15,568,400 research outputs found
Extreme multiplex spectroscopy at wide-field 4-m telescopes
We describe the design and science case for a spectrograph for the prime
focus of classical 4-m wide-field telescopes that can deliver at least 4000 MOS
slits over a 1 degree field. This extreme multiplex capability means that 25000
galaxy redshifts can be measured in a single night, opening up the
possibilities for large galaxy redshift surveys out to z~0.7 and beyond for the
purpose of measuring the Baryon Acoustic Oscillation (BAO) scale and for many
other science goals. The design features four cloned spectrographs and exploits
the exclusive possibility of tiling the focal plane of wide-field 4-m
telescopes with CCDs for multi-object spectroscopic purposes. In ~200 night
projects, such spectrographs have the potential to make galaxy redshift surveys
of ~6 million galaxies over a wide redshift range and thus may provide a
low-cost alternative to other survey routes such as WFMOS and SKA. Two of these
extreme multiplex spectrographs are currently being designed for the AAT
(NG1dF) and Calar Alto (XMS) 4-m class telescopes. NG2dF, a larger version for
the AAT 2 degree field, would have 12 clones and at least 12000 slits. The
clones use a transparent design including a grism in which all optics are
smaller than the clone square subfield so that the clones can be tightly packed
with little gaps between the contiguous fields. Only low cost glasses are used;
the variations in chromatic aberrations between bands are compensated by
changing one or two of the lenses adjacent to the grism. The total weight and
length is smaller with a few clones than a unique spectrograph which makes it
feasible to place the spectrograph at the prime focus.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, to appear in proceedings of Astronomical
Telescopes and Instrumentation, SPIE conference, Marseille, 23-28 June, 200
Content
DAFTAR ISIImplementasi Content-Based Retrieval Pada Perpustakaan Digital Berbasis Open Source Menggunakan Apache Lucene David Pages: 1-13Perancangan Sistem Kendali Otomatik Proses Pengolahan Limbah Cair Tahu Berbasis Mikrokontroler AT89S52Barita Bram Ardiwinata Putra Pages: 14-25Analisis Penerapan Arsitektur Wireless LAN Menggunakan Top Down Approach pada PT. Telkom Pontianak Sandy Kosasi Pages: 26-42Sistem Intelijen Bisnis Global untuk Perencanaan e-commerce Budi Susilo Pages: 43-52Understanding e-Business & e-Commerce and Their Relation to the Conceptual framework of e-Marketing: Case Study Alexander Harsono Pages: 53-68Analisis dan Perancangan Aplikasi Persediaan pada CV. Fajar Khatulistiwa Motor PontianakSusanti Margaretha Kuway Pages: 69-79Analisis Penerapan Aplikasi Sistem Akuntansi Persediaan Menggunakan Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) pada Distrik Navigasi Kelas III PontianakSlamet Sugiarto, Rusmanto Lianto Pages: 80-94Implementasi Web Services Sistem Integrasi Data Menggunakan Teknik Replikasi Data Pada Inventarisasi Bangunan Pemerintah Ilhamsyah Pages: 95-10
Human fibroblast interferon RNA transcripts of different sizes in poly(I).poly(C) induced cells
A
Design and construction of the IMACS-IFU, a 2000-element integral field unit
The IMACS-IFU is an Integral Field Unit built for the IMACS spectrograph at
the Magellan-I-Telescope at Las Campanas Observatory. It consists of two
rectangular fields of 5 by 7 arcseconds, separated by roughly one arcminute.
With a total number of 2000 spatial elements it is the second largest
fiber-lenslet based IFU worldwide, working in a wavelength range between 400
and 900 nm. Due to the equally sized fields classical background subtraction,
beam switching and shuffling are possible observation techniques. One
particular design challenge was the single, half a metre long curved slit in
combination with a non telecentric output. Besides the construction some
preliminary results are described.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, 1 table. Proceedings for SPIE poster 5492-175 of
SPIE Symposium "Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation", June 2004,
Glasgo
Photonic lantern behaviour and implications for instrument design
Photonic lanterns are an important enabling technology for astrophotonics
with a wide range of potential applications including fibre Bragg grating OH
suppression, integrated photonic spectrographs and fibre scramblers for high
resolution spectroscopy. The behaviour of photonic lanterns differs in several
important respects from the conventional fibre systems more frequently used in
astronomical instruments and a detailed understanding of this behaviour is
required in order to make the most effective use of this promising technology.
