2,687 research outputs found
An improved method for determining the DC magnetization curve using a ring specimen
When the DC magnetization curve (B-H) of nonoriented material is measured in a ring specimen, there is an intrinsic error due to the assumption that the mean magnetic path length is equal to the mean geometric path length. A novel method for determining the B-H curve accurately is proposed. The validity of the method is verified by experiments</p
Validation and empirical correction of MODIS AOT and AE over ocean
We present a validation study of Collection 5 MODIS level 2 Aqua and Terra AOT (aerosol optical thickness) and AE (Ångström exponent) over ocean by comparison to coastal and island AERONET (AErosol RObotic NETwork) sites for the years 2003–2009. We show that MODIS (MODerate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) AOT exhibits significant biases due to wind speed and cloudiness of the observed scene, while MODIS AE, although overall unbiased, exhibits less spatial contrast on global scales than the AERONET observations. The same behaviour can be seen when MODIS AOT is compared against Maritime Aerosol Network (MAN) data, suggesting that the spatial coverage of our datasets does not preclude global conclusions. Thus, we develop empirical correction formulae for MODIS AOT and AE that significantly improve agreement of MODIS and AERONET observations. We show these correction formulae to be robust. Finally, we study random errors in the corrected MODIS AOT and AE and show that they mainly depend on AOT itself, although small contributions are present due to wind speed and cloud fraction in AOT random errors and due to AE and cloud fraction in AE random errors. Our analysis yields significantly higher random AOT errors than the official MODIS error estimate (0.03 + 0.05 τ), while random AE errors are smaller than might be expected. This new dataset of bias-corrected MODIS AOT and AE over ocean is intended for aerosol model validation and assimilation studies, but also has consequences as a stand-alone observational product. For instance, the corrected dataset suggests that much less fine mode aerosol is transported across the Pacific and Atlantic oceans
3-D open boundary magnetic field analysis using infinite element based on hybrid finite element method
A method for analyzing 3-D open-boundary magnetic field problems using infinite elements has been developed. The infinite problem has the advantage that the bandwidth of the coefficient matrix and the number of unknown variables are reduced. Moreover, no experience is necessary in determining decay parameters. The effectiveness of the infinite-element method is illustrated by the accuracy and the CPU time obtained when various boundary conditions are applied</p
Subaru Deep Survey VI. A Census of Lyman Break Galaxies at z=4 and 5 in the Subaru Deep Fields: Clustering Properties
We investigate the clustering properties of 2,600 Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs)
at z=3.5-5.2 in two large blank fields, the Subaru Deep Field and the
Subaru/XMM Deep Field (600arcmin^2 each). The angular correlation functions of
these LBGs show a clear clustering at both z~4 and 5. The correlation lengths
are r_0= 4.1^{+0.2}_{-0.2} and 5.9^{+1.3}_{-1.7} h_{100}^{-1} Mpc (r_0=
5.1^{+1.0}_{-1.1} and 5.9^{+1.3}_{-1.7} h_{100}^{-1} Mpc) for all the detected
LBGs (for L>L* LBGs) at z~4 and 5, respectively. These correlation lengths
correspond to galaxy-dark matter biases of b_g= 2.9^{+0.1}_{-0.1} and
4.6^{+0.9}_{-1.2} (b_g=3.5^{+0.6}_{-0.7} and 4.6^{+0.9}_{-1.2}), for all the
detected LBGs (for L>L^* LBGs) at z~4 and 5, respectively. These results,
combined with estimates for z~3 LBGs in the literature, show that the
correlation length of L>L^* LBGs is almost constant, ~5 h_{100}^{-1} Mpc, over
z~3-5, while the bias monotonically increases with redshift at z>3. We also
find that for LBGs at z~4 the clustering amplitude increases with UV-continuum
luminosity and with the amount of dust extinction. We estimate the mass of dark
halos hosting various kinds of high-z galaxies including LBGs with the analytic
model given by Sheth & Tormen (1999). We find that the typical mass of dark
halos hosting L>L^* LBGs is about 1x10^{12} h_{70}^{-1}Msol over z~3-5, which
is comparable to that of the Milky Way Galaxy. A single dark halo with ~10^{12}
h_{70}^{-1} Msol is found to host 0.1-0.3 LBG on average but host about four
K-band selected galaxies.Comment: 33 pages, 12 figures, ApJ in press. Paper with high resolution
figures is available at
http://hikari.astron.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~ouchi/work/astroph/SDS_V_VI/SDS_VI.pdf
(PDF) (The abstract was reduced by the revision.
