2,401 research outputs found
Annotation of Heterogenous Media Using OntoMedia
While ontologies exist for the annotation of monomedia, interoperability between these schemes is an important issue. The OntoMedia ontology consists of a generic core, capable of representing a diverse range of media, as well as extension ontologies to focus on specific formats. This paper provides an overview of the OntoMedia ontologies, together with a detailed case study when applied to video, a scripted form, and an associated short story
Application of Monte Carlo Algorithms to the Bayesian Analysis of the Cosmic Microwave Background
Power spectrum estimation and evaluation of associated errors in the presence
of incomplete sky coverage; non-homogeneous, correlated instrumental noise; and
foreground emission is a problem of central importance for the extraction of
cosmological information from the cosmic microwave background. We develop a
Monte Carlo approach for the maximum likelihood estimation of the power
spectrum. The method is based on an identity for the Bayesian posterior as a
marginalization over unknowns. Maximization of the posterior involves the
computation of expectation values as a sample average from maps of the cosmic
microwave background and foregrounds given some current estimate of the power
spectrum or cosmological model, and some assumed statistical characterization
of the foregrounds. Maps of the CMB are sampled by a linear transform of a
Gaussian white noise process, implemented numerically with conjugate gradient
descent. For time series data with N_{t} samples, and N pixels on the sphere,
the method has a computational expense $KO[N^{2} +- N_{t} +AFw-log N_{t}],
where K is a prefactor determined by the convergence rate of conjugate gradient
descent. Preconditioners for conjugate gradient descent are given for scans
close to great circle paths, and the method allows partial sky coverage for
these cases by numerically marginalizing over the unobserved, or removed,
region.Comment: submitted to Ap
The upper critical field of filamentary Nb3Sn conductors
We have examined the upper critical field of a large and representative set
of present multi-filamentary Nb3Sn wires and one bulk sample over a temperature
range from 1.4 K up to the zero field critical temperature. Since all present
wires use a solid-state diffusion reaction to form the A15 layers,
inhomogeneities with respect to Sn content are inevitable, in contrast to some
previously studied homogeneous samples. Our study emphasizes the effects that
these inevitable inhomogeneities have on the field-temperature phase boundary.
The property inhomogeneities are extracted from field-dependent resistive
transitions which we find broaden with increasing inhomogeneity. The upper
90-99 % of the transitions clearly separates alloyed and binary wires but a
pure, Cu-free binary bulk sample also exhibits a zero temperature critical
field that is comparable to the ternary wires. The highest mu0Hc2 detected in
the ternary wires are remarkably constant: The highest zero temperature upper
critical fields and zero field critical temperatures fall within 29.5 +/- 0.3 T
and 17.8 +/- 0.3 K respectively, independent of the wire layout. The complete
field-temperature phase boundary can be described very well with the relatively
simple Maki-DeGennes model using a two parameter fit, independent of
composition, strain state, sample layout or applied critical state criterion.Comment: Accepted Journal of Applied Physics Few changes to shorten document,
replaced eq. 7-
The joint large-scale foreground-CMB posteriors of the 3-year WMAP data
Using a Gibbs sampling algorithm for joint CMB estimation and component
separation, we compute the large-scale CMB and foreground posteriors of the
3-yr WMAP temperature data. Our parametric data model includes the cosmological
CMB signal and instrumental noise, a single power law foreground component with
free amplitude and spectral index for each pixel, a thermal dust template with
a single free overall amplitude, and free monopoles and dipoles at each
frequency. This simple model yields a surprisingly good fit to the data over
the full frequency range from 23 to 94 GHz. We obtain a new estimate of the CMB
sky signal and power spectrum, and a new foreground model, including a
measurement of the effective spectral index over the high-latitude sky. A
particularly significant result is the detection of a common spurious offset in
all frequency bands of ~ -13muK, as well as a dipole in the V-band data.