To this end we have undertaken a laboratory study of photonic lanterns with the
aim of developing an empirical model for the mapping from input to output
illumination distributions. We have measured overall transmission and near
field output light distributions as a function of input angle of incidence for
photonic lanterns with between 19 and 61 cores. We present the results of this
work, highlight the key differences between photonic lanterns and conventional
fibres, and illustrate the implications for instrument design via a case study,
the design of the PRAXIS spectrograph. The empirical photonic lantern model was
incorporated into an end-to-end PRAXIS performance model which was used to
optimise the design parameters of the instrument. We describe the methods used
and the resulting conclusions. The details of photonic lantern behaviour proved
particularly important in selecting the optimum on sky field of view per fibre
and in modelling of the instrument thermal background.Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, presented at SPIE Advances in Optical and
Mechanical Technologies for Telescopes and Instrumentation 2014, to be
published in Proc. SPIE 915
Communicative Content and Legal Content
This essay investigates a familiar set of questions about the relationship between legal texts (e.g., constitutions, statutes, opinions, orders, and contracts) and the content of the law (e.g., norms, rules, standards, doctrines, and mandates). Is the original meaning of the constitutional text binding on the Supreme Court when it develops doctrines of constitutional law? Should statutes be given their plain meaning or should judges devise statutory constructions that depart from the text to serve a purpose? What role should default rules play in the interpretation and construction of contracts? This essay makes two moves that can help lawyers and legal theorists answer these questions. First, there is a fundamental conceptual distinction between communicative content (the linguistic meaning communicated by a legal text in context) and legal content (the doctrines of the legal rules associated with a text). Second, the relationship between communicative content and legal content varies with context; different kinds of legal texts produce different relationships between linguistic meaning and legal rules
Content Legislation
This article is part of the collection of writings of Marshall (Mike) Westfall, retired autoworker from General Motors in Flint, Michigan (1964-1994) and activist critic of the auto industry restructuring that led to devastating job losses. It originally appeared online in The Westfall Papers. [http://michaelwestfall.tripod.com/id76.html, accessed 12/14/2011
Dual-Channel Multi-Purpose Telescope
A dual-channel telescope allows for a wide-field telescope design wit h a good, narrow field channel of fewer surfaces for shorter-wavelen gth or planet-finding applications. The design starts with a Korsch three-mirror-anastigmat (TMA) telescope that meets the mission criter ia for image quality over a wide field of view. The internal image a t the Cassegrain focus is typically blurry due to the aberration bala ncing among the three mirrors. The Cassegrain focus is then re-optim ized on the axis of the system where the narrow field channel instru ment is picked off by bending the primary mirror
Content Individuation and Evolutionary Content Emergence
This short paper addresses two connected issues which were brought to some focused light by Searle’s comments on my contributed article to the anthology Searle’s philosophy and Chinese Philosophy: Constructive Engagement. The first issue concerns the claim that animals cannot have observer-independent intentional content of the same type as that of human beings. The second is my denial that mental content can be merely caused in specific brain states, given its holistic and normative character. I defend my position on the second issue by distinguishing content individuation from content realization while I elaborate my relatively more sophisticated argument for the first claim by clarifying two related senses or levels of ‘content’ and ‘self’, respectively associated with certain quasi-rational capacities from a third-person perspective and the subjective holistic consciousness from a first-person perspective with the explicit social-discursive dimension. Searle’s Connection Principle is briefly drawn on in this context, with an eye to showing its potential significance when it is extended into the evolutionary settings. In short, it is the full-blown rationality of human holistic discursive practice that ultimately grounds the content talk, which then becomes meaningfully ascribable to certain natural forms of animal existence
Replica Placement on Bounded Treewidth Graphs
We consider the replica placement problem: given a graph with clients and
nodes, place replicas on a minimum set of nodes to serve all the clients; each
client is associated with a request and maximum distance that it can travel to
get served and there is a maximum limit (capacity) on the amount of request a
replica can serve. The problem falls under the general framework of capacitated
set covering. It admits an O(\log n)-approximation and it is NP-hard to
approximate within a factor of . We study the problem in terms of
the treewidth of the graph and present an O(t)-approximation algorithm.Comment: An abridged version of this paper is to appear in the proceedings of
WADS'1
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