2,977 research outputs found
Node Labels in Local Decision
The role of unique node identifiers in network computing is well understood
as far as symmetry breaking is concerned. However, the unique identifiers also
leak information about the computing environment - in particular, they provide
some nodes with information related to the size of the network. It was recently
proved that in the context of local decision, there are some decision problems
such that (1) they cannot be solved without unique identifiers, and (2) unique
node identifiers leak a sufficient amount of information such that the problem
becomes solvable (PODC 2013).
In this work we give study what is the minimal amount of information that we
need to leak from the environment to the nodes in order to solve local decision
problems. Our key results are related to scalar oracles that, for any given
, provide a multiset of labels; then the adversary assigns the
labels to the nodes in the network. This is a direct generalisation of the
usual assumption of unique node identifiers. We give a complete
characterisation of the weakest oracle that leaks at least as much information
as the unique identifiers.
Our main result is the following dichotomy: we classify scalar oracles as
large and small, depending on their asymptotic behaviour, and show that (1) any
large oracle is at least as powerful as the unique identifiers in the context
of local decision problems, while (2) for any small oracle there are local
decision problems that still benefit from unique identifiers.Comment: Conference version to appear in the proceedings of SIROCCO 201
Constraining the orbit of the possible companion to Beta Pictoris: New deep imaging observations
We recently reported on the detection of a possible planetary-mass companion
to Beta Pictoris at a projected separation of 8 AU from the star, using data
taken in November 2003 with NaCo, the adaptive-optics system installed on the
Very Large Telescope UT4. Eventhough no second epoch detection was available,
there are strong arguments to favor a gravitationally bound companion rather
than a background object. If confirmed and located at a physical separation of
8 AU, this young, hot (~1500 K), massive Jovian companion (~8 Mjup) would be
the closest planet to its star ever imaged, could be formed via core-accretion,
and could explain the main morphological and dynamical properties of the dust
disk. Our goal was to return to Beta Pic five years later to obtain a
second-epoch observation of the companion or, in case of a non-detection,
constrain its orbit. Deep adaptive-optics L'-band direct images of Beta Pic and
Ks-band Four-Quadrant-Phase-Mask (4QPM) coronagraphic images were recorded with
NaCo in January and February 2009. We also use 4QPM data taken in November
2004. No point-like signal with the brightness of the companion candidate
(apparent magnitudes L'=11.2 or Ks ~ 12.5) is detected at projected distances
down to 6.5 AU from the star in the 2009 data. As expected, the non-detection
does not allow to rule out a background object; however, we show that it is
consistent with the orbital motion of a bound companion that got closer to the
star since first observed in 2003 and that is just emerging from behind the
star at the present epoch. We place strong constraints on the possible orbits
of the companion and discuss future observing prospects.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Astronomy
and Astrophysic
Applying consumer responsibility principle in evaluating environmental load of carbon emissions
There is a need for a proper indicator in order to assess the environmental impact of international
trade, therefore using the carbon footprint as an indicator can be relevant and useful. The aim of this
study is to show from a methodological perspective how the carbon footprint, combined with input-
output models can be used for analysing the impacts of international trade on the sustainable use
of national resources in a country. The use of the input-output approach has the essential advantage
of being able to track the transformation of goods through the economy. The study examines the environmental
impact of consumption related to international trade, using the consumer responsibility
principle. In this study the use of the carbon footprint and input-output methodology is shown on the
example of the Hungarian consumption and the impact of international trade. Moving from a production-
based approach in climate policy to a consumption-perspective principle and allocation,
would also help to increase the efficiency of emission reduction targets and the evaluation of the
ecological impacts of international trade
Detection of the Sgr A* activity at 3.8 and 4.8 microns with NACO
L'-band (lambda=3.8 microns) and M'-band (lambda=4.8 microns) observations of
the Galactic Center region, performed in 2003 at VLT (ESO) with the adaptive
optics imager NACO, have lead to the detection of an infrared counterpart of
the radio source Sgr A* at both wavelengths. The measured fluxes confirm that
the Sgr A* infrared spectrum is dominated by the synchrotron emission of
nonthermal electrons. The infrared counterpart exhibits no significant short
term variability but demonstrates flux variations on daily and yearly scales.
