463 research outputs found
Team 3: Communication Aspects In Urban Operations
from Scythe : Proceedings and Bulletin of the International Data Farming Community, Issue 2 Workshop 14Objective: The main idea behind network centricity in military
operations is to translate information superiority into
combat effectiveness via creation and dissemination of
a valid and relevant common operational picture. In
order to achieve this goal, a number of preconditions
have to be fulfilled. First and foremost, reliable
communication lines have to be established both in
gathering information about the current situation as
well as in communicating a suitably aggregated
CROP from the headquarter to the commander in the
field. Therefore, the objective of our work is to
investigate the impact of reconnaissance and
communication quality on the outcome of a given
military operation. Due to the nature of contemporary
conflicts, we are especially interested in operations in
urban terrain, which pose special challenges to
reconnaissance as well as communication
Properties of Foreshocks and Aftershocks of the Non-Conservative SOC Olami-Feder-Christensen Model: Triggered or Critical Earthquakes?
Following Hergarten and Neugebauer [2002] who discovered aftershock and
foreshock sequences in the Olami-Feder-Christensen (OFC) discrete block-spring
earthquake model, we investigate to what degree the simple toppling mechanism
of this model is sufficient to account for the properties of earthquake
clustering in time and space. Our main finding is that synthetic catalogs
generated by the OFC model share practically all properties of real seismicity
at a qualitative level, with however significant quantitative differences. We
find that OFC catalogs can be in large part described by the concept of
triggered seismicity but the properties of foreshocks depend on the mainshock
magnitude, in qualitative agreement with the critical earthquake model and in
disagreement with simple models of triggered seismicity such as the Epidemic
Type Aftershock Sequence (ETAS) model [Ogata, 1988]. Many other features of OFC
catalogs can be reproduced with the ETAS model with a weaker clustering than
real seismicity, i.e. for a very small average number of triggered earthquakes
of first generation per mother-earthquake.Comment: revtex, 19 pages, 8 eps figure
Solar and Atmospheric Neutrinos: Background Sources for the Direct Dark Matter Searches
In experiments for direct dark matter searches, neutrinos coherently
scattering off nuclei can produce similar events as Weakly Interacting Massive
Particles (WIMPs). The calculated count rate for solar neutrinos in such
experiments is a few events per ton-year. This count rate strongly depends on
the nuclear recoil energy threshold achieved in the experiments for the WIMP
search. We show that solar neutrinos can be a serious background source for
direct dark matter search experiments using Ge, Ar, Xe and CaWO_4 as target
materials. To reach sensitivities better than approximatly 10^-10 pb for the
elastic WIMP nucleon spin-independent cross section in the zero-background
limit, energy thresholds for nuclear recoils should be approximatly >2.05 keV
for CaWO_4, >4.91 keV for Ge, >2.89 keV for Xe, and >8.62 keV for Ar as target
material. Next-generation experiments should not only strive for a reduction of
the present energy thresholds but mainly focus on an increase of the target
mass. Atmospheric neutrinos limit the achievable sensitivity for the
background-free direct dark matter search to approximatly >10^-12 pb.Comment: accepted by Astroparticle Physic
Evidence for strong relations between the upper Tagus loess formation (central Iberia) and the marine atmosphere off the Iberian margin during the last glacial period
During glacial times, the North Atlantic region was affected by serious climate changes corresponding to Dansgaard-Oeschger cycles that were linked to dramatic shifts in sea temperature and moisture transfer to the continents. However, considerable efforts are still needed to understand the effects of these shifts on terrestrial environments. In this context, the Iberian Peninsula is particularly interesting because of its close proximity to the North Atlantic, although the Iberian interior lacks paleoenvironmental information so far because suitable archives are rare. Here we provide an accurate impression of the last glacial environmental developments in central Iberia based on comprehensive investigations using the upper Tagus loess record. A multi-proxy approach revealed that phases of loess formation during Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 2 (and upper MIS 3) were linked to utmost aridity, coldness, and highest wind strengths in line with the most intense Greenland stadials also including Heinrich Events 3â1. Lack of loess deposition during the global last glacial maximum (LGM) suggests milder conditions, which agrees with less-cold sea surface temperatures (SST) off the Iberian margin. Our results demonstrate that geomorphological system behavior in central Iberia is highly sensitive to North Atlantic SST fluctuations, thus enabling us to reconstruct a detailed hydrological model in relation to marineâatmospheric circulation patterns
