1,843 research outputs found
Fatigue Strength and Related Characteristics of Joints in 24s-t Alclad Sheet
Report includes tension fatigue test results on the following types of samples of 0.040-inch alclad 24s-t: (1) monoblock sheet samples as received and after a post-aging heat treatment, (2) "sheet efficiency" samples (two equally stressed sheets joined by a single transverse row of spot welds) both as received and after post-aging, (3) spot-welded lap-joint samples as received and after post-aging, and (4) roll-welded lap-joint samples. (author
Presupposition projection as proof construction
Even though Van der Sandt's presuppositions as anaphora approach is empirically successful, it fails to give a formal account of the interaction between world-knowledge and presuppositions. In this paper, an algorithm is sketched which is based on the idea of presuppositions as anaphora. It improves on this approach by employing a deductive system, Constructive Type Theory (CTT), to get a formal handle on the way world-knowledge influences presupposition projection. In CTT, proofs for expressions are explicitly represented as objects. These objects can be seen as a generalization of DRT's discourse markers. They are useful in dealing with presuppositional phenomena which require world-knowledge, such as Clark's bridging examples and Beaver's conditional presuppositions
Practical private database queries based on a quantum key distribution protocol
Private queries allow a user Alice to learn an element of a database held by
a provider Bob without revealing which element she was interested in, while
limiting her information about the other elements. We propose to implement
private queries based on a quantum key distribution protocol, with changes only
in the classical post-processing of the key. This approach makes our scheme
both easy to implement and loss-tolerant. While unconditionally secure private
queries are known to be impossible, we argue that an interesting degree of
security can be achieved, relying on fundamental physical principles instead of
unverifiable security assumptions in order to protect both user and database.
We think that there is scope for such practical private queries to become
another remarkable application of quantum information in the footsteps of
quantum key distribution.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, new and improved version, clarified claims,
expanded security discussio
Sonic crystal lenses that obey Lensmaker's formula
This paper presents a theoretical study of the phenomenon of acoustic imaging
by sonic crystals, which are made of two-dimensional regular arrays of rigid
cylinders placed in parallel in air. The scattering of acoustic waves is
computed using the standard multiple scattering theory, and the band structures
are computed by the plane-wave expansion method. It is shown that properly
arranged arrays not only can behave as acoustic lenses, but also the focusing
effect can be well described by Lensmaker's formula. Possible applications are
also discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Predicting Shunt Currents in Stacks of Bipolar Plate Cells
A method is presented for predicting shunt currents in stacks of undivided and divided bipolar plate cells. The method is an efficient way of solving the coupled sets of algebraic equations that arise from using circuit analog models to represent the current paths in stacks of undivided or divided bipolar plate cells. These algebraic equations can be eitherlinear or nonlinear depending upon the current-potential relationships used in the model (i.e., nonlinear circuit elements can be included). The method is used to show the importance of including nonsymmetrical resistances and nonlinear circuit elements in the models. Also, the method is used to predict the shunt currents for a nine cell stack of pilot plant scale bipolar plate, membrane chlor-alkali cells. It is shown that these predictions agree qualitatively with measured values. Finally, the method is used to predict the shunt currents for stacks of 60 and 120 of these cells
Relationship among research collaboration, number of documents and number of citations. A case study in Spanish computer science production in 2000-2009.
