24,972 research outputs found
Space telescope phase B definition study. Volume 2A: Science instruments, astrometer
The analysis and design of an astrometer instrument for the space telescope are discussed. The design concepts utilize the astrometric multiplexing area scanner and the OTA fine guidance sensor
Techniques for improving reliability of computers
Modular design techniques improve methods of error detection, diagnosis, and recovery. Theoretical computer (MARCS (Modular Architecture for Reliable Computer Systems)) study deals with postulated and modeled technology indigenous to 1975-1980. Study developments are discussed
Buoyancy waves in Pluto's high atmosphere: Implications for stellar occultations
We apply scintillation theory to stellar signal fluctuations in the
high-resolution, high signal/noise, dual-wavelength data from the MMT
observation of the 2007 March 18 occultation of P445.3 by Pluto. A well-defined
high wavenumber cutoff in the fluctuations is consistent with viscous-thermal
dissipation of buoyancy waves (internal gravity waves) in Pluto's high
atmosphere, and provides strong evidence that the underlying density
fluctuations are governed by the gravity-wave dispersion relation.Comment: Accepted 18 June 2009 for publication in Icaru
Models of the ICM with Heating and Cooling: Explaining the Global and Structural X-ray Properties of Clusters
(Abridged) Theoretical models that include only gravitationally-driven
processes fail to match the observed mean X-ray properties of clusters. As a
result, there has recently been increased interest in models in which either
radiative cooling or entropy injection play a central role in mediating the
properties of the intracluster medium. Both sets of models give reasonable fits
to the mean properties of clusters, but cooling only models result in fractions
of cold baryons in excess of observationally established limits and the
simplest entropy injection models do not treat the "cooling core" structure
present in many clusters and cannot account for entropy profiles revealed by
recent X-ray observations. We consider models that marry radiative cooling with
entropy injection, and confront model predictions for the global and structural
properties of massive clusters with the latest X-ray data. The models
successfully and simultaneously reproduce the observed L-T and L-M relations,
yield detailed entropy, surface brightness, and temperature profiles in
excellent agreement with observations, and predict a cooled gas fraction that
is consistent with observational constraints. The model also provides a
possible explanation for the significant intrinsic scatter present in the L-T
and L-M relations and provides a natural way of distinguishing between clusters
classically identified as "cooling flow" clusters and dynamically relaxed
"non-cooling flow" clusters. The former correspond to systems that had only
mild levels (< 300 keV cm^2) of entropy injection, while the latter are
identified as systems that had much higher entropy injection. This is borne out
by the entropy profiles derived from Chandra and XMM-Newton.Comment: 20 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
y scaling in electron-nucleus scattering
Data on inclusive electron scattering from A = 4, 12, 27, 56, 197 nuclei at large momentum transfer are presented and analyzed in terms of y scaling. We find that the data do scale for y 1), and we study the convergence of the scaling function with the momentum transfer Q^2 and A
An alternative derivation of the gravitomagnetic clock effect
The possibility of detecting the gravitomagnetic clock effect using
artificial Earth satellites provides the incentive to develop a more intuitive
approach to its derivation. We first consider two test electric charges moving
on the same circular orbit but in opposite directions in orthogonal electric
and magnetic fields and show that the particles take different times in
describing a full orbit. The expression for the time difference is completely
analogous to that of the general relativistic gravitomagnetic clock effect in
the weak-field and slow-motion approximation. The latter is obtained by
considering the gravitomagnetic force as a small classical non-central
perturbation of the main central Newtonian monopole force. A general expression
for the clock effect is given for a spherical orbit with an arbitrary
inclination angle. This formula differs from the result of the general
relativistic calculations by terms of order c^{-4}.Comment: LaTex2e, 11 pages, 1 figure, IOP macros. Submitted to Classical and
Quantum Gravit
Imaging faint brown dwarf companions close to bright stars with a small, well-corrected telescope aperture
We have used our 1.6 m diameter off-axis well-corrected sub-aperture (WCS) on
the Palomar Hale telescope in concert with a small inner-working-angle (IWA)
phase-mask coronagraph to image the immediate environs of a small number of
nearby stars. Test cases included three stars (HD 130948, HD 49197 and HR7672)
with known brown dwarf companions at small separations, all of which were
detected. We also present the initial detection of a new object close to the
nearby young G0V star HD171488. Follow up observations are needed to determine
if this object is a bona fide companion, but its flux is consistent with the
flux of a young brown dwarf or low mass M star at the same distance as the
primary. Interestingly, at small angles our WCS coronagraph demonstrates a
limiting detectable contrast comparable to that of extant Lyot coronagraphs on
much larger telescopes corrected with current-generation AO systems. This
suggests that small apertures corrected to extreme adaptive optics (ExAO)
levels can be used to carry out initial surveys for close brown dwarf and
stellar companions, leaving followup observations for larger telescopes.Comment: accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
Assessing Human Error Against a Benchmark of Perfection
An increasing number of domains are providing us with detailed trace data on
human decisions in settings where we can evaluate the quality of these
decisions via an algorithm. Motivated by this development, an emerging line of
work has begun to consider whether we can characterize and predict the kinds of
decisions where people are likely to make errors.
