8,033 research outputs found
Hardware and software status of QCDOC
QCDOC is a massively parallel supercomputer whose processing nodes are based
on an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC). This ASIC was
custom-designed so that crucial lattice QCD kernels achieve an overall
sustained performance of 50% on machines with several 10,000 nodes. This strong
scalability, together with low power consumption and a price/performance ratio
of $1 per sustained MFlops, enable QCDOC to attack the most demanding lattice
QCD problems. The first ASICs became available in June of 2003, and the testing
performed so far has shown all systems functioning according to specification.
We review the hardware and software status of QCDOC and present performance
figures obtained in real hardware as well as in simulation.Comment: Lattice2003(machine), 6 pages, 5 figure
Status of and performance estimates for QCDOC
QCDOC is a supercomputer designed for high scalability at a low cost per
node. We discuss the status of the project and provide performance estimates
for large machines obtained from cycle accurate simulation of the QCDOC ASIC.Comment: 3 pages 1 figure. Lattice2002(machines
The Dust Content of Galaxy Clusters
We report on the detection of reddening toward z ~ 0.2 galaxy clusters. This
is measured by correlating the Sloan Digital Sky Survey cluster and quasar
catalogs and by comparing the photometric and spectroscopic properties of
quasars behind the clusters to those in the field. We find mean E(B-V) values
of a few times 10^-3 mag for sight lines passing ~Mpc from the clusters'
center. The reddening curve is typical of dust but cannot be used to
distinguish between different dust types. The radial dependence of the
extinction is shallow near the cluster center suggesting that most of the
detected dust lies at the outskirts of the clusters. Gravitational
magnification of background z ~ 1.7 sources seen on Mpc (projected) scales
around the clusters is found to be of order a few per cent, in qualitative
agreement with theoretical predictions. Contamination by different spectral
properties of the lensed quasar population is unlikely but cannot be excluded.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Finding Gravitational Lenses With X-rays
There are , 0.1 and 0.01 gravitationally lensed X-ray sources per
square degree with soft X-ray fluxes exceeding and
respectively. These sources will be detected
serendipitously with the Chandra X-ray Observatory at a rate of 1--3 lenses per
year of high resolution imaging. The low detection rate is due to the small
area over which the HRC and ACIS cameras have the <1\farcs5 FWHM resolution
necessary to find gravitational lenses produced by galaxies. Deep images of
rich clusters at intermediate redshifts should yield one wide separation
(\Delta\theta \gtorder 5\farcs0) multiply-imaged background X-ray source for
every , 30 and 300 clusters imaged to the same flux limits.Comment: 13 pages, including 5 figures, submitted to ApJ Letter
Quasar Clustering and the Lifetime of Quasars
Although the population of luminous quasars rises and falls over a period of
10^9 years, the typical lifetime of individual quasars is uncertain by several
orders of magnitude. We show that quasar clustering measurements can
substantially narrow the range of possible lifetimes with the assumption that
luminous quasars reside in the most massive host halos. If quasars are
long-lived, then they are rare phenomena that are highly biased with respect to
the underlying dark matter, while if they are short-lived they reside in more
typical halos that are less strongly clustered. For a given quasar lifetime, we
calculate the minimum host halo mass by matching the observed space density of
quasars, using the Press-Schechter approximation. We use the results of Mo &
White to calculate the clustering of these halos, and hence of the quasars they
contain, as a function of quasar lifetime. A lifetime of t_Q = 4 x 10^7 years,
the e-folding timescale of an Eddington luminosity black hole with accretion
efficiency eps=0.1, corresponds to a quasar correlation length r_0 ~ 10 Mpc/h
in low-density cosmological models at z=2-3; this value is consistent with
current clustering measurements, but these have large uncertainties.
High-precision clustering measurements from the 2dF and Sloan quasar surveys
will test our key assumption of a tight correlation between quasar luminosity
and host halo mass, and if this assumption holds then they should determine t_Q
to a factor of three or better. An accurate determination of the quasar
lifetime will show whether supermassive black holes acquire most of their mass
during high-luminosity accretion, and it will show whether the black holes in
the nuclei of typical nearby galaxies were once the central engines of
high-luminosity quasars.Comment: ApJ Accepted (Feb 2001). 30 pages, 8 embedded ps figures, AASTEX5.
Added discussion of quasar luminosity evolution. Also available at
http://www.ociw.edu/~martini/pubs
Spectral Variability of Quasars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. II: The C IV Line
We examine the variability of the high-ionizaton C IV line in a sample of 105
quasars observed at multiple epochs by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We find a
strong correlation between the change in the C IV line flux and the change in
the line width, but no correlations between the change in flux and changes in
line center and skewness. The relation between line flux change and line width
change is consistent with a model in which a broad line base varies with
greater amplitude than the line core. The objects studied here are more
luminous and at higher redshift than those normally studied for variability,
ranging in redshift from 1.65 to 4.00 and in absolute r-band magnitude from
roughly -24 to -28. Using moment analysis line-fitting techniques, we measure
line fluxes, centers, widths and skewnesses for the C IV line at two epochs for
each object. The well-known Baldwin Effect is seen for these objects, with a
slope beta = -0.22. The sample has a median intrinsic Baldwin Effect slope of
beta = -0.85; the C IV lines in these high-luminosity quasars appear to be less
responsive to continuum variations than those in lower luminosity AGN.
Additionally, we find no evidence for variability of the well known blueshift
of the C IV line with respect to the low-ionization Mg II line in the highest
flux objects, indicating that this blueshift might be useful as a measure of
orientation.Comment: 52 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Dallas with balls: televized sport, soap opera and male and female pleasures
Two of the most popular of television genres, soap opera and sports coverage have been very much differentiated along gender lines in terms of their audiences. Soap opera has been regarded very much as a 'gynocentric' genre with a large female viewing audience while the audiences for television sport have been predominantly male. Gender differentiation between the genres has had implications for the popular image of each. Soap opera has been perceived as inferior; as mere fantasy and escapism for women while television sports has been perceived as a legitimate, even edifying experience for men.
In this article the authors challenge the view that soap opera and television sport are radically different and argue that they are, in fact, very similar in a number of significant ways. They suggest that both genres invoke similar structures of feeling and sensibility in their respective audiences and that television sport is a 'male soap opera'. They consider the ways in which the viewing context of each genre is related to domestic life and leisure, the ways in which the textual structure and conventions of each genre invoke emotional identification, and finally, the ways in which both genres re-affirm gender identities
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