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2015

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Articles 2431 - 2460 of 12617

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Secular Variations Of Oi 5577 Å Airglow In The Mesopause Region Induced By Transient Gravity Wave Packets, Michael P. Hickey Ph.D., R. L. Walterscheid Sep 2015

Secular Variations Of Oi 5577 Å Airglow In The Mesopause Region Induced By Transient Gravity Wave Packets, Michael P. Hickey Ph.D., R. L. Walterscheid

Michael P. Hickey

We employ a 2-dimensional, time-dependent, fully nonlinear model of minor species in the mesopause region and our Spectral Full-Wave Model to simulate the response of minor species and the OI 5577 Å airglow to a gravity wave packet in the mesopause region. Gravity waves affect the time-averaged distribution of minor species in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere (MLT) region through constituent fluxes induced by violation of the non-acceleration conditions due to wave transience and dissipation. In addition, wave perturbed chemistry can induce a flux of chemically active species. Simulations are performed with nominal values of eddy diffusion coefficients in the …


An Intense Traveling Airglow Front In The Upper Mesosphere–Lower Thermosphere With Characteristics Of A Bore Observed Over Alice Springs, Australia, During A Strong 2 Day Wave Episode, R. L. Walterscheid, J. H. Hecht, L. J. Galinas, Michael P. Hickey Ph.D., I. M. Reid Sep 2015

An Intense Traveling Airglow Front In The Upper Mesosphere–Lower Thermosphere With Characteristics Of A Bore Observed Over Alice Springs, Australia, During A Strong 2 Day Wave Episode, R. L. Walterscheid, J. H. Hecht, L. J. Galinas, Michael P. Hickey Ph.D., I. M. Reid

Michael P. Hickey

The Aerospace Corporation’s Nightglow Imager observed a large step function change in airglow in the form of a traveling front in the OH Meinel (OHM) and O2 atmospheric (O2A) airglow emissions over Alice Springs, Australia, on 2 February 2003. The front exhibited nearly a factor of 2 stepwise increase in the OHM brightness and a stepwise decrease in the O2A brightness. There was significant (~25 K) cooling behind the airglow fronts. The OHM airglow brightness behind the front was among the brightest for Alice Springs that we have measured in 7 years of observations. The event was associated with a …


The V471 Tauri System: A Multi-Data-Type Probe, Todd R. Vaccaro, Robert E. Wilson, W. Van Hamme, Dirk Terrell Sep 2015

The V471 Tauri System: A Multi-Data-Type Probe, Todd R. Vaccaro, Robert E. Wilson, W. Van Hamme, Dirk Terrell

Physics and Astronomy Faculty Publications

V471 Tauri, a white dwarf–red dwarf eclipsing binary ( EB) in the Hyades, is well known for stimulating development of common envelope theory, whereby novae and other cataclysmic variables form from much wider binaries by catastrophic orbit shrinkage. Our evaluation of a recent imaging search that reported negative results for a much postulated third body shows that the object could have escaped detection or may have actually been seen. The balance of evidence continues to favor a brown dwarf companion about 12 AU from the EB. A recently developed algorithm finds unified solutions from three data types. New radial velocities …


Impact Of Declining Proposal Success Rates On Scientific Productivity, Ted Von Hippel, Priscilla Cushman, Todd Hoeksema, Chryssa Kouveliotou, James Lowenthal, Bradley Peterson, Keivan G. Stassun, Sep 2015

Impact Of Declining Proposal Success Rates On Scientific Productivity, Ted Von Hippel, Priscilla Cushman, Todd Hoeksema, Chryssa Kouveliotou, James Lowenthal, Bradley Peterson, Keivan G. Stassun,

Publications

Over the last decade proposal success rates in the fundamental sciences have dropped significantly. Astronomy and related fields funded by NASA and NSF are no exception. Data across agencies show that this is not principally the result of a decline in proposal merit (the proportion of proposals receiving high rankings is largely unchanged), nor of a shift in proposer demographics (seniority, gender, and institutional affiliation have all remained unchanged), nor of an increase (beyond inflation) in the average requested funding per proposal, nor of an increase in the number of proposals per investigator in any one year. Rather, the statistics …


