12,964 research outputs found
Drawn to the Sea: Charles Bradford Hudson (1865-1939), Artist, Author, Army Officer, with Special Notice of His Work for the United States Fish Commission and Bureau of Fisheries
The biography of Charles Bradford Hudson that follows this preface had its seeds about 1965 when I (VGS) was casually examining the extensive files of original illustrations of fishes stored in the Division of Fishes, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. I happened upon the unpublished illustration of a rainbow trout by Hudson and was greatly impressed with its quality. The thought occurred to me then that the artist must have gone on to do more than just illustrate fishes. During the next 20 years I occasionally pawed through those files, which contained the work of numerous artists, who had worked from 1838 to
the present. In 1985, I happened to discuss the files with my supervisor, who urged me to produce a museum exhibit of original fish illustrations. This I did, selecting 200 of the illustrations representing 21 artists, including, of course, Hudson. As part of the text for the exhibit, Drawn from the Sea, Art in the Service of Ichthyology, I prepared short biographies of each of the artists. The exhibit, with an available poster, was shown in the Museum for six months,
and a reduced version was exhibited in U.S. and Canadian museums during the next 3 years
Digital data reformatter/deserializer
A method and apparatus is presented for reformatting and de-serializing a serially-received sequence of data words, each consisting of a fixed number of binary data bits. A block of nm bits is serially fed into a shift register or serially-connected group of shift registers. In lieu of the(nm-1)th shifts, the bits are rearranged within the shift register in parallel fashion, according to a prescribed scheme. Shifting then continues, until the first bit of each data word appears in the last bit position in the shift register, at which time that data word is shifted in parallel into an output buffer stage, from which it is outputted in parallel, after a fixed delay
The Impact of User Effects on the Performance of Dual Receive Antenna Diversity Systems in Flat Rayleigh Fading Channels
In this paper we study the impact of user effects on the performance of receive antenna diversity systems in flat Rayleigh fading channels. Three diversity combining techniques are compared: maximal ratio combining (MRC), equal gain combining (EGC), and selection combining (SC). User effects are considered in two scenarios: 1) body loss (the reduction of effective antenna gain due to user effects) on a single antenna, and 2) equal body loss on both antennas. The system performance is assessed in terms of mean SNR, link reliability, bit error rate of BPSK, diversity order and ergodic capacity. Our results show that body loss on a single antenna has limited (bounded) impact on system performance. In comparison, body loss on both antennas has unlimited (unbounded) impact and can severely degrade system performance. Our results also show that with increasing body loss on a single antenna the performance of EGC drops faster than that of MRC and SC. When body loss on a single antenna is larger than a certain level, EGC is not a “sub-optimal” method anymore and has worse performance than SC
Noiseless Quantum Circuits for the Peres Separability Criterion
In this Letter we give a method for constructing sets of simple circuits that
can determine the spectrum of a partially transposed density matrix, without
requiring either a tomographically complete POVM or the addition of noise to
make the spectrum non-negative. These circuits depend only on the dimension of
the Hilbert space and are otherwise independent of the state.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 7 figures encapsulated postscript. v5: title changed
slightly, more-or-less equivalent to the published versio
Towards a Unified Description of the Baryon Spectrum and the Baryon-Baryon Interaction within a Potential Model Scheme
We study the low energy part of the nucleon and spectra by solving
the Schr\"{o}dinger equation for the three-quark system in the hyperspherical
harmonic approach. The quark-quark hamiltonian considered includes, besides the
usual one-gluon exchange, pion and sigma exchanges generated by the chiral
symmetry breaking. This quark-quark potential reproduces, in a Resonating Group
Method calculation, the nucleon-nucleon scattering phase shifts and the
deuteron properties. The baryonic spectrum obtained is quite reasonable and the
resulting wave function is consistent with the ansatz used in the two baryon
system.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures available under request, uses epsfig.sty and
fbssuppl.sty. Tobe published in Few-Body System
Complexified sigma model and duality
We show that the equations of motion associated with a complexified
sigma-model action do not admit manifest dual SO(n,n) symmetry. In the process
we discover new type of numbers which we called `complexoids' in order to
emphasize their close relation with both complex numbers and matroids. It turns
out that the complexoids allow to consider the analogue of the complexified
sigma-model action but with (1+1)-worldsheet metric, instead of
Euclidean-worldsheet metric. Our observations can be useful for further
developments of complexified quantum mechanics.Comment: 15 pages, Latex, improved versio
Collectors of Rhodiola species on the Sichuan-Tibetan and Sichuan-Shaanxi borders
Medicinal Rhodiola species, including Rhodiola rosea L. and Rhodiola crenulata (Hook.f. & Thomson) H.Ohba, have been widely used as traditional herbal medicines with numerous claims for their therapeutic effects. Faced with resource depletion, environment destruction and higher demand, R. rosea and R. crenulata are becoming endangered, making them economically even more valuable, but also increasing the risk of adulteration and low quality - and raising awareness for the role of often unlicensed collectors and middlemen.
