11,844 research outputs found
What can we infer about the underlying physics from burst distributions observed in an RMHD simulation ?
We determine that the sizes of bursts in mean-square current density in a
reduced magnetohydrodynamic (RMHD)simulation follow power-law probability
density function (PDF). The PDFs for burst durations and waiting time between
bursts are clearly not exponential and could also be power-law. This suffices
to distinguish their behaviour from the original Bak et al. sandpile model
which had exponential waiting time PDFs. However, it is not sufficient to
distinguish between turbulence, some other SOC-like models, and other red noise
sources.Comment: In press, Planetary and Space Science. Proceedings of a session at
European Geophysical Society General Assembly, Nice, 200
Power law burst and inter-burst interval distributions in the solar wind: turbulence or dissipative SOC ?
We calculate for the first time the probability density functions (PDFs) P of
burst energy e, duration T and inter-burst interval tau for a known turbulent
system in nature. Bursts in the earth-sun component of the Poynting flux at 1
AU in the solar wind were measured using the MFI and SWE experiments on the
NASA WIND spacecraft. We find P(e) and P(T) to be power laws, consistent with
self-organised criticality (SOC). We find also a power law form for P(tau) that
distinguishes this turbulent cascade from the exponential P(tau) of ideal SOC,
but not from some other SOC-like sandpile models. We discuss the implications
for the relation between SOC and turbulence.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure. Submitted to PRL on 25th February 2000. Revised
version re-submitted on 9th May 2000. Second revised version submitted Phys.
Rev. E on 26th June, 200
Proto-Brown Dwarf Disks as Products of Protostellar Disk Encounters
The formation of brown dwarfs via encounters between proto-stars has been
confirmed with high-resolution numerical simulations with a restricted
treatment of the thermal conditions. The new results indicate that young brown
dwarfs (BDs) formed this way are disk-like and often reside in multiple
systems. The newly-formed proto-BDs disks are up to 18 AU in size and spin
rapidly making small-scale bipolar outflows, fragmentation and the possible
formation of planetary companions likely as have recently been observed for
BDs. The object masses range from 2 to 73 Jupiter masses, distributed in a
manner consistent with the observed sub-stellar initial mass function. The
simulations usually form multiple BDs on eccentric orbits about a star. One
such system was hierarchical, a BD binary in orbit around a star, which may
explain recently observed hierarchical systems. One third of the BDs were
unbound after a few thousand years and interactions among orbiting BDs may
eject more or add to the number of binaries. Improvements over prior work
include resolution down to a Jupiter mass, self-consistent models of the
vertical structure of the initial disks and careful attention to avoid
artificial fragmentation.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Low dimensional magnetic solids and single crystal elpasolites: Need for improved crystal growing techniques
The need for extensive crystal growing experiments to develop techniques for preparing crystals suitable for magnetic anisotropy measurements and detailed X-ray and neutron diffraction studies is rationalized on the basis of the unique magnetic properties of the materials and their hydrogen bonded structures which have many features in common with metalloenzyme and metalloprotein active sites. Single crystals of the single and mixed lanthanide species are prepared by the Bridgeman technique of gradient solidification of molten samples. The effects of crystal imperfections on the optical properties of these materials are an important part of the projected research. A series of a-amido acid complexes of first row transition metals were prepared which crystallize as infinite linear chains and exhibit low dimensional magnetic ordering (one or two) at temperature below 40 K
Prediction of Critical Illness During Out-of-Hospital Emergency Care
CONTEXT: Early identification of nontrauma patients in need of critical care services in the emergency setting may improve triage decisions and facilitate regionalization of critical care.
OBJECTIVES:
To determine the out-of-hospital clinical predictors of critical illness and to characterize the performance of a simple score for out-of-hospital prediction of development of critical illness during hospitalization.
DESIGN AND SETTING:
Population-based cohort study of an emergency medical services (EMS) system in greater King County, Washington (excluding metropolitan Seattle), that transports to 16 receiving facilities.
PATIENTS:
Nontrauma, non-cardiac arrest adult patients transported to a hospital by King County EMS from 2002 through 2006. Eligible records with complete data (N = 144,913) were linked to hospital discharge data and randomly split into development (n = 87,266 [60%]) and validation (n = 57,647 [40%]) cohorts.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE:
Development of critical illness, defined as severe sepsis, delivery of mechanical ventilation, or death during hospitalization.
