7,253 research outputs found
Dynamic holographic storage in lithium niobate
A program was undertaken to improve the optical recording properties of LiNbO3 for holographic optical memory application. Iron, copper, and manganese doping were all found to increase the optical sensitivity of LiNbO3. Over two orders of magnitude improvement was obtained, resulting in an exposure of 366 wirojoule/sq mm to obtain 1% efficiency in LiNbO3:Fe. High :Fe. High quality pictorial information was stored in 1mm diameter holograms
A new optical recording medium
Method has been developed for doping lithium niobiate crystals with transition metal to increase rate at which crystal can record optical data. Discovery may facilitate development of system for analog storage of TV frames, printed pages, photographs, and other visual information
Fair Equality of Opportunity Critically Reexamined: The Family and the Sustainability of Health Care Systems
A complex interaction of ideological, financial, social, and moral
factors makes the financial sustainability of health care systems a
challenge across the world. One difficulty is that some of the moral
commitments of some health care systems collide with reality. In
particular, commitments to equality in access to health care and
to fair equality of opportunity undergird an unachievable promise,
namely, to provide all with the best of basic health care. In addition,
commitments to fair equality of opportunity are in tension with the
existence of families, because families are aimed at advantaging
their own members in preference to others. Because the social-democratic
state is committed to fair equality of opportunity, it offers
a web of publicly funded entitlements that make it easier for persons
to exit the family and to have children outside of marriage.
In the United States, in 2008, 41% of children were born outside of
wedlock, whereas, in 1940, the percentage was only 3.8%, and in
1960, 5%, with the further consequence that the social and financial
capital generated through families, which aids in supporting
health care in families, is diminished. In order to explore the challenge
of creating a sustainable health care system that also supports
the traditional family, the claims made for fair equality of opportunity
in health care are critically reconsidered. This is done by
engaging the expository device of John Rawls's original position, but
with a thin theory of the good that is substantively different from
that of Rawls, one that supports a health care system built around
significant copayments, financial counseling, and compulsory savings,
with a special focus on enhancing the financial and social
capital of the family. This radical recasting of Rawls, which draws
inspiration from Singapore, is undertaken as a heuristic to aid in articulating an approach to health care allocation that can lead
past the difficulties of social-democratic policy
11. Looking Back
From Alumni Views, Robert H. Bluestein (’67), “ILR addressed the social and economic issues of the times and sought to provide students with the tools to find solutions to many of the problems confronting society in the mid-to late-sixties. This was a period easily described as volatile, evolutionary, and sometimes revolutionary. As would have been the case at any vibrant institution, the curriculum and the students at ILR reflected those times.” Includes: Alumni Views of ILR; The Creation of the Alpern Scholarship and Prize; and A Professor’s Perspective
Development of a theory of the spectral reflectance of minerals, part 2
Theory of diffuse reflectance of particulate media including garnet, glass, corundum powders, and mixture
A model independent and rephase invariant parametrization of CP violation
The phenomenological description of the neutral B meson system is proposed in
terms of the fundamental CP-violating observables and within a rephasing
invariant formalism. This generic formalism can select the time-dependent and
time-integrated asymmetries which provide the basic tools to discriminate the
different kinds of possible CP-violating effects in dedicated experimental
B-meson facilities.Comment: 19 pages, Plain Te
Shift in the velocity of a front due to a cut-off
We consider the effect of a small cut-off epsilon on the velocity of a
traveling wave in one dimension. Simulations done over more than ten orders of
magnitude as well as a simple theoretical argument indicate that the effect of
the cut-off epsilon is to select a single velocity which converges when epsilon
tends to 0 to the one predicted by the marginal stability argument. For small
epsilon, the shift in velocity has the form K(log epsilon)^(-2) and our
prediction for the constant K agrees very well with the results of our
simulations. A very similar logarithmic shift appears in more complicated
situations, in particular in finite size effects of some microscopic stochastic
systems. Our theoretical approach can also be extended to give a simple way of
deriving the shift in position due to initial conditions in the
Fisher-Kolmogorov or similar equations.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
A Nuclear Physics Program at the ATLAS Experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider
The ATLAS collaboration has significant interest in the physics of
ultra-relativistic heavy ion collisions. We submitted a Letter of Intent to the
United States Department of Energy in March 2002. The following document is a
slightly modified version of that LOI. More details are available at:
http://atlas.web.cern.ch/Atlas/GROUPS/PHYSICS/SM/ionsComment: Letter of Intent submitted to the United States Department of Energy
Nuclear Physics Division in March 2002 (revised version
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