20,722 research outputs found
A technique for solving certain Wiener-Hopf type boundary value problems Technical report no. 9
Technique for solving Weiner-Hopf type boundary value problem
An alternative approach to the solution of a class of Wiener-Hopf and related problems Technical report no. 8
Alternative method to Weiner-Hopf approach for solving radiation and diffraction problem
Strengths of sulfur-basalt concretes
Sulfur used in bonding high strength basalt aggregates to form sulfur-basalt concrete
Radiation Induced Damage in GaAs Particle Detectors
The motivation for investigating the use of GaAs as a material for detecting
particles in experiments for High Energy Physics (HEP) arose from its perceived
resistance to radiation damage. This is a vital requirement for detector
materials that are to be used in experiments at future accelerators where the
radiation environments would exclude all but the most radiation resistant of
detector types.Comment: 5 pages. PS file only - original in WORD Also available at
http://ppewww.ph.gla.ac.uk/preprints/97/06
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Preliminary Results for LP VPE X-Ray Detectors
Thick epitaxial layers have been grown using Low Pressure Vapour Phase
Epitaxy techniques with low free carrier concentrations . This type of material
is attractive as a medium for X-ray detection, because of its high conversion
efficiency for X-rays in the medically interesting energy range.Comment: 4 pages. PS file only - original in WORD. Also available at
http://ppewww.ph.gla.ac.uk/preprints/97/07
The synthesis of 15 mu infrared horizon radiance profiles from meteorological data inputs
Computational computer program for modeling infrared horizon radiance profile using pressure and temperature profile input
Cedar River at Cedar Rapids, Iowa
For thirty-seven years we have noted with regret the gradual increase in the pollution of our river, in fact the increase has been quite rapid during recent years. During that time the inhabitants on the banks have increased three-fold while the amount of pollution that is put into the river has increased probably three-thousand-fold. A third of a century ago the Chlorine as Chlorides was three parts per million, the normal amount for unpolluted water in this region; now it is ten. A half a century ago when the Cedar Rapids water works were first built, raw water was put into the mains and for twelve years used for drinking water by a large per cent of the inhabitants
Principle of scaling in a uniaxial medium scientific report no. 6
Solution to Maxwell equations for source currents in unbounded magnetoionic medium for which dielectric tensor is uniaxia
Case-control study of arsenic in drinking water and lung cancer in California and Nevada.
Millions of people are exposed to arsenic in drinking water, which at high concentrations is known to cause lung cancer in humans. At lower concentrations, the risks are unknown. We enrolled 196 lung cancer cases and 359 controls matched on age and gender from western Nevada and Kings County, California in 2002-2005. After adjusting for age, sex, education, smoking and occupational exposures, odds ratios for arsenic concentrations ≥85 µg/L (median = 110 µg/L, mean = 173 µg/L, maximum = 1,460 µg/L) more than 40 years before enrollment were 1.39 (95% CI = 0.55-3.53) in all subjects and 1.61 (95% CI = 0.59-4.38) in smokers. Although odds ratios were greater than 1.0, these increases may have been due to chance given the small number of subjects exposed more than 40 years before enrollment. This study, designed before research in Chile suggested arsenic-related cancer latencies of 40 years or more, illustrates the enormous sample sizes needed to identify arsenic-related health effects in low-exposure countries with mobile populations like the U.S. Nonetheless, our findings suggest that concentrations near 100 µg/L are not associated with markedly high relative risks
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