24 research outputs found

    『マクティーグ』のトリック:初期映画とメタフィクション

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    本稿は、フランク・ノリス(Frank Norris)の長編小説『マクティーグ』(McTeague, 1899)を、当時アメリカで流行しはじめていた初期映画を意識的に作品の構造に取り込んだメタフィクションだと捉え、その特徴を検証する。物語中に主人公たちがヴォードヴィル劇場で映画を鑑賞する場面が描かれているだけでなく、時間の逆行や、機械と動物のモチーフの利用など、作中のさまざまな仕掛けが、初期映画の魔術的な「トリック」を小説に取り込んだものであると解釈できる。すでに指摘されてきている視覚文化と『マクティーグ』の関係性に留意しつつ、この小説がイリュージョンに満ちた現代都市生活の諸相を描くために映画の文法をなぞっていく過程を、複数の視点から分析する

    『グレート・ギャツビー』と遊園地

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     スコット・フィッツジェラルド(F. Scott Fitzgerald)の長編小説『グレート・ギャツビー』(The Great Gatsby, 1925)には、様々なレベルで遊園地のイメージの利用が見られる。主人公ジェイ・ギャツビーの屋敷をはじめ、建築はしばしば「見世物」の要素をもち、作中で重要な役割を果たす自動車は「アトラクション」の効果をもつ。本稿が検証するのは、『ギャツビー』という作品が、シカゴ万国博覧会を祖とするニューヨークの遊園地コニーアイランドを象徴的に物語と重ねあわせることで、「狂騒の20年代」とも呼ばれる第一次世界大戦後のアメリカ社会を巧みに表象しつつ、主人公であるギャツビーと語り手ニックの姿勢の違いを浮き彫りにする過程である

    食べること/食べられること:マーガレット・アトウッド「わんぱくグリゼルダ」の二重性

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    本稿は、疫病流行下の隔離状況を描くマーガレット・アトウッド(Margaret Atwood)のSF短編「わんぱくグリゼルダ」(“Impatient Griselda,” 2020 )に、形式・内容にまたがって複数のレベルでアダプテーションの原理が適用されていることに着目し、そのような手法を通してパンデミック下における日常/非日常の複雑な重なり合いが表現されていることを分析する。この短編の主題が「食」にある点を指摘したうえで、コロナ禍での食文化の変化、アトウッドのキャリアを通じた食という主題の重要性、短編中の捕食/被食関係の描かれ方を順に検証することで、複数の二重性が食の問題に焦点化する過程を明らかにする

    Results of the search for inspiraling compact star binaries from TAMA300's observation in 2000-2004

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    We analyze the data of TAMA300 detector to search for gravitational waves from inspiraling compact star binaries with masses of the component stars in the range 1-3Msolar. In this analysis, 2705 hours of data, taken during the years 2000-2004, are used for the event search. We combine the results of different observation runs, and obtained a single upper limit on the rate of the coalescence of compact binaries in our Galaxy of 20 per year at a 90% confidence level. In this upper limit, the effect of various systematic errors such like the uncertainty of the background estimation and the calibration of the detector's sensitivity are included.Comment: 8 pages, 4 Postscript figures, uses revtex4.sty The author list was correcte

    The Japanese space gravitational wave antenna; DECIGO

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    DECi-hertz Interferometer Gravitational wave Observatory (DECIGO) is the future Japanese space gravitational wave antenna. DECIGO is expected to open a new window of observation for gravitational wave astronomy especially between 0.1 Hz and 10 Hz, revealing various mysteries of the universe such as dark energy, formation mechanism of supermassive black holes, and inflation of the universe. The pre-conceptual design of DECIGO consists of three drag-free spacecraft, whose relative displacements are measured by a differential Fabry– Perot Michelson interferometer. We plan to launch two missions, DECIGO pathfinder and pre- DECIGO first and finally DECIGO in 2024

    DECIGO pathfinder

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    DECIGO pathfinder (DPF) is a milestone satellite mission for DECIGO (DECi-hertz Interferometer Gravitational wave Observatory) which is a future space gravitational wave antenna. DECIGO is expected to provide us fruitful insights into the universe, in particular about dark energy, a formation mechanism of supermassive black holes, and the inflation of the universe. Since DECIGO will be an extremely large mission which will formed by three drag-free spacecraft with 1000m separation, it is significant to gain the technical feasibility of DECIGO before its planned launch in 2024. Thus, we are planning to launch two milestone missions: DPF and pre-DECIGO. The conceptual design and current status of the first milestone mission, DPF, are reviewed in this article

