3,469 research outputs found
Citation Counts and Evaluation of Researchers in the Internet Age
Bibliometric measures derived from citation counts are increasingly being
used as a research evaluation tool. Their strengths and weaknesses have been
widely analyzed in the literature and are often subject of vigorous debate. We
believe there are a few fundamental issues related to the impact of the web
that are not taken into account with the importance they deserve. We focus on
evaluation of researchers, but several of our arguments may be applied also to
evaluation of research institutions as well as of journals and conferences.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 3 table
Study of RPC gas mixtures for the ARGO-YBJ experiment
The ARGO-YBJ experiment consists of a RPC carpet to be operated at the
Yangbajing laboratory (Tibet, P.R. China), 4300 m a.s.l., and devoted to the
detection of showers initiated by photon primaries in the energy range 100 GeV
- 20 TeV. The measurement technique, namely the timing on the shower front with
a few tens of particles, requires RPC operation with 1 ns time resolution, low
strip multiplicity, high efficiency and low single counting rate. We have
tested RPCs with many gas mixtures, at sea level, in order to optimize these
parameters. The results of this study are reported.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. To be published in Nucl. Instr. Meth. A, talk
given at the "5th International Workshop on RPCs and Related Detectors", Bari
(Italy) 199
Recommended from our members
Atmospheric CO2 decline during the Pliocene intensification of Northern Hemisphere glaciations
Several hypotheses have been put forward to explain the onset of intensive glaciations on Greenland, Scandinavia, and North America during the Pliocene epoch between 3.6 and 2.7 million years ago (Ma). A decrease in atmospheric CO_2 may have played a role during the onset of glaciations, but other tectonic and oceanic events occurring at the same time may have played a part as well. Here we present detailed atmospheric CO_2 estimates from boron isotopes in planktic foraminifer shells spanning 4.6-2.0 Ma. Maximal Pliocene atmospheric CO_2 estimates gradually declined from values around 410 μatm to early Pleistocene values of 300 μatm at 2.0 Ma. After the onset of large-scale ice sheets in the Northern Hemisphere, maximal pCO_2 estimates were still at 2.5 Ma +90 μatm higher than values characteristic of the early Pleistocene interglacials. By contrast, Pliocene minimal atmospheric CO_2 gradually decreased from 310 to 245 μatm at 3.2 Ma, coinciding with the start of transient glaciations on Greenland. Values characteristic of early Pleistocene glacial atmospheric CO_2 of 200 μatm were abruptly reached after 2.7 Ma during the late Pliocene transition. This trend is consistent with the suggestion that ocean stratification and iron fertilization increased after 2.7 Ma in the North Pacific and Southern Ocean and may have led to increased glacial CO_2 storage in the oceanic abyss after 2.7 Ma onward
Particle and light fragment emission in peripheral heavy ion collisions at Fermi energies
A systematic investigation of the average multiplicities of light charged
particles and intermediate mass fragments emitted in peripheral and
semiperipheral collisions is presented as a function of the beam energy,
violence of the collision and mass of the system.
The data have been collected with the "Fiasco" setup in the reactions
93Nb+93Nb at 17, 23, 30, 38AMeV and 116Sn+116Sn at 30, 38AMeV.
The midvelocity emission has been separated from the emission of the
projectile-like fragment. This last component appears to be compatible with an
evaporation from an equilibrated source at normal density, as described by the
statistical code Gemini at the appropriate excitation energy.
On the contrary, the midvelocity emission presents remarkable differences for
what concerns both the dependence of the multiplicities on the energy deposited
in the midvelocity region and the isotopic composition of the emitted light
charged particles.Comment: 18 pages, 17 figures, Revtex
Mental disorders and work integration: a retrospective study in a northern italian town.
OBJECTIVES: THE PRESENT STUDY WAS CONDUCTED IN A VOCATIONAL INTEGRATION SERVICE OF A NORTHERN ITALIAN TOWN WITH TWO MAJOR AIMS: to assess vocational integration programs undertaken from 1(st) January 2004 to 1(st) January 2007; and to identify job tenure-associated predictors.
METHODS: This is a retrospective study; we collected data such as gender, age, duration, type and outcome of the vocational integration program, and number of interventions performed by the vocational integration service. Self-report questionnaires were also used to assess the satisfaction of users, caregivers, practitioners, and of the company contacts involved in the study.
RESULTS: The service has enrolled 84 users during the observation period. Out of these users, 64.3% of them still had their jobs after three years. Users, caregivers and company contacts expressed high levels of satisfaction for the support received by the vocational integration service. The company expressed less satisfaction for the collaboration received by the Departments of Mental Health (DMHs) that coached the users. The only variable associated to the outcome was the number of interventions that the users received before their placement on the job.
CONCLUSIONS: Despite all the limits of this study, its results show that the chance of taking advantage of a supported job placement service has likely proven itself effective in helping people with mental disorders to obtain and maintain a competitive employment. Our results, however, also point to the necessity of implementing newer strategies meant to develop a greater integration among all services dealing with mentally ill people
Nitrogen balance and fate in a heavily impacted watershed (Oglio River, Northern Italy): in quest of the missing sources and sinks
We present data from a comprehensive investigation carried out from 2007 to
2010, focussing on nitrogen pollution in the Oglio River basin (3800 km<sup>2</sup>,
Po Plain, Northern Italy). Nitrogen mass balances, computed for
the whole basin with 2000 and 2008 data, suggest a large N surplus in this
area, over 40 000 t N yr<sup>−1</sup>, and increasing between 2000 and 2008.
