17,126 research outputs found
A project to transfer technology from NASA centers in support of industrial innovation in the midwest
A technology transfer program utilizing graduate students in mechanical engineering at the University of Kansas was initiated in early 1981. The objective of the program was to encourage industrial innovation in the Midwest through improved industry/university cooperation and the utilization of NASA technology. A related and important aspect of the program was the improvement of graduate engineering education through the involvement of students in the identification and accomplishment of technological objectives in cooperation with scientists at NASA centers and engineers in industry. The pilot NASA/University Industrial Innovation Program was an outstanding success based on its ability to: attract top graduate students; secure industry support; and stimulate industry/university cooperation leading to enhanced university capability and utilization of advanced technology by industry
Weighing wimps with kinks at colliders: invisible particle mass measurements from endpoints
We consider the application of endpoint techniques to the problem of mass
determination for new particles produced at a hadron collider, where these
particles decay to an invisible particle of unknown mass and one or more
visible particles of known mass. We also consider decays of these types for
pair-produced particles and in each case consider situations both with and
without initial state radiation. We prove that, in most (but not all) cases,
the endpoint of an appropriate transverse mass observable, considered as a
function of the unknown mass of the invisible particle, has a kink at the true
value of the invisible particle mass. The co-ordinates of the kink yield the
masses of the decaying particle and the invisible particle. We discuss the
prospects for implementing this method at the LHC
Transverse masses and kinematic constraints: from the boundary to the crease
We re-examine the kinematic variable m_T2 and its relatives in the light of
recent work by Cheng and Han. Their proof that m_T2 admits an equivalent, but
implicit, definition as the `boundary of the region of parent and daughter
masses that is kinematically consistent with the event hypothesis' is
far-reaching in its consequences. We generalize their result both to simpler
cases (m_T, the transverse mass) and to more complex cases (m_TGen). We further
note that it is possible to re-cast many existing and unpleasant proofs (e.g.
those relating to the existence or properties of "kink" and "crease" structures
in m_T2) into almost trivial forms by using the alternative definition. Not
only does this allow us to gain better understanding of those existing results,
but it also allows us to write down new (and more or less explicit) definitions
of (a) the variable that naturally generalizes m_T2 to the case in which the
parent or daughter particles are not identical, and (b) the inverses of m_T and
m_T2 -- which may be useful if daughter masses are known and bounds on parent
masses are required. We note the implications that these results may have for
future matrix-element likelihood techniques
The application of remote sensing to resource management and environmental quality programs in Kansas
Activities of the Kansas Applied Remote Sensing Program (KARS) designed to establish interactions on cooperative projects with decision makers in Kansas agencies in the development and application of remote sensing procedures are reported. Cooperative demonstration projects undertaken with several different agencies involved three principal areas of effort: Wildlife Habitat and Environmental Analysis; Urban and Regional Analysis; Agricultural and Rural Analysis. These projects were designed to concentrate remote sensing concepts and methodologies on existing agency problems to insure the continued relevancy of the program and maximize the possibility for immediate operational use. Completed projects are briefly discussed
The application of remote sensing to resource management and environmental quality programs in Kansas
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
The application of remote sensing to resource management and environmental quality programs in Kansas
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
The application of remote sensing to resource management and environmental quality programs in Kansas
The activities of the Kansas Applied Remote Sensing (KARS) Program during the period April 1, 1982 through Marsh 31, 1983 are described. The most important work revolved around the Kansas Interagency Task Force on Applied Remote Sensing and its efforts to establish an operational service oriented remote sensing program in Kansas state government. Concomitant with this work was the upgrading of KARS capabilities to process data for state agencies through the vehicle of a low cost digital data processing system. The KARS Program continued to take an active role in irrigation mapping. KARS is now integrating data acquired through analysis of LANDSAT into geographic information systems designed for evaluating groundwater resources. KARS also continues to work at the national level on the national inventory of state natural resources information systems
The application of remote sensing to resource management and environmental quality programs in Kansas
There are no author identified significant results in this report
How culture influences perspective taking: differences in correction, not integration
Individuals from East Asian (Chinese) backgrounds have been shown to exhibit greater sensitivity to a speaker’s perspective than Western (U.S.) participants when resolving referentially ambiguous expressions. We show that this cultural difference does not reflect better integration of social information during language processing, but rather is the result of differential correction: in the earliest moments of referential processing, Chinese participants showed equivalent egocentric interference to Westerners, but managed to suppress the interference earlier and more effectively. A time-series analysis of visual-world eye-tracking data found that the two cultural groups diverged extremely late in processing, between 600 and 1400 ms after the onset of egocentric interference. We suggest that the early moments of referential processing reflect the operation of a universal stratum of processing that provides rapid ambiguity resolution at the cost of accuracy and flexibility. Late components, in contrast, reflect the mapping of outputs from referential processes to decision-making and action planning systems, allowing for a flexibility in responding that is molded by culturally specific demands
Strawberry Ferry (38K1723) and Childsbury Towne (38K1750): A Socio-Economic Enterprise on the Western Branch of the Cooper River, St. John\u27s Parish, Berkeley County, South Carolina
Frontier expansion in British colonial South Carolina was predicated upon the exploitation of diverse indigenous economic resources and staple crop production. The successful exportation of these inland commodities to world markets depended upon . access to a reliable bulk transportation system of interior rivers and roads. Commercial centers, in the form of centrally located settlements, were established for the transshipment of these products and the importation of finished goods. Socially, these settlements provided many needs for an area\u27s population. Strawberry Ferry and Childsbury Towne - - constructed, established, and supported by elite residents along the western branch of the Cooper River - - were designed to take advantage of socioeconomic opportunities vested in the control of two major arteries of trade and commerce along the Carolina frontier.https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/archanth_books/1208/thumbnail.jp
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