42,785 research outputs found
Relationships between geographic and inertial coordinates of position
Relationships between geographic and inertial coordinates of positio
Effect of contrast on the perception of direction of a moving pattern
A series of experiments examining the effect of contrast on the perception of moving plaids was performed to test the hypothesis that the human visual system determines the direction of a moving plaid in a two-staged process: decomposition into component motion followed by application of the intersection-of-contraints rule. Although there is recent evidence that the first tenet of the hypothesis is correct, i.e., that plaid motion is initially decomposed into the motion of the individual grating components, the nature of the second-stage combination rule has not yet been established. It was found that when the gratings within the plaid are of different contrast the preceived direction is not predicted by the intersection-of-constraints rule. There is a strong (up to 20 deg) bias in the direction of the higher-constrast grating. A revised model, which incorporates a contrast-dependent weighting of perceived grating speed as observed for one-dimensional patterns, can quantitatively predict most of the results. The results are then discussed in the context of various models of human visual motion processing and of physiological responses of neurons in the primate visual system
Modeling Building Block Interdependency
The Building-Block Hypothesis appeals to the notion of problem decomposition and the assembly of solutions from sub-solutions. Accordingly, there have been many varieties of GA test problems with a structure based on building-blocks. Many of these problems use deceptive fitness functions to model interdependency between the bits within a block. However, very few have any model of interdependency between building-blocks; those that do are not consistent in the type of interaction used intra-block and inter-block. This paper discusses the inadequacies of the various test problems in the literature and clarifies the concept of building-block interdependency. We formulate a principled model of hierarchical interdependency that can be applied through many levels in a consistent manner and introduce Hierarchical If-and-only-if (H-IFF) as a canonical example. We present some empirical results of GAs on H-IFF showing that if population diversity is maintained and linkage is tight then the GA is able to identify and manipulate building-blocks over many levels of assembly, as the Building-Block Hypothesis suggests
Riemannian submersions from almost contact metric manifolds
In this paper we obtain the structure equation of a contact-complex
Riemannian submersion and give some applications of this equation in the study
of almost cosymplectic manifolds with Kaehler fibres.Comment: Abh. Math. Semin. Univ. Hamb., to appea
Polynomial Response Surface Approximations for the Multidisciplinary Design Optimization of a High Speed Civil Transport
Surrogate functions have become an important tool in multidisciplinary design optimization to deal with noisy functions, high computational cost, and the practical difficulty of integrating legacy disciplinary computer codes. A combination of mathematical, statistical, and engineering techniques, well known in other contexts, have made polynomial surrogate functions viable for MDO. Despite the obvious limitations imposed by sparse high fidelity data in high dimensions and the locality of low order polynomial approximations, the success of the panoply of techniques based on polynomial response surface approximations for MDO shows that the implementation details are more important than the underlying approximation method (polynomial, spline, DACE, kernel regression, etc.). This paper surveys some of the ancillary techniquesâstatistics, global search, parallel computing, variable complexity modelingâthat augment the construction and use of polynomial surrogates
Temporal properties of short and long gamma-ray bursts
A temporal analysis was performed on a sample of 100 bright short GRBs with
T90 < 2s from the BATSE Current Catalog along with a similar analysis on 319
long bright GRBs with T90 > 2s from the same catalog. The short GRBs were
denoised using a median filter and the long GRBs were denoised using a wavelet
method. Both samples were subjected to an automated pulse selection algorithm
to objectively determine the effects of neighbouring pulses. The rise times,
fall times, FWHM, pulse amplitudes and areas were measured and their frequency
distributions are presented. The time intervals between pulses were also
measured. The frequency distributions of the pulse properties were found to be
similar and consistent with lognormal distributions for both the short and long
GRBs. The time intervals between the pulses and the pulse amplitudes of
neighbouring pulses were found to be correlated with each other. The same
emission mechanism can account for the two sub-classes of GRBs.Comment: 3 pages, 8 figures; Proceedings of "Gamma-Ray Burst and Afterglow
Astronomy 2001", Woods Hol
The Determination of the `Diffusion Coefficients' and the Stellar Wind Velocities for X-Ray Binaries
The distribution of neutron stars (NS's) is determined by stationary solution
of the Fokker-Planck equation. In this work using the observed period changes
for four systems: Vela X-1, GX 301-2, Her X-1 and Cen X-3 we determined D, the
'diffusion coefficient',-parameter from the Fokker-Planck equation. Using
strong dependence of D on the velocity for Vela X-1 and GX 301-2, systems
accreting from a stellar wind, we determined the stellar wind velocity. For
different assumptions for a turbulent velocity we obtained . It is in good agreement with the stellar wind velocity determined by
other methods. We also determined the specific characteristic time scales for
the 'diffusion processes' in X-ray pulsars. It is of order of 200 sec for
wind-fed pulsars and 1000-10000 sec for the disk accreting systems.Comment: 8 pages, Latex, no figures, accepted for publication to Astronomical
and Astrophysical Transactions (1995). Admin note 20Feb2000: original
(broken) version now paper.tex.orig in source; fixed version with two bad
equations set in verbatim used for PS, paper.tex in sourc
String Gas Cosmology
We present a critical review and summary of String Gas Cosmology. We include
a pedagogical derivation of the effective action starting from string theory,
emphasizing the necessary approximations that must be invoked. Working in the
effective theory, we demonstrate that at late-times it is not possible to
stabilize the extra dimensions by a gas of massive string winding modes. We
then consider additional string gases that contain so-called enhanced symmetry
states. These string gases are very heavy initially, but drive the moduli to
locations that minimize the energy and pressure of the gas. We consider both
classical and quantum gas dynamics, where in the former the validity of the
theory is questionable and some fine-tuning is required, but in the latter we
find a consistent and promising stabilization mechanism that is valid at
late-times. In addition, we find that string gases provide a framework to
explore dark matter, presenting alternatives to CDM as recently
considered by Gubser and Peebles. We also discuss quantum trapping with string
gases as a method for including dynamics on the string landscape.Comment: 55 pages, 1 figure, minor corrections, version to appear in Reviews
of Modern Physic
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