1,703 research outputs found
False discovery rate: setting the probability of false claim of detection
When testing multiple hypothesis in a survey --e.g. many different source
locations, template waveforms, and so on-- the final result consists in a set
of confidence intervals, each one at a desired confidence level. But the
probability that at least one of these intervals does not cover the true value
increases with the number of trials. With a sufficiently large array of
confidence intervals, one can be sure that at least one is missing the true
value. In particular, the probability of false claim of detection becomes not
negligible. In order to compensate for this, one should increase the confidence
level, at the price of a reduced detection power. False discovery rate control
is a relatively new statistical procedure that bounds the number of mistakes
made when performing multiple hypothesis tests. We shall review this method,
discussing exercise applications to the field of gravitational wave surveys.Comment: 7 pages, 3 table, 3 figures. Prepared for the Proceedings of GWDAW 9
(http://lappc-in39.in2p3.fr/GWDAW9) A new section was added with a numerical
example, along with two tables and a figure related to the new section. Many
smaller revisions to improve readibilit
The NAD(P)H-utilizing glutamate dehydrogenase of Bacteroides thetaiotamicron belongs to enzyme family I, and its activity is affected by trans-acting gene(s) positioned downstream of gdhA
Previous studies have suggested that regulation of the enzymes of ammonia assimilation in human colonic Bacteroides species is coordinated differently than in other eubacteria. The gene encoding an NAD(P)H-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase (gdhA) in Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron was tinned and expressed in Escherichia coli by mutant complementation from the recombinant plasmid pANS100. Examination of the predicted GdhA amino acid sequence revealed that this enzyme possesses motifs typical of the family I-type hexameric GDH proteins. Northern blot analysis with a gdhA-specific probe indicated that a single transcript with an electrophoretic mobility of ~1.6 kb was produced in both B. thetaiotaomicron and E. coli gdhA transformants. Although gdhA transcription was unaffected, no GdhA enzyme activity could be detected in E. coli transformants when smaller DNA fragments from pANS100, which contained the entire gdhA gene, were analyzed. Enzyme activity was restored if these E. coli strains were cotransformed with a second plasmid, which contained a 3-kb segment of DNA located downstream of the gdhA coding region. Frameshift mutagenesis within the DNA downstream of gdhA in pANS100 also resulted in the loss of GdhA enzyme activity. Collectively, these results are interpreted as evidence for the role of an additional gene product(s) in modulating the activity of GDH enzyme activity. Insertional mutagenesis experiments which led to disruption of the gdhA gene on the B. thetaiotaomicron chromosome indicated that gdhA mutants were not glutamate auxotrophs, but attempts to isolate similar mutants with insertion mutations in the region downstream of the gdhA gene were unsuccessful
Training-induced inversion of spontaneous exchange bias field on La1.5Ca0.5CoMnO6
In this work we report the synthesis and structural, electronic and magnetic
properties of La1.5Ca0.5CoMnO6 double-perovskite. This is a re-entrant spin
cluster material which exhibits a non-negligible negative exchange bias effect
when it is cooled in zero magnetic field from an unmagnetized state down to low
temperature. X-ray powder diffraction, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and
magnetometry results indicate mixed valence state at Co site, leading to
competing magnetic phases and uncompensated spins at the magnetic interfaces.
We compare the results for this Ca-doped material with those reported for the
resemblant compound La1.5Sr0.5CoMnO6, and discuss the much smaller spontaneous
exchange bias effect observed for the former in terms of its structural and
magnetic particularities. For La1.5Ca0.5CoMnO6, when successive magnetization
loops are carried, the spontaneous exchange bias field inverts its sign from
negative to positive from the first to the second measurement. We discuss this
behavior based on the disorder at the magnetic interfaces, related to the
presence of a glassy phase. This compound also exhibits a large conventional
exchange bias, for which there is no sign inversion of the exchange bias field
for consecutive cycles
Dynamics and stability of vortex-antivortex fronts in type II superconductors
The dynamics of vortices in type II superconductors exhibit a variety of
patterns whose origin is poorly understood. This is partly due to the
nonlinearity of the vortex mobility which gives rise to singular behavior in
the vortex densities. Such singular behavior complicates the application of
standard linear stability analysis. In this paper, as a first step towards
dealing with these dynamical phenomena, we analyze the dynamical stability of a
front between vortices and antivortices. In particular we focus on the question
of whether an instability of the vortex front can occur in the absence of a
coupling to the temperature. Borrowing ideas developed for singular bacterial
growth fronts, we perform an explicit linear stability analysis which shows
that, for sufficiently large front velocities and in the absence of coupling to
the temperature, such vortex fronts are stable even in the presence of in-plane
anisotropy. This result differs from previous conclusions drawn on the basis of
approximate calculations for stationary fronts. As our method extends to more
complicated models, which could include coupling to the temperature or to other
fields, it provides the basis for a more systematic stability analysis of
nonlinear vortex front dynamics.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
Correlation between Gamma-Ray bursts and Gravitational Waves
The cosmological origin of -ray bursts (GRBs) is now commonly
accepted and, according to several models for the central engine, GRB sources
should also emit at the same time gravitational waves bursts (GWBs). We have
performed two correlation searches between the data of the resonant
gravitational wave detector AURIGA and GRB arrival times collected in the BATSE
4B catalog. No correlation was found and an upper limit \bbox{} on the averaged amplitude of gravitational waves
associated with -ray bursts has been set for the first time.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Compensation temperatures and exchange bias in La1.5Ca0.5CoIrO6
We report on the study of magnetic properties of the La1.5Ca0.5CoIrO6 double
perovskite. Via ac magnetic susceptibility we have observed evidence of weak
ferromagnetism and reentrant spin glass behavior on an antiferromagnetic
matrix. Regarding the magnetic behavior as a function of temperature, we have
found that the material displays up to three inversions of its magnetization,
depending on the appropriate choice of the applied magnetic field. At low
temperature the material exhibit exchange bias effect when it is cooled in the
presence of a magnetic field. Also, our results indicate that this effect may
be observed even when the system is cooled at zero field. Supported by other
measurements and also by electronic structure calculations, we discuss the
magnetic reversals and spontaneous exchange bias effect in terms of magnetic
phase separation and magnetic frustration of Ir4+ ions located between the
antiferromagnetically coupled Co ions.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures and supplemental materia
Chi-square test on candidate events from CW signal coherent searches
In a blind search for continuous gravitational wave signals scanning a wide
frequency band one looks for candidate events with significantly large values
of the detection statistic. Unfortunately, a noise line in the data may also
produce a moderately large detection statistic.
In this paper, we describe how we can distinguish between noise line events
and actual continuous wave (CW) signals, based on the shape of the detection
statistic as a function of the signal's frequency. We will analyze the case of
a particular detection statistic, the F statistic, proposed by Jaranowski,
Krolak, and Schutz.
We will show that for a broad-band 10 hour search, with a false dismissal
rate smaller than 1e-6, our method rejects about 70 % of the large candidate
events found in a typical data set from the second science run of the Hanford
LIGO interferometer.Comment: proceedings of GWDAW8, 2003 conference, 12pages, 6 figure
Utilização do timbó (Ateleia glazioveana Bailon) para produção perene de adubo verde na agricultura familiar, em zonas de clima subtropical.
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