6,485 research outputs found
Testing cosmic acceleration for parameterizations using measurements in galaxy clusters
In this paper we study the cosmic acceleration for five dynamical dark energy
models whose equation of state varies with redshift. The cosmological
parameters of these models are constrained by performing a MCMC analysis using
mainly gas mass fraction, , measurements in two samples of galaxy
clusters: one reported by Allen et al. (2004), which consists of points
spanning the redshift range , and the other by Hasselfield et al.
(2013) from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope survey, which consists of data
points in the redshift range . In addition, we
perform a joint analysis with the measurements of the Hubble parameter ,
baryon acoustic oscillations and the cosmic microwave background radiation from
WMAP and Planck measurements to estimate the equation of state parameters. We
obtained that both samples provide consistent constraints on the
cosmological parameters. We found that the data is consistent at the
confidence level with a cosmic slowing down of the acceleration at
late times for most of the parameterizations. The constraints of the joint
analysis using WMAP and Planck measurements show that this trend disappears. We
have confirmed that the probe provides competitive constraints on the
dark energy parameters when a is assumed.Comment: 21 pages, 8 Tables, 11 Figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
On the properties of compacton-anticompacton collisions
We study the properties of compacton-anticompacton collision processes. We
compare and con- trast results for the case of compacton-anticompacton
solutions of the K(l, p) Rosenau-Hyman (RH) equation for l = p = 2, with
compacton-anticompacton solutions of the L(l,p) Cooper-Shepard- Sodano (CSS)
equation for p = 1 and l = 3. This study is performed using a Pad\'e
discretization of the RH and CSS equations. We find a significant difference in
the behavior of compacton- anticompacton scattering. For the CSS equation, the
scattering can be interpreted as "annihila- tion" as the wake left behind
dissolves over time. In the RH equation, the numerical evidence is that
multiple shocks form after the collision which eventually lead to "blowup" of
the resulting waveform.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Data fusion strategy for precise vehicle location for intelligent self-aware maintenance systems
Abstract— Nowadays careful measurement applications are
handed over to Wired and Wireless Sensor Network. Taking
the scenario of train location as an example, this would lead to
an increase in uncertainty about position related to sensors
with long acquisition times like Balises, RFID and
Transponders along the track. We take into account the data
without any synchronization protocols, for increase the
accuracy and reduce the uncertainty after the data fusion
algorithms. The case studies, we have analysed, derived from
the needs of the project partners: train localization, head of an
auger in the drilling sector localization and the location of
containers of radioactive material waste in a reprocessing
nuclear plant. They have the necessity to plan the maintenance
operations of their infrastructure basing through architecture
that taking input from the sensors, which are localization and
diagnosis, maps and cost, to optimize the cost effectiveness and
reduce the time of operation
Stability and dynamical properties of Rosenau-Hyman compactons using Pade approximants
We present a systematic approach for calculating higher-order derivatives of
smooth functions on a uniform grid using Pad\'e approximants. We illustrate our
findings by deriving higher-order approximations using traditional second-order
finite-differences formulas as our starting point. We employ these schemes to
study the stability and dynamical properties of K(2,2) Rosenau-Hyman (RH)
compactons including the collision of two compactons and resultant shock
formation. Our approach uses a differencing scheme involving only nearest and
next-to-nearest neighbors on a uniform spatial grid. The partial differential
equation for the compactons involves first, second and third partial
derivatives in the spatial coordinate and we concentrate on four different
fourth-order methods which differ in the possibility of increasing the degree
of accuracy (or not) of one of the spatial derivatives to sixth order. A method
designed to reduce roundoff errors was found to be the most accurate
approximation in stability studies of single solitary waves, even though all
derivates are accurate only to fourth order. Simulating compacton scattering
requires the addition of fourth derivatives related to artificial viscosity.
For those problems the different choices lead to different amounts of
"spurious" radiation and we compare the virtues of the different choices.Comment: 12 figure
MECHANISTIC STUDY OF A RUTHENIUM HYDRIDE COMPLEX OF TYPE [RuH(CO)(N-N)(PR3)2]+ AS CATALYST PRECURSOR FOR THE HYDROFORMYLATION REACTION OF 1-HEXENE
Indexación: Web of Science; Scopus; Scielo.The catalytic activity of systems of type [RuH(CO)(N-N)(PR3)(2)](+) was evaluated in the hydroformylation reaction of 1-hexene. The observed activity is explained through a reaction mechanism on the basis of the quantum theory. The mechanism included total energy calculations for each of the intermediaries of the elemental steps considered in the catalytic cycle. The deactivation of the catalyst precursors takes place via dissociation of the polypyridine ligand and the subsequent formation of thermodynamically stable species, such as RuH(CO)(3)(PPh3)(2) and RuH3(CO)(PPh3)(2), which interrupt the catalytic cycle. In addition, the theoretical study allows to explain the observed regioselectivity which is defined in two steps: (a) the hydride migration reaction with an anti-Markovnikov orientation to produce the alkyl-linear-complex (3.1a), which is more stable by 19.4 kJ/mol than the Markovnikov orientation (alkyl-branched-complex) (3.1b); (b) the carbon monoxide insertion step generates the carbonyl alkyl-linear specie (4.1a) which is more stable by 9.5 kJ/mol than the alternative species (4.1b), determining the preferred formation of heptanal in the hydroformylation of 1-hexene.
Palabras clavehttp://ref.scielo.org/db4yc
An intelligent framework and prototype for autonomous maintenance planning in the rail industry
This paper details the development of the AUTONOM project, a project that aims to provide an enterprise system tailored to the planning needs of the rail industry. AUTONOM extends research in novel sensing, scheduling, and decision-making strategies customised for the automated planning of maintenance activities within the rail industry. This paper sets out a framework and software prototype and details the current progress of the project. In the continuation of the AUTONOM project it is anticipated that the combination of techniques brought together in this work will be capable of addressing a wider range of problem types, offered by Network rail and organisations in different industries
First steps of a nucleation theory in disordered systems
We devise a field theoretical formalism for a microscopic theory of
nucleation processes and phase coexistence in finite dimensional glassy
systems. We study disordered -spin models with large but finite range of
interaction. We work in the framework of glassy effective potential theory
which in mean-field is a non-convex, two minima function of the overlap. We
will associate metastability and phase coexistence with the existence of space
inhomogeneous solution of suitable field equations and we will study the
simplest of such solutions.Comment: 31 pages, 4 figures. Content revised, typos correcte
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