To investigate what a general framework for human error prediction might look
like, we focus on a model system with a rich history in the behavioral
sciences: the decisions made by chess players as they select moves in a game.
We carry out our analysis at a large scale, employing datasets with several
million recorded games, and using chess tablebases to acquire a form of ground
truth for a subset of chess positions that have been completely solved by
computers but remain challenging even for the best players in the world.
We organize our analysis around three categories of features that we argue
are present in most settings where the analysis of human error is applicable:
the skill of the decision-maker, the time available to make the decision, and
the inherent difficulty of the decision. We identify rich structure in all
three of these categories of features, and find strong evidence that in our
domain, features describing the inherent difficulty of an instance are
significantly more powerful than features based on skill or time.Comment: KDD 2016; 10 page
HST and Spitzer Observations of the Host Galaxy of GRB 050904: A Metal-Enriched, Dusty Starburst at z=6.295
We present deep Hubble Space Telescope and Spitzer Space Telescope
observations of the host galaxy of GRB 050904 at z=6.295. The host is detected
in the H-band and marginally at 3.6 micron. From these detections, and limits
in the z'-band and 4.5 micron, we infer an extinction-corrected absolute
magnitude, M(UV)=-20.7 mag, or ~L*, a substantial star formation rate of 15
solar masses per year, and a stellar mass of a few 10^9 solar masses. A
comparison to the published sample of spectroscopically-confirmed galaxies at
z>5.5 reveals that the host of GRB 050904 would evade detection and/or
confirmation in any of the current surveys due to the lack of detectable
Ly-alpha emission, which is likely the result of dust extinction (A[1200]~1.5
mag). This suggests that not all luminous starburst galaxies at z~6 are
currently being accounted for. Most importantly, using the metallicity of
Z~0.05 solar inferred from the afterglow absorption spectrum, our observations
indicate for the first time that the observed evolution in the mass- and
luminosity-metallicity relations from z=0 to z~2 continues on to z>6. The ease
of measuring redshifts and metallicities from the afterglow emission suggests
that in tandem with the next generation ground- and space-based telescopes, a
GRB mission with dedicated near-IR follow-up can provide unique information on
the evolution of stars and galaxies through the epoch of re-ionization.Comment: Submitted to ApJ; 11 pages, 5 figures; A high-resolution version of
figure 1 can be found at http://www.ociw.edu/~eberger/fig1.050904.berger.ep
An Infrared Determination of the Reddening and Distance to Dwingeloo 1
We present for the first time infrared observations of the nearby highly
obscured galaxy Dwingeloo 1 (Dw1), including deep H-band imaging covering a
total of 4.9x4.9 arcmin, together with J and Ks imaging of the central 2.5x2.5
arcmin. We used the small dispersion of the intrinsic infrared colors of spiral
galaxies to determine an infrared H-band extinction of A_H = 0.47+/-0.11 mag
towards Dw1. In using infrared colors, the uncertainties in the reddening and
distance are reduced by a factor of three. The H-band magnitude corrected for
extinction and the infrared Tully-Fisher relation are then used to estimate a
distance modulus of (m-M)_0 = 28.62+/-0.27, and thus a distance of d = 5.3
{+0.7/-0.6} Mpc, which puts Dw1 at the far end of the IC342/Maffei 1 & 2 group.
Our result is largely independent of the nature of the reddening law because we
estimated both the reddening and the distance at the same wavelength range.Comment: 20 pages, 2 figures, see
http://nicmos2.as.arizona.edu/~aalonso/Dw1/dw1_paper.htm
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