4,311 research outputs found

    Alien Registration- Bernier, Marie A. (Lewiston, Androscoggin County)

    Get PDF
    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/30314/thumbnail.jp

    The Zero Base Budgeting

    Get PDF

    Attachment working models as unconscious structures: An experimental test

    Get PDF
    Internal working models of attachment (IWMs) are presumed to be largely unconscious representations of childhood attachment experiences. Several instruments have been developed to assess IWMs; some of them are based on self-report and others on narrative interview techniques. This study investigated the capacity of a self-report measure, the Inventory of Parent and Peer Attachment (IPPA; Armsden & Greenberg, 1987), and of a narrative interview method, the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI; George, Kaplan, & Main, 1985), to measure unconscious attachment models. We compared scores on the two attachment instruments to response latencies in an attachment priming task. It was shown that attachment organisation assessed by the AAI correlates with priming effects, whereas the IPPA scales were inversely or not related to priming. The results are interpreted as support for the assumption that the AAI assesses, to a certain degree, unconscious working models of attachment

    Level attraction in a microwave optomechanical circuit

    Full text link
    Level repulsion - the opening of a gap between two degenerate modes due to coupling - is ubiquitous anywhere from solid state theory to quantum chemistry. In contrast, if one mode has negative energy, the mode frequencies attract instead. They converge and develop imaginary components, leading to an instability; an exceptional point marks the transition. This, however, only occurs if the dissipation rates of the two modes are comparable. Here we expose a theoretical framework for the general phenomenon and realize it experimentally through engineered dissipation in a multimode superconducting microwave optomechanical circuit. Level attraction is observed for a mechanical oscillator and a superconducting microwave cavity, while an auxiliary cavity is used for sideband cooling. Two exceptional points are demonstrated that could be exploited for their topological properties.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; includes Supplementary informatio

    Numerical field simulation for parallel transmission in MRI at 7 tesla

    Get PDF
    Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2011.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 41-42).Parallel transmission (pTx) is a promising improvement to coil design that has been demonstrated to mitigate B1* inhomogeneity, manifest as center brightening, for high-field magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Parallel transmission achieves spatially-tailored pulses through multiple radiofrequency (RF) excitation coils that can be activated independently. In this work, simulations of magnetic fields in numerical phantoms using an FDTD solver are used to estimate the excitation profiles for an 8-channel RF head coil. Each channel is driven individually in the presence of a dielectric load, and the excitation profiles for all channels are combined post-processing into a B1+ profile of the birdcage (BC) mode. The B1 profile is calculated for a dielectric sphere phantom with material properties of white matter at main magnetic field strengths of 3T and 7T to demonstrate center brightening associated with head imaging at high magnetic field strengths. Measurements of a circular ROI centered in the image show more B1+ inhomogeneity at 7T than at 3T. The B1* profile is then simulated for a numerical head phantom with spatially segmented tissue compartments at 7T. Comparison of the simulated and in vivo B1* profiles at 7T shows agreement in the B1 inhomogeneity. The results provide confidence in numerical simulation as a means to estimate magnetic fields for human imaging. This work will allow further numerical simulations to model the propagation of electric fields within the body, ultimately to provide an estimate of heat deposition in tissue, quantified by the specific absorption rate (SAR), which is a limiting factor of the use of high-field MRI in the clinical setting.by Jessica A. Bernier.S.M

    Quantum order by disorder in frustrated diamond lattice antiferromagnets

    Full text link
    We present a quantum theory of frustrated diamond lattice antiferromagnets. Considering quantum fluctuations as the predominant mechanism relieving spin frustration, we find a rich phase diagram comprising of six phases with coplanar spiral ordering in addition to the N\'eel phase. By computing the specific heat of these ordered phases, we obtain a remarkable agreement between (k,k,0)(k,k,0)-spiral ordering and the experimental specific heat data for the diamond lattice spinel compounds MnSc2_2S4_4, Co3_3O4_4 and CoRh2_2O4_4, i.e. specific heat data is a strong evidence for (k,k,0)(k,k,0)-spiral ordering in all of these materials. This prediction can be tested in future neutron scattering experiments on Co3_3O4_4 and CoRh2_2O4_4, and is consistent with existing neutron scattering data on MnSc2_2S4_4. Based on this agreement we infer a monotonically increasing relationship between frustration and the strength of quantum fluctuations.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, version published in PR

    Water management and livelihood choices in southwestern Bangladesh

    Get PDF
    Coastal Bangladesh faces an increasing number of challenges including cyclones, tidal surges, floods, drought, saline water intrusion, waterlogging and land subsidence, which pose substantial threats to the livelihoods of the coastal inhabitants. In addition to these threats, profound social and land-use changes are complicating the livelihoods of resource users in the region, including the introduction of aquaculture and increasing competition for ground and surface water sources. The government of Bangladesh has targeted this region for investment with irrigation expansion. This paper uses a sustainable livelihood lens to understand the role of investments in water management and irrigation in driving and shaping livelihood changes and transitions over the past ten years and offers recommendations for investments. We find that while water infrastructure development has greatly enhanced the role of agriculture in coastal livelihoods over the last 10 years, further development of irrigation infrastructure should only be prioritized after issues of water governance and inequity across agricultural and aquacultural livelihoods are addressed
    corecore