Numerical analysis and experimental study of the error of magnetic field strength measurements with single sheet testers
The error of the measurement of the magnetic field strength with a single sheet tester has been studied. Two different methods, determination by means of field sensing coils (1) and from the magnetizing current (2), have been compared. The errors of methods(1) and (2) were calculated by the finite element method (FEM), different parameters having been varied, and method (2) was additionally studied experimentally. SSTs with wound yokes and stacked yokes were considered. The results will help to decide whether the more complicated and more accurate H coil method or the easier to handle, but less accurate m.c.method is chosen.</p
Probing the evolution of early-type galaxies using multi-colour number counts and redshift distributions
We investigate pure luminosity evolution models for early-type (elliptical
and S0) galaxies (i.e., no number density change or morphology transition), and
examine whether these models are consistent with observed number counts in the
B, I and K bands and redshift distributions of two samples of faint galaxies
selected in the I and K bands. The models are characterized by the star
formation time scale and the time when galactic wind blows
in addition to several other conventional parameters. We find the single-burst
model (=0.1 Gyr and =0.353 Gyr), which is known to reproduce
the photometric properties of early-type galaxies in clusters, is inconsistent
with redshift distributions of early-type galaxies in the field environment due
to overpredictions of galaxies at z\gsim1.4 even with strong extinction which
is at work until . In order for dust extinction to be more effective,
we change and as free parameters, and find that models
with \tau_{SF}\gsim0.5 Gyr and Gyr can be made consistent with
both the observed redshift distributions and number counts, if we introduce
strong extinction as a peak value). These results suggest that
early-type galaxies in the field environment do not have the same evolutionary
history as described by the single-burst model.Comment: 6 pages including 4 PS figures; accepted for publication in MNRA
Narrow band imaging in [OIII] and Halpha to search for ICPNe in the Virgo cluster
We have identified intracluster planetary nebulae in a Virgo cluster core
field by imaging with the Subaru Suprime-Cam through two narrow band filters
centered at the redshifted wavelengths of the [OIII] \AA and the
H \AA lines; broad-band images in V and R were
acquired to check for emission in the adjacent continuum. Emission line objects
in Virgo are then selected from the two-color diagram ([OIII] -- Halpha) vs.
([OIII] -- (V+R)), which is calibrated using PNe in M84 (Jacoby et al. 1990).
Using both [OIII] and Halpha allows us to distinguish bona-fide planetary
nebulae from high redshift emission-line galaxies at the bright end of the
[OIII] luminosity function. Spectroscopic observations of a subsample of these
objects were made at the TNG and at the VLT, in a region around M84 and in an
intracluster field respectively. The observations confirm the efficiency of the
combined [OIII]+H imaging to identify true PNe. We also obtained the
first spectrum of an intracluster PN which shows the [OIII] doublet with S/N >
10 and its Halpha emission. From the results based on the spectroscopic
follow-up, we derive a lower limit to the fraction of the Virgo cluster light
contributed by the intracluster stars at the surveyed position in the cluster
core: it amounts to 10%.Comment: 32 pages,11 figures, in press on AJ, February 200
Single-dot spectroscopy via elastic single-electron tunneling through a pair of coupled quantum dots
We study the electronic structure of a single self-assembled InAs quantum dot
by probing elastic single-electron tunneling through a single pair of weakly
coupled dots. In the region below pinch-off voltage, the non-linear threshold
voltage behavior provides electronic addition energies exactly as the linear,
Coulomb blockade oscillation does. By analyzing it, we identify the s and p
shell addition spectrum for up to six electrons in the single InAs dot, i.e.
one of the coupled dots. The evolution of shell addition spectrum with magnetic
field provides Fock-Darwin spectra of s and p shell.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
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