23,481 research outputs found
Review: Postmodern Art Education in Practice. Gude, O. (Ed.). (n.d.). Spiral Art Education
Book review of Spiral Art Education, Olivia Gude (Editor), University of Illinois, Chicago, 2003
Remarks on Form Factor Bounds
Improved model independent upper bounds on the weak transition form factors
are derived using inclusive sum rules. Comparison of the new bounds with the
old ones is made for the form factors h_{A_1} and h_V in B -> D* decays.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, title changed and typos corrected for journal
publicatio
Scalable reconstruction of density matrices
Recent contributions in the field of quantum state tomography have shown
that, despite the exponential growth of Hilbert space with the number of
subsystems, tomography of one-dimensional quantum systems may still be
performed efficiently by tailored reconstruction schemes. Here, we discuss a
scalable method to reconstruct mixed states that are well approximated by
matrix product operators. The reconstruction scheme only requires local
information about the state, giving rise to a reconstruction technique that is
scalable in the system size. It is based on a constructive proof that generic
matrix product operators are fully determined by their local reductions. We
discuss applications of this scheme for simulated data and experimental data
obtained in an ion trap experiment.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, replaced with published versio
Thermocapillary effects in driven dewetting and self-assembly of pulsed laser-irradiated metallic films
In this paper the lubrication-type dynamical model is developed of a molten,
pulsed laser-irradiated metallic film. The heat transfer problem that
incorporates the absorbed heat from a single beam or interfering beams is
solved analytically. Using this temperature field, we derive the 3D long-wave
evolution PDE for the film height. To get insights into dynamics of dewetting,
we study the 2D version of the evolution equation by means of a linear
stability analysis and by numerical simulations. The stabilizing and
destabilizing effects of various system parameters, such as the peak laser beam
intensity, the film optical thickness, the Biot and Marangoni numbers, etc. are
elucidated. It is observed that the film stability is promoted for such
parameters variations that increase the heat production in the film. In the
numerical simulations the impacts of different irradiation modes are
investigated. In particular, we obtain that in the interference heating mode
the spatially periodic irradiation results in a spatially periodic film rupture
with the same, or nearly equal period. The 2D model qualitatively reproduces
the results of the experimental observations of a film stability and spatial
ordering of a re-solidified nanostructures
Include medical ethics in the Research Excellence Framework
The Research Excellence Framework of the Higher Education
Funding Council for England is taking place in 2013, its three
key elements being outputs (65% of the profile), impact (20%),
and âquality of the research environmentâ (15%). Impact will
be assessed using case studies that âmay include any social,
economic or cultural impact or benefit beyond academia that
has taken place during the assessment period.â1
Medical ethics in the UK still does not have its own cognate
assessment panelâfor example, bioethics or applied
ethicsâunlike in, for example, Australia. Several researchers
in medical ethics have reported to the Institute of Medical Ethics
that during the internal preliminary stage of the Research
Excellence Framework several medical schools have decided
to include only research that entails empirical data gathering.
Thus, conceptual papers and ethical analysis will be excluded.
The arbitrary exclusion of reasoned discussion of medical ethics
issues as a proper subject for medical research unless it is based
on empirical data gathering is conceptually mistaken. âEmpirical
ethicsâ is, of course, a legitimate component of medical ethics
research, but to act as though it is the only legitimate component
suggests, at best, a partial understanding of the nature of ethics
in general and medical ethics in particular. It also mistakenly
places medicine firmly on only one side of the
science/humanities âtwo culturesâ divide instead of in its rightful
place bridging the divide.
Given the emphasis by the General Medical Council on medical
ethics in properly preparing âtomorrowâs doctors,â we urge
medical schools to find a way of using the upcoming Research
Excellence Framework to highlight the expertise residing in
their ethicist colleagues. We are confident that appropriate
assessment will reveal work of high quality that can be shown
to have social and cultural impact and benefit beyond academia,
as required by the framework
Spending time with money: from shared values to social connectivity
This article has been made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund.There is a rapidly growing momentum driving the development of mobile payment systems for co-present interactions, using near-field communication on smartphones and contactless payment systems. The design (and marketing) imperative for this is to enable faster, simpler, effortless and secure transactions, yet our evidence shows that this focus on reducing transactional friction may ignore other important features around making payments. We draw from empirical data to consider user interactions around financial exchanges made on mobile phones. Our findings examine how the practices around making payments support people in making connections, to other people, to their communities, to the places they move through, to their environment, and to what they consume. While these social and community bonds shape the kinds of interactions that become possible, they also shape how users feel about, and act on, the values that they hold with their co-users. We draw implications for future payment systems that make use of community connections, build trust, leverage transactional latency, and generate opportunities for rich social interactions
Bounds on Heavy-to-Heavy Mesonic Form Factors
We provide upper and lower bounds on the form factors for B -> D, D^* by
utilizing inclusive heavy quark effective theory sum rules. These bounds are
calculated to leading order in Lambda_QCD/m_Q and alpha_s. The O(alpha_s^2
beta_0) corrections to the bounds at zero recoil are also presented. We compare
our bounds with some of the form factor models used in the literature. All the
models we investigated failed to fall within the bounds for the combination of
form factors (omega^2 - 1)/(4 omega)|omega h_{A2}+h_{A3}|^2.Comment: 27 pages, 10 figure
Resolving velocity space dynamics in continuum gyrokinetics
Many plasmas of interest to the astrophysical and fusion communities are
weakly collisional. In such plasmas, small scales can develop in the
distribution of particle velocities, potentially affecting observable
quantities such as turbulent fluxes. Consequently, it is necessary to monitor
velocity space resolution in gyrokinetic simulations. In this paper, we present
a set of computationally efficient diagnostics for measuring velocity space
resolution in gyrokinetic simulations and apply them to a range of plasma
physics phenomena using the continuum gyrokinetic code GS2. For the cases
considered here, it is found that the use of a collisionality at or below
experimental values allows for the resolution of plasma dynamics with
relatively few velocity space grid points. Additionally, we describe
implementation of an adaptive collision frequency which can be used to improve
velocity space resolution in the collisionless regime, where results are
expected to be independent of collision frequency.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, submitted to Phys. Plasma
A search for stable strange quark matter nuggets in helium
A search for stable strange quark nuggets has been conducted in helium and
argon using a high sensitivity mass spectrometer. The search was guided by a
mass formula for strange quark nuggets which suggested that stable strange
helium might exist at a mass around 65 u. The chemical similarity of such
``strangelets'' to noble gas atoms and the gravitational unboundedness of
normal helium result in a large enhancement in the sensitivity of such a
search. An abundance limit of no more than strangelets per
normal nucleus is imposed by our search over a mass region from 42 to 82 u,
with much more stringent limits at most (non-integer) masses.Comment: 11 pages RevTeX, Accepted for publication in Physics Letters B. 2
updated references added. Air abundance to cosmic abundance ratios now
reflect updated references. No change in results or figures. Also see
ftp://www-physics.mps.ohio-state.edu/pub/nucex/sq
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