1,186 research outputs found
Planetary Nebulae with Ultra-Violet Imaging Telescope (UVIT): Far Ultra-violet halo around the Bow Tie nebula (NGC 40)
Context. NGC 40 is a planetary nebula with diffuse X-ray emission, suggesting
an interaction of the high speed wind from WC8 central star (CS) with the
nebula. It shows strong Civ 1550 {\AA} emission that cannot be explained by
thermal processes alone. We present here the first map of this nebula in C IV
emission, using broad band filters on the UVIT.
Aims. To map the hot C IV emitting gas and its correspondence with soft X-ray
(0.3-8 keV) emitting regions, in order to study the shock interaction with the
nebula and the ISM. This also illustrates the potential of UVIT for nebular
studies.
Methods. Morphological study of images of the nebula obtained at an angular
resolution of about 1.3" in four UVIT filter bands that include C IV 1550 {\AA}
and C II] 2326 {\AA} lines and UV continuum. Comparisons with X-ray, optical,
and IR images from literature.
Results. The C II] 2326 {\AA} images show the core of the nebula with two
lobes on either side of CS similar to [N II]. The C IV emission in the core
shows similar morphology and extant as that of diffuse X-ray emission
concentrated in nebular condensations. A surprising UVIT discovery is the
presence of a large faint FUV halo in FUV Filter with {\lambda}eff of 1608
{\AA}. The UV halo is not present in any other UV filter. FUV halo is most
likely due to UV fluorescence emission from the Lyman bands of H2 molecules.
Unlike the optical and IR halo, FUV halo trails predominantly towards
south-east side of the nebular core, opposite to the CS's proper motion
direction.
Conclusions. Morphological similarity of C IV 1550 {\AA} and X-ray emission
in the core suggests that it results mostly from interaction of strong CS wind
with the nebula. The FUV halo in NGC 40 highlights the existence of H2
molecules extensively in the regions even beyond the optical and IR halos.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication as a letter in Astronomy
& Astrophysic
Planetary Nebulae with UVIT II: Revelations from FUV vision of Butterfly Nebula NGC 6302
The high excitation planetary nebula, NGC 6302, has been imaged in two
far-ultraviolet (FUV) filters, F169M (Sapphire; {\lambda}: 1608
{\AA}) and F172M (Silica; {\lambda}: 1717 {\AA}) and two NUV
filters, N219M (B15; {\lambda}: 2196 {\AA}) and N279N (N2;
{\lambda}: 2792 {\AA}) with the Ultra Violet Imaging Telescope
(UVIT). The FUV F169M image shows faint emission lobes that extend to about 5
arcmin on either side of the central source. Faint orthogonal collimated
jet-like structures are present on either side of the FUV lobes through the
central source. These structures are not present in the two NUV filters nor in
the FUV F172M filter. Optical and IR images of NGC 6302 show bright emission
bipolar lobes in the east-west direction with a massive torus of molecular gas
and dust seen as a dark lane in the north-south direction. The FUV lobes are
much more extended and oriented at a position angle of 113{\deg}. They and the
jet-like structures might be remnants of an earlier evolutionary phase, prior
to the dramatic explosive event that triggered the Hubble type bipolar flows
approximately 2200 years ago. The source of the FUV lobe and jet emission is
not known, but is likely due to fluorescent emission from H molecules. The
cause of the difference in orientation of optical and FUV lobes is not clear
and, we speculate, could be related to two binary interactions.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Dangling and hydrolyzed ligand arms in [Mn3] and [Mn6] coordination assemblies: synthesis, characterization, and functional activity