The observed emission arises away from the position of the dynamical center of
the S2 orbit and would then not originate from the closest regions of the black
hole.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Fully Sampled Maps of Ices and Silicates in Front of Cepheus A East with Spitzer
We report the first fully sampled maps of the distribution of interstellar
CO2 ices, H2O ices and total hydrogen nuclei, as inferred from the 9.7 micron
silicate feature, toward the star-forming region Cepheus A East with the IRS
instrument onboard the Spitzer Space Telescope. We find that the column density
distributions for these solid state features all peak at, and are distributed
around, the location of HW2, the protostar believed to power one of the
outflows observed in this star-forming region. A correlation between the column
density distributions of CO2 and water ice with that of total hydrogen
indicates that the solid state features we mapped mostly arise from the same
molecular clumps along the probed sight lines. We therefore derive average CO2
ice and water ice abundances with respect to the total hydrogen column density
of X(CO2)_ice~1.9x10^-5 and X(H2O)_ice~7.5x10^-5. Within errors, the abundances
for both ices are relatively constant over the mapped region exhibiting both
ice absorptions. The fraction of CO2 ice with respect to H2O ice is also
relatively constant at a value of 22% over that mapped region. A clear
triple-peaked structure is seen in the CO2 ice profiles. Fits to those profiles
using current laboratory ice analogs suggest the presence of both a
low-temperature polar ice mixture and a high-temperature methanol-rich ice
mixture along the probed sightlines. Our results further indicate that thermal
processing of these ices occurred throughout the sampled region.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Optical and infrared properties of V1647 Orionis during the 2003-2006 outburst. I The reflection nebula
Aims: The recent outburst of the young eruptive star V1647 Orionis has
produced a spectacular appearance of a new reflection nebula in Orion (McNeil's
nebula). We present an optical/near infrared investigation of McNeil's nebula.
This analysis is aimed at determining the morphology, temporal evolution and
nature of the nebula and its connection to the outburst.
Method: We performed multi epoch B, V, R, I, z, and K imaging of McNeil's
nebula and V1647 Ori as well as K_S imaging polarimetry. The multiband imaging
allows us to reconstruct the extinction map inside the nebula. Through
polarimetric observations we attempt to disentangle the emission from the
nebula from that of the accretion disk around V1647 Ori. We also attempt to
resolve the small spatial scale structure of the illuminating source.
Results: The energy distribution and temporal evolution of McNeil's nebula
mimic that of the illuminating source. The extinction map reveals a region of
higher extinction in the direction of V1647 Ori. Excluding foreground
extionction, the optical extinction due to McNeil's nebula in the direction of
V1647 Ori is A_V ~ 6.5 mag. The polarimetric measurement shows a compact high
polarization emission around V1647 Ori. The percentage of K_S band linear
polarization goes from 10 -- 20 %. The vectors are all well aligned with a
position angle of 90 +/- 9 degree East of North. This may correspond to the
orientation of a possible accretion disk around V1647 Ori. These findings
suggest that the appearance of McNeil's nebula is due to reflection of light by
pre-existing material in the surroundings of V1647 Ori. We also report on the
discovery of a new candidate brown dwarf or protostar in the vicinity of V1647
Ori as well as the presence of clumpy structure within HH 22A.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, in pres
Allocating the Burdens of Climate Action: Consumption-Based Carbon Accounting and the Polluter-Pays Principle
Action must be taken to combat climate change. Yet, how the costs of climate action should be allocated among states remains a question. One popular answer—the polluter-pays principle (PPP)—stipulates that those responsible for causing the problem should pay to address it. While intuitively plausible, the PPP has been subjected to withering criticism in recent years. It is timely, following the Paris Agreement, to develop a new version: one that does not focus on historical production-based emissions but rather allocates climate burdens in proportion to each state’s annual consumption-based emissions. This change in carbon accounting results in a fairer and more environmentally effective principle for distributing climate duties
Gas-phase CO2 emission toward Cepheus A East: the result of shock activity?