    Observation results by the TAMA300 detector on gravitational wave bursts from stellar-core collapses

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    We present data-analysis schemes and results of observations with the TAMA300 gravitational-wave detector, targeting burst signals from stellar-core collapse events. In analyses for burst gravitational waves, the detection and fake-reduction schemes are different from well-investigated ones for a chirp-wave analysis, because precise waveform templates are not available. We used an excess-power filter for the extraction of gravitational-wave candidates, and developed two methods for the reduction of fake events caused by non-stationary noises of the detector. These analysis schemes were applied to real data from the TAMA300 interferometric gravitational wave detector. As a result, fake events were reduced by a factor of about 1000 in the best cases. The resultant event candidates were interpreted from an astronomical viewpoint. We set an upper limit of 2.2x10^3 events/sec on the burst gravitational-wave event rate in our Galaxy with a confidence level of 90%. This work sets a milestone and prospects on the search for burst gravitational waves, by establishing an analysis scheme for the observation data from an interferometric gravitational wave detector

    Current status of space gravitational wave antenna DECIGO and B-DECIGO

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    Deci-hertz Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory (DECIGO) is the future Japanese space mission with a frequency band of 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz. DECIGO aims at the detection of primordial gravitational waves, which could be produced during the inflationary period right after the birth of the universe. There are many other scientific objectives of DECIGO, including the direct measurement of the acceleration of the expansion of the universe, and reliable and accurate predictions of the timing and locations of neutron star/black hole binary coalescences. DECIGO consists of four clusters of observatories placed in the heliocentric orbit. Each cluster consists of three spacecraft, which form three Fabry-Perot Michelson interferometers with an arm length of 1,000 km. Three clusters of DECIGO will be placed far from each other, and the fourth cluster will be placed in the same position as one of the three clusters to obtain the correlation signals for the detection of the primordial gravitational waves. We plan to launch B-DECIGO, which is a scientific pathfinder of DECIGO, before DECIGO in the 2030s to demonstrate the technologies required for DECIGO, as well as to obtain fruitful scientific results to further expand the multi-messenger astronomy.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure

    The status of DECIGO

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    DECIGO (DECi-hertz Interferometer Gravitational wave Observatory) is the planned Japanese space gravitational wave antenna, aiming to detect gravitational waves from astrophysically and cosmologically significant sources mainly between 0.1 Hz and 10 Hz and thus to open a new window for gravitational wave astronomy and for the universe. DECIGO will consists of three drag-free spacecraft arranged in an equilateral triangle with 1000 km arm lengths whose relative displacements are measured by a differential Fabry-Perot interferometer, and four units of triangular Fabry-Perot interferometers are arranged on heliocentric orbit around the sun. DECIGO is vary ambitious mission, we plan to launch DECIGO in era of 2030s after precursor satellite mission, B-DECIGO. B-DECIGO is essentially smaller version of DECIGO: B-DECIGO consists of three spacecraft arranged in an triangle with 100 km arm lengths orbiting 2000 km above the surface of the earth. It is hoped that the launch date will be late 2020s for the present

    Current status of space gravitational wave antenna DECIGO and B-DECIGO

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    The Deci-hertz Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory (DECIGO) is a future Japanese space mission with a frequency band of 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz. DECIGO aims at the detection of primordial gravitational waves, which could have been produced during the inflationary period right after the birth of the Universe. There are many other scientific objectives of DECIGO, including the direct measurement of the acceleration of the expansion of the Universe, and reliable and accurate predictions of the timing and locations of neutron star/black hole binary coalescences. DECIGO consists of four clusters of observatories placed in heliocentric orbit. Each cluster consists of three spacecraft, which form three Fabry–Pérot Michelson interferometers with an arm length of 1000 km. Three DECIGO clusters will be placed far from each other, and the fourth will be placed in the same position as one of the other three to obtain correlation signals for the detection of primordial gravitational waves. We plan to launch B-DECIGO, which is a scientific pathfinder for DECIGO, before DECIGO in the 2030s to demonstrate the technologies required for DECIGO, as well as to obtain fruitful scientific results to further expand multi-messenger astronomy
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