Two flexible, branched, and sterically constrained di- and tripodal side arms around a phenol backbone were utilized in ligands H3L1 and H5L2 to isolate {Mn6} and {Mn3} coordination aggregates. 2,6-Bis{(1-hydroxy-2-methylpropan-2-ylimino)methyl}-4-methylphenol (H3L1) gave trinuclear complex [Mn3(μ-H2L1)2(μ1,3-O2CCH3)4(CH3OH)2](ClO4)2·4CH3OH (1), whereas 2,6-bis[{1-hydroxy-2-(hydroxymethyl)butan-2-ylimino}methyl]-4-methylphenol (H5L2) provided hexanuclear complex [Mn6(μ4-H2L2)2(μ-HL3)2(μ3-OH)2(μ1,3-O2CC2H5)4](ClO4)2·2H2O (2). Binding of acetates and coordination of {H2L1}− provided a linear MnIIIMnIIMnIII arrangement in 1. A MnIII6 fused diadamantane-type assembly was obtained in 2 from propionate bridges, coordination of {H2L2}3–, and in situ generated {HL3}2–. The magnetic characterization of 1 and 2 revealed the properties dominated by intramolecular anti-ferromagnetic exchange interactions, and this was confirmed using density functional theory calculations. Complex 1 exhibited field-induced slow magnetic relaxation at 2 K due to the axial anisotropy of MnIII centers. Both the complexes show effective solvent-dependent catechol oxidation toward 3,5-di-tert-butylcatechol in air. The catechol oxidation abilities are comparable from two complexes of different nuclearity and structure
SpecTra: Enhancing the Code Translation Ability of Language Models by Generating Multi-Modal Specifications
Large language models (LLMs) are increasingly being used for the task of
automated code translation, which has important real-world applications.
However, most existing approaches use only the source code of a program as an
input to an LLM, and do not consider the different kinds of specifications that
can be extracted from a program. In this paper, we propose SpecTra, a
multi-stage approach that uses a novel self-consistency filter to first
generate high-quality static specifications, test cases, and natural language
descriptions from a given program, and then uses these along with the source
code to improve the quality of LLM-generated translations. We evaluate SpecTra
on three code translation tasks - C to Rust, C to Go, and JavaScript to
TypeScript - and show that it can enhance the performance of six popular LLMs
on these tasks by up to 10 percentage points and a relative improvement of
26\%. Our research suggests that generating high-quality specifications could
be a promising and efficient way to improve the performance of LLMs for code
translation. We make our code and data available, anonymized for review
Data Augmentation for Low-Resource Keyphrase Generation
Keyphrase generation is the task of summarizing the contents of any given
article into a few salient phrases (or keyphrases). Existing works for the task
mostly rely on large-scale annotated datasets, which are not easy to acquire.
Very few works address the problem of keyphrase generation in low-resource
settings, but they still rely on a lot of additional unlabeled data for
pretraining and on automatic methods for pseudo-annotations. In this paper, we
present data augmentation strategies specifically to address keyphrase
generation in purely resource-constrained domains. We design techniques that
use the full text of the articles to improve both present and absent keyphrase
generation. We test our approach comprehensively on three datasets and show
that the data augmentation strategies consistently improve the state-of-the-art
performance. We release our source code at
https://github.com/kgarg8/kpgen-lowres-data-aug.Comment: 9 pages, 8 tables, To appear at the Findings of the Proceedings of
the 61st Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics,
Toronto, Canad
Improved rate-distance trade-offs for quantum codes with restricted connectivity
For quantum error-correcting codes to be realizable, it is important that the
qubits subject to the code constraints exhibit some form of limited
connectivity. The works of Bravyi & Terhal (BT) and Bravyi, Poulin & Terhal
(BPT) established that geometric locality constrains code properties -- for
instance quantum codes defined by local checks on the
-dimensional lattice must obey . Baspin and Krishna
studied the more general question of how the connectivity graph associated with
a quantum code constrains the code parameters. These trade-offs apply to a
richer class of codes compared to the BPT and BT bounds, which only capture
geometrically-local codes. We extend and improve this work, establishing a
tighter dimension-distance trade-off as a function of the size of separators in
the connectivity graph. We also obtain a distance bound that covers all
stabilizer codes with a particular separation profile, rather than only LDPC
codes.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figure
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