1,384 research outputs found
Dark matter annihilation and non-thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect: II. dwarf spheroidal galaxy
We calculate the CMB temperature distortion due to the energetic electrons
and positrons produced by dark matter annihilation (Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect),
in dwarf spheroidal galaxies (dSphs). In the calculation we have included two
important effects which were previously ignored. First we show that the
electron-positron pairs with energy less than GeV, which were neglected in
previous calculation, could contribute a significant fraction of the total
signal. Secondly we also consider the full effects of diffusion loss, which
could significantly reduce the density of electron-positron pairs at the center
of cuspy halos. For neutralinos, we confirm that detecting such kind of SZ
effect is beyond the capability of the current or even the next generation
experiments. In the case of light dark matter (LDM) the signal is much larger,
but even in this case it is only marginally detectable with the next generation
of experiment such as ALMA. We conclude that similar to the case of galaxy
clusters, in the dwarf galaxies the SZ_2DM} effect is not a strong probe of
DM annihilations.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, version accepted by JCA
Examining Periodic Solar Wind Density Structures Observed in the SECCHI Heliospheric Imagers
We present an analysis of small-scale, periodic, solar-wind density
enhancements (length-scales as small as \approx 1000 Mm) observed in images
from the Heliospheric Imager (HI) aboard STEREO A. We discuss their possible
relationship to periodic fluctuations of the proton density that have been
identified at 1 AU using in-situ plasma measurements. Specifically, Viall,
Kepko, and Spence (2008) examined 11 years of in-situ solar-wind density
measurements at 1 AU and demonstrated that not only turbulent structures, but
also non-turbulent periodic density structures exist in the solar wind with
scale sizes of hundreds to one thousand Mm. In a subsequent paper, Viall,
Spence, and Kasper (2009) analyzed the {\alpha} to proton solar-wind abundance
ratio measured during one such event of periodic density structures,
demonstrating that the plasma behavior was highly suggestive that either
temporally or spatially varying coronal source plasma created those density
structures. Large periodic density structures observed at 1 AU, which were
generated in the corona, can be observable in coronal and heliospheric
white-light images if they possess sufficiently high density contrast. Indeed,
we identify such periodic density structures as they enter the HI field of view
and follow them as they advect with the solar wind through the images. The
smaller periodic density structures that we identify in the images are
comparable in size to the larger structures analyzed in-situ at 1 AU, yielding
further evidence that periodic density enhancements are a consequence of
coronal activity as the solar wind is formed.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures. The final publication is available at
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Dislocation Density-Dependent Quality Factors in InGaN Quantum Dot Containing Microdisks
Microdisks incorporating InGaN quantum dots were fabricated using SiO2 microspheres as a hard mask in conjunction with a photoelectrochemical etch step from a structure containing a sacrificial InGaN/InGaN superlattice. Formation of microdisks from two near-identical structures with differing dislocation densities was carried out and investigated using microphotoluminescence. This confirmed the existence of quantum dots through the presence of resolution limited spectral lines and showed a clear correlation between the resulting modes quality factors and the dislocation densities within the disks. The disks with higher dislocation densities showed up to 80% lower quality factors than the low dislocation density disks.Engineering and Applied Science
Synthesis of toxyloxanthone B
A synthesis of the naturally occurring xanthone toxyloxanthone B is described, in which the key step is the regioselective addition of a methyl salicylate to a substituted benzyne followed by cyclization of the intermediate aryl anion to form the xanthone, the regiochemistry of the aryne addition being confirmed by X-ray crystallography. Subsequent introduction of the pyran ring by [3,3]-rearrangement and deprotection completed the synthesi
Inhomogeneous Neutrino Degeneracy and Big Bang Nucleosynthesis
We examine Big Bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) in the case of inhomogenous
neutrino degeneracy, in the limit where the fluctuations are sufficiently small
on large length scales that the present-day element abundances are homogeneous.
