104,155 research outputs found
IVOA Recommendation: SAMP - Simple Application Messaging Protocol Version 1.3
SAMP is a messaging protocol that enables astronomy software tools to
interoperate and communicate.
IVOA members have recognised that building a monolithic tool that attempts to
fulfil all the requirements of all users is impractical, and it is a better use
of our limited resources to enable individual tools to work together better.
One element of this is defining common file formats for the exchange of data
between different applications. Another important component is a messaging
system that enables the applications to share data and take advantage of each
other's functionality. SAMP builds on the success of a prior messaging
protocol, PLASTIC, which has been in use since 2006 in over a dozen astronomy
applications and has proven popular with users and developers. It is also
intended to form a framework for more general messaging requirements
What determines self-employment? : a comparative study
This article consists of a comparative study of the incidence of self-employment (SE) between Greece, which has the highest rate of SE in the European Union and the United Kingdom, which has amongst the lowest. Data from the Greek and the UK Labour Force Surveys are used in order to assess how personal attributes of an individual have an impact on the incidence of SE. It is found that common patterns exist between these two countries. In particular, it is found that for both countries, males have greater odds of being self-employed than females, older people have greater odds than younger, individuals employed in the primary and tertiary sectors have greater odds than the ones employed in the secondary, and that individuals with primary or secondary education have greater odds of being self-employed than individuals holding higher degrees. The incidence of SE is also found to differ according to the occupation of the individual. On the other hand, the findings indicate that individuals, residing in London, have greater odds of being self-employed than individuals working outside UK's capital, whereas in Greece the pattern is reversed
Coulomb force effects in low-energy -deuteron scattering
The -proton Coulomb interaction is included in the description of
-deuteron scattering using the screening and renormalization approach
in the framework of momentum-space three-particle equations. The technical
reliability of the method is demonstrated. Large Coulomb-force effects are
found.Comment: To be published in Phys. Rev.
Promoting nutrition sensitive and climate smart agriculture through increased use of traditional underutilised species in the Pacific
Poster presented at Tropentag 2014. International Conference on Research on Food Security, Natural Resource Management and Rural Development. "Bridging the Gap between Increasing Knowledge and Decreasing Resources" Prague (Czech Republic) Sep 17-19 2014
A fast and robust approach to long-distance quantum communication with atomic ensembles
Quantum repeaters create long-distance entanglement between quantum systems
while overcoming difficulties such as the attenuation of single photons in a
fiber. Recently, an implementation of a repeater protocol based on single
qubits in atomic ensembles and linear optics has been proposed [Nature 414, 413
(2001)]. Motivated by rapid experimental progress towards implementing that
protocol, here we develop a more efficient scheme compatible with active
purification of arbitrary errors. Using similar resources as the earlier
protocol, our approach intrinsically purifies leakage out of the logical
subspace and all errors within the logical subspace, leading to greatly
improved performance in the presence of experimental inefficiencies. Our
analysis indicates that our scheme could generate approximately one pair per 3
minutes over 1280 km distance with fidelity (F>78%) sufficient to violate
Bell's inequality.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables (Two appendixes are added to justify
two claims used in the maintext.
The nature of X-ray spectral variability in Seyfert Galaxies
We use a model-independent technique to investigate the nature of the 2-15
keV X-ray spectral variability in four Seyfert galaxies and distinguish between
spectral pivoting and the two-component model for spectral variability. Our
analysis reveals conclusively that the softening of the X-ray continuum with
increasing flux in MCG -6-30-15 and NGC 3516 is a result of summing two
spectral components: a soft varying component (SVC) with spectral shape
independent of flux and a constant hard component (HCC). In contrast, the
spectral variability in NGC 4051 can be well described by simple pivoting of
one component, together with an additional hard constant component. The
spectral variability model for NGC 5506 is ambiguous, due to the smaller range
of fluxes sampled by the data. We investigate the shape of the hard spectral
component in MCG -6-30-15 and find that it appears similar to a pure reflection
spectrum, but requires a large reflected fraction (R>3). We briefly discuss
physical interpretations of the different modes of spectral variability.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS letter
Community learning and development training for professionals engaged in community regeneration and community planning
The study was commissioned by the Scottish Executive Development Department to identify training needs and current provision of community learning and development (CLD) training for a range of professionals (other than those formally qualified in CLD) who are engaged in community regeneration and community planning (Local Government in Scotland Act 2003). It was one of a series of studies emanating from the Scottish Executive response to the review: „Empowered to Practice – the future of community learning and development training in Scotland‟. One of the themes of the report taken up by the Scottish Executive was the need for; „wider opportunities for joint training with other disciplines such as teachers, librarians, college lecturers, health workers and social workers‟
Bounds on quantum communication via Newtonian gravity
Newtonian gravity yields specific observable consequences, the most striking
of which is the emergence of a force. In so far as communication can
arise via such interactions between distant particles, we can ask what would be
expected for a theory of gravity that only allows classical communication. Many
heuristic suggestions for gravity-induced decoherence have this restriction
implicitly or explicitly in their construction. Here we show that communication
via a force has a minimum noise induced in the system when the
communication cannot convey quantum information, in a continuous time analogue
to Bell's inequalities. Our derived noise bounds provide tight constraints from
current experimental results on any theory of gravity that does not allow
quantum communication.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
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