Detection Of 610-Mhz Radio Emission From Hot Magnetic Stars, P. Chandra, G. A. Wade, J. O. Sundqvist, D. Oberoi, J. H. Grunhut, A. Ud-Doula, V. Petit, David H. Cohen, M. E. Oksala, A. David-Uraz Sep 2015

Detection Of 610-Mhz Radio Emission From Hot Magnetic Stars, P. Chandra, G. A. Wade, J. O. Sundqvist, D. Oberoi, J. H. Grunhut, A. Ud-Doula, V. Petit, David H. Cohen, M. E. Oksala, A. David-Uraz

Physics & Astronomy Faculty Works

We have carried out a study of radio emission from a small sample of magnetic O- and B-type stars using the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope, with the goal of investigating their magnetospheres at low frequencies. These are the lowest frequency radio measurements ever obtained of hot magnetic stars. The observations were taken at random rotational phases in the 1390 and the 610 MHz bands. Out of the eight stars, we detect five B-type stars in both the 1390 and the 610 MHz bands. The three O-type stars were observed only in the 1390 MHz band, and no detections were obtained. …


Enhancing Wifi-Based Localization With Visual Clues, Han Xu, Zheng Yang, Zimu Zhou, Longfei Shangguan, Yunhao Liu, Ke Yi Sep 2015

Enhancing Wifi-Based Localization With Visual Clues, Han Xu, Zheng Yang, Zimu Zhou, Longfei Shangguan, Yunhao Liu, Ke Yi

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

Indoor localization is of great importance to a wide range of applications in the era of mobile computing. Current mainstream solutions rely on Received Signal Strength (RSS) of wireless signals as fingerprints to distinguish and infer locations. However, those methods suffer from fingerprint ambiguity that roots in multipath fading and temporal dynamics of wireless signals. Though pioneer efforts have resorted to motion-assisted or peer-assisted localization, they neither work in real time nor work without the help of peer users, which introduces extra costs and constraints, and thus degrades their practicality. To get over these limitations, we propose Argus, an image-assisted …


Electron Vortices In Photoionization By Circularly Polarized Attosecond Pulses, Jean Marcel Ngoko Djiokap, S. X. Hu, L. B. Madsen, N. L. Manakov, A. V. Meremianin, Anthony F. Starace Sep 2015

Electron Vortices In Photoionization By Circularly Polarized Attosecond Pulses, Jean Marcel Ngoko Djiokap, S. X. Hu, L. B. Madsen, N. L. Manakov, A. V. Meremianin, Anthony F. Starace

Anthony F. Starace Publications

Single ionization of He by two oppositely circularly polarized, time-delayed attosecond pulses is shown to produce photoelectron momentum distributions in the polarization plane having helical vortex structures sensitive to the time delay between the pulses, their relative phase, and their handedness. Results are obtained by both ab initio numerical solution of the two-electron time-dependent Schrödinger equation and by a lowest-order perturbation theory analysis. The energy, bandwidth, and temporal duration of attosecond pulses are ideal for observing these vortex patterns.


Performance Of High Resolution Satellite Rainfall Products Over Data Scarce Parts Of Eastern Ethiopia, Shimelis B. Gebere, Tena Alamirew, Broder J. Merkel, Assefa M. Melesse Sep 2015

Performance Of High Resolution Satellite Rainfall Products Over Data Scarce Parts Of Eastern Ethiopia, Shimelis B. Gebere, Tena Alamirew, Broder J. Merkel, Assefa M. Melesse

Department of Earth and Environment

Accurate estimation of rainfall in mountainous areas is necessary for various water resource-related applications. Though rain gauges accurately measure rainfall, they are rarely found in mountainous regions and satellite rainfall data can be used as an alternative source over these regions. This study evaluated the performance of three high-resolution satellite rainfall products, the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM 3B42), the Global Satellite Mapping of Precipitation (GSMaP_MVK+), and the Precipitation Estimation from Remotely-Sensed Information using Artificial Neural Networks (PERSIANN) at daily, monthly, and seasonal time scales against rain gauge records over data-scarce parts of Eastern Ethiopia. TRMM 3B42 rain products show …


