721 research outputs found
Positive streamers in ambient air and a N2:O2-mixture (99.8 : 0.2)
Photographs show distinct differences between positive streamers in air or in
a nitrogen-oxygen mixture (0.2% O2). The streamers in the mixture branch more
frequently, but the branches also extinguish more easily. Probably related to
that, the streamers in the mixture propagate more in a zigzag manner while they
are straighter in air. Furthermore, streamers in the mixture can become longer;
they are thinner and more intense.Comment: 2 pages, 4 figures, paper is accepted for IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. and
scheduled to appear in June 200
Positive and negative streamers in ambient air: measuring diameter, velocity and dissipated energy
Positive and negative streamers are studied in ambient air at 1 bar; they
emerge from a needle electrode placed 40 mm above a planar electrode. The
amplitudes of the applied voltage pulses range from 5 to 96 kV; most pulses
have rise times of 30 ns or shorter. Diameters, velocities and energies of the
streamers are measured. Two regimes are identified; a low voltage regime where
only positive streamers appear and a high voltage regime where both positive
and negative streamers exist. Below 5 kV, no streamers emerge. In the range
from 5 to 40 kV, positive streamers form, while the negative discharges only
form a glowing cloud at the electrode tip, but no streamers. For 5 to 20 kV,
diameters and velocities of the positive streamers have the minimal values of
d=0.2 mm and v \approx 10^5 m/s. For 20 to 40 kV, their diameters increase by a
factor 6 while the voltage increases only by a factor 2. Above the transition
value of 40 kV, streamers of both polarities form; they strongly resemble each
other, though the positive ones propagate further; their diameters continue to
increase with applied voltage. For 96 kV, positive streamers attain diameters
of 3 mm and velocities of 4*10^6 m/s, negative streamers are about 20 % slower
and thinner. An empirical fit formula for the relation between velocity v and
diameter d is v=0.5 d^2/(mm ns) for both polarities. Streamers of both
polarities dissipate energies of the order of several mJ per streamer while
crossing the gap.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, accepted for J. Phys.
Answering Conjunctive Queries under Updates
We consider the task of enumerating and counting answers to -ary
conjunctive queries against relational databases that may be updated by
inserting or deleting tuples. We exhibit a new notion of q-hierarchical
conjunctive queries and show that these can be maintained efficiently in the
following sense. During a linear time preprocessing phase, we can build a data
structure that enables constant delay enumeration of the query results; and
when the database is updated, we can update the data structure and restart the
enumeration phase within constant time. For the special case of self-join free
conjunctive queries we obtain a dichotomy: if a query is not q-hierarchical,
then query enumeration with sublinear delay and sublinear update time
(and arbitrary preprocessing time) is impossible.
For answering Boolean conjunctive queries and for the more general problem of
counting the number of solutions of k-ary queries we obtain complete
dichotomies: if the query's homomorphic core is q-hierarchical, then size of
the the query result can be computed in linear time and maintained with
constant update time. Otherwise, the size of the query result cannot be
maintained with sublinear update time. All our lower bounds rely on the
OMv-conjecture, a conjecture on the hardness of online matrix-vector
multiplication that has recently emerged in the field of fine-grained
complexity to characterise the hardness of dynamic problems. The lower bound
for the counting problem additionally relies on the orthogonal vectors
conjecture, which in turn is implied by the strong exponential time hypothesis.
