88,541 research outputs found
GRB 030226 in a Density-Jump Medium
We present an explanation for the unusual temporal feature of the GRB 030226
afterglow. The R-band afterglow of this burst faded as ~ t^{-1.2} in ~ 0.2 days
after the burst, rebrightened during the period of ~ 0.2 - 0.5 days, and then
declined with ~ t^{-2.0}. To fit such a light curve, we consider an
ultrarelativistic jetted blast wave expanding in a density-jump medium. The
interaction of the blast wave with a large density jump produces relativistic
reverse and forward shocks. In this model, the observed rebrightening is due to
emissions from these newly forming shocks, and the late-time afterglow is
caused by sideways expansion of the jet. Our fitting implies that the
progenitor star of GRB 030226 could have produced a stellar wind with a large
density jump prior to the GRB onset.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Aqua MODIS Electronic Crosstalk on SMWIR Bands 20 to 26
Aqua MODIS Moon images obtained with bands 20 to 26 (3.66 - 4.55 and 1.36 -
1.39 m) during scheduled lunar events show evidence of electronic
crosstalk contamination of the response of detector 1. In this work, we
determined the sending bands for each receiving band. We found that the
contaminating signal originates, in all cases, from the detector 10 of the
corresponding sending band and that the signals registered by the receiving and
sending detectors are always read out in immediate sequence. We used the lunar
images to derive the crosstalk coefficients, which were then applied in the
correction of electronic crosstalk striping artifacts present in L1B images,
successfully restoring product quality.Comment: Accepted to be published in the IEEE 2017 International Geoscience &
Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS 2017), scheduled for July 23-28, 2017 in
Fort Worth, Texas, US
Human African trypanosomiasis : the current situation in endemic regions and the risks for non-endemic regions from imported cases
Human African trypanosomiasis (HAT) is caused by Trypanosoma brucei
gambiense and T. b. rhodesiense and caused devastating epidemics during the 20th
century. Due to effective control programs implemented in the last two decades, the
number of reported cases has fallen to a historically low level. Although fewer than
977 cases were reported in 2018 in endemic countries, HAT is still a public health
problem in endemic regions until it is completely eliminated. In addition, almost 150
confirmed HAT cases were reported in non-endemic countries in the last three
decades. The majority of non-endemic HAT cases were reported in Europe, United
States and South Africa, due to historical alliances, economic links or geographic
proximity to disease endemic countries. Furthermore, with the implementation of the
“Belt and Road” project, sporadic imported HAT cases have been reported in China
as a warning sign of tropical diseases prevention. In this paper, we explore and
interpret the data on HAT incidence and find no positive correlation between the
number of HAT cases from endemic and non-endemic countries.This data will
provide useful information for better understanding the imported cases of HAT
globally in the post-elimination phase
Robust active magnetic dearing control using stabilizing dynamical compensators
The robust control of active magnetic bearings, based on a linearised interval model, is considered. Through robust stability analysis, all the first-order robust stabilizing dynamical compensators for the interval system are obtained. Disturbance attenuation and minimum control effort are also addressed. The approach is applied to a high-speed flywheel supported by two active and two passive magnetic bearings. Simulation and experimental results both show that it is simple, effective, and robust
Robust magnetic bearing control using stabilizing dynamical compensators
Abstract—This paper considers the robust control of an active radial magnetic bearing system, having a homopolar, external rotor topology, which is used to support an annular fiber composite flywheel rim. A first-order dynamical compensator, which uses only position feedback information, is used for control, its design being based on a linearized one-dimensional second-order model which is treated as an interval system in order to cope with parameter uncertainties. Through robust stability analysis, a parameterization of all first-order robustly stabilizing dynamical compensators for the interval system is initially obtained. Then, by appropriate selection of the free parameters in the robust controller, the H2 norm of the disturbance-output transfer function is made arbitrarily small over the system parameter intervals, and the norm of the input–output transfer function is made arbitrarily close to a lower bound. Simulation and experimental
results demonstrate both stability and performance robustness of the developed controller
Construction of nested space-filling designs
New types of designs called nested space-filling designs have been proposed
for conducting multiple computer experiments with different levels of accuracy.
In this article, we develop several approaches to constructing such designs.
The development of these methods also leads to the introduction of several new
discrete mathematics concepts, including nested orthogonal arrays and nested
difference matrices.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/09-AOS690 the Annals of
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Optical Flashes and Very Early Afterglows in Wind Environments
The interaction of a relativistic fireball with its ambient medium is
described through two shocks: a reverse shock that propagates into the
fireball, and a forward shock that propagates into the medium. The observed
optical flash of GRB 990123 has been considered to be the emission from such a
reverse shock. The observational properties of afterglows suggest that the
progenitors of some GRBs may be massive stars and their surrounding media may
be stellar winds. We here study very early afterglows from the reverse and
forward shocks in winds. An optical flash mainly arises from the relativistic
reverse shock while a radio flare is produced by the forward shock. The peak
flux densities of optical flashes are larger than 1 Jy for typical parameters,
if we do not take into account some appropriate dust obscuration along the line
of sight. The radio flare always has a long lasting constant flux, which will
not be covered up by interstellar scintillation. The non-detections of optical
flashes brighter than about 9th magnitude may constrain the GRBs isotropic
energies to be no more than a few ergs and wind intensities to be
relatively weak.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, accepted by MNRAS on March 7, 200
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