Information Diffusion, Facebook Clusters, And The Simplicial Model Of Social Aggregation: A Computational Simulation Of Simplicial Diffusers For Community Health Interventions, Kerk Kee, Lisa Sparks, Daniele C. Struppa, Mirco A. Manucci, Alberto Damiano Sep 2015

Information Diffusion, Facebook Clusters, And The Simplicial Model Of Social Aggregation: A Computational Simulation Of Simplicial Diffusers For Community Health Interventions, Kerk Kee, Lisa Sparks, Daniele C. Struppa, Mirco A. Manucci, Alberto Damiano

Communication Faculty Articles and Research

By integrating the simplicial model of social aggregation with existing research on opinion leadership and diffusion networks, this article introduces the constructs of simplicial diffusers (mathematically defined as nodes embedded in simplexes; a simplex is a socially bonded cluster) and simplicial diffusing sets (mathematically defined as minimal covers of a simplicial complex; a simplicial complex is a social aggregation in which socially bonded clusters are embedded) to propose a strategic approach for information diffusion of cancer screenings as a health intervention on Facebook for community cancer prevention and control. This approach is novel in its incorporation of interpersonally bonded clusters, …


Forecasting Climate Change Impacts On The Distribution Of Wetland Habitat In The Midwestern United States, Heath Garris, Randall Mitchell, Lauchlan Fraser, Linda Barrett Sep 2015

Forecasting Climate Change Impacts On The Distribution Of Wetland Habitat In The Midwestern United States, Heath Garris, Randall Mitchell, Lauchlan Fraser, Linda Barrett

Linda R. Barrett

Shifting precipitation patterns brought on by climate change threaten to alter the future distribution of wetlands. We developed a set of models to understand the role climate plays in determining wetland formation on a landscape scale and to forecast changes in wetland distribution for the Midwestern United States. These models combined 35 climate variables with 21 geographic and anthropogenic factors thought to encapsulate other major drivers of wetland distribution for the Midwest. All models successfully recreated a majority of the variation in current wetland area within the Midwest, and showed that wetland area was significantly associated with climate, even when …


Controls On Trace Metal Authigenic Enrichment In Reducing Sediments: Insights From Modern Oxygen-Deficient Settings, Susan Little, Derek Vance, Timothy Lyons, James Mcmanus Sep 2015

Controls On Trace Metal Authigenic Enrichment In Reducing Sediments: Insights From Modern Oxygen-Deficient Settings, Susan Little, Derek Vance, Timothy Lyons, James Mcmanus

James McManus

Any effort to reconstruct Earth history using variations in authigenic enrichments of redox-sensitive and biogeochemically important trace metals must rest on a fundamental understanding of their modern oceanic and sedimentary geochemistry. Further, unravelling the multiple controls on sedimentary enrichments requires a multi-element approach. Of the range of metals studied, most is known about the behavior of Fe, Mn, and Mo. In this study, we compare the authigenic enrichment patterns of these elements with a group whose behavior is not as well defined (Cd, Cu, Zn, and Ni) in three oxygen-poor settings: the Black Sea, the Cariaco Basin (Venezuela), and the …


The Sedimentary Flux Of Dissolved Rare Earth Elements To The Ocean, April Abbott, Brian Haley, James Mcmanus, Clare Reimers Sep 2015

The Sedimentary Flux Of Dissolved Rare Earth Elements To The Ocean, April Abbott, Brian Haley, James Mcmanus, Clare Reimers

James McManus

We determined pore fluid rare earth element (REE) concentrations in near-surface sediments retrieved from the continental margin off Oregon and California (USA). These sites represent shelf-to-slope settings, which lie above, within, and below the oxygen minimum zone of the Northeast Pacific. The sediments are characterized by varying degrees of net iron reduction, with pore fluids from the shelf sites being generally ferruginous, and the slope sediments having less-pronounced iron reduction zones that originate deeper in the sediment package. REE concentrations show maxima in shallow (upper 2–10 cm) subsurface pore fluids across all sites with concentrations that rise more than two …


