18,687 research outputs found
Involutivity of integrals for sine-Gordon, modified KdV and potential KdV maps
Closed form expressions in terms of multi-sums of products have been given in
\cite{Tranclosedform, KRQ} of integrals of sine-Gordon, modified Korteweg-de
Vries and potential Korteweg-de Vries maps obtained as so-called
-traveling wave reductions of the corresponding partial difference
equations. We prove the involutivity of these integrals with respect to
recently found symplectic structures for those maps. The proof is based on
explicit formulae for the Poisson brackets between multi-sums of products.Comment: 24 page
Nuclear-spin-dependent corrections to the transition polarizability in cesium
The Stark-interference technique is commonly used to amplify the feeble
parity-violating signal in atomic experiments. As a result, interpretation of
these experiments in terms of electroweak observables requires knowledge of the
Stark-induced transition amplitudes or, equivalently, transition
polarizabilities. While the literature assumes that these transition
polarizabilities do not depend on the nuclear spin, here we prove the contrary.
The nuclear spin dependence arises due to hyperfine mixing of atomic states and
requires a third-order perturbation theory (one hyperfine interaction and two
electric-dipole interactions) treatment. We demonstrate that the so far
neglected {\em tensor} contribution appears in the transition polarizability
and present numerical results for the nuclear-spin-dependent corrections to the
transition polarizability in Cs. We
investigate the effect of these corrections to transition polarizabilities on
the extraction of the Cs anapole moment from the Boulder experiment
[Science 275, 1759 (1997)]. We also consider their effect on the extraction of
the ratio between the scalar and vector transition polarizabilities from the
measurements [Phys. Rev. A 55, 2 (1997)]. While the corrections are minor at
the current level of experimental accuracy, our analysis provides a framework
for future experiments.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
Reevaluation of Stark-induced transition polarizabilities in cesium
Extracting electroweak observables from experiments on atomic parity
violation (APV) using the Stark interference technique requires accurate
knowledge of transition polarizabilities. In cesium, the focus of our paper,
the APV amplitude is deduced from the measured
ratio of the APV amplitude to the vector transition polarizability, .
This ratio was measured with a uncertainty by the Boulder group
[Science 275, 1759 (1997)]. Currently, there is a sizable discrepancy in
different determinations of critically limiting the interpretation of
the APV measurement. The most recent value [Phys. Rev. Lett. 123, 073002
(2019)] of was deduced from a semi-empirical
sum-over-state determination of the scalar transition polarizability
and the measured ratio [Phys. Rev. A 55, 1007 (1997)]. This
value of , however, differs by or from the
previous determination of by [Phys. Rev. A 62, 052101
(2000)] based on the measured ratio of the magnetic-dipole
matrix element to . Here, we revise the
determination of by [Phys. Rev. Lett. 123, 073002 (2019)], using a more
consistent and more theoretically complete treatment of contributions from the
excited intermediate states in the sum-over-state method. Our
result of resolves the tension between the
and approaches. We recommend the value of
obtained by averaging our result and that of [Phys. Rev. A
62, 052101 (2000)].Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures v2: Reference added, small cosmetic changes to the
tex
Resolved Spectroscopy of the Narrow-Line Region in NGC 1068. I. The Nature of the Continuum Emission
We present the first long-slit spectra of the Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC 1068
obtained by the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS); the spectra cover
the wavelength range 1150 - 10,270 Angstroms at a spatial resolution of 0.05 -
0.1 arcsec and a spectral resolving power of 1000. In this first paper, we
concentrate on the far-UV to near-IR continuum emission from the continuum
``hot spot'' and surrounding regions extending out to +/- 6 arcsec (+/-432 pc)
at a position angle of 202 degrees In addition to the broad emission lines
detected by spectropolarimetry, the hot spot shows the ``little blue bump'' in
the 2000 - 4000 Ang. range, which is due to Fe II and Balmer continuum
emission. The continuum shape of the hot spot is indistinguishable from that of
NGC 4151 and other Seyfert 1 galaxies. Thus, the hot spot is reflected emission
from the hidden nucleus, due to electron scattering (as opposed to
wavelength-dependent dust scattering). The hot spot is ~0.3 arcsec in extent
and accounts for 20% of the scattered light in the inner 500 pc. We are able to
deconvolve the extended continuum emission in this region into two components:
electron-scattered light from the hidden nucleus (which dominates in the UV)
