5,964 research outputs found
Triaxial digital fluxgate magnetometer for NASA applications explorer mission: Results of tests of critical elements
Tests performed to prove the critical elements of the triaxial digital fluxgate magnetometer design were described. A method for improving the linearity of the analog to digital converter portion of the instrument was studied in detail. A sawtooth waveform was added to the signal being measured before the A/D conversion, and averaging the digital readings over one cycle of the sawtooth. It was intended to reduce bit error nonlinearities present in the A/D converter which could be expected to be as much as 16 gamma if not reduced. No such nonlinearities were detected in the output of the instrument which included the feature designed to reduce these nonlinearities. However, a small scale nonlinearity of plus or minus 2 gamma with a 64 gamma repetition rate was observed in the unit tested. A design improvement intended to eliminate this small scale nonlinearity was examined
An exploration into the client at the heart of therapy : a qualitative perspective
Over 50 years ago Eysenck challenged the existing base of research into psychotherapy. Since that time, a large number of investigations have been conducted to verify the efficacy of therapy. Recently however, an increasing number of studies have cast new doubts on this research base. Instead of therapy being a function of the therapist, it is now becoming ever more apparent that the client plays a prime role in the therapeutic process. The qualitative studies presented in this paper provide some examples of research that demonstrates that clients are actively involved in their therapy, even making counselling work despite their counsellor. These studies suggest that clients may not experience therapy as beneficially as traditional outcome studies indicate. This raises a new challenge to researchers to more fully explore the client's experience of therapy, a challenge to which qualitative methods of inquiry would appear well suited
Resources, Trade, and Debt
The paper studies a two-region economy that has two sectors and three factors of production: oil, capital, and labor. The South exports oil in exchange for industrial goods from the North. There is a net capital inflow to the South. This equals the difference between its export revenues and import costs, and represents the South's indebtedness. This overseas borrowing finances the development of the oil sector: increased borrowing leads to &her oil supplies, to new levels of consumption and a new distribution of income in the South, and to new levels of industrial exports from the North. The paper studies the macro impacts of changes in the values of the debt on both the borrowing and the lending regions
Quasars and Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies: At the Limit?
We have detected the host galaxies of 16 nearby, radio-quiet quasars using
images obtained with the Near-Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer
(NICMOS). We confirm that these luminous quasars tend to live in luminous,
early-type host galaxies, and we use the host-galaxy magnitudes to refine the
luminosity/host-mass limit inferred from ground-based studies. If quasars obey
the relation found for massive dark
objects in nonactive galaxies, then our analysis implies that they radiate at
up to of the Eddington rate. An analogous analysis for ultraluminous
infrared galaxies shows them to accrete at up to similar Eddington fractions,
consistent with the hypothesis that some of them are powered by embedded
quasars.Comment: 9 pages, includes 2 eps figs, accepted to ApJLet
Correlation effects in Ni 3d states of LaNiPO
The electronic structure of the new superconducting material LaNiPO
experimentally probed by soft X-ray spectroscopy and theoretically calculated
by the combination of local density approximation with Dynamical Mean-Field
Theory (LDA+DMFT) are compared herein. We have measured the Ni L2,3 X-ray
emission (XES) and absorption (XAS) spectra which probe the occupied and
unoccupied the Ni 3d states, respectively. In LaNiPO, the Ni 3d states are
strongly renormalized by dynamical correlations and shifted about 1.5 eV lower
in the valence band than the corresponding Fe 3d states in LaFeAsO. We further
obtain a lower Hubbard band at -9 eV below the Fermi level in LaNiPO which
bears striking resemblance to the lower Hubbard band in the correlated oxide
NiO, while no such band is observed in LaFeAsO. These results are also
supported by the intensity ratio between the transition metal L2 and L3 bands
measured experimentally to be higher in LaNiPO than in LaFeAsO, indicating the
presence of the stronger electron correlations in the Ni 3d states in LaNiPO in