On The Isotope Composition Of Reactive Iron In Marine Sediments: Redox Shuttle Versus Early Diagenesis, Florian Shultz, Silke Severman, James Mcmanus, Anna Nofke, Ulrike Lomnitz, Christian Hensen Sep 2015

On The Isotope Composition Of Reactive Iron In Marine Sediments: Redox Shuttle Versus Early Diagenesis, Florian Shultz, Silke Severman, James Mcmanus, Anna Nofke, Ulrike Lomnitz, Christian Hensen

James McManus

The isotope composition of reactive iron (Fe) in marine sediments and sedimentary rocks is a promising tool for identifying Fe sources and sinks across ocean basins. In addition to cross-basinal Fe redistribution, which can modify Fe isotope signatures, Fe minerals also undergo diagenetic redistribution during burial. The isotope fractionation associated with this redistribution does not affect the bulk isotope composition, but complicates the identification of mineral- specific isotope signatures. Here, we present new Fe isotope data for Peru margin sediments and revisit previously published data for sediments from the California margin to unravel the impact of early diagenesis on Fe …


Computing Invariant Dynamics For Differential Equations: Spectral Methods, Errors, And Computer Assisted Proof, J. D. Mireles James Sep 2015

Computing Invariant Dynamics For Differential Equations: Spectral Methods, Errors, And Computer Assisted Proof, J. D. Mireles James

Mathematics Colloquium Series

The qualitative theory of dynamical systems is concerned with studying the long time behavior discrete and continuous time models such as nonlinear differential equations. The long time behavior of such models is organized by landmarks called invariant sets. For complicated nonlinear equations these invariant sets are difficult to study via pen and paper analysis, and we typically employ numerical simulations to gain insights into the dynamics. If we now think of these computer assisted insights as mathematical conjectures, then it is natural to ask how we might obtain proofs. Since the conjectures themselves originate with the computer it is not …


Transitions Of Tethered Chain Molecules Under Tension, Jutta Luettmer-Strathmann, Kurt Binder Sep 2015

Transitions Of Tethered Chain Molecules Under Tension, Jutta Luettmer-Strathmann, Kurt Binder

Jutta Luettmer-Strathmann

An applied tension force changes the equilibrium conformations of a polymer chain tethered to a planar substrate and thus affects the adsorption transition as well as the coil-globule and crystallization transitions. Conversely, solvent quality and surface attraction are reflected in equilibrium force-extension curves that can be measured in experiments. To investigate these effects theoretically, we study tethered chains under tension with Wang-Landau simulations of a bond-fluctuation lattice model. Applying our model to pulling experiments on biological molecules we obtain a good description of experimental data in the intermediate force range, where universal features dominate and finite size effects are small. …


Partition Function Zeros And Finite Size Scaling For Polymer Adsorption, Mark Taylor, Jutta Luettmer-Strathmann Sep 2015

Partition Function Zeros And Finite Size Scaling For Polymer Adsorption, Mark Taylor, Jutta Luettmer-Strathmann

Jutta Luettmer-Strathmann

The zeros of the canonical partition functions for a flexible polymer chain tethered to an attractive flat surface are computed for chains up to length N = 1536. We use a bond-fluctuation model for the polymer and obtain the density of states for the tethered chain by Wang-Landau sampling. The partition function zeros in the complex e(β)-plane are symmetric about the real axis and densest in a boundary region that has the shape of a nearly closed circle, centered at the origin, terminated by two flaring tails. This structure defines a root-free zone about the positive real axis and follows …


A New Microenvironment For The Formation Of Clay Minerals: The Example Of Authigenic Halloysite-7Å And Gibbsite In A Stalactite From Agios Georgios Cave, Kilkis, North Greece, Elena Ifandi, Basilios Tsikouras, Dimitrios Papoulis, Konstantin Hatzipanagiotou, Aspasia Antonelou Sep 2015