By sublinear we mean for some
, where is the size of the active domain of the current
database
Nanosecond pulsed discharges in N2 and N2/H2O mixtures
Nanosecond pulsed discharges in N2 and N2/H2O at atmospheric pressure between two pin-shaped electrodes are studied. The evolution of the discharge is investigated with time-resolved imaging and optical emission spectroscopy. The discharge consists of three phases, the ignition (mainly molecular emission), spark (mainly atomic and ionic emission) and recombination phase (mainly atomic emission). The electron density is obtained by broadening of the N 746 nm and Ha line and reaches very high values up to 4 10^24 m^-3. The gas temperature is obtained by OES and Rayleigh scattering
Beyond Worst-Case Analysis for Joins with Minesweeper
We describe a new algorithm, Minesweeper, that is able to satisfy stronger
runtime guarantees than previous join algorithms (colloquially, `beyond
worst-case guarantees') for data in indexed search trees. Our first
contribution is developing a framework to measure this stronger notion of
complexity, which we call {\it certificate complexity}, that extends notions of
Barbay et al. and Demaine et al.; a certificate is a set of propositional
formulae that certifies that the output is correct. This notion captures a
natural class of join algorithms. In addition, the certificate allows us to
define a strictly stronger notion of runtime complexity than traditional
worst-case guarantees. Our second contribution is to develop a dichotomy
theorem for the certificate-based notion of complexity. Roughly, we show that
Minesweeper evaluates -acyclic queries in time linear in the certificate
plus the output size, while for any -cyclic query there is some instance
that takes superlinear time in the certificate (and for which the output is no
larger than the certificate size). We also extend our certificate-complexity
analysis to queries with bounded treewidth and the triangle query.Comment: [This is the full version of our PODS'2014 paper.
Positive streamers in air and nitrogen of varying density: experiments on similarity laws
Positive streamers in ambient air at pressures from 0.013 to 1 bar are
investigated experimentally. The voltage applied to the anode needle ranges
from 5 to 45 kV, the discharge gap from 1 to 16 cm. Using a "slow" voltage rise
time of 100 to 180 ns, the streamers are intentionally kept thin. For each
pressure p, we find a minimal diameter d_{min}. To test whether streamers at
different pressures are similar, the minimal streamer diameter d_{min} is
multiplied by its pressure p; we find this product to be well approximated by
p*d_{min}=0.20 \pm 0.02 mm*bar over two decades of air pressure at room
temperature. The value also fits diameters of sprite discharges above
thunderclouds at an altitude of 80 km when extrapolated to room temperature (as
air density rather than pressure determines the physical behavior). The minimal
velocity of streamers in our measurements is approximately 0.1 mm/ns = 10^5
m/s. The same minimal velocity has been reported for tendrils in sprites. We
also investigate the size of the initial ionization cloud at the electrode tip
from which the streamers emerge, and the streamer length between branching
events. The same quantities are also measured in nitrogen with a purity of
approximately 99.9 %. We characterize the essential differences with streamers
in air and find a minimal diameter of p*d_{min}=0.12 \pm 0.02 mm*bar in our
nitrogen.Comment: 24 pages, 11 figures, accepted for J. Phys.
Harvest and Nitrogen Management of Three Perennial Grasses as Biomass Feedstock in Subarctic Alaska
High energy costs in high-latitude regions have generated interest in the feasibility of bioenergy cropping. The goal of this study was to determine the N response and best harvest regime for biomass production of three perennial, cool-season grass species—tufted hairgrass (Deschampsia caespitosa (L.) P. Beauv.), slender wheatgrass (Elymus trachyÂcaulus (Link) Gould ex Shinners), and smooth bromegrass (Bromus inermis Leyss)—at two locations in central Alaska. Maximum dry matter yields were 11.3 Mg ha-1 for smooth bromegrass, 8.1 Mg ha-1 for tufted hairgrass, and 8.0 Mg ha-1 for slender wheatgrass, but yields varied greatly among years. We found a linear N response in most cases, with highest yields at the 100 kg N ha-1 application rate. Yields for the double-harvest regime usually did not vary significantly from those of the fall harvest, but spring harvest sometimes reduced