26,964 research outputs found
The Saga of Cable TV\u27s Must-Carry Rules: Will a New Phoenix Rise from the Constitutional Ashes?
System engineering considerations in spacecraft design
System engineering considerations in spacecraft desig
A Stark decelerator on a chip
A microstructured array of 1254 electrodes on a substrate has been configured
to generate an array of local minima of electric field strength with a
periodicity of 120 m about 25 m above the substrate. By applying
sinusoidally varying potentials to the electrodes, these minima can be made to
move smoothly along the array. Polar molecules in low-field seeking quantum
states can be trapped in these traveling potential wells. Recently, we
experimentally demonstrated this by transporting metastable CO molecules at
constant velocities above the substrate [Phys. Rev. Lett. 100 (2008) 153003].
Here, we outline and experimentally demonstrate how this microstructured array
can be used to decelerate polar molecules directly from a molecular beam. For
this, the sinusoidally varying potentials need to be switched on when the
molecules arrive above the chip, their frequency needs to be chirped down in
time, and they need to be switched off before the molecules leave the chip
again. Deceleration of metastable CO molecules from an initial velocity of 360
m/s to a final velocity as low as 240 m/s is demonstrated in the 15-35 mK deep
potential wells above the 5 cm long array of electrodes. This corresponds to a
deceleration of almost , and about 85 cm of kinetic energy is
removed from the metastable CO molecules in this process.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure
Ethical Leadership in Kazakhstan: An Exploratory Study
This study measured ethical leadership perceptions utilizing a new corporate culture scale in a Central Asian country. Ethical leadership ratings from 103 Kazakhstani employees were used to determine how they perceived their managers in terms of being moral people and moral managers. Results indicate that managers are perceived as relatively weaker moral managers as compared to moral persons. Holding employees accountable for their actions is the lowest rated aspect of the moral manager. Definitions of moral persons and moral managers in Kazakhstan vary somewhat from an American culture-oriented ethical leadership model. Implications for theory and practice are discussed
Multi-spectral and thermal scanner experiments along the Massachusetts coastline Final report
Aerial multispectral and infrared scanning of Massachusetts coastlin
A method for comparing non-nested models with application to astrophysical searches for new physics
Searches for unknown physics and decisions between competing astrophysical
models to explain data both rely on statistical hypothesis testing. The usual
approach in searches for new physical phenomena is based on the statistical
Likelihood Ratio Test (LRT) and its asymptotic properties. In the common
situation, when neither of the two models under comparison is a special case of
the other i.e., when the hypotheses are non-nested, this test is not
applicable. In astrophysics, this problem occurs when two models that reside in
different parameter spaces are to be compared. An important example is the
recently reported excess emission in astrophysical -rays and the
question whether its origin is known astrophysics or dark matter. We develop
and study a new, simple, generally applicable, frequentist method and validate
its statistical properties using a suite of simulations studies. We exemplify
it on realistic simulated data of the Fermi-LAT -ray satellite, where
non-nested hypotheses testing appears in the search for particle dark matter.Comment: We welcome examples of non-nested models testing problem
Evaluating the influence of lake morphology, trophic status and diagenesis on geochemical profiles in lake sediments
Recent geochemical studies provide evidence that changes in vertical distributions of nutrients in lake sediments are driven by anthropogenic activities, based primarily on trends of increasing concentrations in upper sediment layers. However, we show that vertical concentration profiles of carbon (C), nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) in lake sediments can be higher in the upper, most recently deposited sediment strata, driven largely by natural diagenetic processes and not eutrophication alone. We examined sediment cores from 14 different lakes in New Zealand and China ranging from oligotrophic to highly eutrophic and shallow to deep, and found that the shape of vertical profiles of total P, a key nutrient for lake productivity, can be similar in sediments across gradients of widely differing trophic status. We derived and applied empirical and mechanistic diagenesis steady state profile models to describe the vertical distribution of C, N and P in the sediments. These models, which focus on large scale temporal (decades) and spatial (up to 35 cm in the vertical) processes, revealed that density-differentiated burial and biodiffusive mixing, were strongly correlated with vertical concentration gradients of sediment C, N and P content, whereas lake trophic status was not. A sensitivity analysis of parameters included in the diagenetic model further showed that the processes including flux of organic matter to the sediment-water interface, burial (net sedimentation), breakdown of organic matter and biodiffusion all significantly can influence the vertical distribution of sediment P content. We conclude that geochemical studies attempting to evaluate drivers of the vertical distribution of sediment C, N, and P content in lake sediments should also account for the natural diagenetic drivers of vertical concentration gradients, assisted with application of similar models to those presented in this study. This would include quantification of key sediment diagenesis model parameters to separate out the influence of anthropogenic activities
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