8,838 research outputs found
Fast algorithms for large scale generalized distance weighted discrimination
High dimension low sample size statistical analysis is important in a wide
range of applications. In such situations, the highly appealing discrimination
method, support vector machine, can be improved to alleviate data piling at the
margin. This leads naturally to the development of distance weighted
discrimination (DWD), which can be modeled as a second-order cone programming
problem and solved by interior-point methods when the scale (in sample size and
feature dimension) of the data is moderate. Here, we design a scalable and
robust algorithm for solving large scale generalized DWD problems. Numerical
experiments on real data sets from the UCI repository demonstrate that our
algorithm is highly efficient in solving large scale problems, and sometimes
even more efficient than the highly optimized LIBLINEAR and LIBSVM for solving
the corresponding SVM problems
Wideband finite difference time domain implementation of surface impedance boundary conditions for good conductors
Surface impedance boundary conditions are used to reduce the solution volume during the analysis of scattering from lossy dielectric objects. In a finite difference solution, they also can be used to avoid using small cells, made necessary by shorter wavelengths in conducting media, throughout the solution volume. A one dimensional implementation is presented for a surface impedance boundary condition for good conductors in the Finite Difference Time Domain (FDTD) technique. In order to illustrate the FDTD surface impedance boundary condition, a planar air-lossy dielectric interface is considered
Finite difference time domain implementation of surface impedance boundary conditions
Surface impedance boundary conditions are employed to reduce the solution volume during the analysis of scattering from lossy dielectric objects. In a finite difference solution, they also can be utilized to avoid using small cells, made necessary by shorter wavelengths in conducting media throughout the solution volume. The standard approach is to approximate the surface impedance over a very small bandwidth by its value at the center frequency, and then use that result in the boundary condition. Two implementations of the surface impedance boundary condition are presented. One implementation is a constant surface impedance boundary condition and the other is a dispersive surface impedance boundary condition that is applicable over a very large frequency bandwidth and over a large range of conductivities. Frequency domain results are presented in one dimension for two conductivity values and are compared with exact results. Scattering width results from an infinite square cylinder are presented as a 2-D demonstration. Extensions to 3-D should be straightforward
Chemical aging of m-xylene secondary organic aerosol: laboratory chamber study
Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) can reside in the atmosphere for a week or more. While its initial formation from the gas-phase oxidation of volatile organic compounds tends to take place in the first few hours after emission, SOA can continue to evolve chemically over its atmospheric lifetime. Simulating this chemical aging over an extended time in the laboratory has proven to be challenging. We present here a procedure for studying SOA aging in laboratory chambers that is applied to achieve 36 h of oxidation. The formation and evolution of SOA from the photooxidation of m-xylene under low-NO_x conditions and in the presence of either neutral or acidic seed particles is studied. In SOA aging, increasing molecular functionalization leads to less volatile products and an increase in SOA mass, whereas gas- or particle-phase fragmentation chemistry results in more volatile products and a loss of SOA. The challenge is to discern from measured chamber variables the extent to which these processes are important for a given SOA system. In the experiments conducted, m-xylene SOA mass, calculated under the assumption of size-invariant particle composition, increased over the initial 12–13 h of photooxidation and decreased beyond that time, suggesting the existence of fragmentation chemistry. The oxidation of the SOA, as manifested in the O:C elemental ratio and fraction of organic ion detected at m/z 44 measured by the Aerodyne aerosol mass spectrometer, increased continuously starting after 5 h of irradiation until the 36 h termination. This behavior is consistent with an initial period in which, as the mass of SOA increases, products of higher volatility partition to the aerosol phase, followed by an aging period in which gas- and particle-phase reaction products become increasingly more oxidized. When irradiation is stopped 12.4 h into one experiment, and OH generation ceases, minimal loss of SOA is observed, indicating that the loss of SOA is either light- or OH-induced. Chemical ionization mass spectrometry measurements of low-volatility m-xylene oxidation products exhibit behavior indicative of continuous photooxidation chemistry. A condensed chemical mechanism of m-xylene oxidation under low-NO_x conditions is capable of reproducing the general behavior of gas-phase evolution observed here. Moreover, order of magnitude analysis of the mechanism suggests that gas-phase OH reaction of low volatility SOA precursors is the dominant pathway of aging in the m-xylene system although OH reaction with particle surfaces cannot be ruled out. Finally, the effect of size-dependent particle composition and size-dependent particle wall loss rates on different particle wall loss correction methods is discussed
The age and abundance structure of the stellar populations in the central sub-kpc of the Milky Way
The four main findings about the age and abundance structure of the Milky Way
bulge based on microlensed dwarf and subgiant stars are: (1) a wide metallicity
distribution with distinct peaks at [Fe/H]=-1.09, -0.63, -0.20, +0.12, +0.41;
(2) a high fraction of intermediate-age to young stars where at [Fe/H]>0 more
than 35 % are younger than 8 Gyr, (3) several episodes of significant star
formation in the bulge 3, 6, 8, and 11 Gyr ago; (4) the `knee' in the
alpha-element abundance trends of the sub-solar metallicity bulge appears to be
located at a slightly higher [Fe/H] (about 0.05 to 0.1 dex) than in the local
thick disk.Comment: 4 pages, contributed talk at the IAU Symposium 334 "Rediscovering our
Galaxy" in Potsdam, July 10-14, 201
1/2 BPS Geometries of M2 Giant Gravitons
We construct the general 1/2 BPS M2 giant graviton solutions asymptotic to
the eleven-dimensional maximally supersymmetric plane wave background, based on
the recent work of Lin, Lunin and Maldacena. The solutions have null
singularity and we argue that it is unavoidable to have null singularity in the
proposed framework, although the solutions are still physically relevant. They
involve an arbitrary function F(x) which is shown to have a correspondence to
the 1/2 BPS states of the BMN matrix model. A detailed map between the 1/2 BPS
states of both sides is worked out.Comment: 21 pages and 1 figure. v2: references added, comments adde
Transformation of stimulus correlations by the retina
Redundancies and correlations in the responses of sensory neurons seem to
waste neural resources but can carry cues about structured stimuli and may help
the brain to correct for response errors. To assess how the retina negotiates
this tradeoff, we measured simultaneous responses from populations of ganglion
cells presented with natural and artificial stimuli that varied greatly in
correlation structure. We found that pairwise correlations in the retinal
output remained similar across stimuli with widely different spatio-temporal
correlations including white noise and natural movies. Meanwhile, purely
spatial correlations tended to increase correlations in the retinal response.
Responding to more correlated stimuli, ganglion cells had faster temporal
kernels and tended to have stronger surrounds. These properties of individual
cells, along with gain changes that opposed changes in effective contrast at
the ganglion cell input, largely explained the similarity of pairwise
correlations across stimuli where receptive field measurements were possible.Comment: author list corrected in metadat
Design, fabrication, and initial test of a fixture for reducing the natural frequency of the Mod-O wind turbine tower
It was desired to observe the behavior of a two bladed wind turbine where the tower first bending natural frequency is less than twice the rotor speed. The system then passes through resonance when accelerating to operating speed. The frequency of the original Mod-O tower was reduced by placing it on a spring fixture. The fixture is adjustable to provide a range of tower bending frequencies. Fixture design details are given and behavior during initial operation is described
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