Although R. rosea is the most well known in Europe, R. crenulata is the recognised species in China. On the border of Sichuan and Tibet, members of the Yi minority collect R. crenulata in order to sell it to the “traditional” Chinese medicine market. Collection of this medicinal herb represents about one third of the annual income for the Yi. Three times a year they climb up to 5,000 metres in search of the plants. As it is stripped out, the Yi have to travel to more and more inhospitable places to ensure its supply.
At Taibai mountain along the border of Sichuan and Shaanxi, the same medicinal plant, hongjingtian in Chinese, is growing in the wild, too. Yet, in a socioeconomic context, collectors do not have a particular ethnic background such as Yi, Tibetan or Han collectors. Here, the collectors are various unlicensed providers-cum-prescribers 'caoyi'. (The term does not mean herb-physician, as one might assume from terms such as caoyao (herbals). It means unofficial or not following the scholarly standard.) Using neither an ethnic identity nor the general botanical terms in Latin, they claim Daoism and terroir of their mountain as a sign of good quality ‘Taibai hongjingtian’.
There appears to be no strategy in place to protect the species across all those socioeconomic, ethnic and provincial boundaries, and without some intervention it is likely that R. crenulata will eventually become so rare that it can no longer be collected in the current quantities. This will have consequences both for the livelihoods of the Yi and of various Caoyi, and also for the conservation of R. Crenulata and it’s sustainability
The Impacts of Contract Type on Broker Performance: Submarket Effects
Rutherford et al. (2001) develop and empirically test a model that analyzes the effect the type of listing contract, either exclusive agency (EA) or exclusive right to sell (ERTS), has on the performance of the agent/broker. This paper extends the work of Rutherford et al. (2001) and looks at differences between housing submarkets delineated by price. The results show a selling price discount associated with both broker-effected and owner-effected sales for lower-priced houses with EA contracts. For higher-priced houses, there is no price advantage to an EA-listing if the broker achieves the sale, but if the owner sells the house, there is a modest price premium associated with the sale. The primary implication of the results is that owners of lower-priced houses should be wary of alternative listing arrangements, namely exclusive agency contracts.
Local invariants of stabilizer codes
In [Phys. Rev. A 58, 1833 (1998)] a family of polynomial invariants which
separate the orbits of multi-qubit density operators under the action of
the local unitary group was presented. We consider this family of invariants
for the class of those which are the projection operators describing
stabilizer codes and give a complete translation of these invariants into the
binary framework in which stabilizer codes are usually described. Such an
investigation of local invariants of quantum codes is of natural importance in
quantum coding theory, since locally equivalent codes have the same
error-correcting capabilities and local invariants are powerful tools to
explore their structure. Moreover, the present result is relevant in the
context of multipartite entanglement and the development of the
measurement-based model of quantum computation known as the one-way quantum
computer.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure. Minor changes. Accepted in Phys. Rev.
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