8,743 research outputs found
Measurement of point velocities in turbulent liquid flow
Turbulent water flow velocity distribution using hot-wire anemometer and photographic technique
U.S. WHEAT STORAGE CONTROL UNDER JOINT CRITERIA OF MEAN BENEFITS AND PRICE VARIATION
A method based on stochastic dynamic programming is developed to derive efficiency frontiers for the trade-off between the long-run average social benefits and price variation. The method is used to quantify the importance of price variation per se as a criterion in U.S. wheat storage policy. The results suggest that a single criterion of maximum expected social benefits, calculated by the traditional surplus measures, is satisfactory because price variation is incidentally reduced enough that further reductions can be attained only a considerable opportunity cost.Crop Production/Industries,
Ductile mandrel and parting compound facilitate tube drawing
Refractory tubing is warm drawn over a solid ductile mandrel with a powder parting compound packed between mandrel and the tubes inner surface. This method applies also to the coextrusion of a billet and a ductile mandrel
Fabrication techniques developed for small- diameter, thin-wall tungsten and tungsten alloy tubing
Report describes methods for the fabrication of tungsten and tungsten alloys into small-diameter, thin-wall tubing of nuclear quality. The tungsten, or tungsten alloy tube blanks are produced by double extrusion. Plug-drawing has emerged as an excellent secondary fabrication technique for the reduction of the overall tube dimensions
Accurate measurement of telemetry performance
Performance of high rate telemetry stations used in the Deep Space Network is verified. Measurement techniques are discussed
The mammals of El Salvador
http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/56361/1/MP117.pd
A Parameterized Centrality Metric for Network Analysis
A variety of metrics have been proposed to measure the relative importance of
nodes in a network. One of these, alpha-centrality [Bonacich, 2001], measures
the number of attenuated paths that exist between nodes. We introduce a
normalized version of this metric and use it to study network structure,
specifically, to rank nodes and find community structure of the network.
Specifically, we extend the modularity-maximization method [Newman and Girvan,
2004] for community detection to use this metric as the measure of node
connectivity. Normalized alpha-centrality is a powerful tool for network
analysis, since it contains a tunable parameter that sets the length scale of
interactions. By studying how rankings and discovered communities change when
this parameter is varied allows us to identify locally and globally important
nodes and structures. We apply the proposed method to several benchmark
networks and show that it leads to better insight into network structure than
alternative methods.Comment: 11 pages, submitted to Physical Review
A QTL for osteoporosis detected in an F2 population derived from White Leghorn chicken lines divergently selected for bone index
Osteoporosis, resulting from progressive loss of structural bone during the period of egg-laying in hens, is associated with an increased susceptibility to bone breakage. To study the genetic basis of bone strength, an F cross was produced from lines of hens that had been divergently selected for bone index from a commercial pedigreed White Leghorn population. Quantitative trait loci (QTL) affecting the bone index and component traits of the index (tibiotarsal and humeral strength and keel radiographic density) were mapped using phenotypic data from 372 F individuals in 32 F families. Genotypes for 136 microsatellite markers in 27 linkage groups covering ∼80% of the genome were analysed for association with phenotypes using within-family regression analyses. There was one significant QTL on chromosome 1 for bone index and the component traits of tibiotarsal and humeral breaking strength. Additive effects for tibiotarsal breaking strength represented 34% of the trait standard deviation and 7.6% of the phenotypic variance of the trait. These QTL for bone quality in poultry are directly relevant to commercial populations
Emotional Strategies as Catalysts for Cooperation in Signed Networks
The evolution of unconditional cooperation is one of the fundamental problems
in science. A new solution is proposed to solve this puzzle. We treat this
issue with an evolutionary model in which agents play the Prisoner's Dilemma on
signed networks. The topology is allowed to co-evolve with relational signs as
well as with agent strategies. We introduce a strategy that is conditional on
the emotional content embedded in network signs. We show that this strategy
acts as a catalyst and creates favorable conditions for the spread of
unconditional cooperation. In line with the literature, we found evidence that
the evolution of cooperation most likely occurs in networks with relatively
high chances of rewiring and with low likelihood of strategy adoption. While a
low likelihood of rewiring enhances cooperation, a very high likelihood seems
to limit its diffusion. Furthermore, unlike in non-signed networks, cooperation
becomes more prevalent in denser topologies.Comment: 24 pages, Accepted for publication in Advances in Complex System
Population inversion in optically pumped asymmetric quantum well terahertz lasers
Intersubband carrier lifetimes and population ratios are calculated for three- and four-level optically pumped terahertz laser structures. Laser operation is based on intersubband transitions between the conduction band states of asymmetric GaAs-Ga(1 – x)Al(x)As quantum wells. It is shown that the carrier lifetimes in three-level systems fulfill the necessary conditions for stimulated emission only at temperatures below 200 K. The addition of a fourth level, however, enables fast depopulation of the lower laser level by resonant longitudinal optical phonon emission and thus offers potential for room temperature laser operation. © 1997 American Institute of Physics
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