A New Microenvironment For The Formation Of Clay Minerals: The Example Of Authigenic Halloysite-7Å And Gibbsite In A Stalactite From Agios Georgios Cave, Kilkis, North Greece, Elena Ifandi, Basilios Tsikouras, Dimitrios Papoulis, Konstantin Hatzipanagiotou, Aspasia Antonelou

International Journal of Speleology

An unusual authigenic origin for halloysite and gibbsite is reported in a stalactite from Agios Georgios Cave, Kilkis. This speleothem includes mostly pure calcite whereas minor areas of Mg-rich calcite and scarce dolomite are present in four growth phases. Abundant pores are created due to imperfect coalescence of the calcite crystals. Several of them contain detrital muscovite, which was presumably transferred from the dripping water, during the formation of speleothem and has been variably altered to halloysite. Several pores in the stalactite contain different mineral assemblages that we interpret as in situ: halloysite-7Å, halloysite + silica, gibbsite + silica and …


Speleogenesis Of The Hermannshöhle Cave System (Austria): Constraints From 230Th/U-Dating And Palaeomagnetic Analysis, Lukas Plan, Andrea Schober, Denis Scholz, Christoph Spötl, Petr Pruner, Pavel Bosák Sep 2015

Speleogenesis Of The Hermannshöhle Cave System (Austria): Constraints From 230Th/U-Dating And Palaeomagnetic Analysis, Lukas Plan, Andrea Schober, Denis Scholz, Christoph Spötl, Petr Pruner, Pavel Bosák

International Journal of Speleology

Hermannshöhle is a show cave located near Kirchberg/Wechsel in Lower Austria. Together with three nearby and genetically connected caves, it forms the Hermannshöhlen cave system (HHS). With a length of 5 km, the HHS is the longest cave in the Lower Austroalpine unit. It is arranged as an extreme three-dimensional maze on a ground area of 200 x 200 x 82 m. Speleothems are abundant in this cave and represent the focus of this study. Low carbon isotope values indicate the presence of a soil-covered catchment above the HHS during times of speleothem deposition. 28 samples were dated by the …


The Firece Green Fire: Vol. 6 Issue 1, Wofford College Environmental Studies Program Sep 2015

The Firece Green Fire: Vol. 6 Issue 1, Wofford College Environmental Studies Program

The Fierce Green Fire

No abstract provided.


Observations Of An Energetically Isolated Quiet Sun Transient: Evidence Of Quasi-Steady Coronal Heating, Norton Brice Orange, David L. Chesney, Hakeem M. Oluseyi Sep 2015

Observations Of An Energetically Isolated Quiet Sun Transient: Evidence Of Quasi-Steady Coronal Heating, Norton Brice Orange, David L. Chesney, Hakeem M. Oluseyi

Aerospace, Physics, and Space Science Faculty Publications

Increasing evidence for coronal heating contributions from cooler solar atmospheric layers, notably quiet Sun (QS) conditions, challenges standard solar atmospheric descriptions of bright transition region (TR) emission. As such, questions about the role of dynamic QS transients in contributing to the total coronal energy budget are raised. Using observations from the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly and Heliosemic Magnetic Imager on board the Solar Dynamics Observatory, and numerical model extrapolations of coronal magnetic fields, we investigate a dynamic QS transient that is energetically isolated to the TR and extrudes from a common footpoint shared with two heated loop arcades. A non-causal relationship …


Utilization Of Antibody-Conjugated Gold Nanoparticles, Dynamic Light Scattering And Sers In Influenza Virus Detection, Yen Hoang Lai Sep 2015

Utilization Of Antibody-Conjugated Gold Nanoparticles, Dynamic Light Scattering And Sers In Influenza Virus Detection, Yen Hoang Lai