RESULTS:
Critical illness occurred during hospitalization in 5% of the development (n = 4835) and validation (n = 3121) cohorts. Multivariable predictors of critical illness included older age, lower systolic blood pressure, abnormal respiratory rate, lower Glasgow Coma Scale score, lower pulse oximetry, and nursing home residence during out-of-hospital care (P < .01 for all). When applying a summary critical illness prediction score to the validation cohort (range, 0-8), the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.77 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.76-0.78), with satisfactory calibration slope (1.0). Using a score threshold of 4 or higher, sensitivity was 0.22 (95% CI, 0.20-0.23), specificity was 0.98 (95% CI, 0.98-0.98), positive likelihood ratio was 9.8 (95% CI, 8.9-10.6), and negative likelihood ratio was 0.80 (95% CI, 0.79- 0.82). A threshold of 1 or greater for critical illness improved sensitivity (0.98; 95% CI, 0.97-0.98) but reduced specificity (0.17; 95% CI, 0.17-0.17).
CONCLUSIONS:
In a population-based cohort, the score on a prediction rule using out-of-hospital factors was significantly associated with the development of critical illness during hospitalization. This score requires external validation in an independent populationPeer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/85143/1/Seymour - JAMA-2010-747-54.pdf11
Distinguishability of infinite groups and graphs
The distinguishing number of a group G acting faithfully on a set V is the least number of colors needed to color the elements of V so that no non-identity element of the group preserves the coloring. The distinguishing number of a graph is the distinguishing number of its automorphism group acting on its vertex set. A connected graph Gamma is said to have connectivity 1 if there exists a vertex alpha \in V\Gamma such that Gamma \setminus \{\alpha\} is not connected. For alpha \in V, an orbit of the point stabilizer G_\alpha is called a suborbit of G.
We prove that every nonnull, primitive graph with infinite diameter and countably many vertices has distinguishing number 2. Consequently, any nonnull, infinite, primitive, locally finite graph is 2-distinguishable; so, too, is any infinite primitive permutation group with finite suborbits. We also show that all denumerable vertex-transitive graphs of connectivity 1 and all Cartesian products of connected denumerable graphs of infinite diameter have distinguishing number 2.
All of our results follow directly from a versatile lemma which we call The Distinct Spheres Lemma
Stellar Encounters with Massive Star-Disk Systems
The dense, clustered environment in which massive stars form can lead to
interactions with neighboring stars. It has been hypothesized that collisions
and mergers may contribute to the growth of the most massive stars. In this
paper we extend the study of star-disk interactions to explore encounters
between a massive protostar and a less massive cluster sibling using the
publicly available SPH code GADGET-2. Collisions do not occur in the parameter
space studied, but the end state of many encounters is an eccentric binary with
a semi-major axis ~ 100 AU. Disk material is sometimes captured by the
impactor. Most encounters result in disruption and destruction of the initial
disk, and periodic torquing of the remnant disk. We consider the effect of the
changing orientation of the disk on an accretion driven jet, and the evolution
of the systems in the presence of on-going accretion from the parent core.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted to Ap
Tapinoma nigerrimum as safeguard for Italian myrmecofauna against Argentine ant
The Hurst effect plays an important role in many areas such as physics, climate and finance. It describes the anomalous growth of range and constrains the behavior and predictability of these systems. The Hurst effect is frequently taken to be synonymous with Long-Range Dependence (LRD) and is typically assumed to be produced by a stationary stochastic process which has infinite memory. However, infinite memory appears to be at odds with the Markovian nature of most physical laws while the stationarity assumption lacks robustness. Here we use Lorenz's paradigmatic chaotic model to show that regime behavior can also cause the Hurst effect. By giving an alternative, parsimonious, explanation using nonstationary Markovian dynamics, our results question the common belief that the Hurst effect necessarily implies a stationary infinite memory process. We also demonstrate that our results can explain atmospheric variability without the infinite memory previously thought necessary and are consistent with climate model simulations
Fatigue Testing of a Composite Propeller Blade using Fiber-Optic Strain Sensors
The performance of surface-mounted extrinsic Fabry-Perot interferometric (EFPI) sensors during a seventeen-million-cycle, high-strain fatigue test is reported. Fiber-optic strain measurements did not degrade during the test. The sensors were applied to a composite propeller blade subject to a constant axial load and a cyclic bending load. Strain measurements were taken at four blade locations using two types of EFPI sensors and co-located electrical resistance strain gages. Static and dynamic strain measurements were taken daily during the 65 days of this standard propeller-blade test. All fiber-optic sensors survived the fatigue test while most of the resistive gages failed. The suitability of fiber-optic monitoring for fatigue testing and other high-cycle monitoring is demonstrated
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