32,166 research outputs found
Electronic Effects in Expansive Flow Under Hypersonic Conditions
Plasma effects in hypersonic shock tunnel nozzle using ai
The Reality and Measurement of the Wavefunction
Using a simple version of the model for the quantum measurement of a two
level system, the contention of Aharonov, Anandan, and Vaidman that one must in
certain circumstances give the wavefunction an ontological as well as an
epistemological significance is examined. I decide that their argument that the
wave function of a system can be measured on a single system fails to establish
the key point and that what they demonstrate is the ontological significance of
certain operators in the theory, with the wave function playing its usual
epistemological role.Comment: 10p
New criteria for cluster identification in continuum systems
Two new criteria, that involve the microscopic dynamics of the system, are
proposed for the identification of clusters in continuum systems. The first one
considers a residence time in the definition of the bond between pairs of
particles, whereas the second one uses a life time in the definition of an
aggregate. Because of the qualitative features of the clusters yielded by the
criteria we call them chemical and physical clusters, respectively. Molecular
dynamics results for a Lennard-Jones system and general connectivity theories
are presented.Comment: 31 pages, 11 figures, The following article has been accepted by The
Journal of Chemical Physics. After it is published, it will be found at
http://ojps.aip.org/jcpo
Linking Research and Policy: Assessing a Framework for Organic Agricultural Support in Ireland
This paper links social science research and agricultural policy through an analysis of support for organic agriculture and food. Globally, sales of organic food have experienced 20% annual increases for the past two decades, and represent the fastest growing segment of the grocery market. Although consumer interest has increased, farmers are not keeping up with demand. This is partly due to a lack of political support provided to farmers in their transition from conventional to organic production. Support policies vary by country and in some nations, such as the US, vary by state/province. There have been few attempts to document the types of support currently in place. This research draws on an existing Framework tool to investigate regionally specific and relevant policy support available to organic farmers in Ireland. This exploratory study develops a case study of Ireland within the framework of ten key categories of organic agricultural support: leadership, policy, research, technical support, financial support, marketing and promotion, education and information, consumer issues, inter-agency activities, and future developments. Data from the Irish Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, the Irish Agriculture and Food Development Authority (Teagasc), and other governmental and semi-governmental agencies provide the basis for an assessment of support in each category. Assessments are based on the number of activities, availability of information to farmers, and attention from governmental personnel for each of the ten categories. This policy framework is a valuable tool for farmers, researchers, state agencies, and citizen groups seeking to document existing types of organic agricultural support and discover policy areas which deserve more attention
Cycled operation of water vapor electrolysis cell Annual report, 1 Jan. - 31 Dec. 1969
Mathematical model of heat, mass, and momentum relationships in cyclic operation of water vapor electrolytic cell, and equilibrium conditions between gel matrix and vapo
Is the Redshift Clustering of Long-Duration Gamma-Ray Bursts Significant?
The 26 long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) with known redshifts form a
distinct cosmological set, selected differently than other cosmological probes
such as quasars and galaxies. Since the progenitors are now believed to be
connected with active star-formation and since burst emission penetrates dust,
one hope is that with a uniformly-selected sample, the large-scale redshift
distribution of GRBs can help constrain the star-formation history of the
Universe. However, we show that strong observational biases in ground-based
redshift discovery hamper a clean determination of the large-scale GRB rate and
hence the connection of GRBs to the star formation history. We then focus on
the properties of the small-scale (clustering) distribution of GRB redshifts.
When corrected for heliocentric motion relative to the local Hubble flow, the
observed redshifts appear to show a propensity for clustering: 8 of 26 GRBs
occurred within a recession velocity difference of 1000 km/s of another GRB.
That is, 4 pairs of GRBs occurred within 30 h_65^-1 Myr in cosmic time, despite
being causally separated on the sky. We investigate the significance of this
clustering. Comparison of the numbers of close redshift pairs expected from the
simulation with that observed shows no significant small-scale clustering
excess in the present sample; however, the four close pairs occur only in about
twenty percent of the simulated datasets (the precise significance of the
clustering is dependent upon the modeled biases). We conclude with some
impetuses and suggestions for future precise GRB redshift measurements.Comment: Published in the Astronomical Journal, June 2003: see
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?bibcode=2003AJ....125.2865
A Multiwavelength Investigation of Unidentified EGRET Sources
Statistical studies indicate that the 271 point sources of high-energy gamma
rays belong to two groups: a Galactic population and an isotropic extragalactic
population. Many unidentified extragalactic sources are certainly blazars, and
it is the intention of this work to uncover gamma-ray blazars missed by
previous attempts. Until recently, searches for blazar counterparts to
unidentified EGRET sources have focused on finding AGN that have 5-GHz radio
flux densities S_5 near or above 1 Jy. However, the recent blazar
identification of 3EG J2006-2321 (S_5 = 260 mJy) and other work suggest that
careful studies of weaker flat-spectrum sources may be fruitful. In this
spirit, error circles of 4 high-latitude unidentified EGRET sources have been
searched for 5-GHz sources. The gamma-ray sources are 3EG J1133+0033, 3EG
J1212+2304, 3EG J1222+2315, and 3EG J1227+4302. Within the error contours of
each of the four sources are found 6 radio candidates; by observing the
positions of the radio sources with the 0.81-m Tenagra II telescope it is
determined that 14 of these 24 radio sources have optical counterparts with R <
22. Eight of these from two different EGRET sources have been observed in the
B, V, and R bands in more than one epoch and the analysis of these data is
ongoing. Any sources that are found to be variable will be the objects of
multi-epoch polarimetry studies.Comment: 6 pages, 2 tables. To appear in Astrophysics & Space Scienc
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