47,391 research outputs found
The Differing Federalisms of Canada and the United States
The differences in the ways in which the US and Canada have structured their federalisms are discussed. Both systems have judicial supremacy, but Canada recognizes far more legislative power in the provinces than the US allows its states
Using Collider Event Topology in the Search for the Six-Jet Decay of Top Quark-Antiquark Pairs
We investigate the use of the event topology as a tool in the search for the
six-jet decay of top-pair production in proton-antiproton collisions at 1.8
TeV. Modified Fox-Wolfram "shape" variables, H_i, are employed to help
distinguish the top-pair signal from the ordinary QCD multi-jet background. The
H's can be constructed directly from the calorimeter cells or from jets. Events
are required to lie in a region of H-space defined by L_i < H_i < R_i for
i=1,...,,6, where the left, L_i, and right, R_i, cuts are determined by a
genetic algorithm (GA) procedure to maximize the signal over the square root of
the background. We are able to reduce the background over the signal to less
than a factor of 100 using purely topological methods without using jet
multiplicity cuts and without the aid of b-quark tagging.Comment: LaTeX, 19 pages, 13 figure
Recommended from our members
The role of the ventral intraparietal area (VIP/pVIP) in parsing optic flow into visual motion caused by self-motion and visual motion produced by object-motion
Retinal image motion is a composite signal that contains information about two behaviourally significant factors: self-motion and the movement of environmental objects. It is thought that the brain separates the two relevant signals, and although multiple brain regions have been identified that respond selectively to the composite optic flow signal, which brain region(s) perform the parsing process remains unknown. Here, we present original evidence that the putative human ventral intraparietal area (pVIP), a region known to receive optic flow signals as well as independent self-motion signals from other sensory modalities, plays a critical role in the parsing process and acts to isolate object-motion. We localised pVIP using its multisensory response profile, and then tested its relative responses to simulated object-motion and self-motion stimuli; results indicated that responses were much stronger in pVIP to stimuli that specified object-motion. We report two further observations that will be significant for the future direction of research in this area; firstly, activation in pVIP was suppressed by distant stationary objects compared to the absence of objects or closer objects. Secondly, we describe several other brain regions that share with pVIP selectivity for visual object-motion over visual self-motion as well as a multisensory response
The nature of turbulence in OMC1 at the star forming scale: observations and simulations
Aim: To study turbulence in the Orion Molecular Cloud (OMC1) by comparing
observed and simulated characteristics of the gas motions.
Method: Using a dataset of vibrationally excited H2 emission in OMC1
containing radial velocity and brightness which covers scales from 70AU to
30000AU, we present the transversal structure functions and the scaling of the
structure functions with their order. These are compared with the predictions
of two-dimensional projections of simulations of supersonic hydrodynamic
turbulence.
Results: The structure functions of OMC1 are not well represented by power
laws, but show clear deviations below 2000AU. However, using the technique of
extended self-similarity, power laws are recovered at scales down to 160AU. The
scaling of the higher order structure functions with order deviates from the
standard scaling for supersonic turbulence. This is explained as a selection
effect of preferentially observing the shocked part of the gas and the scaling
can be reproduced using line-of-sight integrated velocity data from subsets of
supersonic turbulence simulations. These subsets select regions of strong flow
convergence and high density associated with shock structure. Deviations of the
structure functions in OMC1 from power laws cannot however be reproduced in
simulations and remains an outstanding issue.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted A&A. Revised in response to referee.
For higher resolution, see http://www.astro.phys.au.dk/~maikeng/sim_paper
Satellite versus ground-based estimates of burned area: a comparison between MODIS based burned area and fire agency reports over North America in 2007
North American wildfire management teams routinely assess burned area on site during firefighting campaigns; meanwhile, satellite observations provide systematic and global burned-area data. Here we compare satellite and ground-based daily burned area for wildfire events for selected large fires across North America in 2007 on daily timescales. In a sample of 26 fires across North America, we found the Global Fire Emissions Database Version 4 (GFED4) estimated about 80% of the burned area logged in ground-based Incident Status Summary (ICS-209) over 8-day analysis windows. Linear regression analysis found a slope between GFED and ICS-209 of 0.67 (with R = 0.96). The agreement between these data sets was found to degrade at short timescales (from R = 0.81 for 4-day to R = 0.55 for 2-day). Furthermore, during large burning days (> 3000 ha) GFED4 typically estimates half of the burned area logged in the ICS-209 estimates
- …