and stellar light (which dominates in the optical and near-IR). The scattered
light is heavily concentrated towards the hot spot, is stronger in the
northeast, and is enhanced in regions of strong narrow-line emission. The
stellar component is more extended, concentrated southwest of the hot spot,
dominated by an old (> 2 x 10 Gyr) stellar population, and includes a nuclear
stellar cluster which is ~200 pc in extent.Comment: 32 pages, Latex, includes 11 figures (postscript), to appear in the
Astrophysical Journa
Markov and Neural Network Models for Prediction of Structural Deterioration of Stormwater Pipe Assets
Storm-water pipe networks in Australia are designed to convey water from rainfall and surface runoff. They do not transport sewerage. Their structural deterioration is progressive with aging and will eventually cause pipe collapse with consequences of service interruption. Predicting structural condition of pipes provides vital information for asset management to prevent unexpected failures and to extend service life. This study focused on predicting the structural condition of storm-water pipes with two objectives. The first objective is the prediction of structural condition changes of the whole network of storm-water pipes by a Markov model at different times during their service life. This information can be used for planning annual budget and estimating the useful life of pipe assets. The second objective is the prediction of structural condition of any particular pipe by a neural network model. This knowledge is valuable in identifying pipes that are in poor condition for repair actions. A case study with closed circuit television inspection snapshot data was used to demonstrate the applicability of these two models
A call to safeguard sexual and reproductive health information and services during Ebola outbreaks
The recent Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreaks in 2021 exemplify how sexual and reproductive health services are too often considered unessential during health emergencies. Bleeding for reasons other than EVD, such as pregnancy complications or rape, can be construed as EVD symptoms, reinforcing fear and stigmatisation, and delaying timely access to adequate care. In this commentary, we urgently call on all humanitarian actors to integrate the Minimum Initial Services Package for Sexual and Reproductive Health in Crisis Situations into current and future EVD preparedness and response efforts
Implementation of screened hybrid functionals based on the Yukawa potential within the LAPW basis set
The implementation of screened hybrid functionals into the WIEN2k code, which
is based on the LAPW basis set, is reported. The Hartree-Fock exchange energy
and potential are screened by means of the Yukawa potential as proposed by
Bylander and Kleinman [Phys. Rev. B 41, 7868 (1990)] for the calculation of the
electronic structure of solids with the screened-exchange local density
approximation. Details of the formalism, which is based on the method of
Massidda, Posternak, and Baldereschi [Phys. Rev. B 48, 5058 (1993)] for the
unscreened Hartree-Fock exchange are given. The results for the
transition-energy and structural properties of several test cases are
presented. Results of calculations of the Cu electric-field gradient in Cu2O
are also presented, and it is shown that the hybrid functionals are much more
accurate than the standard local-density or generalized gradient
approximations
Discovering Valuable Items from Massive Data
Suppose there is a large collection of items, each with an associated cost
and an inherent utility that is revealed only once we commit to selecting it.
Given a budget on the cumulative cost of the selected items, how can we pick a
subset of maximal value? This task generalizes several important problems such
as multi-arm bandits, active search and the knapsack problem. We present an
algorithm, GP-Select, which utilizes prior knowledge about similarity be- tween
items, expressed as a kernel function. GP-Select uses Gaussian process
prediction to balance exploration (estimating the unknown value of items) and
exploitation (selecting items of high value). We extend GP-Select to be able to
discover sets that simultaneously have high utility and are diverse. Our
preference for diversity can be specified as an arbitrary monotone submodular
function that quantifies the diminishing returns obtained when selecting
similar items. Furthermore, we exploit the structure of the model updates to
achieve an order of magnitude (up to 40X) speedup in our experiments without
resorting to approximations. We provide strong guarantees on the performance of
GP-Select and apply it to three real-world case studies of industrial
relevance: (1) Refreshing a repository of prices in a Global Distribution
System for the travel industry, (2) Identifying diverse, binding-affine
peptides in a vaccine de- sign task and (3) Maximizing clicks in a web-scale
recommender system by recommending items to users
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