We consider two representive cases: degeneracy of the electron neutrino alone,
and equal chemical potentials for all three neutrinos. We use a linear
programming method to constrain an arbitrary distribution of the chemical
potentials. For the current set of (highly-restrictive) limits on the
primordial element abundances, homogeneous neutrino degeneracy barely changes
the allowed range of the baryon-to-photon ratio. Inhomogeneous degeneracy
allows for little change in the lower bound on the baryon-to-photon ratio, but
the upper bound in this case can be as large as 1.1 \times 10^{-8} (only
electron neutrino degeneracy) or 1.0 \times 10^{-9} (equal degeneracies for all
three neutrinos). For the case of inhomogeneous neutrino degeneracy, we show
that there is no BBN upper bound on the neutrino energy density, which is
bounded in this case only by limits from structure formation and the cosmic
microwave background.Comment: 6 pages, no figure
Epidemiologic Study of Dental Caries Experience and Between-Meal Eating Patterns
The relationship between dental caries and between-meal snacks was investigated in a study of 1,486 high school students. The participants completed a questionnaire on between-meal habits and then were given dental examinations. The lack of differences in dental caries between racial and geographic groups was not related to the frequency of sucrose-containing, between-meal snacks.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66591/2/10.1177_00220345730520022501.pd
Integrated stratigraphical study of the Rhuddanian-Aeronian (Llandovery, Silurian) boundary succession in the Rheidol Gorge, Wales:A proposed Global Stratotype Section and Point for the base of the Aeronian Stage
The Rheidol Gorge section, approximately 17 km east of Aberystwyth, mid Wales, exposes a ca. 20 m-thick succession of Llandovery (Silurian) strata from the upper Rhuddanian Pernerograptus revolutus Biozone through the lower Aeronian Demirastrites triangulatus Biozone and basal Neodiplograptus magnus Biozone. The section records deposition under a range of bottom-water oxygenation states. The Rhuddanian-Aeronian boundary is located 0.8 m above an abrupt lithological change from predominantly organic-poor, bioturbated `oxic' mudrocks to an interval of black, richly graptolitic `anoxic' shales. The graptolite fauna through the boundary interval, including the local lowest occurrence of D. triangulatus, allows precise correlation with other parts of the world. Graptolite assemblages indicative of separate divisions in the underlying revolutus Biozone and of the lower and upper parts of the triangulatus Biozone are also present. Chitinozoans are relatively well preserved in the section and indicate the Spinachitina maennili Biozone throughout the boundary interval, as is widely the case. The results of carbon isotope analyses from organic matter indistinctly show the weak interval of positive shift in d13C org values through the Rhuddanian-Aeronian boundary interval, as observed globally, though local or regional processes appear largely to overprint the global signal. Overall, the excellent biostratigraphical record, well-documented local and regional stratigraphical context, historical significance, as well as easy access and assured longterm preservation, mean that the Rheidol Gorge section can be proposed as a strong candidate for a new Global Stratotype Section and Point for the base of the Aeronian Stage.. Silurian, Llandovery, Rhuddanian, Aeronian, Global Stratotype Section and Point, Graptolites, Chitinozoa, Carbon Isotope
Big Bang Nucleosynthesis with Gaussian Inhomogeneous Neutrino Degeneracy
We consider the effect of inhomogeneous neutrino degeneracy on Big Bang
nucleosynthesis for the case where the distribution of neutrino chemical
potentials is given by a Gaussian. The chemical potential fluctuations are
taken to be isocurvature, so that only inhomogeneities in the electron chemical
potential are relevant. Then the final element abundances are a function only
of the baryon-photon ratio , the effective number of additional neutrinos
, the mean electron neutrino degeneracy parameter , and
the rms fluctuation of the degeneracy parameter, . We find that for
fixed , , and , the abundances of helium-4,
deuterium, and lithium-7 are, in general, increasing functions of .
Hence, the effect of adding a Gaussian distribution for the electron neutrino
degeneracy parameter is to decrease the allowed range for . We show that
this result can be generalized to a wide variety of distributions for .Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, added discussion of neutrino oscillations,
altered presentation of figure
The Five Factor Model of personality and evaluation of drug consumption risk
The problem of evaluating an individual's risk of drug consumption and misuse
is highly important. An online survey methodology was employed to collect data
including Big Five personality traits (NEO-FFI-R), impulsivity (BIS-11),
sensation seeking (ImpSS), and demographic information. The data set contained
information on the consumption of 18 central nervous system psychoactive drugs.
Correlation analysis demonstrated the existence of groups of drugs with
strongly correlated consumption patterns. Three correlation pleiades were
identified, named by the central drug in the pleiade: ecstasy, heroin, and
benzodiazepines pleiades. An exhaustive search was performed to select the most
effective subset of input features and data mining methods to classify users
and non-users for each drug and pleiad. A number of classification methods were
employed (decision tree, random forest, -nearest neighbors, linear
discriminant analysis, Gaussian mixture, probability density function
estimation, logistic regression and na{\"i}ve Bayes) and the most effective
classifier was selected for each drug. The quality of classification was
surprisingly high with sensitivity and specificity (evaluated by leave-one-out
cross-validation) being greater than 70\% for almost all classification tasks.
The best results with sensitivity and specificity being greater than 75\% were
achieved for cannabis, crack, ecstasy, legal highs, LSD, and volatile substance
abuse (VSA).Comment: Significantly extended report with 67 pages, 27 tables, 21 figure
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