34,322 research outputs found
Inversion of stellar fundamental parameters from Espadons and Narval high-resolution spectra
The general context of this study is the inversion of stellar fundamental
parameters from high-resolution Echelle spectra. We aim indeed at developing a
fast and reliable tool for the post-processing of spectra produced by Espadons
and Narval spectropolarimeters. Our inversion tool relies on principal
component analysis. It allows reduction of dimensionality and the definition of
a specific metric for the search of nearest neighbours between an observed
spectrum and a set of observed spectra taken from the Elodie stellar library.
Effective temperature, surface gravity, total metallicity and projected
rotational velocity are derived. Various tests presented in this study, and
done from the sole information coming from a spectral band centered around the
Mg I b-triplet and with spectra from FGK stars are very promising.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures (accepted A&A). arXiv admin note: text overlap
with arXiv:1401.108
Dark matter and dark gauge fields
Following the unexpected theoretical discovery of a mass dimension one
fermionic quantum field of spin one half, we now present first results on two
_local_ versions. The Dirac and Majorana fields of the standard model of
particle physics are supplemented by their natural counterparts in the dark
matter sector. The possibility that a mass dimension transmuting symmetry may
underlie a new standard model of particle physics is briefly suggested.Comment: This manuscript combines a plenary talk (by DVA) and an invited talk
(by DS) at "Dark 2007 - Sixth International Heidelberg Conference on Dark
Matter in Astro and Particle Physics (Sydney, Australia, 24th-28th September
2007)." 11 pages. v2: minor typos correcte
Dissociating task difficulty from incongruence in face-voice emotion integration
In the everyday environment, affective information is conveyed by both the face and the voice. Studies have demonstrated that a concurrently presented voice can alter the way that an emotional face expression is perceived, and vice versa, leading to emotional conflict if the information in the two modalities is mismatched. Additionally, evidence suggests that incongruence of emotional valence activates cerebral networks involved in conflict monitoring and resolution. However, it is currently unclear whether this is due to task difficulty—that incongruent stimuli are harder to categorize—or simply to the detection of mismatching information in the two modalities. The aim of the present fMRI study was to examine the neurophysiological correlates of processing incongruent emotional information, independent of task difficulty. Subjects were scanned while judging the emotion of face-voice affective stimuli. Both the face and voice were parametrically morphed between anger and happiness and then paired in all audiovisual combinations, resulting in stimuli each defined by two separate values: the degree of incongruence between the face and voice, and the degree of clarity of the combined face-voice information. Due to the specific morphing procedure utilized, we hypothesized that the clarity value, rather than incongruence value, would better reflect task difficulty. Behavioral data revealed that participants integrated face and voice affective information, and that the clarity, as opposed to incongruence value correlated with categorization difficulty. Cerebrally, incongruence was more associated with activity in the superior temporal region, which emerged after task difficulty had been accounted for. Overall, our results suggest that activation in the superior temporal region in response to incongruent information cannot be explained simply by task difficulty, and may rather be due to detection of mismatching information between the two modalities
Present state of knowledge of the upper atmosphere: An assessment report; processes that control ozone and other climatically important trace gases
The state of knowledge of the upper atmosphere was assessed as of January 1986. The physical, chemical, and radiative processes which control the spatial and temporal distribution of ozone in the atmosphere; the predicted magnitude of ozone perturbations and climate changes for a variety of trace gas scenarios; and the ozone and temperature data used to detect the presence or absence of a long term trend were discussed. This assessment report was written by a small group of NASA scientists, was peer reviewed, and is based primarily on the comprehensive international assessment document entitled Atmospheric Ozone 1985: Assessment of Our Understanding of the Processes Controlling Its Present Distribution and Change, to be published as the World Meteorological Organization Global Ozone Research and Monitoring Project Report No. 16
Present state of knowledge of the upper atmosphere 1990: An assessment report
NASA is charged with the responsibility to report on the state of the knowledge of the Earth's upper atmosphere, particularly the stratosphere. Part 1 of this report, issued earlier this year, summarized the objectives, status, and accomplishments of the research tasks supported under NASA's Upper Atmosphere Research Program during the last two years. New findings since the last report to Congress was issued in 1988 are presented. Several scientific assessments of the current understanding of the chemical composition and physical structure of the stratosphere are included, in particular how the abundance and distribution of ozone is predicted to change in the future. These reviews include: a summary of the most recent international assessment of stratospheric ozone; a study of future chlorine and bromine loading of the atmosphere; a review of the photochemical and chemical kinetics data that are used as input parameters for the atmospheric models; a new assessment of the impact of Space Shuttle launches on the stratosphere; a summary of the environmental issues and needed research to evaluate the impact of the newly re-proposed fleet of stratospheric supersonic civil aircraft; and a list of the contributors to this report and the science assessments which have formed our present state of knowledge of the upper atmosphere and ozone depletion
Late time evolution of brane gas cosmology and compact internal dimensions
We study the late-time behavior of a universe in the framework of brane gas
cosmology. We investigate the evolution of a universe with a gas of
supergravity particles and a gas of branes. Considering the case when different
dimensions are anisotropically wrapped by various branes, we have derived
Friedman-like equations governing the dynamics of wrapped and unwrapped
subvolumes. We point out that the compact internal dimensions are wrapped by
three or higher dimensional branes.Comment: 16 pages, typos, references, comment on the possibility of
stabilizing the internal dimensions with fluxe
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
www.Betfair.com: World-Wide Wagering
Many industries are being fundamentally changed as entrepreneurs discover how to use the Internet to create higher customer value. Betfair has turned the gaming industry upside down with its exchange for gamblers. It has found a very efficient and effective way to match those who want to make and take bets, and also made these gamblers 10 percent better off compared to betting via traditional channels. The case describes the development of Betfair, its business model, and addresses the problems it faces as it expands beyond the boundaries of the United Kingdom
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