187 research outputs found

    Task Scheduling with RT Constraints

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    This paper addresses the problem of scheduling reactive realtime transactions (task groups) implementing a network of extended Finite State Machines communicating asynchronously. Task instances are..

    Correlating spectral and timing properties in the evolving jet of the micro blazar MAXI J1836-194

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    During outbursts, the observational properties of black hole X-ray binaries (BHXBs) vary on timescales of days to months. These relatively short timescales make these systems ideal laboratories to probe the coupling between accreting material and outflowing jets as a the accretion rate varies. In particular, the origin of the hard X-ray emission is poorly understood and highly debated. This spectral component, which has a power-law shape, is due to Comptonisation of photons near the black hole, but it is unclear whether it originates in the accretion flow itself, or at the base of the jet, or possibly the interface region between them. In this paper we explore the disk-jet connection by modelling the multi-wavelength emission of MAXI J1836-194 during its 2011 outburst. We combine radio through X-ray spectra, X-ray timing information, and a robust joint-fitting method to better isolate the jet's physical properties. Our results demonstrate that the jet base can produce power-law hard X-ray emission in this system/outburst, provided that its base is fairly compact and that the temperatures of the emitting electrons are sub-relativistic. Because of energetic considerations, our model favours mildly pair-loaded jets carrying at least 20 pairs per proton. Finally, we find that the properties of the X-ray power spectrum are correlated with the jet properties, suggesting that an underlying physical process regulates both.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication on MNRA

    Peering at the outflow mechanisms in the transitional pulsar PSR J1023+0038: simultaneous VLT, XMM-Newton, and Swift high-time resolution observations

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    We report on a NIR, optical and X-ray campaign performed in 2017 with the XMM-Newton and Swift satellites and the VLT/HAWK-I instrument on the transitional MSP PSR J1023+0038. NIR observations were performed in fast-photometric mode in order to detect any fast variation of the flux and correlate them with the optical and X-ray light curves. The optical curve shows the typical sinusoidal modulation at the orbital period (4.75hr). No flaring or flickering is found in the optical, neither signs of transitions between active and passive states. On the contrary, the NIR curve displays a bimodal behaviour, showing strong flares in the first part of the curve, and an almost flat trend in the rest. The X-ray curves show a few low/high mode transitions, but no flaring activity. One of the low/high mode transition is found to happen at the same time as the emission of an infrared flare. This can be interpreted as the emission of a jet: the NIR flare could be due to the evolving spectrum of the jet, which possesses a break frequency that moves from higher (NIR) to lower (radio) frequencies after the launching, that has to happen at the low/high mode transition. We also present the cross correlation function between the optical and near infrared curves. Due to the bimodality of the NIR curve, we divided it in two parts (flaring and quiet). While the CCF of the quiet part is found to be flat, the one referring to the flaring part shows a narrow peak at ~10s, which indicates a delay of the NIR emission with respect to the optical. This lag can be interpreted as reprocessing of the optical emission at the light cylinder radius with a stream of matter spiraling around the system due to a phase of radio-ejection. This strongly supports a different origin of the NIR flares observed for PSR J1023+0038 with respect to the optical and X-ray flaring activity reported in other works on the same source.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy&Astrophysic

    Linearly scaling direct method for accurately inverting sparse banded matrices

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    In many problems in Computational Physics and Chemistry, one finds a special kind of sparse matrices, termed "banded matrices". These matrices, which are defined as having non-zero entries only within a given distance from the main diagonal, need often to be inverted in order to solve the associated linear system of equations. In this work, we introduce a new O(n) algorithm for solving such a system, being n X n the size of the matrix. We produce the analytical recursive expressions that allow to directly obtain the solution, as well as the pseudocode for its computer implementation. Moreover, we review the different options for possibly parallelizing the method, we describe the extension to deal with matrices that are banded plus a small number of non-zero entries outside the band, and we use the same ideas to produce a method for obtaining the full inverse matrix. Finally, we show that the New Algorithm is competitive, both in accuracy and in numerical efficiency, when compared to a standard method based in Gaussian elimination. We do this using sets of large random banded matrices, as well as the ones that appear when one tries to solve the 1D Poisson equation by finite differences.Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures, submitted to J. Comp. Phy

    Generation of a library of carbohydrate-active enzymes for plant biomass deconstruction

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    Áreas de pesquisa: Biochemistry & Molecular Biology ; ChemistryIn nature, the deconstruction of plant carbohydrates is carried out by carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZymes). A high-throughput (HTP) strategy was used to isolate and clone 1476 genes obtained from a diverse library of recombinant CAZymes covering a variety of sequence-based families, enzyme classes, and source organisms. All genes were successfully isolated by either PCR (61%) or gene synthesis (GS) (39%) and were subsequently cloned into Escherichia coli expression vectors. Most proteins (79%) were obtained at a good yield during recombinant expression. A significantly lower number (p < 0.01) of proteins from eukaryotic (57.7%) and archaeal (53.3%) origin were soluble compared to bacteria (79.7%). Genes obtained by GS gave a significantly lower number (p = 0.04) of soluble proteins while the green fluorescent protein tag improved protein solubility (p = 0.05). Finally, a relationship between the amino acid composition and protein solubility was observed. Thus, a lower percentage of non-polar and higher percentage of negatively charged amino acids in a protein may be a good predictor for higher protein solubility in E. coli. The HTP approach presented here is a powerful tool for producing recombinant CAZymes that can be used for future studies of plant cell wall degradation. Successful production and expression of soluble recombinant proteins at a high rate opens new possibilities for the high-throughput production of targets from limitless sourcesinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Unveiling optical signatures of outflows in accreting white dwarfs