We report the first detection of gas-phase CO2 emission in the star-forming
region Cepheus A East, obtained by spectral line mapping of the v2 bending mode
at 14.98 micron with the Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) instrument onboard the
Spitzer Space Telescope. The gaseous CO2 emission covers a region about 35'' x
25'' in extent, and results from radiative pumping by 15 micron continuum
photons emanating predominantly from the HW2 protostellar region. The gaseous
CO2 exhibits a temperature distribution ranging from 50 K to 200 K. A
correlation between the gas-phase CO2 distribution and that of H2 S(2), a
tracer of shock activity, indicates that the CO2 molecules originate in a cool
post-shock gas component associated with the outflow powered by HW2. The
presence of CO2 ice absorption features at 15.20 micron toward this region and
the lack of correlation between the IR continuum emission and the CO2 gas
emission distribution further suggest that the gaseous CO2 molecules are mainly
sputtered off grain mantles -- by the passage of slow non-dissociative shocks
with velocities of 15-30 km/s -- rather than sublimated through grain heating.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
Epsilon Indi Ba/Bb: the nearest binary brown dwarf
We have carried out high angular resolution near-infrared imaging and
low-resolution (R~1000) spectroscopy of the nearest known brown dwarf, Eps Indi
B, using the ESO VLT NAOS/CONICA adaptive optics system. We find it to be a
close binary (as also noted by Volk et al. 2003) with an angular separation of
0.732 arcsec, corresponding to 2.65AU at the 3.626pc distance of the Eps Indi
system. In our discovery paper (Scholz et al. 2003), we concluded that Eps Indi
B was a ~50Mjup T2.5 dwarf: our revised finding is that the two system
components (Eps Indi Ba and Eps Indi Bb) have spectral types of T1 and T6,
respectively, and estimated masses of 47 and 28Mjup, respectively, assuming an
age of 1.3Gyr. Errors in the masses are +/-10 and +/-7Mjup, respectively,
dominated by the uncertainty in the age determination (0.8-2Gyr range). This
uniquely well-characterised T dwarf binary system should prove important in the
study of low-mass, cool brown dwarfs. The two components are bright and
relatively well-resolved: Eps Indi B is the only T dwarf binary in which
spectra have been obtained for both components. They have a well-established
distance and age. Finally, their orbital motion can be measured on a fairly
short timescale (nominal orbital period 15 yrs), permitting an accurate
determination of the true total system mass, helping to calibrate brown dwarf
evolutionary models.Comment: Accepted for publication by Astronomy & Astrophysics main journal.
This replacement version includes minor changes made following comments by
the referee, along with a reworking of the photometric data and derived
quantities using 2MASS catalogue photometry as the basis, with only a minor
impact on the final result
Uncovering the kiloparsec-scale stellar ring of NGC5128
We reveal the stellar light emerging from the kiloparsec-scale, ring-like
structure of the NGC5128 (Centaurus A) galaxy in unprecedented detail. We use
arcsecond-scale resolution near infrared images to create a "dust-free" view of
the central region of the galaxy, which we then use to quantify the shape of
the revealed structure. At the resolution of the data, the structure contains
several hundreds of discreet, point-like or slightly elongated sources. Typical
extinction corrected surface brightness of the structure is K_S = 16.5
mag/arcsec^2, and we estimate the total near infrared luminosity of the
structure to be M = -21 mag. We use diffraction limited (FWHM resolution of ~
0.1", or 1.6 pc) near infrared data taken with the NACO instrument on VLT to
show that the structure decomposes into thousands of separate, mostly
point-like sources. According to the tentative photometry, the most luminous
sources have M_K = -12 mag, naming them red supergiants or relatively low-mass
star clusters. We also discuss the large-scale geometry implied by the
reddening signatures of dust in our near infrared images.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in A&A Letters. A
version with high resolution images can be downloaded from
http://www.helsinki.fi/~jtkainul/CenALette
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