1,225 research outputs found
Imaging Polarimetric Observations of a New Circumstellar Disk System
Few circumstellar disks have been directly observed. Here we use sensitive
differential polarimetric techniques to overcome atmospheric speckle noise in
order to image the circumstellar material around HD 169142. The detected
envelope or disk is considerably smaller than expectations based on the
measured strength of the far-IR excess from this system
A Single Circumbinary Disk in the HD 98800 Quadruple System
We present sub-arcsecond thermal infrared imaging of HD 98800, a young
quadruple system composed of a pair of low-mass spectroscopic binaries
separated by 0.8'' (38 AU), each with a K-dwarf primary. Images at wavelengths
ranging from 5 to 24.5 microns show unequivocally that the optically fainter
binary, HD 98800B, is the sole source of a comparatively large infrared excess
upon which a silicate emission feature is superposed. The excess is detected
only at wavelengths of 7.9 microns and longer, peaks at 25 microns, and has a
best-fit black-body temperature of 150 K, indicating that most of the dust lies
at distances greater than the orbital separation of the spectroscopic binary.
We estimate the radial extent of the dust with a disk model that approximates
radiation from the spectroscopic binary as a single source of equivalent
luminosity. Given the data, the most-likely values of disk properties in the
ranges considered are R_in = 5.0 +/- 2.5 AU, DeltaR = 13+/-8 AU, lambda_0 =
2(+4/-1.5) microns, gamma = 0+/-2.5, and sigma_total = 16+/-3 AU^2, where R_in
is the inner radius, DeltaR is the radial extent of the disk, lambda_0 is the
effective grain size, gamma is the radial power-law exponent of the optical
depth, tau, and sigma_total is the total cross-section of the grains. The range
of implied disk masses is 0.001--0.1 times that of the moon. These results show
that, for a wide range of possible disk properties, a circumbinary disk is far
more likely than a narrow ring.Comment: 11 page Latex manuscript with 3 postscript figures. Accepted for
publication in Astrophysical Journal Letters. Postscript version of complete
paper also available at
http://www.hep.upenn.edu/PORG/web/papers/koerner00a.p
Influence of gas flow rate on liquid distribution in trickle-beds using perforated plates as liquid distributors
Two wire mesh tomography devices and a liquid collector were used to study
the influence of the gas flow rate on liquid distribution when fluids
distribution on top of the reactor is ensured by a perforated plate. In
opposition to most of the studies realized by other authors, conditions in
which the gas has a negative impact in liquid distribution were evidenced.
Indeed, the obtained results show that the influence of gas flow rate depends
on the quality of the initial distribution, as the gas forces the liquid to
"respect" the distribution imposed at the top of the reactor. Finally, a
comparison between the two measuring techniques shows the limitations of the
liquid collector and the improper conclusions to which its use could lead
Hybrid quantum computing with ancillas
In the quest to build a practical quantum computer, it is important to use
efficient schemes for enacting the elementary quantum operations from which
quantum computer programs are constructed. The opposing requirements of
well-protected quantum data and fast quantum operations must be balanced to
maintain the integrity of the quantum information throughout the computation.
