34,031 research outputs found
Accumulator isolator prevents malfunctioning of faulty hydraulic system
Special isolator valve prevents malfunction of a closed hydraulic system by converting the initial accumulator-reservoir to a reservoir function only when the system loses oil, or gaseous nitrogen precharge, or has a jammed piston. This permits near-normal operation until the defect is corrected
Potential influences on suicide prevalence in comparisons of UK post-industrial cities
No abstract available
Encoding of temporal probabilities in the human brain
Anticipating the timing of future events is a necessary precursor to preparing actions and allocating resources to sensory processing. This requires elapsed time to be represented in the brain and used to predict the temporal probability of upcoming events. While neuropsychological, imaging, magnetic stimulation studies, and single-unit recordings implicate the role of higher parietal and motor-related areas in temporal estimation, the role of earlier, purely sensory structures remains more controversial. Here we demonstrate that the temporal probability of expected visual events is encoded not by a single area but by a wide network that importantly includes neuronal populations at the very earliest cortical stages of visual processing. Moreover, we show that activity in those areas changes dynamically in a manner that closely accords with temporal expectations
A large scale extinction map of the Galactic Anticenter from 2MASS
We present a 127deg x 63deg extinction map of the Anticenter of the Galaxy,
based on and colour excess maps from 2MASS. This 8001 square degree
map with a resolution of 4 arcminutes is provided as online material. The
colour excess ratio / is used to determine the power law index of
the reddening law (\beta) for individual regions contained in the area (e.g.
Orion, Perseus, Taurus, Auriga, Monoceros, Camelopardalis, Cassiopeia). On
average we find a dominant value of \beta=1.8+-0.2 for the individual clouds,
in agreement with the canonical value for the interstellar medium. We also show
that there is an internal scatter of \beta values in these regions, and that in
some areas more than one dominant \beta value is present. This indicates large
scale variations in the dust properties. The analysis of the A_V values within
individual regions shows a change in the slope of the column density
distribution with distance. This can either be attributed to a change in the
governing physical processes in molecular clouds on spatial scales of about 1pc
or an A_V dilution with distance in our map.Comment: 18 pages, 29 Figures, 1 Table, Accepted for publication by MNRAS, A
version with higher resolution figures can be found at
http://astro.kent.ac.uk/~df
Conceptual apparatus for detecting leaks of nonconductive liquids
Apparatus detects leaks at joints in lines carrying electrically nonconductive liquids. The proposed apparatus could include a panel that would give a visual or audible indication of a leak /to permit manual shutdown/ and/or an electromechanical actuator that would automatically cut off the flow when a leak occurs
Third-dredge-up oxygen in planetary nebulae
The planetary nebulae He 2-436 and Wray 16-423 in the Sagittarius dwarf
galaxy appear to result from nearly twin stars, except that third-dredge-up
carbon is more abundant in He 2-436. A thorough photoionization-model analysis
implies that ratios Ne/O, S/O and Ar/O are significantly smaller in He 2-436,
indicative of third-dredge-up oxygen enrichment. The enrichment of oxygen with
respect to carbon is (7 +/- 4)%. Excess nitrogen in Wray 16-423 suggests third
dredge-up of late CN-cycle products even in these low-mass,
intermediate-metallicity stars.Comment: To appear in Astron. Astrophys. Lett. (Latex, 5 pages, 1 postscript
figure
Detection of deuterium Balmer lines in the Orion Nebula
The detection and first identification of the deuterium Balmer emission
lines, D-alpha and D-beta, in the core of the Orion Nebula is reported.
Observations were conducted at the 3.6m Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, using
the Echelle spectrograph Gecko. These lines are very narrow and have identical
11 km/s velocity shifts with respect to H-alpha and H-beta. They are probably
excited by UV continuum fluorescence from the Lyman (DI) lines and arise from
the interface between the HII region and the molecular cloud.Comment: 4 pages, latex, 1 figure, 1 table, accepted for publication in
Astronomy & Astrophysics, Letter
No stratification without representation
Sortition is an alternative approach to democracy, in which representatives are not elected but randomly selected from the population. Most electoral democracies fail to accurately represent even a handful of protected groups. By contrast, sortition guarantees that every subset of the population will in expectation fill their fair share of the available positions. This fairness property remains satisfied when the sample is stratified based on known features. Moreover, stratification can greatly reduce the variance in the number of positions filled by any unknown group, as long as this group correlates with the strata. Our main result is that stratification cannot increase this variance by more than a negligible factor, even in the presence of indivisibilities and rounding. When the unknown group is unevenly spread across strata, we give a guarantee on the reduction in variance with respect to uniform sampling. We also contextualize stratification and uniform sampling in the space of fair sampling algorithms. Finally, we apply our insights to an empirical case study.Accepted manuscrip
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