57,508 research outputs found
Fears and realisations of employment insecurity
We investigate the validity of subjective data expectations of job loss and on the probability of re-employment consequent on job loss, by examining associations between expectations and realisations. We find that subjective expectations data reveal private information about subsequent job loss, the expectations data perform better with numerical descriptors than with ordinal verbal descriptors. On average, employees overestimate the chance of losing their job; while they underestimate the difficulty of finding another job as good as the currently-held one. We recommend that survey items on employment insecurity should be explicit about each risk investigation, and utilise a cardinal probability scale with discrete numerical descriptors
Radio Images of 3C 58: Expansion and Motion of its Wisp
New 1.4 GHz VLA observations of the pulsar-powered supernova remnant 3C 58
have resulted in the highest-quality radio images of this object to date. The
images show filamentary structure over the body of the nebula. The present
observations were combined with earlier ones from 1984 and 1991 to investigate
the variability of the radio emission on a variety of time-scales. No
significant changes are seen over a 110 day interval. In particular, the upper
limit on the apparent projected velocity of the wisp is 0.05c. The expansion
rate of the radio nebula was determined between 1984 and 2004, and is
0.014+/-0.003%/year, corresponding to a velocity of 630+/-70 km/s along the
major axis. If 3C 58 is the remnant of SN 1181, it must have been strongly
decelerated, which is unlikely given the absence of emission from the supernova
shell. Alternatively, the low expansion speed and a number of other arguments
suggest that 3C 58 may be several thousand years old and not be the remnant of
SN 1181.Comment: 12 pages; accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
Physics at COSY
The COSY accelerator in J\'ulich is presented together with its internal and
external detectors. The physics programme performed recently is discussed with
emphasis on strangeness physics.Comment: Invited talk given at the "10th International Symposium on
Meson-Nucleon Physics and the Structure of the Nucleon (MENU04)," IHEP,
Beijing, China, 30/Aug.-4/Sept./0
The role of electrons in sputter deposition in thin films
Imperial Users onl
Charge shelving and bias spectroscopy for the readout of a charge-qubit on the basis of superposition states
Charge-based qubits have been proposed as fundamental elements for quantum
computers. One commonly proposed readout device is the single-electron
transistor (SET). SETs can distinguish between localized charge states, but
lack the sensitivity to directly distinguish superposition states, which have
greatly enhanced coherence times compared with position states. We propose
introducing a third dot, and exploiting energy dependent tunnelling from the
qubit into this dot (bias spectroscopy) for pseudo-spin to charge conversion
and superposition basis readout. We introduce an adiabatic fast passage-style
charge pumping technique which enables efficient and robust readout via charge
shelving, avoiding problems due to finite SET measurement time.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, note slightly changed title, replaced with
journal versio
Chromatographic separation and identification of some peptides in partial hydroylsates of gelatin
Recently we have been engaged in a study of the chemical structure of collagen and gelatin with the object of determining the sequence of the amino acid residues in the polypeptide chains of these proteins. In the course of this study we have made considerable progress in the chromatographic analysis of complex mixtures of peptides and we have isolated and identified several simple peptides which occur in partial hydrolysates of gelatin. The initial separation of the mixture into zones of one or more peptides has been made on a column of ion exchange resin; further separation of the peptides in each zone has been achieved by chromatographing in the form of dinitrophenyl (DNP) peptides on columns of silicic acid-Celite. It is to be hoped that the particular combination of chromatographic methods which has been successfully used in the present study will be helpful in the resolution of the complex mixtures which result from the partial hydrolysis of other proteins
Alternative sets of hyperspherical harmonics: Satisfying cusp conditions through frame transformations
By extending the concept of Euler-angle rotations to more than three
dimensions, we develop the systematics under rotations in higher-dimensional
space for a novel set of hyperspherical harmonics. Applying this formalism, we
determine all pairwise Coulomb interactions in a few-body system without
recourse to multipole expansions. Our approach combines the advantages of
relative coordinates with those of the hyperspherical description. In the
present method, each Coulomb matrix element reduces to the ``1/r'' form
familiar from the two-body problem. Consequently, our calculation accounts for
all the cusps in the wave function whenever an interparticle separation
vanishes. Unlike a truncated multipole expansion, the calculation presented
here is exact. Following the systematic development of the procedure for an
arbitrary number of particles, we demonstrate it explicitly with the simplest
nontrivial example, the three-body system.Comment: 19 pages, no figure
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Stardust microcrater residue compositional groups
Compositional groups are defined in residue from Stardust craters (1-9 Dc) by qualitative EDS. These compositional groups are being further studied by a FIB-SEM technique to determine representative residue compositions
Many-body theory for positronium-atom interactions
A many-body-theory approach has been developed to study positronium-atom
interactions. As first applications, we calculate the elastic scattering and
momentum-transfer cross sections and the pickoff annihilation rate
for Ps collisions with He and Ne. The cross section for He is
in agreement with previous coupled-state calculations, and the
momentum-transfer cross section for Ne agrees with available experimental data.
is found to be 0.13 and 0.26 for He and Ne, respectively, in
excellent agreement with the measured values.Comment: Accepted by Phys. Rev. Lett. (V2 contains update to text and Figs. 3
and 5. V3 contains further discussion on the calculation of pickoff
annihilation rates.
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