracer of
the amount of dust in the warmer layers of the circumstellar disks, and the
mass accretion rate appear to decay with the isocronal stellar age, suggesting
that the observed age spread (~0.5-5 Myr) within the cluster is real. Our
sample contains a few outliers that may have dissipated their circumstellar
disks on shorter time-scale.Comment: to appear on Astronomical Journal, accepted April 16, 2012 (AJ-10740
Gaia DR2 view of the Lupus V-VI clouds: the candidate diskless young stellar objects are mainly background contaminants
Extensive surveys of star-forming regions with Spitzer have revealed
populations of disk-bearing young stellar objects. These have provided crucial
constraints, such as the timescale of dispersal of protoplanetary disks,
obtained by carefully combining infrared data with spectroscopic or X-ray data.
While observations in various regions agree with the general trend of
decreasing disk fraction with age, the Lupus V and VI regions appeared to have
been at odds, having an extremely low disk fraction. Here we show, using the
recent Gaia data release 2 (DR2), that these extremely low disk fractions are
actually due to a very high contamination by background giants. Out of the 83
candidate young stellar objects (YSOs) in these clouds observed by Gaia, only
five have distances of 150 pc, similar to YSOs in the other Lupus clouds, and
have similar proper motions to other members in this star-forming complex. Of
these five targets, four have optically thick (Class II) disks. On the one
hand, this result resolves the conundrum of the puzzling low disk fraction in
these clouds, while, on the other hand, it further clarifies the need to
confirm the Spitzer selected diskless population with other tracers, especially
in regions at low galactic latitude like Lupus V and VI. The use of Gaia
astrometry is now an independent and reliable way to further assess the
membership of candidate YSOs in these, and potentially other, star-forming
regions.Comment: Accepted for publication on Astronomy&Astrophysics Letter
The temporal evolution of neutron-capture elements in the Galactic discs
Important insights into the formation and evolution of the Galactic disc(s)
are contained in the chemical compositions of stars. We analysed
high-resolution and high signal to noise HARPS spectra of 79 solar twin stars
in order to obtain precise determinations of their atmospheric parameters, ages
(0.4 Gyr) and chemical abundances (0.01~dex) of 12
neutron-capture elements (Sr, Y, Zr, Ba, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, and Dy).
This valuable dataset allows us to study the [X/Fe]-age relations over a time
interval of 10 Gyr and among stars belonging to the thin and thick discs.
These relations show that i) the -process has been the main channel of
nucleosynthesis of -capture elements during the evolution of the thin disc;
ii) the thick disc is rich in -process elements which suggests that its
formation has been rapid and intensive. %; iii) a chemical continuity between
the thin and thick discs is evident in the abundances of Ba. In addition, the
heavy (Ba, La, Ce) and light (Sr, Y, Zr) -process elements revealed details
on the dependence between the yields of AGB stars and the stellar mass or
metallicity. Finally, we confirmed that both [Y/Mg] and [Y/Al] ratios can be
employed as stellar clocks, allowing ages of solar twin stars to be estimated
with an average precision of 0.5~Gyr
Constraining the evolution of stellar rotation using solar twins
The stellar Rotation Age relation is commonly considered as a useful
tool to derive reliable ages for Sun-like stars. However, in the light of
\kepler\ data, the presence of apparently old and fast rotators that do not
obey the usual gyrochronology relations led to the hypothesis of weakened
magnetic breaking in some stars. In this letter, we constrain the solar
rotation evolutionary track using solar twins. Predicted rotational periods as
a function of mass, age, [Fe/H] and given critical Rossby number () were estimated for the entire rotational sample. Our analysis favors
the smooth rotational evolution scenario and suggests that, if the magnetic
weakened breaking scenario takes place at all, it should arise after or ages 5.3 Gyr (at 95 confidence level).Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Spectroscopic binaries in the Solar Twin Planet Search program: from substellar-mass to M dwarf companions
Previous studies on the rotation of Sun-like stars revealed that the
rotational rates of young stars converge towards a well-defined evolution that
follows a power-law decay. It seems, however, that some binary stars do not
obey this relation, often by displaying enhanced rotational rates and activity.
In the Solar Twin Planet Search program we observed several solar twin
binaries, and found a multiplicity fraction of in the whole
sample; moreover, at least three of these binaries (HIP 19911, HIP 67620 and
HIP 103983) clearly exhibit the aforementioned anomalies. We investigated the
configuration of the binaries in the program, and discovered new companions for
HIP 6407, HIP 54582, HIP 62039 and HIP 30037, of which the latter is orbited by
a M brown dwarf in a 1-month long orbit. We report the orbital
parameters of the systems with well-sampled orbits and, in addition, the lower
limits of parameters for the companions that only display a curvature in their
radial velocities. For the linear trend binaries, we report an estimate of the
masses of their companions when their observed separation is available, and a
minimum mass otherwise. We conclude that solar twin binaries with low-mass
stellar companions at moderate orbital periods do not display signs of a
distinct rotational evolution when compared to single stars. We confirm that
the three peculiar stars are double-lined binaries, and that their companions
are polluting their spectra, which explains the observed anomalies.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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