1,489 research outputs found
Daily Eastern News: April 09, 1974
https://thekeep.eiu.edu/den_1974_apr/1006/thumbnail.jp
Reheating Metastable O'Raifeartaigh Models
In theories with multiple vacua, reheating to a temperature greater than the
height of a barrier can stimulate transitions from a desirable metastable
vacuum to a lower energy state. We discuss the constraints this places on
various theories and demonstrate that in a class of supersymmetric models this
transition does not occur even for arbitrarily high reheating temperature.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figure. Typos corrected and some references adde
Assessing the transition towards battery electric vehicles:a Multi-Level Perspective on drivers of, and barriers to, take up.
The Multi-Level Perspective (MLP) framework on transitions is used to interpret European electric vehicle take up and auto mobility transition. It finds that environmental and energy security pressures have created a favourable landscape ‘push’ for Battery Electric Vehicles (BEVs) that in turn has encouraged and facilitated serious commitment from some manufacturers. Yet BEVs, as a niche product seeking to disrupt an entrenched and established regime, face significant multi-level forces acting as barriers against such a transition, which the paper explores. This combination of factors creates a situation where BEV market penetration remains far below the level required for mass market transition. For BEVs to ‘cross the chasm’ and gain an established foothold in the market and hence significantly disrupt the regime, more holistic and effective solutions are required. It is argued that, so far, this has yet to be fully taken on board by policy makers
SUSY Simplified Models at 14, 33, and 100 TeV Proton Colliders
Results are presented for a variety of SUSY Simplified Models at the 14 TeV
LHC as well as a 33 and 100 TeV proton collider. Our focus is on models whose
signals are driven by colored production. We present projections of the upper
limit and discovery reach in the gluino-neutralino (for both light and heavy
flavor decays), squark-neutralino, and gluino-squark Simplified Model planes.
Depending on the model a jets + MET, mono-jet, or same-sign di-lepton search is
applied. The impact of pileup is explored. This study utilizes the Snowmass
backgrounds and combined detector. Assuming 3000 fb^{-1} of integrated
luminosity, a gluino that decays to light flavor quarks can be discovered below
2.3 TeV at the 14 TeV LHC and below 11 TeV at a 100 TeV machine.Comment: 81 pages, 55 figures; v2 journal versio
Effect of Iodine Doping on BiSrCaCuO: Charge Transfer or Interlayer Coupling?
A comparative study has been made of iodine-intercalated
BiSrCaCuO single crystal and 1 atm O
annealed BiSrCaCuO single crystal using AC
susceptibility measurement, X-ray photoemission (XPS) and angle-resolved
ultraviolet photoemission spectroscopy (ARUPS). AC susceptibility measurement
indicates that O-doped samples studied have T of 84 K,
whereas T of Iodine-doped samples studied are 80 K. XPS Cu 2p core
level data establish that the hole concentration in the CuO planes are
essentially the same for these two kinds of samples. ARUPS measurements show
that electronic structure of the normal states near the Fermi level has been
strongly affected by iodine intercalation. We conclude that the dominant effect
of iodine doping is to alter the interlayer coupling.Comment: LBL 9 pages, APS_Revtex. 5 Figures, available upon request.
UW-Madison preprin
Blur discrimination and its relation to blur-mediated depth perception
Retinal images of three-dimensional scenes often contain regions that are spatially blurred by different amounts, owing to depth variation in the scene and depth-of-focus limitations in the eye. Variations in blur between regions in the retinal image therefore offer a cue to their relative physical depths. In the first experiment we investigated apparent depth ordering in images containing two regions of random texture separated by a vertical sinusoidal border. The texture was sharp on one side of the border, and blurred on the other side. In some presentations the border itself was also blurred. Results showed that blur variation alone is sufficient to determine the apparent depth ordering. A subsequent series of experiments measured blur-discrimination thresholds with stimuli similar to those used in the depth-ordering experiment. Weber fractions for blur discrimination ranged from 0.28 to 0.56. It is concluded that the utility of blur variation as a depth cue is constrained by the relatively mediocre ability of observers to discriminate different levels of blur. Blur is best viewed as a relatively coarse, qualitative depth cue
Recommended from our members
Chapter 8: Selective Stoichiometric and Catalytic Reactivity in the Confines of a Chiral Supramolecular Assembly
Nature uses enzymes to activate otherwise unreactive compounds in remarkable ways. For example, DNases are capable of hydrolyzing phosphate diester bonds in DNA within seconds,[1-3]--a reaction with an estimated half-life of 200 million years without an enzyme.[4] The fundamental features of enzyme catalysis have been much discussed over the last sixty years in an effort to explain the dramatic rate increases and high selectivities of enzymes. As early as 1946, Linus Pauling suggested that enzymes must preferentially recognize and stabilize the transition state over the ground state of a substrate.[5] Despite the intense study of enzymatic selectivity and ability to catalyze chemical reactions, the entire nature of enzyme-based catalysis is still poorly understood. For example, Houk and co-workers recently reported a survey of binding affinities in a wide variety of enzyme-ligand, enzyme-transition-state, and synthetic host-guest complexes and found that the average binding affinities were insufficient to generate many of the rate accelerations observed in biological systems.[6] Therefore, transition-state stabilization cannot be the sole contributor to the high reactivity and selectivity of enzymes, but rather, other forces must contribute to the activation of substrate molecules. Inspired by the efficiency and selectivity of Nature, synthetic chemists have admired the ability of enzymes to activate otherwise unreactive molecules in the confines of an active site. Although much less complex than the evolved active sites of enzymes, synthetic host molecules have been developed that can carry out complex reactions with their cavities. While progress has been made toward highly efficient and selective reactivity inside of synthetic hosts, the lofty goal of duplicating enzymes specificity remains.[7-9] Pioneered by Lehn, Cram, Pedersen, and Breslow, supramolecular chemistry has evolved well beyond the crown ethers and cryptands originally studied.[10-12] Despite the increased complexity of synthetic host molecules, most assembly conditions utilize self-assembly to form complex highly-symmetric structures from relatively simple subunits. For supramolecular assemblies able to encapsulate guest molecules, the chemical environment in each assembly--defined by the size, shape, charge, and functional group availability--greatly influences the guest-binding characteristics.[6, 13-17
Gravitomagnetism and the Clock Effect
The main theoretical aspects of gravitomagnetism are reviewed. It is shown
that the gravitomagnetic precession of a gyroscope is intimately connected with
the special temporal structure around a rotating mass that is revealed by the
gravitomagnetic clock effect. This remarkable effect, which involves the
difference in the proper periods of a standard clock in prograde and retrograde
circular geodesic orbits around a rotating mass, is discussed in detail. The
implications of this effect for the notion of ``inertial dragging'' in the
general theory of relativity are presented. The theory of the clock effect is
developed within the PPN framework and the possibility of measuring it via
spaceborne clocks is examined.Comment: 27 pages, LaTeX, submitted to Proc. Bad Honnef Meeting on: GYROS,
CLOCKS, AND INTERFEROMETERS: TESTING GENERAL RELATIVITY IN SPACE (22 - 27
August 1999; Bad Honnef, Germany
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