12,150 research outputs found

    The exceptional TeV flaring activity of the blazar 1ES 1959+650 in 2015 and 2016 as observed with VERITAS

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    The high-synchrotron-peaked blazar 1ES 1959+650 was among the first extragalactic sources detected in the very high energy gamma ray band (VHE, E > 100 GeV). In October 2015, the source entered an extended period of activity that continued through July 2016, during which several strong VHE flares were observed. This flaring activity in the TeV band was accompanied by a strong increase in the optical, X-ray, and GeV gamma-ray flux of the source, surpassing its brightest recorded flux states. The VERITAS telescope array performed observations of 1ES 1959+650 between October 2015 and June 2016, and detected the source multiple times at a flux higher than the Crab nebula flux in the TeV band, representing the brightest flares of this object since 2002. We here present results from the analysis of 32 hours of VERITAS observations obtained during this period and as well as a contemporaneous multi-wavelength observations in the optical, X-ray, and GeV gamma-ray bands.Comment: In Proceedings of the International Cosmic Ray Conference 2017, Busan, South Kore

    The Dawn of Multi-Messenger Astronomy

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    The recent discoveries of high-energy astrophysical neutrinos and gravitational waves have opened new windows of exploration to the Universe. Combining neutrino observations with measurements of electromagnetic radiation and cosmic rays promises to unveil the sources responsible for the neutrino emission and to help solve long-standing problems in astrophysics such as the origin of cosmic rays. Neutrino observations may also help localize gravitational-wave sources, and enable the study of their astrophysical progenitors. In this work we review the current status and future plans for multi-messenger searches of neutrino sources.Comment: To appear in "Neutrino Astronomy- Current status, future prospects", Eds. T. Gaisser & A. Karle (World Scientific

    Reflection formulas for order derivatives of Bessel functions

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    From new integral representations of the nn-th derivative of Bessel functions with respect to the order, we derive some reflection formulas for the first and second order derivative of Jν(t)J_{\nu }\left( t\right) and % Y_{\nu }\left( t\right) for integral order, and for the nn-th order derivative of Iν(t)I_{\nu }\left( t\right) and Kν(t)K_{\nu }\left( t\right) for arbitrary real order. As an application of the reflection formulas obtained for the first order derivative, we extend some formulas given in the literature to negative integral order. Also, as a by-product, we calculate an integral which does not seem to be reported in the literature.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1808.0560

    Geometries of orthogonal groups and their contractions: a unified classical deformation viewpoint

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    The geometries of spaces having as groups the real orthogonal groups and some of their contractions are described from a common point of view. Their central extensions and Casimirs are explicitly given. An approach to the trigonometry of their spaces is also advanced.Comment: 9 pages, LaTeX; contribution presented by M.Santander to the II International Workshop on Classical and Quantum Integrible Systems (Dubna, 8-12 July,1996), to be published in Int.J.Mod.Phys.

    Final report, independent Study during Fall 2009 "Improving Collaborative Filtering in Social Tagging Systems for the Recommendation of Scientific Articles"

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    This report describes our study of different ways to improve existing collaborative filtering techniques in order to recommend scientific articles. Using data crawled from CiteUlike, a collaborative tagging service for academic purposes, we compared the classical user-based collaborative filtering algorithm as described by Schafer et al. [2], with two enhanced variations: 1) using a tag-based similarity calculation, to avoid depending on ratings to find the neighborhood of a user, and 2) incorporate the amount of raters in the final recommendation ranking to decrease the noise of items that have been rated by too few users. We provide a discussion of our results, describing the dataset and highlighting our findings about applying collaborative filtering on folksonomies instead of the classic bipartite user-item network, and providing guidelines of our future research
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