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    Accreting white dwarfs are known to show signatures of wind-type outflows in the ultraviolet. At optical wavelengths, however, wind detections have only been reported for a few sources. We present GTC-10.4m optical spectroscopy of four accreting white dwarfs (BZ Cam, V751 Cyg, MV Lyr, and V425 Cas) observed during luminous epochs, when their optical emission is expected to be dominated by the accretion disc. We focused the analysis on four emission lines: Hα\alpha and He I λ\lambda5876, λ\lambda6678, λ\lambda7065. Line profiles are complex and variable on short (minutes) and long (days to weeks) time scales, with transient absorption and emission components. Among them, we detect strong blue-shifted absorptions at ≳1000\gtrsim 1000 km s−1^{-1}. These high-velocity components, present only in the blue wing of the emission lines, are observed in all four sources and could be associated with accretion disc winds. For MV Lyr and V425 Cas, these would represent the first detection of optical outflows in these objects, while in the case of BZ Cam and V751 Cyg, the presence of outflows has been previously reported. This study suggests that, in addition to ultraviolet winds, optical outflows might be also common in accreting white dwarfs. We discuss the observational properties of these winds and their possible similarity to those detected in accreting black holes and neutrons stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&

    Low power coordination in wireless ad-hoc networks

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    ABSTRACT Distributed wireless ad-hoc networks @WANs) pose numerous technical Among them, two are widely conthese problems, two are of dominating importance: (i) low energy and Operation and (ii) autonomous localized operation and decision making. Recent studies have shown sidered as crucial: autonomous localized operation and minimization of energy consumption. We address the fundamental problem of how to maximize life-time of the network by using only local information while preserving network connectivity, We start by introducing the Care-Ree Sleep (CS) Theorem that provides provably optimal necessary and nodes are not required for addressing the current network cient conditions for a node to turn off its radio while ensuring and Although there have been a number of efforts to deterthat global connectivity is not affected. The cS theorem is the basis for an efficient localized almine the conditions for a node to enter sleep state using gorithm that decides which node will turn its radio off, and only locally available information while preserving the overfor how long, The effectiveness of the approach is demonall connectivity of the network, only heuristic answers have sleep coordination problem. The sleep coordination problem the algorithm over a wide range of network parameters. is interesting and challenging from several view points: 0 Complexity of the Problem. The nodes that stay Categories and Subject Descriptors awake to preserve the connectivity of the network form a [ C O M P U T E R -C O M M U N I C A T I O N N E T W O R K S ] : connected dominating set on the network graph. Finding Network Protocols; C.4 [ P E R F O R M A N C E OF S Y S - the minimum connected dominating set can be proven to be TEMS]: [Reliability, availability, and serviceability] NP-complete. Therefore, even in cases where we do have the complete graph information about the whole network, finding the optimal solution in polynomial time is unlikely. Furthermore, setting the proper sleep times t o the nodes to maximize the overall network&apos;s lifetime, adds a new dimension to the NP-complete minimum connected dominating 0 Scope of the Problem. For a sleep coordination procedure, making a globally sound decision using only local information is a challenging task. Changing the status of even one node can potentially impact any node in the network ill terms Of its CODneCtiVity and energy consumption. 0 Guaranteed Connectivity. There is a need to determine under which conditions, a Particular node can sleep, while still guaranteeing that the network is connected. 0 Protocol Design. The autonomous operation of the nodes in DWANs has several advantages including fault tolerance, fast response to changes, and non-PrePlanned network structure. However, interaction and collaboration between the nodes and existence of shared resources, dictates a need for a protocol that can handle concurrency and synchronization of the autonomous ad-hoc node decisions. The power saving coordination strategy introduced here attempts to address these challenges. we start by introducing the care-nee sleep (CS) theorem that establishes provably optimal necessary and sufficient conditions for a given node to enter sleep state without disconnecting the network. strated using numerous simulations of the performance of been Presented [17, 3~ &apos; 1. we refer to this Problem as the General Terms Algorithms, Design, Performance Keywords set problem. Wireless ad-hoc network, low-power, coordinatio

    Failed-transition outbursts in black hole low-mass X-ray binaries

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    Black hole low-mass X-ray binaries (BH LMXBs) evolve in a similar way during outburst. Based on the X-ray spectrum and variability, this evolution can be divided into three canonical states: low/hard, intermediate, and high/soft state. BH LMXBs evolve from the low/hard to the high/soft state through the intermediate state in some outbursts (here called 'full outbursts'). However, in other cases, BH LMXBs undergo outbursts in which the source never reaches the high/soft state, here called 'failed-transition outbursts' (FT outbursts). From a sample of 56 BH LMXBs undergoing 128 outbursts, we find that 36 per cent of these BH LMXBs experienced at least one FT outburst, and that FT outbursts represent ~33 per cent of the outbursts of the sample, showing that these are common events. We compare all the available X-ray data of full and FT outbursts of BH LMXBs from RXTE/PCA, Swift/BAT, and MAXI, and find that FT and full outbursts cannot be distinguished from their X-ray light curves, hardness-intensity diagrams, or X-ray variability during the initial 10-60 d after the outburst onset. This suggests that both types of outbursts are driven by the same physical process. We also compare the optical and infrared (O/IR) data of FT and full outbursts of GX 339-4. We found that this system is generally brighter in O/IR bands before an FT outburst, suggesting that the O/IR flux points to the physical process that later leads to a full or an FT outburst. We discuss our results in the context of models that describe the onset and evolution of outbursts in accreting X-ray binaries.</p
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