comparison with the Fe 3d states in LaFeAsO. These findings are in accordance
with resonantly excited transition metal L3 X-ray emission spectra which probe
occupied metal 3d-states and show the appearance of the lower Hubbard band in
LaNiPO and NiO and its absence in LaFeAsO.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Nanoparticle tethered antioxidant response element as a biosensor for oxygen induced toxicity in retinal endothelial cells
Purpose: A novel system, based on biosensor DNA tethered to a nanoparticle, was developed for the treatment of retinopathy of prematurity. Methods: The construction of a five-layered nanoparticle was visualized with gel electrophoresis. Transcriptionally active PCR products (TAP) containing the biosensor sequence, were bioconjugated to the surface of magnetic nanoparticles yielding biosensor tethered magnetic nanoparticles (MNP). The biosensor was based on an enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) reporter gene driven by an enhanced antioxidant response element ( ARE). Image analysis and flow cytometry were used to characterize MNP delivery and biosensor activity. Results: The MNP penetrated dividing and migrating cells more often than quiescent endothelial cells in a wound-healing in vitro assay. Prussian blue staining demonstrated that more cells have nanoparticle cores than are transfected. When compared to naked TAP alone, MNP transfected more cells in a dose dependent manner. Both the biosensor alone and MNP induce gene expression in the presence of hyperoxia, greater than 1.5 fold over normoxic controls. These data also show that the MNP had a signal to noise ratio of 0.5 greater than the plasmid form of the biosensor as demonstrated by flow cytometry. Conclusions: This approach has the potential to allow the endothelial cells of the retinal vasculature to prevent or treat themselves after hyperoxic insult, rather than systemic treatment to protect or treat only the retina
The Evolution of a Mass-Selected Sample of Early-Type Field Galaxies
We investigate the evolution of mass-selected early-type field galaxies using
a sample of 28 gravitational lenses spanning the redshift range 0 < z < 1.
Based on the redshift-dependent intercept of the fundamental plane in the rest
frame B band, we measure an evolution rate of d log (M/L)_B / dz = -0.56 +/-
0.04 (all errors are 1 sigma unless noted) if we directly compare to the local
intercept measured from the Coma cluster. Re-fitting the local intercept helps
minimize potential systematic errors, and yields an evolution rate of d log
(M/L)_B / dz = -0.54 +/- 0.09. An evolution analysis of properly-corrected
aperture mass-to-light ratios (defined by the lensed image separations) is
closely related to the Faber-Jackson relation. In rest frame B band we find an
evolution rate of d log (M/L)_B / dz = -0.41 +/- 0.21, a present-day
characteristic magnitude of M_{*0} = -19.70 + 5 log h +/- 0.29 (assuming a
characteristic velocity dispersion of sigma_{DM*} = 225 km/s), and a
Faber-Jackson slope of gamma_{FJ} = 3.29 +/- 0.58. The measured evolution rates
favor old stellar populations (mean formation redshift z_f > 1.8 at 2 sigma
confidence for a Salpeter initial mass function and a flat Omega_m =0.3
cosmology) among early-type field galaxies, and argue against significant
episodes of star formation at z < 1.Comment: 38 pages; 9 figs; ApJ accepted; REVISION: erroneous image separation
corrected for one lens, another lens removed; results recalculated and
slightly modifie
Don't bleach chaotic data
A common first step in time series signal analysis involves digitally
filtering the data to remove linear correlations. The residual data is
spectrally white (it is ``bleached''), but in principle retains the nonlinear
structure of the original time series. It is well known that simple linear
autocorrelation can give rise to spurious results in algorithms for estimating
nonlinear invariants, such as fractal dimension and Lyapunov exponents. In
theory, bleached data avoids these pitfalls. But in practice, bleaching
obscures the underlying deterministic structure of a low-dimensional chaotic
process. This appears to be a property of the chaos itself, since nonchaotic
data are not similarly affected. The adverse effects of bleaching are
demonstrated in a series of numerical experiments on known chaotic data. Some
theoretical aspects are also discussed.Comment: 12 dense pages (82K) of ordinary LaTeX; uses macro psfig.tex for
inclusion of figures in text; figures are uufile'd into a single file of size
306K; the final dvips'd postscript file is about 1.3mb Replaced 9/30/93 to
incorporate final changes in the proofs and to make the LaTeX more portable;
the paper will appear in CHAOS 4 (Dec, 1993
- …