Theses and Dissertations

Influenza A H3N2, H1N1, and influenza B viruses primarily cause winter illness in humans, leading to significant morbidity and mortality in the population of the very young, the elderly, and people with chronic disease. In addition to the regular seasonal epidemics of influenza, influenza pandemics associated with the emergence of new influenza A strains are threatening due to high levels of mortality, social disruption, and economic losses. These novel strains are not affected by the human immunity developed to older strains of influenza, therefore can spread readily and infect a vast number of people. The most recent flu pandemic outbreak …


Bulk Equations Of Motion From Cft Correlators, Daniel N. Kabat, Gilad Lifschytz Sep 2015

Bulk Equations Of Motion From Cft Correlators, Daniel N. Kabat, Gilad Lifschytz

Publications and Research

ToO (1/N) we derive, purely from CFT data, the bulk equations of motion for interacting scalar fields and for scalars coupled to gauge fields and gravity. We first uplift CFT operators to mimic local AdS fields by imposing bulk microcausality. This requires adding an infinite tower of smeared higher-dimension double-trace operators to the CFT definition of a bulk field, with coefficients that we explicitly compute. By summing the contribution of the higher-dimension operators we derive the equations of motion satisfied by these uplifted CFT operators and show that we precisely recover the expected bulk equations of motion. We exhibit the …


Identifying The Tautomeric Form Of A Deoxyguanosine-Estrogen Quinone Intermediate, Douglas E. Stack Sep 2015

Identifying The Tautomeric Form Of A Deoxyguanosine-Estrogen Quinone Intermediate, Douglas E. Stack

Chemistry Faculty Publications

Mechanistic insights into the reaction of an estrogen o-quinone with deoxyguanosine has been further investigated using high level density functional calculations in addition to the use of 4-hyroxycatecholestrone (4-OHE1) regioselectivity labeled with deuterium at the C1-position. Calculations using the M06-2X functional with large basis sets indicate the tautomeric form of an estrogen-DNA adduct present when glycosidic bonds cleavage occurs is comprised of an aromatic A ring structure. This tautomeric form was further verified by use of deuterium labelling of the catechol precursor use to form the estrogen o-quinone. Regioselective deuterium labelling at the C1-position of the estrogen A ring allows …


More Coastal Nuisance Flooding Forecast For Coming Months, Associated Press Sep 2015

More Coastal Nuisance Flooding Forecast For Coming Months, Associated Press

News Items

No abstract provided.


Synthesis, Crystal Structures, And Dft Calculations Of Three New Cyano(Phenylsulfonyl)Indoles And A Key Synthetic Precursor Compound, William Montgomery, Justin Lopchuk, Gordon Gribble, Jerry Jasinski Sep 2015

Synthesis, Crystal Structures, And Dft Calculations Of Three New Cyano(Phenylsulfonyl)Indoles And A Key Synthetic Precursor Compound, William Montgomery, Justin Lopchuk, Gordon Gribble, Jerry Jasinski

Dartmouth Scholarship

Three cyano-1-(phenylsulfonyl)indole derivatives, 3-cyano-1-(phenylsulfonyl) indole, (I), 2-cyano-1-(phenylsulfonyl)indole, (II), and 2,3-dicyano-1-(phenylsulfonyl) indole, (III), and a key synthetic precursor 1-(phenylsulfonyl)-1-(1,1-dimethylethyl) indole-3-carboxamide, (IV), have been synthesized and their structures determined by single crystal X-ray crystallography. (I), C15H10N2O2S, is orthorhombic with space group P 212121 and cell constants: a = 4.9459(3) Å, b = 10.5401(7) Å, c = 25.0813(14) Å, V = 1307.50(14) Å3 and Z = 4. (II), C15H10N2O2S, …


Homo Naledi, A New Species Of The Genus Homo From The Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa, Lee Berger, John Hawks, Darryl J. De Ruiter, Steve E. Churchill, Peter Schmid, Lucas Delezene, Tracy Kivell, Heather Garvin, Scott Williams, Jeremy Desilva Sep 2015

Homo Naledi, A New Species Of The Genus Homo From The Dinaledi Chamber, South Africa, Lee Berger, John Hawks, Darryl J. De Ruiter, Steve E. Churchill, Peter Schmid, Lucas Delezene, Tracy Kivell, Heather Garvin, Scott Williams, Jeremy Desilva