yields dramatically. Biomass in the spring harvest was usually dry enough not to require additional drying for storage. Results of this study indicate it may be possible to produce grass biomass yields high enough for use as bioenergy feedstocks in central Alaska, but questions remain about the best management practices and the economics of growing bioenergy crops in Alaska.Les coûts élevés de l’énergie en haute latitude incitent les gens à se pencher sur la faisabilité d’entreprendre des cultures bioénergétiques. L’objectif de cette étude consistait à déterminer la réponse à l’azote et le meilleur régime d’exploitation pour la bioproduction de trois espèces de graminées vivaces en saison fraîche, soit la deschampsie cespiteuse (Deschampsia caespitosa (L.) P. Beauv.), l’élyme à chaumes rudes (Elymus trachycaulus (Link) Gould ex Shinners) et le brome inerme (Bromus inermis Leyss), à deux endroits du centre de l’Alaska. Le rendement maximum de matière sèche était de 11,3 tm ha-1 dans le cas du brome inerme, de 8,1 tm ha-1 dans le cas de la deschampsie cespiteuse et de 8,0 tm ha-1 dans le cas de l’élyme à chaumes rudes, bien que les rendements aient connu d’importantes variations d’une année à l’autre. Nous avons trouvé une réponse linéaire à l’azote dans la plupart des cas, les rendements les plus élevés étant ceux de la dose d’application de 100 kg N ha-1. Le rendement du régime à double récolte ne variait généralement pas beaucoup du régime à récolte d’automne, bien que les récoltes du printemps donnaient parfois un rendement considérablement réduit. De manière générale, la biomasse de la récolte du printemps était suffisamment sèche pour ne pas avoir besoin d’être asséchée davantage avant d’être stockée. Les résultats de cette étude indiquent qu’il peut être possible de produire des rendements en biomasse suffisamment élevés à partir de graminées pour être utilisés comme charge bioénergétique dans le centre de l’Alaska, mais cela dit, il y a toujours lieu de répondre aux questions portant sur les pratiques de gestion exemplaires et le caractère économique des productions bioénerÂgétiques en Alaska
Conceptualisatie en parameterisatie van landgebruik, bodem, beregening en buisdrainage in het NHI
Bij de modellering van de hydrologie van de bodem en het landgebruik in het NHI (Nationaal Hydrologisch Instrumentarium) is voortgebouwd op de hydrologie voor STONE 2.3. Bij STONE is Nederland landsdekkend gemodelleerd met behulp van een beperkt aantal (6405) plots. Een plot is een unieke combinatie van gewastypen, en geclassificeerde hydrologische eigenschappen en bodemchemische eigenschappen. Bij het bouwen van het NHI is deze piotbenadering verlaten. Dit betekent dat voor elke gridcel van 250 bij 250 m een model moet worden gebouwd van het gewas-onverzadigde zone deelsysteem.Daarbij is gebruik gemaakt van de modelcode metaSWAP, de onverzadigde zone module van SIMGRO. In dit artikel wordt zowel de conceptualisatie als de bijbehorende parametrisatie en de daarvoor gebruikte bestanden in meer detail beschreve
Sex pheromone signal and stability covary with fitness
If sexual signals are costly, covariance between signal expression and fitness is expected. Signal–fitness covariance is important, because it can contribute to the maintenance of genetic variation in signals that are under natural or sexual selection. Chemical signals, such as female sex pheromones in moths, have traditionally been assumed to be species-recognition signals, but their relationship with fitness is unclear. Here, we test whether chemical, conspecific mate finding signals covary with fitness in the moth Heliothis subflexa. Additionally, as moth signals are synthesized de novo every night, the maintenance of the signal can be costly. Therefore, we also hypothesized that fitness covaries with signal stability (i.e. lack of temporal intra-individual variation). We measured among- and within-individual variation in pheromone characteristics as well as fecundity, fertility and lifespan in two independent groups that differed in the time in between two pheromone samples. In both groups, we found fitness to be correlated with pheromone amount, composition and stability, supporting both our hypotheses. This study is, to our knowledge, the first to report a correlation between fitness and sex pheromone composition in moths, supporting evidence of condition-dependence and highlighting how signal–fitness covariance may contribute to heritable variation in chemical signals both among and within individuals
- …