Correcting for these is essential when determining the effective spectral index
of the foregrounds. We find that our new foreground model is in good agreement
with template-based model presented by the WMAP team, but not with their MEM
reconstruction. We believe the latter may be at least partially compromised by
the residual offsets and dipoles in the data. Fortunately, the CMB power
spectrum is not significantly affected by these issues, as our new spectrum is
in excellent agreement with that published by the WMAP team. The corresponding
cosmological parameters are also virtually unchanged.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to ApJL. Background data are available
at http://www.astro.uio.no/~hke under the Research ta
Improving rainfall nowcasting and urban runoff forecasting through dynamic radar-raingauge rainfall adjustment
The insufficient accuracy of radar rainfall estimates is a major source of uncertainty in short-term quantitative precipitation forecasts (QPFs) and associated urban flood forecasts. This study looks at the possibility of improving QPFs and urban runoff forecasts through the dynamic adjustment of radar rainfall estimates based on raingauge measurements. Two commonly used techniques (Kriging with External Drift (KED) and mean field bias correction) were used to adjust radar rainfall estimates for a large area of the UK (250,000 km2) based on raingauge data. QPFs were produced using original radar and adjusted rainfall estimates as input to a nowcasting algorithm. Runoff forecasts were generated by feeding the different QPFs into the storm water drainage model of an urban catchment in London. The performance of the adjusted precipitation estimates and the associated forecasts was tested using local rainfall and flow records. The results show that adjustments done at too large scales cannot provide tangible improvements in rainfall estimates and associated QPFs and runoff forecasts at small scales, such as those of urban catchments. Moreover, the results suggest that the KED adjusted rainfall estimates may be unsuitable for generating QPFs, as this method damages the continuity of spatial structures between consecutive rainfall fields
Joint Bayesian component separation and CMB power spectrum estimation
We describe and implement an exact, flexible, and computationally efficient
algorithm for joint component separation and CMB power spectrum estimation,
building on a Gibbs sampling framework. Two essential new features are 1)
conditional sampling of foreground spectral parameters, and 2) joint sampling
of all amplitude-type degrees of freedom (e.g., CMB, foreground pixel
amplitudes, and global template amplitudes) given spectral parameters. Given a
parametric model of the foreground signals, we estimate efficiently and
accurately the exact joint foreground-CMB posterior distribution, and therefore
all marginal distributions such as the CMB power spectrum or foreground
spectral index posteriors. The main limitation of the current implementation is
the requirement of identical beam responses at all frequencies, which restricts
the analysis to the lowest resolution of a given experiment. We outline a
future generalization to multi-resolution observations. To verify the method,
we analyse simple models and compare the results to analytical predictions. We
then analyze a realistic simulation with properties similar to the 3-yr WMAP
data, downgraded to a common resolution of 3 degree FWHM. The results from the
actual 3-yr WMAP temperature analysis are presented in a companion Letter.Comment: 23 pages, 16 figures; version accepted for publication in ApJ -- only
minor changes, all clarifications. More information about the WMAP3 analysis
available at http://www.astro.uio.no/~hke under the Research ta
Modelling the impact of social mixing and behaviour on infectious disease transmission: application to SARS-CoV-2
In regard to infectious diseases socioeconomic determinants are strongly
associated with differential exposure and susceptibility however they are
seldom accounted for by standard compartmental infectious disease models. These
associations are explored here with a novel compartmental infectious disease
model which, stratified by deprivation and age, accounts for population-level
behaviour including social mixing patterns. As an exemplar using a fully
Bayesian approach our model is fitted, in real-time if required, to the UKHSA
COVID-19 community testing case data from England. Metrics including
reproduction number and forecasts of daily case incidence are estimated from
the posterior samples. From this UKHSA dataset it is observed that during the
initial period of the pandemic the most deprived groups reported the most cases
however this trend reversed after the summer of 2021. Forward simulation
experiments based on the fitted model demonstrate that this reversal can be
accounted for by differential changes in population level behaviours including
social mixing and testing behaviour, but it is not explained by the depletion
of susceptible individuals. In future epidemics, with a focus on socioeconomic
factors the approach outlined here provides the possibility of identifying
those groups most at risk with a view to helping policy-makers better target
their support.Comment: Main article: 25 pages, 6 figures. Appendix 2 pages, 1 figure.
Supplementary Material: 15 pages, 14 figures. Version 2 - minor updates:
fixed typos, updated mathematical notation and small quantity of descriptive
text added. Version 3 - minor update: made colour coding consistent across
all time series figure
A Hybrid N-body--Coagulation Code for Planet Formation
We describe a hybrid algorithm to calculate the formation of planets from an
initial ensemble of planetesimals. The algorithm uses a coagulation code to
treat the growth of planetesimals into oligarchs and explicit N-body
calculations to follow the evolution of oligarchs into planets. To validate the
N-body portion of the algorithm, we use a battery of tests in planetary
dynamics. Several complete calculations of terrestrial planet formation with
the hybrid code yield good agreement with previously published calculations.
These results demonstrate that the hybrid code provides an accurate treatment
of the evolution of planetesimals into planets.Comment: Astronomical Journal, accepted; 33 pages + 11 figure
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