11,451 research outputs found
Orbiter/launch system
The system includes reusable turbojet propelled booster vehicles releasably connected to a reusable rocket powered orbit vehicle. The coupled orbiter-booster combination takes off horizontally and ascends to staging altitude and speed under booster power with both orbiter and booster wings providing lift. After staging, the booster vehicles fly back to Earth for horizontal landing and the orbiter vehicle continues ascending to orbit
Common adversaries form alliances: modelling complex networks via anti-transitivity
Anti-transitivity captures the notion that enemies of enemies are friends,
and arises naturally in the study of adversaries in social networks and in the
study of conflicting nation states or organizations. We present a simplified,
evolutionary model for anti-transitivity influencing link formation in complex
networks, and analyze the model's network dynamics. The Iterated Local
Anti-Transitivity (or ILAT) model creates anti-clone nodes in each time-step,
and joins anti-clones to the parent node's non-neighbor set. The graphs
generated by ILAT exhibit familiar properties of complex networks such as
densification, short distances (bounded by absolute constants), and bad
spectral expansion. We determine the cop and domination number for graphs
generated by ILAT, and finish with an analysis of their clustering
coefficients. We interpret these results within the context of real-world
complex networks and present open problems
Modulation of Thermoelectric Power of Individual Carbon Nanotubes
Thermoelectric power (TEP) of individual single walled carbon nanotubes
(SWNTs) has been measured at mesoscopic scales using a microfabricated heater
and thermometers. Gate electric field dependent TEP-modulation has been
observed. The measured TEP of SWNTs is well correlated to the electrical
conductance across the SWNT according to the Mott formula. At low temperatures,
strong modulations of TEP were observed in the single electron conduction
limit. In addition, semiconducting SWNTs exhibit large values of TEP due to the
Schottky barriers at SWNT-metal junctions.Comment: to be published in Phys. Rev. Let
Time transfer between the Goddard Optical Research Facility and the U.S. Naval Observatory using 100 picosecond laser pulses
A horizontal two-way time comparison link in air between the University of Maryland laser ranging and time transfer equipment at the Goddard Optical Research Facility (GORF) 1.2 m telescope and the Time Services Division of the U.S. Naval Observatory (USNO) was established. Flat mirrors of 25 cm and 30 cm diameter respectively were placed on top of the Washington Cathedral and on a water tower at the Beltsville Agricultural Research Center. Two optical corner reflectors at the USNO reflect the laser pulses back to the GORF. Light pulses of 100 ps duration and an energy of several hundred microjoules are sent at the rate of 10 pulses per second. The detection at the USNO is by means of an RCA C30902E avalanche photodiode and the timing is accomplished by an HP 5370A computing counter and an HP 1000 computer with respect to a 10 pps pulse train from the Master Clock
QSO's from Galaxy Collisions with Naked Black Holes
In the now well established conventional view (see Rees [1] and references
therein), quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) and related active galactic nuclei (AGN)
phenomena are explained as the result of accretion of plasma onto giant black
holes which are postulated to form via gravitational collapse of the high
density regions in the centers of massive host galaxies. This model is
supported by a wide variety of indirect evidence and seems quite likely to
apply at least to some observed AGN phenomena. However, one surprising set of
new Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations [2-4] directly challenges the
conventional model, and the well known evolution of the QSO population raises
some additional, though not widely recognized, difficulties. We propose here an
alternative possibility: the Universe contains a substantial independent
population of super-massive black holes, and QSO's are a phenomenon that occurs
due to their collisions with galaxies or gas clouds in the intergalactic medium
(IGM). This hypothesis would naturally explain why the QSO population declines
very rapidly towards low redshift, as well as the new HST data.Comment: plain TeX file, no figures, submitted to Natur
Quasar Luminosity Functions from Joint Evolution of Black Holes and Host Galaxies
We show that our previously proposed anti-hierarchical baryon collapse
scenario for the joint evolution of black holes and host galaxies predicts
quasar luminosity functions at redshifts 1.5<z<6 and local properties in nice
agreement with observations. In our model the quasar activity marks and
originates the transition between an earlier phase of violent and heavily
dust-enshrouded starburst activity promoting rapid black hole growth, and a
later phase of almost passive evolution; the former is traced by the
submillimeter-selected sources, while the latter accounts for the high number
density of massive galaxies at substantial redshifts z>1.5, the population of
Extremely Red Objects, and the properties of local ellipticals.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, uses REVTeX 4 + emulateapj.cls and apjfonts.sty.
Version revised following referee's comments. Accepted on Ap
Rhythmic dynamics and synchronization via dimensionality reduction : application to human gait
Reliable characterization of locomotor dynamics of human walking is vital to understanding the neuromuscular control of human locomotion and disease diagnosis. However, the inherent oscillation and ubiquity of noise in such non-strictly periodic signals pose great challenges to current methodologies. To this end, we exploit the state-of-the-art technology in pattern recognition and, specifically, dimensionality reduction techniques, and propose to reconstruct and characterize the dynamics accurately on the cycle scale of the signal. This is achieved by deriving a low-dimensional representation of the cycles through global optimization, which effectively preserves the topology of the cycles that are embedded in a high-dimensional Euclidian space. Our approach demonstrates a clear advantage in capturing the intrinsic dynamics and probing the subtle synchronization patterns from uni/bivariate oscillatory signals over traditional methods. Application to human gait data for healthy subjects and diabetics reveals a significant difference in the dynamics of ankle movements and ankle-knee coordination, but not in knee movements. These results indicate that the impaired sensory feedback from the feet due to diabetes does not influence the knee movement in general, and that normal human walking is not critically dependent on the feedback from the peripheral nervous system
Population dynamics of rhesus macaques and associated foamy virus in Bangladesh.
Foamy viruses are complex retroviruses that have been shown to be transmitted from nonhuman primates to humans. In Bangladesh, infection with simian foamy virus (SFV) is ubiquitous among rhesus macaques, which come into contact with humans in diverse locations and contexts throughout the country. We analyzed microsatellite DNA from 126 macaques at six sites in Bangladesh in order to characterize geographic patterns of macaque population structure. We also included in this study 38 macaques owned by nomadic people who train them to perform for audiences. PCR was used to analyze a portion of the proviral gag gene from all SFV-positive macaques, and multiple clones were sequenced. Phylogenetic analysis was used to infer long-term patterns of viral transmission. Analyses of SFV gag gene sequences indicated that macaque populations from different areas harbor genetically distinct strains of SFV, suggesting that geographic features such as forest cover play a role in determining the dispersal of macaques and SFV. We also found evidence suggesting that humans traveling the region with performing macaques likely play a role in the translocation of macaques and SFV. Our studies found that individual animals can harbor more than one strain of SFV and that presence of more than one SFV strain is more common among older animals. Some macaques are infected with SFV that appears to be recombinant. These findings paint a more detailed picture of how geographic and sociocultural factors influence the spectrum of simian-borne retroviruses
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