8,859 research outputs found
Phototube tests in the MiniBooNE experiment
The MiniBooNE neutrino oscillation experiment at Fermilab uses 1520 8-inch
PMTs: 1197 PMTs are Hamamatsu model R1408 and the rest are model R5912. All of
the PMTs were tested to qualify for inclusion in the detector, sorted according
to their charge and time resolutions and dark rates. Seven PMTs underwent
additional low light level tests. The relative detection efficiency as a
function of incident angle for seven additional PMTs was measured. Procedures
and results are presented.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures. Presented at Beaune 2005: 4th International
Conference on New Developments in Photodetection, Beaune, France, 19-24 June
200
Helminths in the gastrointestinal tract 1 as modulators of immunity and pathology
Helminth parasites are highly prevalent in many low- and middle-income countries, in which inflammatory bowel disease and other immunopathologies are less frequent than in the developed world. Many of the most common helminths establish in the gastrointestinal tract, and can exert counter-inflammatory influences on the host immune system. For these reasons, interest has arisen in how parasites may ameliorate intestinal inflammation and whether these organisms, or products they release, could offer future therapies for immune disorders. In this review, we discuss interactions between helminth parasites and the mucosal immune system, and progress made towards identifying mechanisms and molecular mediators through which it may be possible to attenuate pathology in the intestinal tract
Particle dynamics inside shocks in Hamilton-Jacobi equations
Characteristics of a Hamilton-Jacobi equation can be seen as action
minimizing trajectories of fluid particles. For nonsmooth "viscosity"
solutions, which give rise to discontinuous velocity fields, this description
is usually pursued only up to the moment when trajectories hit a shock and
cease to minimize the Lagrangian action. In this paper we show that for any
convex Hamiltonian there exists a uniquely defined canonical global nonsmooth
coalescing flow that extends particle trajectories and determines dynamics
inside the shocks. We also provide a variational description of the
corresponding effective velocity field inside shocks, and discuss relation to
the "dissipative anomaly" in the limit of vanishing viscosity.Comment: 15 pages, no figures; to appear in Philos. Trans. R. Soc. series
How do Humans Determine Reflectance Properties under Unknown Illumination?
Under normal viewing conditions, humans find it easy to distinguish between objects made out of different materials such as plastic, metal, or paper. Untextured materials such as these have different surface reflectance properties, including lightness and gloss. With single isolated images and unknown illumination conditions, the task of estimating surface reflectance is highly underconstrained, because many combinations of reflection and illumination are consistent with a given image. In order to work out how humans estimate surface reflectance properties, we asked subjects to match the appearance of isolated spheres taken out of their original contexts. We found that subjects were able to perform the task accurately and reliably without contextual information to specify the illumination. The spheres were rendered under a variety of artificial illuminations, such as a single point light source, and a number of photographically-captured real-world illuminations from both indoor and outdoor scenes. Subjects performed more accurately for stimuli viewed under real-world patterns of illumination than under artificial illuminations, suggesting that subjects use stored assumptions about the regularities of real-world illuminations to solve the ill-posed problem
James J. Kaput (1942–2005) imagineer and futurologist of mathematics education
Jim Kaput lived a full life in mathematics education and we have many reasons to be grateful to him, not only for his vision of the use of technology in mathematics, but also for his fundamental humanity. This paper considers the origins of his ‘big ideas’ as he lived through the most amazing innovations in technology that have changed our lives more in a generation than in many centuries before. His vision continues as is exemplified by the collected papers in this tribute to his life and work
Effects of surface reflectance and 3D shape on perceived rotation axis
Cataloged from PDF version of article.Surface specularity distorts the optic flow generated by a moving object in a way that provides important cues for identifying surface material properties (Doerschner, Fleming et al., 2011). Here we show that specular flow can also affect the perceived rotation axis of objects. In three experiments, we investigate how threedimensional shape and surface material interact to affect the perceived rotation axis of unfamiliar irregularly shaped and isotropic objects. We analyze observers' patterns of errors in a rotation axis estimation task under four surface material conditions: shiny, matte textured, matte untextured, and silhouette. In addition to the expected large perceptual errors in the silhouette condition, we find that the patterns of errors for the other three material conditions differ from each other and across shape category, yielding the largest differences in error magnitude between shiny and matte, textured isotropic objects. Rotation axis estimation is a crucial implicit computational step to perceive structure from motion; therefore, we test whether a structure from a motion-based model can predict the perceived rotation axis for shiny and matte, textured objects. Our model's predictions closely follow observers' data, even yielding the same reflectance-specific perceptual errors. Unlike previous work (Caudek & Domini, 1998), our model does not rely on the assumption of affine image transformations; however, a limitation of our approach is its reliance on projected correspondence, thus having difficulty in accounting for the perceived rotation axis of smooth shaded objects and silhouettes. In general, our findings are in line with earlier research that demonstrated that shape from motion can be extracted based on several different types of optical deformation (Koenderink & Van Doorn, 1976; Norman & Todd, 1994; Norman, Todd, & Orban, 2004; Pollick, Nishida, Koike, & Kawato, 1994; Todd, 1985). © 2013 Arvo
Linear Sigma EFT for Nearly Conformal Gauge Theories
We construct a generalized linear sigma model as an effective field theory
(EFT) to describe nearly conformal gauge theories at low energies. The work is
motivated by recent lattice studies of gauge theories near the conformal
window, which have shown that the lightest flavor-singlet scalar state in the
spectrum () can be much lighter than the vector state () and
nearly degenerate with the PNGBs () over a large range of quark masses.
The EFT incorporates this feature. We highlight the crucial role played by the
terms in the potential that explicitly break chiral symmetry. The explicit
breaking can be large enough so that a limited set of additional terms in the
potential can no longer be neglected, with the EFT still weakly coupled in this
new range. The additional terms contribute importantly to the scalar and pion
masses. In particular, they relax the inequality , allowing for consistency with current lattice data.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure, published versio
Political Competency: Understanding How College Students Develop Their Political Identity
Constructing models of how students come to understand their identity is a hallmark of student development theory. Yet, there is little published research or institutional attention devoted to the examination of students’ political identity development. In this article, the authors apply existing student development theories to this topic and describe ways that student affairs practitioners can facilitate student growth in this important dimension of adulthood
- …
