3,904 research outputs found
Soliton core filling in superfluid Fermi gases with spin-imbalance
In this paper the properties of dark solitons in superfluid Fermi gases with
spin-imbalance are studied by means of a recently developed effective field
theory [S. N. Klimin, J. Tempere, G. Lombardi, J. T. Devreese, Eur. Phys. J. B
88, 122 (2015)] suitable to describe the BEC-BCS crossover in ultracold gases
in an extended range of temperatures as compared to the usual Ginzburg-Landau
treatments. The spatial profiles for the total density and for the density of
the excess-spin component, and the changes of their properties across the
BEC-BCS crossover are examined in different conditions of temperature and
imbalance. The presence of population imbalance is shown to strongly affect the
structure of the soliton excitation by filling its core with unpaired atoms.
This in turn influences the dynamical properties of the soliton since the
additional particles in the core have to be dragged along thus altering the
effective mass.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
NICMOS Snapshot Survey of Damped Lyman Alpha Quasars
We image 19 quasars with 22 damped Lyman alpha (DLA) systems using the F160W
filter and the Near-Infrared Camera and Multiobject Spectrograph aboard the
Hubble Space Telescope, in both direct and coronagraphic modes. We reach 5
sigma detection limits of ~H=22 in the majority of our images. We compare our
observations to the observed Lyman-break population of high-redshift galaxies,
as well as Bruzual & Charlot evolutionary models of present-day galaxies
redshifted to the distances of the absorption systems. We predict H magnitudes
for our DLAs, assuming they are producing stars like an L* Lyman-break galaxy
(LBG) at their redshift. Comparing these predictions to our sensitivity, we
find that we should be able to detect a galaxy around 0.5-1.0 L* (LBG) for most
of our observations. We find only one new possible candidate, that near
LBQS0010-0012. This scarcity of candidates leads us to the conclusion that most
DLA systems are not drawn from a normal LBG luminosity function nor a local
galaxy luminosity function placed at these high redshifts.Comment: 31 pages, 8 figures, Accepted for Feb. 10 issue of Ap
Taxa de adequação de uso das terras e riscos de degradação agroambiental.
Ainda há grandes conflitos entre agricultura e meio ambiente, apesar da crescente adoção de sistemas de produção mais adequados à conservação dos recursos naturais. O objetivo deste trabalho foi analisar a taxa de adequação de uso das terras da quadrícula de Ribeirão Preto-SP, identificando-se inclusive as taxas de sobreutilização e subutilização, além de eventuais riscos de degradação agroambiental. A partir do cruzamento do mapa de uso atual das terras com o mapa de aptidão agrícola foi gerado o mapa de adequação de uso. A área apresentou uso adequado para 50,76% das terras; subutilização para 28,67%; e sobreutilização para 13,99%. De um modo geral a área apresentou risco baixo ou muito baixo de degradação agroambiental
Robust Machine Learning Applied to Astronomical Datasets I: Star-Galaxy Classification of the SDSS DR3 Using Decision Trees
We provide classifications for all 143 million non-repeat photometric objects
in the Third Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) using decision
trees trained on 477,068 objects with SDSS spectroscopic data. We demonstrate
that these star/galaxy classifications are expected to be reliable for
approximately 22 million objects with r < ~20. The general machine learning
environment Data-to-Knowledge and supercomputing resources enabled extensive
investigation of the decision tree parameter space. This work presents the
first public release of objects classified in this way for an entire SDSS data
release. The objects are classified as either galaxy, star or nsng (neither
star nor galaxy), with an associated probability for each class. To demonstrate
how to effectively make use of these classifications, we perform several
important tests. First, we detail selection criteria within the probability
space defined by the three classes to extract samples of stars and galaxies to
a given completeness and efficiency. Second, we investigate the efficacy of the
classifications and the effect of extrapolating from the spectroscopic regime
by performing blind tests on objects in the SDSS, 2dF Galaxy Redshift and 2dF
QSO Redshift (2QZ) surveys. Given the photometric limits of our spectroscopic
training data, we effectively begin to extrapolate past our star-galaxy
training set at r ~ 18. By comparing the number counts of our training sample
with the classified sources, however, we find that our efficiencies appear to
remain robust to r ~ 20. As a result, we expect our classifications to be
accurate for 900,000 galaxies and 6.7 million stars, and remain robust via
extrapolation for a total of 8.0 million galaxies and 13.9 million stars.
