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Crotalus enyo
Number of Pages: 6Integrative BiologyGeological Science
IMPACTS OF THE FARM FINANCIAL CRISIS: RESULTS OF THE 1989 REGIONAL FARM SURVEY FOR MINNESOTA
Agricultural Finance,
Psalms for Skeptics (101-150)
Sparked by phrases from the book of Psalms, these poems question and occasionally affirm our everyday ideas about life, mortality, the afterlife, God, family, and belief. In vigorous contemporary language—complaining, lamenting, and wisecracking on everything from Job\u27s wife to baseball, crows to angels, circus elephants to Mary Magdalene—but in traditional form, these sonnets, or little songs, speak what we feel, not what we ought to say. [From the publisher]https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/books/1060/thumbnail.jp
Thermally-Assisted Spin-Transfer Torque Dynamics in Energy Space
We consider the general Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert theory underlying the
magnetization dynamics of a macrospin magnet subject to spin-torque effects and
thermal fluctuations. Thermally activated dynamical properties are analyzed by
averaging the full magnetization equations over constant- energy orbits. After
averaging, all the relevant dynamical scenarios are a function of the ratio
between hard and easy axis anisotropies. We derive analytically the range of
currents for which limit cycles exist and discuss the regimes in which the
constant energy orbit averaging technique is applicable
Thermally-Assisted Spin-Transfer Torque Magnetization Reversal of Uniaxial Nanomagnets in Energy Space
The asymptotic behavior of switching time as a function of current for a
uniaxial macrospin under the effects of both spin-torque and thermal noise is
explored analytically by focusing on its diffusive energy space dynamics. The
scaling dependence (, ) is shown
to confirm recent literature results. The analysis shows the mean switching
time to be functionally independent of the angle between the spin current and
magnet's uniaxial axes. These results have important implications for modeling
the energetics of thermally assisted magnetization reversal of spin transfer
magnetic random access memory bit cells.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1205.650
On the Low and High Frequency Correlation in Quasi-Periodic Oscillations Among White Dwarfs, Neutron Star and Black Hole Binaries
We interpret the correlation over five orders of magnitude between high
frequency and low frequency in a quasi-periodic oscillations (QPO) found by
Psaltis, Belloni & van der Klis (1999) for black hole (BH), neutron star (NS)
systems and then extended by Mauche (2002) to white dwarf (WD) binaries. We
argue that the observed correlation is a natural consequence of the Keplerian
disk flow adjustment to the innermost sub-Keplerian boundary conditions near
the central object. In the framework of the transition layer model the high
frequency is related to the Keplerian frequency at the outer (adjustment)
radius and the low frequency is related to the magnetoacoustic oscillation (MA)
frequency. Using a relation between the MA frequency the magnetic and gas
pressure and the density and the hydrostatic equilibrium condition in the disk
we infer a linear correlation the Keplerian frequency and the MA frequency. We
estimate the magnetic field strength near the TL outer radius for BHs NSs and
WDs. The fact that the observed high-low frequency correlation over five orders
of magnitude is valid for BHs, NSs, and down to WDs strongly rules out
relativistic models for QPO phenomena. We come to the conclusion that the QPOs
observations indicate the adjustment of the geometrically thin disk to
sub-Keplerian motion near the central object. This effect is a common feature
for a wide class of systems, starting from white dwarf binaries up to black
hole binaries.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in the ApJ. Letters 2002
August
Critical Currents of Josephson-Coupled Wire Arrays
We calculate the current-voltage characteristics and critical current
I_c^{array} of an array of Josephson-coupled superconducting wires. The array
has two layers, each consisting of a set of parallel wires, arranged at right
angles, such that an overdamped resistively-shunted junction forms wherever two
wires cross. A uniform magnetic field equal to f flux quanta per plaquette is
applied perpendicular to the layers. If f = p/q, where p and q are mutually
prime integers, I_c^{array}(f) is found to have sharp peaks when q is a small
integer. To an excellent approximation, it is found in a square array of n^2
plaquettes, that I_c^{array}(f) \propto (n/q)^{1/2} for sufficiently large n.
This result is interpreted in terms of the commensurability between the array
and the assumed q \times q unit cell of the ground state vortex lattice.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Airborne lidar observations of Arctic polar stratospheric clouds
Polar stratospheric clouds (PSC's) have been detected repeatedly during Arctic and Antarctic winters since 1978/1979 by the SAM II (Stratospheric Aerosol Measurement II) instrument aboard the NIMBUS-7 satellite. PSC's are believed to form when supercooled sulfuric acid droplets freeze, and subsequently grow by deposition of ambient water vapor as the local stratospheric temperature falls below the frost point. In order to study the characteristics of PSC's at higher spatial and temporal resolution than that possible from the satellite observations, aircraft missions were conducted within the Arctic polar night vortex in Jan. 1984 and Jan. 1986 using the NASA Langley Research Center airborne dual polarization ruby lidar system. A synopsis of the 1984 and 1986 PSC observations is presented illustrating short range spatial changes in cloud structure, the variation of backscatter ratio with temperature, and the depolarization characterics of cloud layers. Implications are noted with regard to PSC particle characteristics and the physical process by which the clouds are thougth to form
Applying Optimization and the Analytic Hierarchy Process to Enhance Agricultural Preservation Strategies in the State of Delaware
Using agricultural preservation priorities derived from an analytical hierarchy process by 23 conservation experts from 18 agencies in the state of Delaware, this research uses weighted benefit measures to evaluate the historical success of Delaware’s agricultural protection fund, which spent nearly 25 million.conservation optimization, farmland protection, analytic hierarchy process, binary linear programming, Environmental Economics and Policy, Land Economics/Use, Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies,
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