3,126 research outputs found
A Comparison of Development Times for \u3cem\u3eProtophormia terraenovae\u3c/em\u3e (R-D) Reared on Different Food Substrates
Experiments were conducted to determine whether a specific larval substrate impacted immature development rates. Protophormia terraenovae was raised on beef organs and compared with whole carcasses (rat), to determine if discrepancies in development times were observed. The minimum development time on beef liver was the most consistent with the rat carcass but a significant difference between all substrates was found after the third instar. These differences can be explained by the differences found between heart and muscle and the other substrates. Often length of the larvae is used to estimate insect age and so Day 2 measuring of weight, length, and width of the pupae was undertaken. Significant differences were found for all parameters measured on each of the substrates. As a result, the use of these measurements should not be done for P. terraenovae due to conflicting rearing substrates. Significant differences within substrates were only found for weight of insects developing on heart and length of insects developing on muscle. There was no significant difference in survival from first instar to the adult stage on any of the substrates but personal observation suggested that mortality was higher in insects developing on the brain tissue
FINDCHIRP: an algorithm for detection of gravitational waves from inspiraling compact binaries
Matched-filter searches for gravitational waves from coalescing compact
binaries by the LIGO Scientific Collaboration use the FINDCHIRP algorithm: an
implementation of the optimal filter with innovations to account for unknown
signal parameters and to improve performance on detector data that has
nonstationary and non-Gaussian artifacts. We provide details on the FINDCHIRP
algorithm as used in the search for subsolar mass binaries, binary neutron
stars, neutron star-black hole binaries, and binary black holes.Comment: 19 pages, 1 figure, journal version with Creative Commons 4.0
open-access license adde
A power filter for the detection of burst sources of gravitational radiation in interferometric detectors
We present a filter for detecting gravitational wave signals from burst
sources. This filter requires only minimal advance knowledge of the expected
signal: i.e. the signal's frequency band and time duration. It consists of a
threshold on the total power in the data stream in the specified signal band
during the specified time. This filter is optimal (in the Neyman-Pearson sense)
for signal searches where only this minimal information is available.Comment: 3 pages, RevTeX, GWDAW '99 proceedings contribution, submitted to
Int. J. Modern Phys.
A Knowledge Gradient Policy for Sequencing Experiments to Identify the Structure of RNA Molecules Using a Sparse Additive Belief Model
We present a sparse knowledge gradient (SpKG) algorithm for adaptively
selecting the targeted regions within a large RNA molecule to identify which
regions are most amenable to interactions with other molecules. Experimentally,
such regions can be inferred from fluorescence measurements obtained by binding
a complementary probe with fluorescence markers to the targeted regions. We use
a biophysical model which shows that the fluorescence ratio under the log scale
has a sparse linear relationship with the coefficients describing the
accessibility of each nucleotide, since not all sites are accessible (due to
the folding of the molecule). The SpKG algorithm uniquely combines the Bayesian
ranking and selection problem with the frequentist regularized
regression approach Lasso. We use this algorithm to identify the sparsity
pattern of the linear model as well as sequentially decide the best regions to
test before experimental budget is exhausted. Besides, we also develop two
other new algorithms: batch SpKG algorithm, which generates more suggestions
sequentially to run parallel experiments; and batch SpKG with a procedure which
we call length mutagenesis. It dynamically adds in new alternatives, in the
form of types of probes, are created by inserting, deleting or mutating
nucleotides within existing probes. In simulation, we demonstrate these
algorithms on the Group I intron (a mid-size RNA molecule), showing that they
efficiently learn the correct sparsity pattern, identify the most accessible
region, and outperform several other policies
Quantum Effects in Black Hole Interiors
The Weyl curvature inside a black hole formed in a generic collapse grows,
classically without bound, near to the inner horizon, due to partial absorption
and blueshifting of the radiative tail of the collapse. Using a spherical
model, we examine how this growth is modified by quantum effects of conformally
coupled massless fields.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure (not included), RevTe
Agronomy of Dwarf oats.
Location: Mt Barker Research Station, Pardelup Prison Farm, Kojonup, Williams and Mayanup.
Time of sowing x oat cultivars, 87AL6, 87BR5, 87KA4, 87MT4, 87NA7.
N rates x oat cultivars, 87AL4, 87BR8, 87KA2, 87MT2, 87NA5.
Seed rates x oat cultivars, 87AL5, 87BR4, 87KA3, 87MT3, 87NA6.
Oat cultivar factorial, 87AL7, 87BR6, 87KA5, 87MT5, 87NA8
A matched expansion approach to practical self-force calculations
We discuss a practical method to compute the self-force on a particle moving
through a curved spacetime. This method involves two expansions to calculate
the self-force, one arising from the particle's immediate past and the other
from the more distant past. The expansion in the immediate past is a covariant
Taylor series and can be carried out for all geometries. The more distant
expansion is a mode sum, and may be carried out in those cases where the wave
equation for the field mediating the self-force admits a mode expansion of the
solution. In particular, this method can be used to calculate the gravitational
self-force for a particle of mass mu orbiting a black hole of mass M to order
mu^2, provided mu/M << 1. We discuss how to use these two expansions to
construct a full self-force, and in particular investigate criteria for
matching the two expansions. As with all methods of computing self-forces for
particles moving in black hole spacetimes, one encounters considerable
technical difficulty in applying this method; nevertheless, it appears that the
convergence of each series is good enough that a practical implementation may
be plausible.Comment: IOP style, 8 eps figures, accepted for publication in a special issue
of Classical and Quantum Gravit
Long gravitational-wave transients and associated detection strategies for a network of terrestrial interferometers
Searches for gravitational waves (GWs) traditionally focus on persistent sources (e.g., pulsars or the stochastic background) or on transients sources (e.g., compact binary inspirals or core-collapse supernovae), which last for time scales of milliseconds to seconds. We explore the possibility of long GW transients with unknown waveforms lasting from many seconds to weeks. We propose a novel analysis technique to bridge the gap between short O(s) “burst” analyses and persistent stochastic analyses. Our technique utilizes frequency-time maps of GW strain cross power between two spatially separated terrestrial GW detectors. The application of our cross power statistic to searches for GW transients is framed as a pattern recognition problem, and we discuss several pattern-recognition techniques. We demonstrate these techniques by recovering simulated GW signals in simulated detector noise. We also recover environmental noise artifacts, thereby demonstrating a novel technique for the identification of such artifacts in GW interferometers. We compare the efficiency of this framework to other techniques such as matched filtering
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