768 research outputs found
Interrole Conflicts in the Hospitality Industry: The Role of Positive Affectivity as an Antidote
This study investigates the role of positive affectivity as a buffer against the detrimental effects of interrole conflicts on frontline hotel employees’ job performance and turnover intentions. Data collected from a sample of frontline hotel employees in Turkey serve as the study setting. Results and their implications are discussed, and directions for future research are offered
Preferences, Selection, and Value Added: A Structural Approach Applied to Turkish Exam High Schools
What do applicants care about when choosing a school in Turkey? Are their preferences vertical or horizontal? Which school attributes seem to matter? Do selective schools con-tribute to their students' success, or is their performance attributable to the higher ability of the students they accept? By taking a structural approach we answer all these questions in one go. We find that students seem to infer quality from past performance in the University entrance exam. There also seems to be a consumption value of attending elite schools and schools add very different value and this is unrelated to their selectivity
1 mJ pulse bursts from a Yb-doped fiber amplifier
Cataloged from PDF version of article.We demonstrate burst-mode operation of a polarization-maintaining Yb-doped fiber amplifier capable of generating 60 mu J pulses within bursts of 11 pulses with extremely uniform energy distribution facilitated by a novel feedback mechanism shaping the seed of the burst-mode amplifier. The burst energy can be scaled up to 1 mJ, comprising 25 pulses with 40 mu J average individual energy. The amplifier is synchronously pulse pumped to minimize amplified spontaneous emission between the bursts. Pulse propagation is entirely in fiber and fiber-integrated components until the grating compressor, which allows for highly robust operation. The burst repetition rate is set to 1 kHz and spacing between individual pulses is 10 ns. The 40 mu J pulses are externally compressible to a full width at half-maximum of 600 fs. However, due to the substantial pedestal of the compressed pulses, the effective pulse duration is longer, estimated to be 1.2 ps. (C) 2012 Optical Society of Americ
Determining the Electron-Phonon Coupling Strength in Correlated Electron Systems from Resonant Inelastic X-ray Scattering
We show that high resolution Resonant Inelastic X-ray Scattering (RIXS)
provides direct, element-specific and momentum-resolved information on the
electron-phonon (e-p) coupling strength. Our theoretical analysis demonstrates
that the e-p coupling can be extracted from RIXS spectra by determining the
differential phonon scattering cross section. An alternative, very direct
manner to extract the coupling is to use the one and two-phonon loss ratio,
which is governed by the e-p coupling strength and the core-hole life-time.
This allows measurement of the e-p coupling on an absolute energy scale.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Texturing of titanium (Ti6Al4V) medical implant surfaces with MHz-repetition-rate femtosecond and picosecond Yb-doped fiber lasers
Cataloged from PDF version of article.We propose and demonstrate the use of short pulsed fiber lasers in surface texturing using MHz-repetition-rate, microjoule- and sub-microjoule-energy pulses. Texturing of titanium-based (Ti6Al4V) dental implant surfaces is achieved using femtosecond, picosecond and (for comparison) nanosecond pulses with the aim of controlling attachment of human cells onto the surface. Femtosecond and picosecond pulses yield similar results in the creation of micron-scale textures with greatly reduced or no thermal heat effects, whereas nanosecond pulses result in strong thermal effects. Various surface textures are created with excellent uniformity and repeatability on a desired portion of the surface. The effects of the surface texturing on the attachment and proliferation of cells are characterized under cell culture conditions. Our data indicate that picosecond-pulsed laser modification can be utilized effectively in low-cost laser surface engineering of medical implants, where different areas on the surface can be made cell-attachment friendly or hostile through the use of different patterns. (C) 2011 Optical Society of Americ
Spin waves and spin-state transitions in a ruthenate high-temperature antiferromagnet
Ruthenium compounds play prominent roles in materials research ranging from
oxide electronics to catalysis, and serve as a platform for fundamental
concepts such as spin-triplet superconductivity, Kitaev spin-liquids, and
solid-state analogues of the Higgs mode in particle physics. However, basic
questions about the electronic structure of ruthenates remain unanswered,
because several key parameters (including the Hund's-rule, spin-orbit, and
exchange interactions) are comparable in magnitude, and their interplay is
poorly understood - partly due to difficulties in synthesizing sizable single
crystals for spectroscopic experiments. Here we introduce a resonant inelastic
x-ray scattering (RIXS) technique capable of probing collective modes in
microcrystals of -electron materials. We present a comprehensive set of
data on spin waves and spin-state transitions in the honeycomb antiferromagnet
SrRuO, which possesses an unusually high N\'eel temperature. The
new RIXS method provides fresh insight into the unconventional magnetism of
SrRuO, and enables momentum-resolved spectroscopy of a large class
of transition-metal compounds.Comment: The original submitted version of the published manuscript.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41563-019-0327-
- …