This paper analyzes the relationship among research collaboration, number of documents and number of citations of computer science research activity. It analyzes the number of documents and citations and how they vary by number of authors. They are also analyzed (according to author set cardinality) under different circumstances, that is, when documents are written in different types of collaboration, when documents are published in different document types, when documents are published in different computer science subdisciplines, and, finally, when documents are published by journals with different impact factor quartiles. To investigate the above relationships, this paper analyzes the publications listed in the Web of Science and produced by active Spanish university professors between 2000 and 2009, working in the computer science field. Analyzing all documents, we show that the highest percentage of documents are published by three authors, whereas single-authored documents account for the lowest percentage. By number of citations, there is no positive association between the author cardinality and citation impact. Statistical tests show that documents written by two authors receive more citations per document and year than documents published by more authors. In contrast, results do not show statistically significant differences between documents published by two authors and one author. The research findings suggest that international collaboration results on average in publications with higher citation rates than national and institutional collaborations. We also find differences regarding citation rates between journals and conferences, across different computer science subdisciplines and journal quartiles as expected. Finally, our impression is that the collaborative level (number of authors per document) will increase in the coming years, and documents published by three or four authors will be the trend in computer science literature
Theoretical studies of the historical development of the accounting discipline: a review and evidence
Many existing studies of the development of accounting thought have either been atheoretical or have adopted Kuhn's model of scientific growth. The limitations of this 35-year-old model are discussed. Four different general neo-Kuhnian models of scholarly knowledge development are reviewed and compared with reference to an analytical matrix. The models are found to be mutually consistent, with each focusing on a different aspect of development. A composite model is proposed. Based on a hand-crafted database, author co-citation analysis is used to map empirically the entire literature structure of the accounting discipline during two consecutive time periods, 1972–81 and 1982–90. The changing structure of the accounting literature is interpreted using the proposed composite model of scholarly knowledge development
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Chemistry of hydrogen oxide radicals (HO_x) in the Arctic troposphere in spring
We use observations from the April 2008 NASA ARCTAS aircraft campaign to the North American Arctic, interpreted with a global 3-D chemical transport model (GEOS-Chem), to better understand the sources and cycling of hydrogen oxide radicals (HO_x≡H+OH+peroxy radicals) and their reservoirs (HO_y≡HO_x+peroxides) in the springtime Arctic atmosphere. We find that a standard gas-phase chemical mechanism overestimates the observed HO_2 and H_2O_2 concentrations. Computation of HO_x and HO_y gas-phase chemical budgets on the basis of the aircraft observations also indicates a large missing sink for both. We hypothesize that this could reflect HO_2 uptake by aerosols, favored by low temperatures and relatively high aerosol loadings, through a mechanism that does not produce H_2O_2. We implemented such an uptake of HO_2 by aerosol in the model using a standard reactive uptake coefficient parameterization with γ(HO_2) values ranging from 0.02 at 275 K to 0.5 at 220 K. This successfully reproduces the concentrations and vertical distributions of the different HO_x species and HO_y reservoirs. HO_2 uptake by aerosol is then a major HO_x and HO_y sink, decreasing mean OH and HO_2 concentrations in the Arctic troposphere by 32% and 31% respectively. Better rate and product data for HO_2 uptake by aerosol are needed to understand this role of aerosols in limiting the oxidizing power of the Arctic atmosphere
LBQS 0103-2753: A 0.3 Arcsec Binary Quasar
Imaging and spectroscopy with HST show that LBQS 0103-2753 (V = 17.8, z =
0.848) is a binary quasar with a separation of 0.3 arcsec or 2.3 kpc. This is
by far the smallest separation binary quasar reported to date. The two
components have very different spectra, including the presence of strong broad
absorption lines (BALs) in component A only. The emission-line redshifts, based
on the broad high ionization C IV lines, are z_A = 0.834 and z_B = 0.858; their
difference is 3900 km/s in velocity units. The broad C IV lines, however, are
probably not a good indicator of systemic redshift; and LBQS 0103-2753 A and B
could have a much smaller systemic redshift difference, like the other known
binary quasars. If the systemic redshift difference is small, then LBQS
0103-2753 would most likely be a galaxy merger that has led to a binary
supermassive black hole. There is now one known 0.3 arcsec binary among roughly
500 QSOs that have been observed in a way that would reveal such a close
binary. This suggests that QSO activity is substantially more likely for black
hole binaries at spacings ~2 kpc than at ~15 to 60 kpc. Between 1987 and 1998,
the observed Mg II BAL disappeared.Comment: 12 pages LATEX with 3 EPS figures; uses aaspp4.sty. Accepted for
publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, volume 550 (2001 March 20
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