1,678 research outputs found
Reading Materials and Reading Trends of Youth Incarcerated in Mississippi’s State-Run Training School
While MS Code 43-21-321(5)(i) requires juvenile detention centers to make reading materials available to delinquents, it fails to define specifics about the types of reading materials to which youth are to have access. Likewise, while the Robertson and Dunaway (2006) report identified facilities that provided materials and levels of access, it fell short of providing specific information on the reading materials available in the juvenile detention centers because it was not within the scope of the report. Thus, there is no clear picture of what materials delinquents have access to or read when they are placed in a juvenile correctional facility in Mississippi. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine the circulation records at one facility, OYDC, to determine the types of reading materials that it provides or makes available to the juveniles it houses and to determine the reading preferences of delinquents during their incarceration
Next-to-next-to-leading order results for heavy quark pair production in quark--antiquark collisions: The one-loop squared contributions
We calculate the next-to-next-to-leading order
one-loop squared corrections to the production of heavy quark pairs in
quark-antiquark annihilations. These are part of the next-to-next-to-leading
order radiative QCD corrections to this process. Our
results, with the full mass dependence retained, are presented in a closed and
very compact form, in the dimensional regularization scheme. We have found very
intriguing factorization properties for the finite part of the amplitudes.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, electronic results file, abbreviation NNLO in
Title and Abstract expanded, Summary expanded, reference updated, version to
appear in Phys.Rev.
One-loop amplitudes for four-point functions with two external massive quarks and two external massless partons up to O(epsilon^2)
We present complete analytical results on the
one-loop amplitudes relevant for the NNLO quark-parton model description of the
hadroproduction of heavy quarks as given by the so-called loop-by-loop
contributions. All results of the perturbative calculation are given in the
dimensional regularization scheme. These one-loop amplitudes can also be used
as input in the determination of the corresponding NNLO cross sections for
heavy flavor photoproduction, and in photon-photon reactions.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures in the text, Revtex, one reference added, minor
improvements in the text, to appear in Phys.Rev.
Atom detection and photon production in a scalable, open, optical microcavity
A microfabricated Fabry-Perot optical resonator has been used for atom
detection and photon production with less than 1 atom on average in the cavity
mode. Our cavity design combines the intrinsic scalability of microfabrication
processes with direct coupling of the cavity field to single-mode optical
waveguides or fibers. The presence of the atom is seen through changes in both
the intensity and the noise characteristics of probe light reflected from the
cavity input mirror. An excitation laser passing transversely through the
cavity triggers photon emission into the cavity mode and hence into the
single-mode fiber. These are first steps towards building an optical
microcavity network on an atom chip for applications in quantum information
processing.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. A typographical error in the published paper has
been corrected (equation of the corrected normalized variance, page 3, 2nd
paragraph
The Thermal Stability of Mass-Loaded Flows
We present a linear stability analysis of a flow undergoing
conductively-driven mass-loading from embedded clouds. We find that
mass-loading damps isobaric and isentropic perturbations, and in this regard is
similar to the effect of thermal conduction, but is much more pronounced where
many embedded clumps exist. The stabilizing influence of mass-loading is
wavelength independent against isobaric (condensing) perturbations, but
wavelength dependent against isentropic (wave-like) perturbations. We derive
equations for the degree of mass-loading needed to stabilize such
perturbations. We have also made 1D numerical simulations of a mass-loaded
radiative shock and demonstrated the damping of the overstability when
mass-loading is rapid enough.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, to be published in A&
Crucial Factors for the Recovery and Conservation of an Archaeological Ship
What factors determine the successful recovery and concentration of a full archaeological ship? While an article by G.D. van der Heide provides guidelines for recovery, he offers no analysis to explain why his issues are valid. Using ten case studies from diverse time periods and geographic locations around the world, this thesis explores van der Heide's issues to determine their significance. The case studies showed that while van der Heide's issues are valid there is no guarantee of a successful project even if they are addressed. There are other issues that are more influential to the outcome of a project, namely the parties responsible for the project and acquiring funding early on. Addressing these two issues increases the chances of having a successful outcome.Ă‚Â Ă‚Â M.A
Validation of Observed Bedload Transport Pathways Using Morphodynamic Modeling
Phenomena related to braiding, including local scour and fill, channel bar development, migration
and avulsion, make numerical morphodynamic modeling of braided rivers challenging. This paper investigates
the performance of a Delft3D model, in a 2D depth-averaged formulation, to simulate the
morphodynamics of an anabranch of the Rees River (New Zealand). Model performance is evaluated using
data from field surveys collected on the falling limb of a major high flow, and using several sediment
transport formulas. Initial model results suggest that there is generally good agreement between observed and
modeled bed levels. However, some discrepancies in the bed level estimations were noticed, leading to bed
level, water depth and water velocity estimation errors
Analysis of reach-scale elevation distribution in braided rivers: Definition of a new morphologic indicator and estimation of mean quantities
This work has been carried out within the SMART Joint Doctorate (Science forthe MAnagement of Rivers and theirTidal systems) funded with the support of the Erasmus Mundus programme of the European Union. Data of the Rees River were derived as part of UKNatural Environment Research Council grant (NE/G005427/1) awarded to PI Brasington, along with further support from the NERC Geophysical Equipmen tFacility (Loan 892) and Leverhulme Trust IAF2014-03
Pyramidal micromirrors for microsystems and atom chips
Concave pyramids are created in the (100) surface of a silicon wafer by anisotropic etching in potassium hydroxide. High quality micromirrors are then formed by sputtering gold onto the smooth silicon (111) faces of the pyramids. These mirrors show great promise as high quality optical devices suitable for integration into micro-optoelectromechanical systems and atom chips. We have shown that structures of this shape can be used to laser-cool and hold atoms in a magneto-optical trap
- …