Calculations indicate a very large impact of animal husbandry and
agricultural activities in this watershed, with livestock manure and
synthetic fertilizers contributing 85% of total N inputs (about 100 000 t N yr<sup>−1</sup>)
and largely exceeding crop uptake and other N losses (about
60 000 t N yr<sup>−1</sup>). Nitrogen from domestic and industrial origin is
estimated as about 5800 and 7200 t N yr<sup>−1</sup>, respectively, although
these loads are overestimated, as denitrification in treatment plants is not
considered; nonetheless, they represent a minor term of the N budget. Annual
export of nitrogen from the basin, calculated from flow data and water
chemistry at the mouth of the Oglio River, is estimated at 13 000 t N yr<sup>−1</sup>,
and represents a relatively small fraction of N inputs and
surplus (∼12% and 34%, respectively). After considering N sinks
in crop uptake, soil denitrification and volatilization, a large excess
remains unaccounted (∼26 000 t N yr<sup>−1</sup>) in unknown temporary or
permanent N sinks. Nitrogen removal via denitrification was evaluated in the
Oglio riverbed with stable isotope techniques (δ<sup>15</sup>N and
δ<sup>18</sup>O in nitrate). The downstream final segment of the river displays an
enriched nitrate stable isotope composition but calculations suggest a N
removal corresponding to at most 20% of the unaccounted for N amount.
Denitrification was also evaluated in riverine wetlands with the isotope
pairing technique. Areal rates are elevated but overall N removal is low
(about 1% of the missing N amount), due to small wetland surfaces and
limited lateral connectivity. The secondary drainage channel network has a
much higher potential for nitrogen removal via denitrification, due to its
great linear development, estimated in over 12 500 km, and its capillary
distribution in the watershed. In particular, we estimated a maximum N loss
up to 8500 t N yr<sup>−1</sup>, which represents up to 33% of the unaccounted
for N amount in the basin. Overall, denitrification in surface aquatic
habitats within this basin can be responsible for the permanent removal of
about 12 000 t N yr<sup>−1</sup>; but the fate of some 14 000 t remains unknown.
Available data on nitrate concentration in wells suggest that in the central
part of the watershed groundwater accumulates nitrogen. Simultaneously, we
provide evidences that part of the stored nitrate can be substantially
recycled via springs and can pollute surface waters via river-groundwater
interactions. This probably explains the ten fold increase of nitrate
concentration in a reach of the Oglio River where no point pollutions
sources are present
Gauge Fixing in Higher Derivative Gravity
Linearized four-derivative gravity with a general gauge fixing term is
considered. By a Legendre transform and a suitable diagonalization procedure it
is cast into a second-order equivalent form where the nature of the physical
degrees of freedom, the gauge ghosts, the Weyl ghosts, and the intriguing
"third ghosts", characteristic to higher-derivative theories, is made explicit.
The symmetries of the theory and the structure of the compensating
Faddeev-Popov ghost sector exhibit non-trivial peculiarities.Comment: 21 pages, LaTe
Higher-Derivative Boson Field Theories and Constrained Second-Order Theories
As an alternative to the covariant Ostrogradski method, we show that
higher-derivative relativistic Lagrangian field theories can be reduced to
second differential-order by writing them directly as covariant two-derivative
theories involving Lagrange multipliers and new fields. Despite the intrinsic
non-covariance of the Dirac's procedure used to deal with the constraints, the
explicit Lorentz invariance is recovered at the end. We develop this new
setting on the grounds of a simple scalar model and then its applications to
generalized electrodynamics and higher-derivative gravity are worked out. For a
wide class of field theories this method is better suited than Ostrogradski's
for a generalization to 2n-derivative theoriesComment: 31 pages, Plain Te
Field-Dependent Tilt and Birefringence of Electroclinic Liquid Crystals: Theory and Experiment
An unresolved issue in the theory of liquid crystals is the molecular basis
of the electroclinic effect in the smectic-A phase. Recent x-ray scattering
experiments suggest that, in a class of siloxane-containing liquid crystals, an
electric field changes a state of disordered molecular tilt in random
directions into a state of ordered tilt in one direction. To investigate this
issue, we measure the optical tilt and birefringence of these liquid crystals
as functions of field and temperature, and we develop a theory for the
distribution of molecular orientations under a field. Comparison of theory and
experiment confirms that these materials have a disordered distribution of
molecular tilt directions that is aligned by an electric field, giving a large
electroclinic effect. It also shows that the net dipole moment of a correlated
volume of molecules, a key parameter in the theory, scales as a power law near
the smectic-A--smectic-C transition.Comment: 18 pages, including 9 postscript figures, uses REVTeX 3.0 and
epsf.st
Neutrino Quasielastic Scattering on Nuclear Targets: Parametrizing Transverse Enhancement (Meson Exchange Currents)
We present a parametrization of the observed enhancement in the transverse
electron quasielastic (QE) response function for nucleons bound in carbon as a
function of the square of the four momentum transfer () in terms of a
correction to the magnetic form factors of bound nucleons. The parametrization
should also be applicable to the transverse cross section in neutrino
scattering. If the transverse enhancement originates from meson exchange
currents (MEC), then it is theoretically expected that any enhancement in the
longitudinal or axial contributions is small. We present the predictions of the
"Transverse Enhancement" model (which is based on electron scattering data
only) for the differential and total QE cross sections
for nucleons bound in carbon. The dependence of the transverse
enhancement is observed to resolve much of the long standing discrepancy in the
QE total cross sections and differential distributions between low energy and
high energy neutrino experiments on nuclear targets.Comment: Revised Version- July 21, 2011: 17 pages, 20 Figures. To be published
in Eur. Phys. J.
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