One important approach to quantum operations is to use an extra quantum system
- an ancilla - to interact with the quantum data register. Ancillas can mediate
interactions between separated quantum registers, and by using fresh ancillas
for each quantum operation, data integrity can be preserved for longer. This
review provides an overview of the basic concepts of the gate model quantum
computer architecture, including the different possible forms of information
encodings - from base two up to continuous variables - and a more detailed
description of how the main types of ancilla-mediated quantum operations
provide efficient quantum gates.Comment: Review paper. An introduction to quantum computation with qudits and
continuous variables, and a review of ancilla-based gate method
Highest weight Macdonald and Jack Polynomials
Fractional quantum Hall states of particles in the lowest Landau levels are
described by multivariate polynomials. The incompressible liquid states when
described on a sphere are fully invariant under the rotation group. Excited
quasiparticle/quasihole states are member of multiplets under the rotation
group and generically there is a nontrivial highest weight member of the
multiplet from which all states can be constructed. Some of the trial states
proposed in the literature belong to classical families of symmetric
polynomials. In this paper we study Macdonald and Jack polynomials that are
highest weight states. For Macdonald polynomials it is a (q,t)-deformation of
the raising angular momentum operator that defines the highest weight
condition. By specialization of the parameters we obtain a classification of
the highest weight Jack polynomials. Our results are valid in the case of
staircase and rectangular partition indexing the polynomials.Comment: 17 pages, published versio
Inverse medium problem for a singular contrast
We consider an inverse medium problem in two- and three-dimensional cases. Namely, we investigate the problem of reconstruction of unknown compactly supported refractive index (contrast) from L-2 with a fixed positive wave number. The proof is based on the new estimates for the Green-Faddeev function in L-infinity space. The main goal of this work is to prove a uniqueness result in the two- and three-dimensional cases and to discuss some possible constructive methods for solving the problem. Finally, we present some numerical examples to demonstrate the results in two dimensions. Published under license by AIP Publishing.Peer reviewe
Efficient implementation of selective recoupling in heteronuclear spin systems using Hadamard matrices
We present an efficient scheme which couples any designated pair of spins in
heteronuclear spin systems. The scheme is based on the existence of Hadamard
matrices. For a system of spins with pairwise coupling, the scheme
concatenates intervals of system evolution and uses at most pulses
where . Our results demonstrate that, in many systems, selective
recoupling is possible with linear overhead, contrary to common speculation
that exponential effort is always required.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, mypsfig2, revtex, submitted April 27, 199
Technical evaluation of the mEducator 3.0 linked data-based environment for sharing medical educational resources
mEducator 3.0 is a content sharing approach for medical education, based on Linked Data principles. Through standardization, it enables sharing and discovery of medical information. Overall the mEducator project seeks to address the following two different approaches, mEducator 2.0, based on web 2.0 and ad-hoc Application Programmers Interfaces (APIs), and mEducator 3.0, which builds upon a collection of Semantic Web Services that federate existing sources of medical and Technology Enhanced Learning (TEL) data. The semantic mEducator 3.0 approach It has a number of different instantiations, allowing flexibility and choice. At present these comprise of a standalone social web-based instantiation (MetaMorphosis+) and instantiations integrated with Drupal, Moodle and OpenLabyrinth systems. This paper presents the evaluation results of the mEducator 3.0 Linked Data based environment for sharing medical educational resources and focuses on metadata enrichment, conformance to the requirements and technical performance (of the MetaMorphosis+ and Drupal instantiations)
Indigenous knowledges and development: a postcolonial caution
As a result of the failure of formal top-down development, there has recently been increased interest in the possibilities of drawing upon the indigenous knowledges of those in the communities involved, in an attempt to produce more effective development strategies. The concept of indigenous knowledge calls for the inclusion of local voices and priorities, and promises empowerment through ownership of the process. However, there has been little critical examination of the ways in which indigenous knowledges have been included in the development process. Drawing upon postcolonial theory, this article suggests that indigenous knowledges are often drawn into development by both theorists and development institutions in a very limited way, failing to engage with other ways of perceiving development, and thus missing the possibility of devising more challenging alternatives
Formulas and equations for finding scattering data from the Dirichlet-to-Neumann map with nonzero background potential
For the Schrodinger equation at fixed energy with a potential supported in a
bounded domain we give formulas and equations for finding scattering data from
the Dirichlet-to-Neumann map with nonzero background potential. For the case of
zero background potential these results were obtained in [R.G.Novikov,
Multidimensional inverse spectral problem for the equation
-\Delta\psi+(v(x)-Eu(x))\psi=0, Funkt. Anal. i Ego Prilozhen 22(4), pp.11-22,
(1988)]
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