[Abridged]Comment: 27 pages, 12 figures, to be published in ApJ, uses emulateapj.cl
Discovery of Damped Lyman-Alpha Systems at Redshifts Less Than 1.65 and Results on their Incidence and Cosmological Mass Density
We report results on the incidence and cosmological mass density of damped
Lyman-alpha (DLA) systems at redshifts less that 1.65. We used HST and an
efficient non-traditional (but unbiased) survey technique to discover DLA
systems at redshifts z<1.65, where we observe the Lyman-alpha line in known
MgII absorption-line systems. We uncovered 14 DLA lines including 2
serendipitously. We find that (1) The DLA absorbers are drawn almost
exclusively from the population of MgII absorbers which have rest equivalent
widths W(2796)>0.6A. (2) The incidence of DLA systems per unit redshift,
n(DLA), is observed to decrease with decreasing redshift. (3) On the other
hand, the cosmological mass density of neutral gas in low-redshift DLA
absorbers, Omega(DLA), is observed to be comparable to that observed at high
redshift. (4) The low-redshift DLA absorbers exhibit a significantly larger
fraction of very high column density systems in comparison to determinations at
both high redshift and locally.Comment: 47 pages in LaTeX - emulateapj style with included tables and
encapsulated postscript figures. Accepted for Publication in Astrophysical
Journal Supplements. Results unchanged, text revise
Network Physiology of Cortico–Muscular Interactions
Skeletal muscle activity is continuously modulated across physiologic states to provide coordination, flexibility and responsiveness to body tasks and external inputs. Despite the central role the muscular system plays in facilitating vital body functions, the network of brain-muscle interactions required to control hundreds of muscles and synchronize their activation in relation to distinct physiologic states has not been investigated. Recent approaches have focused on general associations between individual brain rhythms and muscle activation during movement tasks. However, the specific forms of coupling, the functional network of cortico-muscular coordination, and how network structure and dynamics are modulated by autonomic regulation across physiologic states remains unknown. To identify and quantify the cortico-muscular interaction network and uncover basic features of neuro-autonomic control of muscle function, we investigate the coupling between synchronous bursts in cortical rhythms and peripheral muscle activation during sleep and wake. Utilizing the concept of time delay stability and a novel network physiology approach, we find that the brain-muscle network exhibits complex dynamic patterns of communication involving multiple brain rhythms across cortical locations and different electromyographic frequency bands. Moreover, our results show that during each physiologic state the cortico-muscular network is characterized by a specific profile of network links strength, where particular brain rhythms play role of main mediators of interaction and control. Further, we discover a hierarchical reorganization in network structure across physiologic states, with high connectivity and network link strength during wake, intermediate during REM and light sleep, and low during deep sleep, a sleep-stage stratification that demonstrates a unique association between physiologic states and cortico-muscular network structure. The reported empirical observations are consistent across individual subjects, indicating universal behavior in network structure and dynamics, and high sensitivity of cortico-muscular control to changes in autonomic regulation, even at low levels of physical activity and muscle tone during sleep. Our findings demonstrate previously unrecognized basic principles of brain-muscle network communication and control, and provide new perspectives on the regulatory mechanisms of brain dynamics and locomotor activation, with potential clinical implications for neurodegenerative, movement and sleep disorders, and for developing efficient treatment strategies
The Nature of the Dense Core Population in the Pipe Nebula: Thermal Cores Under Pressure
In this paper we present the results of a systematic investigation of an
entire population of starless dust cores within a single molecular cloud.