Dartmouth Scholarship

Homo naledi is a previously-unknown species of extinct hominin discovered within the Dinaledi Chamber of the Rising Star cave system, Cradle of Humankind, South Africa. This species is characterized by body mass and stature similar to small-bodied human populations but a small endocranial volume similar to australopiths. Cranial morphology of H. naledi is unique, but most similar to early Homo species including Homo erectus, Homo habilis or Homo rudolfensis. While primitive, the dentition is generally small and simple in occlusal morphology. H. naledi has humanlike manipulatory adaptations of the hand and wrist. It also exhibits a humanlike foot and lower …


Implementation Techniques For The Truncated Fourier Transform, Li Zhang Sep 2015

Implementation Techniques For The Truncated Fourier Transform, Li Zhang

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

We study various algorithms for the Truncated Fourier Transform (TFT) which is a variation of the Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT) that allows one to work with an input vector of arbitrary size without zero padding. After a review of the original algorithms for the forward and inverse TFT introduced by J. van der Hoeven, we consider the variation of D. Harvey as well as that of J. Johnson and L.C. Meng. Both variations are based on Cooley-Tukey like formulas. The former is called strict general radix as it strictly follows the specifications proposed by J. van der Hoeven, while the …


Nanograv Constraints On Gravitational Wave Bursts With Memory, Z. Arzoumanian, A. Brazier, S. Burke-Spolaor, S. J. Chamberlin, S. Chatterjee, B. Christy, J. M. Cordes, N. J. Cornish, Fredrick A. Jenet, Jing Luo Sep 2015

Nanograv Constraints On Gravitational Wave Bursts With Memory, Z. Arzoumanian, A. Brazier, S. Burke-Spolaor, S. J. Chamberlin, S. Chatterjee, B. Christy, J. M. Cordes, N. J. Cornish, Fredrick A. Jenet, Jing Luo

Physics and Astronomy Faculty Publications and Presentations

Among efforts to detect gravitational radiation, pulsar timing arrays are uniquely poised to detect \"memory\" signatures, permanent perturbations in spacetime from highly energetic astrophysical events such as mergers of supermassive black hole binaries. The North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav) observes dozens of the most stable millisecond pulsars using the Arecibo and Green Bank radio telescopes in an effort to study, among other things, gravitational wave memory. We herein present the results of a search for gravitational wave bursts with memory (BWMs) using the first five years of NANOGrav observations. We develop original methods for dramatically speeding up …


Editorial Of Special Issue: Nanomaterials As Photocatalysts, Mohammad Mansoob Khan Dr Sep 2015

Editorial Of Special Issue: Nanomaterials As Photocatalysts, Mohammad Mansoob Khan Dr

Dr. Mohammad Mansoob Khan

This thematic special issue entitled “Nanomaterials as Photocatalysts” based on selected research/review articles submitted to the Journal of Saudi Chemical Society focuses on the visible/UV light photocatalytic activities of the selected nanomaterials. Topics of these research/review articles cover diverse and exciting areas of research related to nanomaterials such as metal oxides, nanoparticles, nanocomposites, their synthesis, and photocatalysis for waste water treatment, photocatalysis for effective conversion of waste, photochemical conversions, energy generation and other chemical energy production.


Fate Of Quasiparticles In The Superconducting State, Sasa Dordevic, D. Van Der Marel, C. C. Homes Sep 2015

Fate Of Quasiparticles In The Superconducting State, Sasa Dordevic, D. Van Der Marel, C. C. Homes

Sasa V. Dordevic

Quasiparticle properties in the superconducting state are masked by the superfluid and are not directly accessible to infrared spectroscopy. We show how one can use a Kramers-Kronig transformation to separate the quasiparticle from superfluid response and extract intrinsic quasiparticle properties in the superconducting state. We also address the issue of a narrow quasiparticle peak observed in microwave measurements, and demonstrate how it can be combined with infrared measurements to obtain a unified picture of electrodynamic properties of cuprate superconductors.