37,740 research outputs found
The Origins and Early History of the Steamer Albatross, 1880–18
Spencer Fullerton Baird (Fig. 1), a noted systematic zoologist and builder of scientific institutions in 19th century America, persuaded the U.S. Congress to establish the United States Commission of Fish and Fisheries1 in March 1871. At that time, Baird was Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. Following the death of Joseph Henry in 1878, he became head of the institution, a position he held until his own demise in 1887. In addition to his many duties as a Smithsonian official, including his prominent role in developing the Smithsonian’s Federally funded National Museum as the repository for governmental scientific collections, Baird directed the Fish Commission from 1871 until 1887.
The Fish Commission’s original mission was to determine the reasons and remedies for the apparent decline of American fisheries off southern New England as well as other parts of the United States. In 1872, Congress further directed the Commission to begin a large fish hatching program aimed at increasing the supply of American food
The angular resolution of the Pierre Auger Observatory
We discuss the angular resolution obtained for events registered with the
surface detector alone and for hybrid events, i.e., those observed
simultaneously by both the surface and fluorescence detectors. The angular
accuracy of the surface detector is directly extracted from the data itself and
on an event by event basis, and is given as a function of the number of
stations triggered by the event and of the zenith angle of the shower. We
compare the angular resolution of the surface detector obtained from hybrid
events with the one obtained from the surface detector alone.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures. Presented at CRIS 2008, Malfa, Ital
Measuring job security over time: in search of a historical indicator for EPL
All studies that have explored the impact that job-security legislation has had on labor-market performance have been handicapped by the lack of a good quantitative indicator covering a long enough historical period to reflect the drastic changes that have occurred in this area since World War II. This study has developed such an indicator in hopes of making a key tool available for labor-market research. The paper describes the reason that job security is important for labor market performance, and outlines the steps taken to develop this time-series indicator, which should help to deliver on how job-security laws have affected labor market performance in the developed countries since WWII.
Propagation of high-energy cosmic rays in extragalactic turbulent magnetic fields: resulting energy spectrum and composition
We extend previous studies of mixed-composition extragalactic cosmic-ray
source models, by investigating the influence of a non-negligible extragalactic
magnetic field on the propagated cosmic-ray spectrum and composition. We study
the transport of charged particles in turbulent fields and the transition from
a ballistic to a diffusive propagation regime. We introduce a method allowing a
fast integration of the particle trajectories, which allows us to calculate
extragalactic cosmic-ray spectra in the general case, without using either the
diffusive or the rectilinear approximation. We find that the main features of
the mixed-composition models -- regarding the interpretation of the ankle and
the non-monotonous evolution of the average cosmic-ray mass -- remain
essentially unchanged as long as the magnetic field intensity does not exceed a
few nG.Comment: 15 pages, 20 figure
Alkali Line Profiles in Degenerate Dwarfs
Ultracool stellar atmospheres show absorption by alkali resonance lines
severely broadened by collisions with neutral perturbers. In the coolest and
densest atmospheres, such as those of T dwarfs, Na I and K I broadened by
molecular hydrogen and helium can come to dominate the entire optical spectrum.
Their profiles have been successfully modelled with accurate interaction
potentials in the adiabatic theory, computing line profiles from the first few
orders of a density expansion of the autocorrelation function. The line shapes
in the emergent spectrum also depend on the distribution of absorbers as a
function of depth, which can be modelled with improved accuracy by new models
of dust condensation and settling.
The far red K I wings of the latest T dwarfs still show missing opacity in
these models, a phenomenon similar to what has been found for the Na I line
profiles observed in extremely cool, metal-rich white dwarfs. We show that the
line profile in both cases is strongly determined by multiple-perturber
interactions at short distances and can no longer be reproduced by a density
expansion, but requires calculation of the full profile in a unified theory.
Including such line profiles in stellar atmosphere codes will further improve
models for the coolest and densest dwarfs as well as for the deeper atmosphere
layers of substellar objects in general.Comment: VI Serbian Conference on Spectral Line Shapes in Astrophysics; to be
published by the American Institute of Physics, eds. Milan S. Dimitrijevic
and Luka C. Popovic; 6 pages, 6 figure
Study of coupled states for the (4s^{2})^{1}S + (4s4p)^{3}P asymptote of Ca_{2}
The coupled states A^{1}\Sigma_{u}^{+} (^{1}D +}1}S), c^{3}\Pi_{u} (^{3}P +
^{1}S) and a^{3}\Sigma_{u}^{+} (^{3}P +}1}S) of the calcium dimer are
investigated in a laser induced fluorescence experiment combined with
high-resolution Fourier-transform spectroscopy. A global deperturbation
analysis of the observed levels, considering a model, which is complete within
the subspace of relevant neighboring states, is performed using the Fourier
Grid Hamiltonian method. We determine the potential energy curve of the
A^{1}\Sigma_{u}^{+} and c^{3}\Pi_{u} states and the strengths of the couplings
between them. The c^{3}\Pi_{u} and \as states are of particular importance for
the description of collisional processes between calcium atoms in the ground
state ^{1}S_{0} and excited state ^{3}P_{1} applied in studies for establishing
an optical frequency standard with Ca.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure
The Determinants of Corporate Liquidity in the Netherlands
We investigate the driving forces of corporate liquidity for a balanced panel of large Dutch non-financial firms during the period 1986-1997 using an error-correction framework. This framework allows a crucial distinction between short-run and long-run determinants of corporate liquidity. We conclude from our empirical estimates that long-run corporate liquidity targets exist and are based on a small number of firm characteristics. In the short run liquidity responds passively to exogenous shocks. The latter phenomenon is consistent both with buffer stock behaviour and pecking order theory. Passive liquidity behaviour does not extend to the long run, however. On average eighty percent of deviations from target is eliminated within one year. Overall, we conclude that the corporate liquidity ratio is an actively managed financial ratio and does not passively adjust to financial decisions taken elsewhere in the firm. Based on long run evidence, a pecking order theory of corporate liquidity holdings must be rejected.financial economics and financial management ;
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