Application of Jain and Munczek's bound-state approach to gamma gamma-processes of pi0, eta_c and eta_b
We point out the problems affecting most quark--antiquark bound state
approaches when they are faced with the electromagnetic processes dominated by
Abelian axial anomaly. However, these problems are resolved in the consistently
coupled Schwinger-Dyson and Bethe-Salpeter approach. Using one of the most
successful variants of this approach, we find the dynamically dressed
propagators of the light u and d quarks, as well as the heavy c and b quarks,
and find the Bethe-Salpeter amplitudes for their bound states pi0, eta_c and
\eta_b. Thanks to incorporating the dynamical chiral symmetry breaking, the
pion simultaneously appears as the (pseudo)Goldstone boson. We give the
theoretical predictions for the gamma-gamma decay widths of pi0, eta_c and
eta_b, and for the pi0 gamma* -> gamma transition form factor, and compare them
with experiment. In the chiral limit, the axial-anomaly result for
pi0->gamma-gamma is reproduced analytically in the consistently coupled
Schwinger-Dyson and Bethe-Salpeter approach, provided that the quark-photon
vertex is dressed consistently with the quark propagator, so that the vector
Ward-Takahashi identity of QED is obeyed. On the other hand, the present
approach is also capable of quantitatively describing systems of heavy quarks,
concretely eta_c and possibly eta_b, and their gamma-gamma decays. We discuss
the reasons for the broad phenomenological success of the bound-state approach
of Jain and Munczek.Comment: RevTeX, 37 pages, 7 eps figures, submitted to Int. J. Mod. Phys.
On the broken gauge, conformal and discrete symmetries in particle physics
Relationships between gauge, conformal and discrete symmetries in particle
physics are analysed. We study also the effect of the electroweak mixing on the
cancellation of SU(2) anomalous actions. It is shown that the relation
theta_{W} = 2(theta_{12}+theta_{23}+theta_{13}) between the Weinberg angle and
the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa angles should be satisfied and this effect is
completely defined by the mixing of Dirac fermions. We compare two mechanisms
of the spontaneous breaking of gauge symmetry, discuss the renormalizability of
theories, and argue for the existence of the Majorana fermions necessary to
remove the SU(2) anomalous action. The fate of the majoron and the
spontaneously broken lepton number is discussed. We also show the compatibility
of the boson and fermion mixings with Dyson-Schwinger equations.Comment: 27 pages, LaTeX style; v2: published version, two figures adde
The Invasion and Metastasis Promotion Role of CD97 Small Isoform in Gastric Carcinoma
CD97 is over-expressed in the majority of gastric adenocarcinomas and is associated with its dedifferentiation and aggressiveness. Our previous results demonstrated that out of three CD97 isoforms tested, only the small one was able to promote increased invasiveness in vitro. Based on these data we further aimed to investigate the role of CD97 small isoform in gastric cancer progression in vivo by employing the cells with a stable CD97 small isoform knock-down and an orthotopic gastric cancer mouse model. We could demonstrate that the knock down of CD97/EGF1,2,5, led to a significant decrease in the number of cells penetrating the gelatin coated membrane as compared with control cells. In the gastric cancer mouse model, both the hypodermic and the orthotopic yielded tumor masses of the CD97/EGF1,2,5kd group and were significantly smaller than the control. Metastatic tumor cell number in early metastatic regional lymph nodes on post-operative day 42 was distinctly decreased in the CD97/EGF1,2,5kd group as compared with the SGC-NS group, and was accompanied with the downregulation of CD44, VEGFR, CD31 and CD97. We concluded in this study that CD97 small isoform not only supported gastric cancer local growth, but also promoted metastatic spread in orthotopically implanted mouse model suggesting involvement of the CD97 small isoform in the preparation of (pre)metastatic niche
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