45,820 research outputs found
On the limits of measuring the bulge and disk properties of local and high-redshift massive galaxies
A considerable fraction of the massive quiescent galaxies at \emph{z}
2, which are known to be much more compact than galaxies of
comparable mass today, appear to have a disk. How well can we measure the bulge
and disk properties of these systems? We simulate two-component model galaxies
in order to systematically quantify the effects of non-homology in structures
and the methods employed. We employ empirical scaling relations to produce
realistic-looking local galaxies with a uniform and wide range of
bulge-to-total ratios (), and then rescale them to mimic the
signal-to-noise ratios and sizes of observed galaxies at \emph{z} 2.
This provides the most complete set of simulations to date for which we can
examine the robustness of two-component decomposition of compact disk galaxies
at different . We confirm that the size of these massive, compact galaxies
can be measured robustly using a single S\'{e}rsic fit. We can measure
accurately without imposing any constraints on the light profile shape of the
bulge, but, due to the small angular sizes of bulges at high redshift, their
detailed properties can only be recovered for galaxies with \gax\ 0.2.
The disk component, by contrast, can be measured with little difficulty
Tracking decision-making during architectural design
There is a powerful cocktail of circumstances governing the way decisions are made during the architectural design process of a building project. There is considerable potential for misunderstandings, inappropriate changes, change which give rise to unforeseen difficulties, decisions which are not notified to all interested parties, and many other similar problems. The paper presents research conducted within the frame of the EPSRC funded ADS project aiming at addressing the problems linked with the evolution and changing environment of project information to support better decision-making. The paper presents the conceptual framework as well as the software environment that has been developed to support decision-making during building projects, and reports on work carried out on the application of the approach to the architectural design stage. This decision-tracking environment has been evaluated and validated by professionals and practitioners from industry using several instruments as described in the paper
A probabilistic model checking approach to analysing reliability, availability, and maintainability of a single satellite system
Satellites now form a core component for space
based systems such as GPS and GLONAS which provide
location and timing information for a variety of uses. Such
satellites are designed to operate in-orbit and have lifetimes of
10 years or more. Reliability, availability and maintainability
(RAM) analysis of these systems has been indispensable in
the design phase of satellites in order to achieve minimum
failures or to increase mean time between failures (MTBF)
and thus to plan maintainability strategies, optimise reliability
and maximise availability. In this paper, we present formal
modelling of a single satellite and logical specification of
its reliability, availability and maintainability properties. The
probabilistic model checker PRISM has been used to perform
automated quantitative analyses of these properties
How Robust Are the Size Measurements of High-redshift Compact Galaxies?
Massive quiescent galaxies at are apparently much more compact
than galaxies of comparable mass today. How robust are these size measurements?
We perform comprehensive simulations to determine possible biases and
uncertainties in fitting single-component light distributions to real galaxies.
In particular, we examine the robustness of the measurements of the luminosity,
size, and other structural parameters. We devise simulations with increasing
realism to systematically disentangle effects due to the technique
(specifically using GALFIT) and the intrinsic structures of the galaxies. By
accurately capturing the detailed substructures of nearby elliptical galaxies
and then rescaling their sizes and signal-to-noise to mimic galaxies at
different redshifts, we confirm that the massive quiescent galaxies at are significantly more compact intrinsically than their local
counterparts. Their observed compactness is not a result of missing faint outer
light due to systematic errors in modeling. In fact, we find that fitting
multi-component galaxies with a single S\'ersic profile, the procedure most
commonly adopted in the literature, biases the inferred sizes higher by up to
10% - 20%, which accentuates the amount of size evolution required. If the sky
estimation has been done robustly and the model for the point-spread function
is fairly accurate, GALFIT can retrieve the properties of single-component
galaxies over a wide range of signal-to-noise ratios without introducing any
systematic errors.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures, 8 tables; Accepted for publication in Ap
Orbital elements of barium stars formed through a wind accretion scenario
Taking the total angular momentum conservation in place of the tangential
momentum conservation, and considering the square and higher power terms of
orbital eccentricity e, the changes of orbital elements of binaries are
calculated for wind accretion scenario. These new equations are used to
quantitatively explain the observed (e,logP) properties of normal G, K giants
and barium stars. Our results reflect the evolution from G, K giant binaries to
barium binaries, moreover, the barium stars with longer orbital periods P>1600
days may be formed by accreting part of the ejecta from the intrinsic AGB stars
through wind accretion scenario.Comment: 7 pages, LaTex, 4 PS figures and 1 table included, accepted for
publication in A &
Risk-limiting Dispatch with Operation Constraints
As an extension of the current theory of risk-limiting dispatch for a system with large-scale renewable integration, this paper presents a model for risk-limiting dispatch with operation constraints, such as generation limitation and network constraint. By proposing and solving four interrelated models, the problem for risk-limiting dispatch with network constraint is finally solved by using sequential optimization. Through the analysis of the model, the paper points out the feasible procedure of dispatch decision, including determining the optimal output and the generators needed to be scheduled. With this dispatch approach, the lowest dispatch cost of the whole dispatch process can be obtained.published_or_final_versio
Minding the expectation gap: Student expectations pre-study abroad in China
Study Abroad (SA) can be expected to promote personal growth, future employability, greater intercultural awareness, adaptability, and efficacy, alongside language improvement. However, students can encounter high thresholds to meeting their own expectations, and may struggle with personal and academic transition into and on return from SA. This study reports on the initial stage of a longitudinal survey-based study of the whole SA experience for a group of UK-based students of Chinese – presenting here students’ pre-departure expectations and goals. Participants had high positive expectations of linguistic gains, adaptability, and knowledge about life in China, but were less aware of broader personal gains in employability, while cultural gains for some suggested a focus on individualised ‘cultural consumption’. We discuss implications for support offered pre-SA to better shape student expectations of realistic benefits and probable challenges, particularly for less familiar SA contexts such as for anglophone students in China
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