260,358 research outputs found
Variable Winds and Dust Formation in R Coronae Borealis Stars
We have observed P-Cygni and asymmetric, blue-shifted absorption profiles in
the He I 10830 lines of twelve R Coronae Borealis (RCB) stars over short (1
month) and long (3 year) timescales to look for variations linked to their
dust-formation episodes. In almost all cases, the strengths and terminal
velocities of the line vary significantly and are correlated with dust
formation events. Strong absorption features with blue-shifted velocities ~400
km/s appear during declines in visible brightness and persist for about 100
days after recovery to maximum brightness. Small residual winds of somewhat
lower velocity are present outside of the decline and recovery periods. The
correlations support models in which recently formed dust near the star is
propelled outward at high speed by radiation pressure and drags the gas along
with it.Comment: AJ in press, 21 pages, 3 figure
Design of magnetic traps for neutral atoms with vortices in type-II superconducting micro-structures
We design magnetic traps for atoms based on the average magnetic field of
vortices induced in a type-II superconducting thin film. This magnetic field is
the critical ingredient of the demonstrated vortex-based atom traps, which
operate without transport current. We use Bean's critical-state method to model
the vortex field through mesoscopic supercurrents induced in the thin strip.
The resulting inhomogeneous magnetic fields are studied in detail and compared
to those generated by multiple normally-conducting wires with transport
currents. Various vortex patterns can be obtained by programming different
loading-field and transport current sequences. These variable magnetic fields
are employed to make versatile trapping potentials.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figure
A fundamental limit to the efficiency of spin-exchange optical pumping of 3He nuclei
We establish the existence of a fundamental limit to the efficiency of
spin-exchange optical pumping of 3He nuclei by collisions with spin-polarized
alkali-metal atoms. Using accurate ab initio calculations of molecular
interactions and scattering properties, we show that the maximum 3He spin
polarization that can be achieved in spin-exchange collisions with potassium
(39K) and silver (107Ag) atoms is limited by the anisotropic hyperfine
interaction. We find that spin exchange in Ag-He collisions occurs much faster
than in K-He collisions, suggesting the possibility of using Ag in
spin-exchange optical pumping experiments to increase the production rate of
hyperpolarized 3He. Our analysis indicates that measurements of trap loss rates
of 2S atoms in the presence of cold 3He gas may be used to probe anisotropic
spin-exchange interactions in atom-He collisions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Coexistence of Spin Density Wave and Triplet Superconductivity
We discuss the possibility of coexistence of spin density wave
(antiferromagnetism) and triplet superconductivity as a particular example of a
broad class of systems where the interplay of magnetism and superconductivity
is important. We focus on the case of quasi-one-dimensional metals, where it is
known experimentally that antiferromagnetism is in close proximity to triplet
superconductivity in the temperature versus pressure phase diagram. Over a
narrow range of pressures, we propose an intermediate non-uniform phase
consisting of alternating antiferromagnetic and triplet superconducting
stripes. Within the non-uniform phase there are also changes between two and
three dimensional behavior.Comment: Revtex4, 4 pages, 5 figure
GhostVLAD for set-based face recognition
The objective of this paper is to learn a compact representation of image
sets for template-based face recognition. We make the following contributions:
first, we propose a network architecture which aggregates and embeds the face
descriptors produced by deep convolutional neural networks into a compact
fixed-length representation. This compact representation requires minimal
memory storage and enables efficient similarity computation. Second, we propose
a novel GhostVLAD layer that includes {\em ghost clusters}, that do not
contribute to the aggregation. We show that a quality weighting on the input
faces emerges automatically such that informative images contribute more than
those with low quality, and that the ghost clusters enhance the network's
ability to deal with poor quality images. Third, we explore how input feature
dimension, number of clusters and different training techniques affect the
recognition performance. Given this analysis, we train a network that far
exceeds the state-of-the-art on the IJB-B face recognition dataset. This is
currently one of the most challenging public benchmarks, and we surpass the
state-of-the-art on both the identification and verification protocols.Comment: Accepted by ACCV 201
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