83,050 research outputs found
Shock and vibration response of multistage structure
Study of the shock and vibration response of a multistage structure employed analytically, lumped-mass, continuous-beam, multimode, and matrix-iteration methods. The study was made on the load paths, transmissibility, and attenuation properties along a longitudinal axis of a long, slender structure with increasing degree of complexity
New Models of f(R) Theories of Gravity
We introduce new models of f(R) theories of gravity that are generalization
of Horava-Lifshitz gravity.Comment: 16 pages, typos corrected, v2:minor changes, references adde
A re-visit of the phase-resolved X-ray and \gamma-ray spectra of the Crab pulsar
We use a modified outer gap model to study the multi-frequency phase-resolved
spectra of the Crab pulsar. The emissions from both poles contribute to the
light curve and the phase-resolved spectra. Using the synchrotron self-Compton
mechanism and by considering the incomplete conversion of curvature photons
into secondary pairs, the observed phase-averaged spectrum from 100 eV - 10 GeV
can be explained very well. The predicted phase-resolved spectra can match the
observed data reasonably well, too. We find that the emission from the north
pole mainly contributes to Leading Wing 1. The emissions in the remaining
phases are mainly dominated by the south pole. The widening of the azimuthal
extension of the outer gap explains Trailing Wing 2. The complicated
phase-resolved spectra for the phases between the two peaks, namely Trailing
Wing 1, Bridge and Leading Wing 2, strongly suggest that there are at least two
well-separated emission regions with multiple emission mechanisms, i.e.
synchrotron radiation, inverse Compton scattering and curvature radiation. Our
best fit results indicate that there may exist some asymmetry between the south
and the north poles. Our model predictions can be examined by GLAST.Comment: 35 pages, 13 figures, accepted to publish in Ap
Phase glass and zero-temperature phase transition in a randomly frustrated two-dimensional quantum rotor model
The ground state of the quantum rotor model in two dimensions with random
phase frustration is investigated. Extensive Monte Carlo simulations are
performed on the corresponding (2+1)-dimensional classical model under the
entropic sampling scheme. For weak quantum fluctuation, the system is found to
be in a phase glass phase characterized by a finite compressibility and a
finite value for the Edwards-Anderson order parameter, signifying long-ranged
phase rigidity in both spatial and imaginary time directions. Scaling
properties of the model near the transition to the gapped, Mott insulator state
with vanishing compressibility are analyzed. At the quantum critical point, the
dynamic exponent is greater than one. Correlation
length exponents in the spatial and imaginary time directions are given by
and , respectively, both assume values
greater than 0.6723 of the pure case. We speculate that the phase glass phase
is superconducting rather than metallic in the zero current limit.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, to appear in JSTA
Emergence of highly-designable protein-backbone conformations in an off-lattice model
Despite the variety of protein sizes, shapes, and backbone configurations
found in nature, the design of novel protein folds remains an open problem.
Within simple lattice models it has been shown that all structures are not
equally suitable for design. Rather, certain structures are distinguished by
unusually high designability: the number of amino-acid sequences for which they
represent the unique ground state; sequences associated with such structures
possess both robustness to mutation and thermodynamic stability. Here we report
that highly designable backbone conformations also emerge in a realistic
off-lattice model. The highly designable conformations of a chain of 23 amino
acids are identified, and found to be remarkably insensitive to model
parameters. While some of these conformations correspond closely to known
natural protein folds, such as the zinc finger and the helix-turn-helix motifs,
others do not resemble known folds and may be candidates for novel fold design.Comment: 7 figure
DASCH 100-yr light curves of high-mass X-ray binaries
We analyzed the 100-yr light curves of Galactic high-mass X-ray binaries
using the Harvard photographic plate collection, made accessible through the
DASCH project (Digital Access to a Sky Century at Harvard). As scanning is
still in progress, we focus on the four objects that are currently well
covered: the supergiant X-ray binary Cyg X-1 (V1357 Cyg), and the Be X-ray
binaries 1H 1936+541 (BD+53 2262), RX J1744.7-2713 (HD 161103), and RX
J2030.5+4751 (SAO 49725), the latter two objects being similar to gamma Cas.
The star associated with Cyg X-1 does not show evidence for variability with an
amplitude higher than 0.3 magnitude over a hundred years. We found significant
variability of one magnitude with timescales of more than 10 years for SAO
49725, as well as a possible period of 500-600 days and an amplitude of 0.05
magnitude that might be the orbital, or super-orbital period of the system. The
data is insufficient to conclude for HD 161103 but suggests a similar long-term
variability. We thus observe an additional characteristic of gamma Cas-like
objects: their long-term variability. This variability seems to be due to the
slow evolution of a decretion disk around the Be star, but may be triggered by
the presence of a compact object in the system, possibly a white dwarf. This
characteristic could be used to identify further similar objects otherwise
difficult to detect.Comment: Accepted for publication in Proceedings of Science (INTEGRAL 2012),
Eds. A. Goldwurm, F. Lebrun and C. Winkler, based on a presentation at the
9th INTEGRAL Workshop "An INTEGRAL view of the high-energy sky (the first 10
years)", October 15-19, 2012, Paris, Franc
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Communicability across evolving networks
Many natural and technological applications generate time ordered sequences of networks, defined over a fixed set of nodes; for example time-stamped information about ‘who phoned who’ or ‘who came into contact with who’ arise naturally in studies of communication and the spread of disease. Concepts and algorithms for static networks do not immediately carry through to this dynamic setting. For example, suppose A and B interact in the morning, and then B and C interact in the afternoon. Information, or disease, may then pass from A to C, but not vice versa. This subtlety is lost if we simply summarize using the daily aggregate network given by the chain A-B-C. However, using a natural definition of a walk on an evolving network, we show that classic centrality measures from the static setting can be extended in a computationally convenient manner. In particular, communicability indices can be computed to summarize the ability of each node to broadcast and receive information. The computations involve basic operations in linear algebra, and the asymmetry caused by time’s arrow is captured naturally through the non-mutativity of matrix-matrix multiplication. Illustrative examples are given for both synthetic and real-world communication data sets. We also discuss the use of the new centrality measures for real-time monitoring and prediction
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