7,220 research outputs found
Light-cone Gauge NSR Strings in Noncritical Dimensions
Light-cone gauge NSR string theory in noncritical dimensions should
correspond to a string theory with a nonstandard longitudinal part.
Supersymmetrizing the bosonic case [arXiv:0909.4675], we formulate a
superconformal worldsheet theory for the longitudinal variables X^{\pm},
\psi^{\pm}. We show that with the transverse variables and the ghosts combined,
it is possible to construct a nilpotent BRST charge.Comment: 22 pages, 1 figur
Method for making conductors for ferrite memory arrays
The ferrite memory arrays are made from pre-formed metal conductors for the ferrite arrays. The conductors are made by forming a thin sheet of a metallizing paste of metal alloy powder, drying the paste layer, bisque firing the dried sheet at a first temperature, and then punching the conductors from the fired sheet. During the bisque firing, the conductor sheet shrinks to 58 percent of its pre-fired volume and the alloy particles sinter together. The conductors are embedded in ferrite sheet material and finally fired at a second higher temperature during which firing the conductors shrink approximately the same degree as the ferrite material
Light-cone Gauge Superstring Field Theory and Dimensional Regularization II
We propose a dimensional regularization scheme to deal with the divergences
caused by colliding supercurrents inserted at the interaction points, in the
light-cone gauge NSR superstring field theory. We formulate the theory in
dimensions and define the amplitudes as analytic functions of . With an
appropriately chosen three-string interaction term and large negative , the
tree level amplitudes for the (NS,NS) closed strings can be recast into a BRST
invariant form, using the superconformal field theory proposed in
Ref.[arXiv:0911.3704]. We show that in the limit they coincide with
the results of the first quantized theory. Therefore we obtain the desired
results without adding any contact interaction terms to the action.Comment: 23 pages; v2: minor modifications; v3: revised argument in section 3,
added appendix C, results unchanged; v4: added clarifications, two figures
and a footnote; v5: minor modification
Rumen Fermentation, Blood Metabolites, and Performance of Sheep Fed Tropical Browse Plants
The in vitro study was designed to evaluate total gas production, dry matter degradability (DMD), and VFA profile; while in vivo study was designed to evaluate nutrient intakes, blood metabolites, and performance of sheep fed native grass mixed with Calliandra calothyrrus (CC), Leucaena leucochepala (LL), Moringa oleifera (MO), Gliricidea sepium (GS), and Artocarpus heterophyllus (AH). The best three from the in vitro results were used to formulate diets in in vivo study. Sixteen male growing sheep (average BW 20 kg) were fed 100% native grass (NG) as control; 70% NG + 30% GS; 70% NG + 30% MO; and 70% NG + 30% AH. Nutrient consumptions, DMD, blood metabolites, and sheep performances were analyzed by using Completely Randomized Design. The in vitro results showed that the total gas production and DMD of CC and LL were the lowest (P<0.05) while the highest was found in GS, MO, and AH treatments (P<0.05). Meanwhile, the in vivo results showed that nutrient intakes (DM, CP, and CF) of GS and AH rations were the highest. The ADG, concentration of albumin, and globulin in all treatments were similar, while total serum protein, triglycerides, and glucose concentration in MO and AH rations were higher than others. Serum cholesterol concentration in MO ration was the lowest, meanwhile the concentration of IgG was the highest (P<0.05). Supplementation of 30% MO was the best choice for optimum rumen fermentation and maintaining health status of local sheep
Sunday Friends: The Working Alternative to Charity
Sunday Friends is a non-profit organization in San José, California, that provides multiple activities for families who are in need of financial support. Given the particular location of the program, most families are Latino and bilingual. Participants and program volunteers form a community at an elementary school on a couple of scheduled Sundays each month. When family members participate in activities designed to educate, improve skills, and to give back to the larger community, they earn tickets that they can redeem for items that they need and want from the Sunday Friends store. Activities include healthy cooking projects, “Thank You Letter” writing, English-as-a-Second-Language programs, crafts, and education in nutrition and financial literacy. The program’s central focus is to empower families to break out of poverty. A specific guiding principal is the developmental assets approach promoted by the Search Institute in Minneapolis (http://www.search-institute.org/). This approach encourages individuals and organizations to work together toward a common goal of supporting the healthy development of all children and youth. Healthy development is conceptualized as consisting of the development of external assets (i.e., support, empowerment, boundaries and expectations, constructive activities) and internal assets (i.e., commitment to learning, positive values, social competencies, and positive identity). The 2009 evaluation’s primary focus was on whether Sunday Friends was succeeding at fostering developmental assets for children. Other relevant indicators of success were perceptions of program effectiveness, regard for program activities, and nutrition and healthy eating habits. Data were gathered from family members (adults and minors) during program activities using written surveys administered by volunteers to the research team (most of whom were bilingual). The families were recruited in person by program staff onsite. The questionnaires were written in English and Spanish (with the choice