15,974 research outputs found
Parametric study of space power systems. Volume 1 - Summary Final report
Summary of methodology and results of study of space power system
B physics at CDF - the Beauty of hadron collisions
The CDF experiment at the Tevatron p-pbar collider established that extensive
and detailed exploration of the b-quark dynamics is possible in hadron
collisions, with results competitive and supplementary to those from e+e-
colliders. This provides an unique, rich, and highly rewarding program that is
currently reaching full maturity. I report a few recent world-leading results
on rare decays, CP-violation in Bs mixing, and b-> s penguin decays.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Write-up of the proceedings of the "Third
Workshop on Theory, Phenomenology and Experiments in Heavy Flavour Physics"
(Capri2010
EXTRACTION of DEMS and ORTHOIMAGES from ARCHIVE AERIAL IMAGERY to SUPPORT PROJECT PLANNING in CIVIL ENGINEERING
Archive aerial photos represent a valuable heritage to provide information about land content and topography in the past years. Today, the availability of low-cost and open-source solutions for photogrammetric processing of close-range and drone images offers the chance to provide outputs such as DEM's and orthoimages in easy way. This paper is aimed at demonstrating somehow and to which level of accuracy digitized archive aerial photos may be used within a such kind of low-cost software (Agisoft Photoscan Professional®) to generate photogrammetric outputs. Different steps of the photogrammetric processing workflow are presented and discussed. The main conclusion is that this procedure may come to provide some final products, which however do not feature the high accuracy and resolution that may be obtained using high-end photogrammetric software packages specifically designed for aerial survey projects. In the last part a case study is presented about the use of four-epoch archive of aerial images to analyze the area where a tunnel has to be excavated
Precise Determination of Minimum Achievable Temperature for Solid-State Optical Refrigeration
We measure the minimum achievable temperature (MAT) as a function of
excitation wavelength in anti-Stokes fluorescence cooling of high purity
Yb3+-doped LiYF4 (Yb:YLF) crystal. Such measurements were obtained by
developing a sensitive noncontact thermometry that is based on a two-band
differential luminescence spectroscopy using balanced photo-detectors. These
measurements are in excellent agreement with the prediction of the laser
cooling model and identify MAT of 110 K at 1020 nm, corresponding to E4-E5
Stark manifold transition in Yb:YLF crystal.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Are bullies more productive? Empirical study of affectiveness vs. issue fixing time
Human Affectiveness, i.e., The emotional state of a person, plays a crucial role in many domains where it can make or break a team's ability to produce successful products. Software development is a collaborative activity as well, yet there is little information on how affectiveness impacts software productivity. As a first measure of this impact, this paper analyzes the relation between sentiment, emotions and politeness of developers in more than 560K Jira comments with the time to fix a Jira issue. We found that the happier developers are (expressing emotions such as JOY and LOVE in their comments), the shorter the issue fixing time is likely to be. In contrast, negative emotions such as SADNESS, are linked with longer issue fixing time. Politeness plays a more complex role and we empirically analyze its impact on developers' productivity
The artificial retina for track reconstruction at the LHC crossing rate
We present the results of an R&D study for a specialized processor capable of
precisely reconstructing events with hundreds of charged-particle tracks in
pixel and silicon strip detectors at , thus suitable for
processing LHC events at the full crossing frequency. For this purpose we
design and test a massively parallel pattern-recognition algorithm, inspired to
the current understanding of the mechanisms adopted by the primary visual
cortex of mammals in the early stages of visual-information processing. The
detailed geometry and charged-particle's activity of a large tracking detector
are simulated and used to assess the performance of the artificial retina
algorithm. We find that high-quality tracking in large detectors is possible
with sub-microsecond latencies when the algorithm is implemented in modern,
high-speed, high-bandwidth FPGA devices.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, ICHEP14. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1409.089
First prototype of a silicon tracker using an artificial retina for fast track finding
We report on the R\&D for a first prototype of a silicon tracker based on an
alternative approach for fast track finding. The working principle is inspired
from neurobiology, in particular by the processing of visual images by the
brain as it happens in nature. It is based on extensive parallelisation of data
distribution and pattern recognition. In this work we present the design of a
practical device that consists of a telescope based on single-sided silicon
detectors; we describe the data acquisition system and the implementation of
the track finding algorithms using available digital logic of commercial FPGA
devices. Tracking performance and trigger capabilities of the device are
discussed along with perspectives for future applications.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, Technology and Instrumentation in Particle
Physics 2014 (TIPP 2014), conference proceeding
miRNAs are essential for survival and differentiation of newborn neurons but not for expansion of neural progenitors during early neurogenesis in the mouse embryonic neocortex
Neurogenesis during the development of the mammalian cerebral cortex involves a switch of neural stem and progenitor cells from proliferation to differentiation. To explore the possible role of microRNAs (miRNAs) in this process, we conditionally ablated Dicer in the developing mouse neocortex using Emx1-Cre, which is specifically expressed in the dorsal telencephalon as early as embryonic day (E) 9.5. Dicer ablation in neuroepithelial cells, which are the primary neural stem and progenitor cells, and in the neurons derived from them, was evident from E10.5 onwards, as ascertained by the depletion of the normally abundant miRNAs miR-9 and miR-124. Dicer ablation resulted in massive hypotrophy of the postnatal cortex and death of the mice shortly after weaning. Analysis of the cytoarchitecture of the Dicer-ablated cortex revealed a marked reduction in radial thickness starting at E13.5, and defective cortical layering postnatally. Whereas the former was due to neuronal apoptosis starting at E12.5, which was the earliest detectable phenotype, the latter reflected dramatic impairment of neuronal differentiation. Remarkably, the primary target cells of Dicer ablation, the neuroepithelial cells, and the neurogenic progenitors derived from them, were unaffected by miRNA depletion with regard to cell cycle progression, cell division, differentiation and viability during the early stage of neurogenesis, and only underwent apoptosis starting at E14.5. Our results support the emerging concept that progenitors are less dependent on miRNAs than their differentiated progeny, and raise interesting perspectives as to the expansion of somatic stem cells
The artificial retina processor for track reconstruction at the LHC crossing rate
We present results of an R&D study for a specialized processor capable of
precisely reconstructing, in pixel detectors, hundreds of charged-particle
tracks from high-energy collisions at 40 MHz rate. We apply a highly parallel
pattern-recognition algorithm, inspired by studies of the processing of visual
images by the brain as it happens in nature, and describe in detail an
efficient hardware implementation in high-speed, high-bandwidth FPGA devices.
This is the first detailed demonstration of reconstruction of offline-quality
tracks at 40 MHz and makes the device suitable for processing Large Hadron
Collider events at the full crossing frequency.Comment: 4th draft of WIT proceedings modified according to JINST referee's
comments. 10 pages, 6 figures, 2 table
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