Analysis of extinction data shows the cores to be dense objects characterized
by a narrow range of density. Analysis of C18O and NH3 molecular-line
observations reveals very narrow lines. The non-thermal velocity dispersions
measured in both these tracers are found to be subsonic for the large majority
of the cores and show no correlation with core mass (or size). Thermal pressure
is thus the dominate source of internal gas pressure and support for most of
the core population. The total internal gas pressures of the cores are found to
be roughly independent of core mass over the entire range of the core mass
function (CMF) indicating that the cores are in pressure equilibrium with an
external source of pressure. This external pressure is most likely provided by
the weight of the surrounding Pipe cloud within which the cores are embedded.
Most of the cores appear to be pressure confined, gravitationally unbound
entities whose nature, structure and future evolution are determined by only a
few physical factors which include self-gravity, the fundamental processes of
thermal physics and the simple requirement of pressure equilibrium with the
surrounding environment. The observed core properties likely constitute the
initial conditions for star formation in dense gas. The entire core population
is found to be characterized by a single critical Bonnor-Ebert mass. This mass
coincides with the characteristic mass of the Pipe CMF indicating that most
cores formed in the cloud are near critical stability. This suggests that the
mass function of cores (and the IMF) has its origin in the physical process of
thermal fragmentation in a pressurized medium.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journa
Femtosecond Time-Bin Entangled Qubits for Quantum Communication
We create pairs of non-degenerate time-bin entangled photons at telecom
wavelengths with ultra-short pump pulses. Entanglement is shown by performing
Bell kind tests of the Franson type with visibilities of up to 91%. As
time-bin entanglement can easily be protected from decoherence as encountered
in optical fibers, this experiment opens the road for complex quantum
communication protocols over long distances. We also investigate the creation
of more than one photon pair in a laser pulse and present a simple tool to
quantify the probability of such events to happen.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
The Spatial, Ionization, and Kinematic Conditions of the z=1.39 Damped Ly-alpha Absorber in Q0957+561 A,B
We examined the sizes of the absorption clouds in a z=1.3911 damped Ly-alpha
absorber (DLA) in the double image lensed quasar Q0957+561 A,B (separation 135
pc at the absorber redshift). Using HIRES/Keck spectra, we studied the MgII
2796,2803 doublet, FeII multiplet, and MgI 2853 transition in absorption. We
defined six "clouds" in the system of sightline A and seven clouds in the
system of sightline B. An examination of the N(v) profiles, using the apparent
optical depth method, reveals no clear physical connection between the clouds
in A and those in B. The observed column density ratios of all clouds is
log[N(MgI)/N(FeII)] ~ -2 across the full velocity range in both systems and
also spatially (in both sightlines). This is a remarkable uniformity not seen
in Lyman limit systems. The uniformity of the cloud properties suggests that
the multiple clouds are not part of a "halo". Based upon photoionization
modeling, we constrain the ionization parameters in the range -6.2 < log(U) <
-5.1, where the range brackets known abundance ratio and dust depletion
patterns. The inferred cloud properties are densities of 2 < n_H < 20 cm^-3,
and line of sight sizes of 1 < D < 25 pc. The masses of the clouds in system A
are 10 < M/M_sun < 1000 and in system B are 1 < M/M_sun < 60 for spherical
clouds. For planar clouds, the upper limits are 400 M_sun and 160 M_sun for A
and B, respectively. We favor a model of the absorber in which the DLA region
itself is a single cloud in thiscomplex, which could be a parcel of gas in a
galactic ISM. A spherical cloud of ~10 pc would be limited to one of the
sightlines (A) and imply a covering factor less than 0.1 for the DLA complex.
We infer that the DLA cloud properties are consistent with those of lower
density, cold clouds in the Galactic interstellar medium.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal; final versio
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