made by respondents). Sunday Friends volunteers were recruited to the study via email by Sunday Friends staff. They completed questionnaires through an online survey platform. In all, 74 parents or guardians, 67 children or youth, and 45 volunteers participated in the data collection. Across the three sets of surveys (parents or guardians, children or youth, and volunteers), there are fairly consistent results. The families and volunteers in the Sunday Friends program believe that Sunday Friends is effectively engaging them and meeting its goals. Overall, children and youth report positive experiences at Sunday Friends. On every dimension of psychological well-being, connectedness with others, and self-efficacy, the answers provided by children and youth indicate that Sunday Friends is promoting developmental assets. In addition, parents and guardians report that Sunday Friends has positive influences on their lives. The majority of measures, whether questions about self-efficacy, the effect of Sunday Friends on their children, or improved nutrition for their family, indicate that Sunday Friends is meeting its goals. Finally, volunteers agree that the program makes an important contribution to the lives of both children and adults. They also feel that Sunday Friends enhances their awareness of the community and contributes to making their personal lives more meaningful. The survey results presented here should be interpreted with caution because all persons surveyed were continuing participants in the program, and the cross-sectional data could not detect changes over time. Despite this caution, each group’s data and triangulation across family and volunteer surveys reveal that milestones are accomplished at Sunday Friends. It is safe to conclude that Sunday Friends’ community-based approach to empowering parents and youths is achieving its goals
The day KTC became Cape Town's Beirut; African squatters' struggles in Cape Town 1983 - 1986
Paper presented at the Wits History Workshop: Structure and Experience in the Making of Apartheid, 6-10 February, 199
Spacetime Fermions in Light-cone Gauge Superstring Field Theory and Dimensional Regularization
We consider the dimensional regularization of the light-cone gauge type II
superstring field theories in the NSR formalism. In the previous work, we have
calculated the tree-level amplitudes with external lines in the (NS,NS) sector
using the regularization and shown that the desired results are obtained
without introducing contact term interactions. In this work, we study the
tree-level amplitudes with external lines in the Ramond sector. In order to
deal with them, we propose a worldsheet theory to be used instead of that for
the naive dimensional regularization. With the worldsheet theory, we regularize
and define the tree-level amplitudes by analytic continuation. We show that the
results coincide with those of the first quantized formulation.Comment: 28 pages, 5 figures; v2: more details of our manipulations in
subsection 3.2 added, figures and references added; v3: clarifications adde
European migration crises: The role of national hemoglobinopathy registries in improving patient access to care
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/137547/1/pbc26515.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/137547/2/pbc26515_am.pd
Use of Electron Back Scatter Diffraction Patterns for Determination of Crystal Symmetry Elements
The application of electron back scatter diffraction in the scanning electron microscope has been extended to the determination of crystal symmetry elements, point group and space group. The wide angular range of the patterns makes this a relatively simple task compared with equivalent analysis using electron channelling patterns, convergent beam patterns or standard x-ray methods, though the complexity of the analysis does not permit an unthinking approach. To establish the best procedure specimens from the seven crystal systems were investigated and results from the examination of the metal tin (tetragonal), and minerals zircon (ZrSiO4, tetragonal) and calcite (CaCO3 rhombohedral) are presented. The procedure entails determination of the crystal system from detection of rotation axes, determination of point group from the observed combinations of mirror planes and rotation axes, determination of Bravais lattice, and finally, determination of space group from the absences of lines due to screw axes and glide planes. Considerable computational aids were required in the latter stages of analysis and for this a computer program was written to simulate the diffraction patterns from any crystal system and Bravais lattice with line delete procedures to remove lines forbidden because of space group requirements
Instability Heating of Sympathetically-Cooled Ions in a Linear Paul Trap
Sympathetic laser cooling of ions stored within a linear-geometry, radio
frequency, electric-quadrupole trap has been investigated using computational
and theoretical techniques. The simulation, which allows 5 sample ions to
interact with 35 laser-cooled atomic ions, revealed an instability heating
mechanism, which can prevent ions below a certain critical mass from being
sympathetically cooled. This critical mass can however be varied by changing
the trapping field parameters thus allowing ions with a very large range of
masses to be sympathetically cooled using a single ion species. A theoretical
explanation of this instability heating mechanism is presented which predicts
that the cooling-heating boundary in trapping parameter space is a line of
constant (ion trap stability coefficient), a result supported by the
computational results. The threshold value of depends on the masses of
the interacting ions. A functional form of this dependence is given
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