1,683 research outputs found
The origin of the E+ transition in GaAsN alloys
Optical properties of GaAsN system with nitrogen concentrations in the range
of 0.9-3.7% are studied by full-potential LAPW method in a supercell approach.
The E+ transition is identified by calculating the imaginary part of the
dielectric function. The evolution of the energy of this transition with
nitrogen concentration is studied and the origin of this transition is
identified by analyzing the contributions to the dielectric function from
different band combinations. The L_1c-derived states are shown to play an
important role in the formation of the E+ transition, which was also suggested
by recent experiments. At the same time the nitrogen-induced modification of
the first conduction band of the host compound are also found to contribute
significantly to the E+ transition. Further, the study of several model
supercells demonstrated the significant influence of the nitrogen potential on
the optical properties of the GaAsN system.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Crew Motion and the Dynamic Environment of Spaceborne Experiments
Analytical study of crew motion on dynamic environment of orbiting laboratorie
Evaluating Matrix Circuits
The circuit evaluation problem (also known as the compressed word problem)
for finitely generated linear groups is studied. The best upper bound for this
problem is , which is shown by a reduction to polynomial
identity testing. Conversely, the compressed word problem for the linear group
is equivalent to polynomial identity testing. In
the paper, it is shown that the compressed word problem for every finitely
generated nilpotent group is in . Within
the larger class of polycyclic groups we find examples where the compressed
word problem is at least as hard as polynomial identity testing for skew
arithmetic circuits
Locally Chain-Parsable Languages
If a context-free language enjoys the local parsability property then, no matter how the source string is segmented, each segment can be parsed in- dependently, and an efficient parallel parsing algorithm becomes possible. The new class of locally chain-parsable languages (LCPL), included in deterministic context-free languages, is here defined by means of the chain-driven automa- ton and characterized by decidable properties of grammar derivations. Such au- tomaton decides to reduce or not a factor in a way purely driven by the terminal characters, thus extending the well-known concept of Input-Driven (ID) (visibly) pushdown machines. LCPL extend and improve the practically relevant operator- precedence languages (Floyd), which are known to strictly include the ID lan- guages, and for which a parallel-parser generator exists. Consistently with the classical results for ID, chain-compatible LCPL are closed under reversal and Boolean operations, and language inclusion is decidable
Feature Selection of Post-Graduation Income of College Students in the United States
This study investigated the most important attributes of the 6-year
post-graduation income of college graduates who used financial aid during their
time at college in the United States. The latest data released by the United
States Department of Education was used. Specifically, 1,429 cohorts of
graduates from three years (2001, 2003, and 2005) were included in the data
analysis. Three attribute selection methods, including filter methods, forward
selection, and Genetic Algorithm, were applied to the attribute selection from
30 relevant attributes. Five groups of machine learning algorithms were applied
to the dataset for classification using the best selected attribute subsets.
Based on our findings, we discuss the role of neighborhood professional degree
attainment, parental income, SAT scores, and family college education in
post-graduation incomes and the implications for social stratification.Comment: 14 pages, 6 tables, 3 figure
Plasmas and Controlled Nuclear Fusion
Contains reports on ten research projects split into three sections.National Science Foundation (Grant GK-2581
Functional characterization of a melon alcohol acyl-transferase gene family involved in the biosynthesis of ester volatiles. Identification of the crucial role of a threonine residue for enzyme activity
Volatile esters, a major class of compounds contributing to the aroma of many fruit, are synthesized by
alcohol acyl-transferases (AAT). We demonstrate here that, in Charentais melon (Cucumis melo var.
cantalupensis), AAT are encoded by a gene family of at least four members with amino acid identity ranging
from 84% (Cm-AAT1/Cm-AAT2) and 58% (Cm-AAT1/Cm-AAT3) to only 22% (Cm-AAT1/Cm-AAT4).
All encoded proteins, except Cm-AAT2, were enzymatically active upon expression in yeast and show
differential substrate preferences. Cm-AAT1 protein produces a wide range of short and long-chain acyl
esters but has strong preference for the formation of E-2-hexenyl acetate and hexyl hexanoate. Cm-AAT3
also accepts a wide range of substrates but with very strong preference for producing benzyl acetate.
Cm-AAT4 is almost exclusively devoted to the formation of acetates, with strong preference for cinnamoyl
acetate. Site directed mutagenesis demonstrated that the failure of Cm-AAT2 to produce volatile esters is
related to the presence of a 268-alanine residue instead of threonine as in all active AAT proteins. Mutating
268-A into 268-T of Cm-AAT2 restored enzyme activity, while mutating 268-T into 268-A abolished
activity of Cm-AAT1. Activities of all three proteins measured with the prefered substrates sharply increase
during fruit ripening. The expression of all Cm-AAT genes is up-regulated during ripening and inhibited in
antisense ACC oxidase melons and in fruit treated with the ethylene antagonist 1-methylcyclopropene
(1-MCP), indicating a positive regulation by ethylene. The data presented in this work suggest that the
multiplicity of AAT genes accounts for the great diversity of esters formed in melon
Filling a blank on the map: 60 years of fisheries in Equatorial Guinea
Despite a scarcity of pertinent information, it has been possible to reconstruct time series of marine fisheries catches for Equatorial Guinea from 1950 to 2010 using per capita fish consumption and population numbers for small-scale fisheries, catch rates and number of vessels for industrial fisheries and discard rates to estimate the discarded bycatch. Small-scale fisheries, industrial large-scale fisheries, domestic and legal and illegal foreign fisheries and their discards are all included. Total catches were estimated at 2.7 million tonnes over the time period considered, of which 653 000 t were caught domestically compared to 187 000 t reported by FAO. This shows that fisheries have more importance for Equatorial Guinea's food security than the official data suggest. In contrast to what is suggested by official figures, fisheries were shown to be strongly impacted by civil and political unrest; notably, they declined overall because of civil and political conflicts, socio-demographic dynamics, and a growing role of the newly discovered oil resources, which directly and indirectly threaten the food security of the people of Equatorial Guinea
The Road to Quantum Computational Supremacy
We present an idiosyncratic view of the race for quantum computational
supremacy. Google's approach and IBM challenge are examined. An unexpected
side-effect of the race is the significant progress in designing fast classical
algorithms. Quantum supremacy, if achieved, won't make classical computing
obsolete.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figur
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